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Holy Name (Girls), Pomona (Closed 1949) (reopened as Pomona Catholic High School) Los Angeles College, the junior seminary of the archdiocese; Mount Carmel (Closed 1976) Our Lady Queen of Angels, Los Angeles (Closed 1982) Pater Noster, Los Angeles (Closed 1991) Pius X.Downey (merged with St. Mathias 1995) Notre Dame (Girls), Sunland (Closed 1960s)
Only include public high schools in the Los Angeles city limits. Several schools with "Los Angeles, CA" postal addresses are in fact outside of the Los Angeles city limits. There are also schools in the Los Angeles city limits that have postal addresses reflecting other cities and/or specific places (in the San Fernando Valley several places ...
Bridges Academy, Los Angeles, is a college prep school (Grades 4–12) serving twice-exceptional (or "2e") learners—students who are gifted but who also have learning differences such as Autism, AD/HD, executive functioning challenges, processing deficits, and mild dyslexia. The students are driven by creativity and intellectual curiosity.
La Salle College Preparatory is a private, Catholic college preparatory high school founded and run by the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools in Pasadena, California and located in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles. It was founded in 1956 as La Salle High School. It was accredited in 1961 by the University of ...
KIPP LA, serving the Los Angeles metropolitan area, was founded in 2003 with two middle schools and now consists of 15 schools. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] According to an article in LA School Report , the district "serves 5,750 students, 90 percent of them low income, 74 percent are Latinos, 24 percent are English learners, and 11 percent receive special ...
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PUC Schools is a charter school operator in Greater Los Angeles. It has its headquarters in Burbank . [ 1 ] The charter school systems operates schools in northeast Los Angeles and the northeast San Fernando Valley .
Polytechnic High School opened in 1897 as a "commercial branch" of the only high school at that time in the city, Los Angeles High School.As such, Polytechnic would be the third oldest high school in the city, after Abraham Lincoln High School in Lincoln Heights, (founded in 1878), and the fourth oldest in the LAUSD, after San Fernando High School., which was founded in 1896.