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Brighton Hall, formerly known as San Fernando Valley Professional School, is a private school educating students from second to twelfth grade in Burbank, California. [1] It operates on a shortened daily schedule, accepts online class work, and has rolling admissions in order to accommodate students with time-consuming professional or extracurricular commitments.
Pomona Catholic High School (Girls), Pomona (previously Holy Name Academy) Don Bosco Technical Institute (Boys), Rosemead; San Gabriel Mission High School (Girls), San Gabriel; St. Paul High School, Santa Fe Springs; St. Monica High School, Santa Monica; Alverno Heights Academy (Girls), Sierra Madre (closed June 2023, now a K-8 co-ed school ...
Antelope Valley High School, Lancaster; ... San Fernando; Mission View Public Charter, Santa Clarita (2 locations) [47] Montclair College Preparatory School, Van Nuys;
The first recorded adult school in California was in San Francisco in 1856. Evening classes were taught in the basement of old St. Mary's church. Subjects include adult literacy, drafting and bookkeeping. John Swett, one of the first volunteer teachers convinced the board to make the program tuition free.
Desert Christian High School, or DCHS, is Desert Christian's high school. DCHS was opened in 1988. [3] The DCHS campus is located at 2340 W Avenue J8. The principal of DCHS is Brian Roseborough. [4] DCHS offers Advanced Placement classes as well as Dual Credit Classes affording students the opportunity to earn college credits while still in ...
The César E. Chávez Learning Academies, also known as Valley Region High School 5 (VRHS #5), is a public high school of the Los Angeles Unified School District.It is located in the City of San Fernando in the San Fernando Valley region of the Los Angeles metropolitan area, in the US state of California.
Van Nuys High School opened in 1914, four years after Van Nuys was established. [4] For years the only high schools in the San Fernando Valley were Van Nuys, Owensmouth (now Canoga Park), San Fernando, and North Hollywood.
In 1970, Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Paul Egly established the law school. [5] In 1985, the school merged with the San Fernando Valley College of Law; [6] however, the two operated as independent entities within the University of La Verne until 2002, when the University of West Los Angeles purchased the San Fernando Valley College of Law campus. [7]