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Granada Hills Charter

Independent charter school in Los Angeles, California, United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Granada Hills Chartermap
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Granada Hills Charter (often abbreviated to GHCHS/GHC or simply Granada), formerly Granada Hills High School, is an independent charter school consisting of over 6,000 students in grades K–12, located in the Granada Hills neighborhood of Los Angeles, California, United States. It is affiliated with the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD).[5]

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Granada also, as of 2011, has a high Academic Performance Index (API) score of 878, greatly exceeding the target API score of 800 for all schools in California.[6] On April 12, 2011, Granada was named a 2011 California Distinguished School.[7] On December 22, 2011, Granada became an International Baccalaureate World School.[8] Since 2011, the school has won seven National Academic Decathlon Championships.

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History

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Granada Hills High School is a comprehensive public high school, founded in 1960.[9] Bryce Schurr was the first acting principal of the school.[10] It was in the Los Angeles City High School District until 1961, when it merged into LAUSD.[11]

In the 1970–71 and 1971–72 school years, Granada Hills High had the largest student body of any high school in the United States.[12] Overcrowding at the school was relieved with the 1971 opening of John F. Kennedy High School.[13]

In 1994, the school opened a LAUSD magnet school with emphasis on math, science, and technology in conjunction with the California State University, Northridge. In 2003, the Los Angeles Board of Education voted to allow the school to become a charter, making it the largest school in the United States to convert to a charter school.[14] The school administration asked for charter status since being directly operated by the district limited its fundraising opportunities, and it was also against LAUSD funding cuts. Charter status also brought instructional autonomy.[15][16]

In mid-2013, Granada Hills Charter High School purchased the nearby Pinecrest Northridge Elementary School campus for $5.6M,[17] using funds obtained from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. Granada Hills Charter High School used this new land to create iGranada, a campus specializing in digital arts and sciences. This campus opened for the first time for the Fall 2015 school year.[18]

As part of their Charter Renewal Petition, GHCHS has applied to increase its enrollment from 4,300 students to 5,500 students. This includes adding approximately 200 additional grades 9–12 seats to the existing GHCHS campus, through a Charter Augmentation Grant, and adding up to 1,000 additional seats at the Pinecrest site (or at another possible property acquisition).[19]

In 2020, the grade span changed to K–12.[20]

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Technology

On campus, there are six computer labs, each with more than 35 computers. There are also laptop carts, which house many laptop computers and can be transported around the campus for enrichment activities. Science classrooms are updated with new lab technology often. Most classrooms have Smart Boards and projectors, increasing the overall student interaction in class.

Beginning in the 2015–2016 school year, Chromebooks are given to every student. Teachers may use Canvas (or Google Classroom prior to 2022) to post assignments, online teaching materials, and give instant feedback to the students. Additionally, the school has wifi networks campuswide, and can provide wifi at a student's home if they cannot afford it.[21]

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Demographics

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According to U.S. News & World Report, as of 2019, 75% of Granada's student body is "minority," with 47% of the student body coming from an economically disadvantaged household, determined by student eligibility for California's Reduced-price meal program.[22]

The school is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges.[4]

Facilities

The school's sports stadium, John Elway Stadium, is used by the Los Angeles Rampage women's soccer team and is the former home ground of the San Fernando Valley Quakes United Soccer League Premier Development League soccer team.

Academics

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Granada offers 29 Advanced Placement courses and 38 IB courses.[23]

Academic Decathlon

The Academic Decathlon team won back-to-back-to-back national championships in 2011, 2012 and 2013. The 2015 team began another championship streak[24] as Granada Hills went on to win again in 2016, 2017, 2019, 2021, and 2022.

Speech & Debate

Granada Hills Charter has a nationally ranked Speech and Debate team, and consistently sends students to both the California High School Speech Association State Championships and National Speech and Debate Association Championship. Granada Hills was the 2008 CHSSA State Champion in Thematic interpretation.[25] In 2011 the school took 13th at the CHSSA State tournament in Original Prose and Poetry. Also in 2011, Granada Hills Charter won the Stanford Junior Varsity LD tournament[26] (Yellow River). In 2017, Granada Hills Charter won 1st place in Original Advocacy at the CHSSA State Tournament, taking 14th overall.[27] In 2024, Granada Hills won 1st place in Presiding Officer, 8th place in Humorous Interpretation, 9th & 11th Place in Congressional Debate, 13th in National Extemporaneous Speaking, and 14th place in Original Prose and Poetry at the CHSSA State tournament. GHC placed 13th in the Overall Sweepstakes.[28] At the 2024 NSDA National Tournament, the school had semifinalists in Congressional Debate in the House & Senate, and a double octafinalist in World Schools Debate. A student also won 12th speaker in World Schools Debate. [29]

Model United Nations

The nationally ranked[30] Model United Nations team at Granada Hills Charter has been recognized at various conferences across North America. During the 2017–2018 season, they won Best Small Delegation at Harvard Model UN (HMUN).[31] In 2019, GHC Model UN won the Award of Distinction at the National High School Model United Nations (NHSMUN).[32] GHCMUN notably hosts the Valley Regional Model United Nations (VRMUN), the first high-school Model UN conference in the San Fernando Valley.[33]

Robotics

The school's robotics team, The Robodox, participates in both the FIRST Robotics Competition (FRC) and in the VEX Robotics Competition (VRC). The team builds robots that compete in these competitions. Students are responsible for every step of construction, from designing and manufacturing to coding and CADing. The Robotics team also helps out the local community with its outreach programs, spreading the importance of STEM Education. In 2018, the Robodox won the VRC California State competition. In 2021 the FIRST robotics portion of the team competed in Tidal Tumble winning the competition with its two alliance members 4414 and 973[34][35] In addition, the team mastered the use of machines using them to create tons of parts this season leading to the team going undefeated for over 3 matches this season due to the revolutionary design choices.

Marching Band & Color Guard

In 2012, the Granada Hills Charter High School Marching Band was awarded a bronze medal at the 2012 SCSBOA Division 5A Field Show Championships.[36] In 2016, the Highlander Band participated in the 2016 Bands of America St. George Regional Championships in St. George, Utah and was awarded and recognized as a SCSBOA 4A Finalist that year.[37]

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Athletics

Baseball

Ryan Braun was a four-year letterman on the Granada Hills High School baseball team, and a three-year team captain and Most Valuable Player (MVP). In 2002, he batted .451 as a senior, with an OBP of .675, and broke the school record for career home runs with 25.[38]

Cross country

The girls' varsity cross country team won the City League Championship in 2021. The boys' cross country teams in all three divisions--10th grade, junior varsity, and varsity--won the city championship from 1963-1973.

Football

In 1970, Granada Hills High School won the L.A. City Football Championship with the five-receiver passing attack developed by Coach Jack Neumeier later known as the spread offense. A few years later, this innovation attracted the attention of John Elway's father, Jack Elway, after Jack Elway assumed the head football coaching position at California State University, Northridge, and the Elway family moved to Los Angeles.[39]

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Notable alumni

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References

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Further reading

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