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James Monroe High School (JMHS), at 9229 Haskell Avenue in North Hills, California, is a public high school in the Los Angeles Unified School District. It is home to Small Learning Communities (SLCs) and two magnet schools. Its mascot is the Viking.
Cleveland's academic programs include the Academy of Art and Technology (AOAT) and the School for Advanced Studies (SAS). It has two magnet programs including the Humanities Magnet and the Global Media Studies Magnet. [2] Cleveland, a part of the Los Angeles Unified School District, was named after President Grover Cleveland.
LACES was founded as the "Center for Enriched Studies" (minus the "LA") in September 1977 as the first magnet school in the Los Angeles Unified School District. [5] It was the first school created as part of the District's voluntary integration program. The founding principal was David Peha.
Its program Operation School Bell provides K-5 students with one pair of sneakers, two tops, five pairs of socks, underwear, a backpack, school supplies, a hygiene kit, a hoodie, one or two books ...
On June 10, 2014, the Los Angeles Unified School District Board granted the school Affiliate Charter status, [3] [4] thus adding Emerson to Los Angeles' growing roster of charter schools. Emerson's well known Performing Arts Academy (terminated in 2012) offered classes including Musical Theater, Stage Design, Costume Design, and Dance.
L.A. Unified School Board member Nick Melvoin, whose West Los Angeles district includes Twain, had also expressed concern, saying he was “disappointed” the district had not sought school board ...
The Los Angeles Unified School District has set up a hotline for concerned parents and students, following the digital heist of confidential records and files from the district's computer systems ...
Los Angeles Unified School District's own open-source data reports that 57.3% of the school's student body lives in economically disadvantaged households. Furthermore, less than 15% of the student body is at benchmark or above for the SAT Math section test, representing a roughly 10% decrease as compared to the school's opening year in 2009.