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Sweetwater Union High School District (SUHSD) is a school district headquartered in Chula Vista, California. [4] The union high school district serves over 42,000 high school-aged students and over 32,000 adult learners.
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.
National University Academy, [34] Vista, California (established 2008) National University Virtual High School, [35] Chula Vista, California (established 2003) The Center for Performance Psychology [36] The National University System Institute for Policy Research [37]
Hilltop High School (Chula Vista, California) alumni (12 P) Pages in category "Education in Chula Vista, California" The following 17 pages are in this category, out of 17 total.
Options Secondary School (commonly known as The Portal), is a public high school in San Diego, California, located on the campus of Montgomery High School. It is run under the "Alternative Education" division of Sweetwater Union High School District , which also runs the Independent Studies program. [ 2 ]
Hilltop was named a California Distinguished School in 2005 [6] and is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC). In the 2006–07 school year, the graduation rate was 93.3%. [7] Hilltop has the highest number of AP courses available to all students and the highest AP pass rate out of the entire SUHSD at 72.8%. [7]
Picture of High Tech High Chula Vista's lunch area. Cross country CIF, 2024, 3 mile variety at Morley field . High Tech High Chula Vista is a charter school in Chula Vista, California. The high school, being open-campus and project-based, opened in the fall of 2007 with approximately 150 9th-grade students.
Chula Vista first opened in the summer of 1947, operating out of a temporary campus in Brown Field Municipal Airport with an estimated student enrollment of 650. [2] By 1949, the student body had grown to just over 900 students between grades 10, 11, and 12; a new school at the intersection of Fourth Avenue and K Street was under construction. [3]