San Francisco Unified School District
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The San Francisco Unified School District is a public school district in San Francisco, California. It is managed by the San Francisco Board of Education.
The district was California's first public school district when it was established in 1851.[1][2] It currently serves over 56,000 students in more than 160 institutions.[3] It is the only public school district within the City and County of San Francisco.
The San Francisco Unified School District utilizes an intra-district school choice system and requires students and parents to submit a selection application. Calfee School Guide was the first curricula-based non-profit program in the country to work with public middle school students to help them select and apply to public, magnet and public-charter high schools.
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Comprehensive schools
- Abraham Lincoln High School
- Balboa High School
- Galileo Academy of Science and Technology
- George Washington High School
- Mission High School
Alternative schools
- Downtown High School [4]
- Hilltop High School
- Ida B. Wells High School
- Independence High School (Charter)
- Metropolitan Arts and Tech High School
- International Studies Academy [5]
- June Jordan School for Equity (Small School)
- Leadership High School (Charter School)
- Lowell High School (Academic)
- Newcomer High School
- John O'Connell High School of Technology [6]
- Phillip & Sala Burton High School
- Raoul Wallenberg Traditional High School
- School of the Arts (SOTA) (Visual and Performing Arts)
- Thurgood Marshall Academic High School [7]
Traditional schools
- A.P. Giannini Middle School [8]
- Aptos Middle School[9]
- Everett Middle School [10]
- Francisco Middle School [11]
- Herbert Hoover Middle School [12]
- James Denman Middle School [13]
- James Lick Middle School [14]
- Marina Middle School [15]
- Presidio Middle School [16]
- Roosevelt Middle School [17]
- Visitacion Valley Middle School [18]
Alternative schools
- Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Academic Middle School [19]
- Gloria R. Davis College Preparatory Academy [20]
- Horace Mann Middle School [21]
- Creative Arts Charter K-8
- Lawton Alternative K-8
- Bessie Carmichael K-8
- Claire Lilienthal Alternative K-8
- Madison Campus (Grades K-2) 3950 Sacramento Street
- Winfield Scott Campus (Grades 3-8) 3630 Divisadero Street
- Madison Campus (Grades K-2) 3950 Sacramento Street
- Rooftop Alternative Elementary K-8
- Burnett Campus (Grades K-4) 443 Burnett Avenue
- Mayeda Campus (Grade 5-8) 500 Corbett Avenue
- Burnett Campus (Grades K-4) 443 Burnett Avenue
- Paul Revere K-8
- San Francisco Community K-8
- Alice Fong Yu Alternative K-8, (formerly Christopher Columbus Elementary)
- Alamo Elementary
- Alvarado Elementary
- Argonne Alternative Elementary School
- Willie L. Brown Jr. Academy College Preparatory School, 4-6 (formerly Twenty-First Century K-8)
- Bryant Elementary School
- Buena Vista Alternative Elementary School
- Dr. George Washington Carver Elementary
- César Chávez Elementary School (formerly Hawthorne Elementary)
- John Yehall Chin Elementary
- Clarendon Alternative Elementary
- JBBP at Clarendon
- Cleveland Elementary
- Dr. William L. Cobb Elementary (formerly Emerson Elementary)
- Dr. Charles R. Drew Alternative Elementary
- El Dorado Elementary School
- Fairmount Elementary School
- Dianne Feinstein Elementary School (formerly Parkside Elementary)
- Leonard R. Flynn Elementary (formerly Le Conte Elementary)
- Garfield Elementary
- Glen Park Elementary
- Grattan Elementary
- Guadalupe Elementary
- Bret Harte Elementary
- Hillcrest Elementary
- Jefferson Elementary
- Francis Scott Key Elementary
- Thomas Starr King Elementary
- Lafayette Elementary
- Lakeshore Alternative Elementary
- Gordon J. Lau Elementary (formerly Commodore Stockton Elementary)
- Longfellow Elementary
- Frank McCoppin Elementary
- McKinley Elementary
- Malcolm X Academy (formerly Sir Francis Drake Elementary)
- Marshall Elementary
- Harvey Milk Civil Rights Academy, dedicated and renamed June 25, 1996 (formerly Douglass School)
- Miraloma Elementary
- Monroe Elementary
- George R. Moscone Elementary
- John Muir Elementary
- New Traditions Alternative Elementary (located in the old Andrew Jackson Elementary)
- Jose Ortega Elementary
- Jean Parker Elementary
- Rosa Parks Elementary (formerly Raphael Weill Elementary, reconstituted and renamed in 1995)
- JBBP West at Rosa Parks
- George Peabody Elementary
- Redding Elementary
- Sanchez Elementary
- Junipero Serra Elementary
- Sheridan Elementary
- Sherman Elementary School
- Commodore Sloat Elementary School
- Spring Valley Elementary
- Robert Louis Stevenson Elementary School
- Sunnyside Elementary
- Sunset Elementary School (formerly Mark Twain Elementary)
- Sutro Elementary
- Edward Robeson "E.R." Taylor Elementary
- Tenderloin Community School
- Ulloa Elementary School
- Visitacion Valley Elementary
- Daniel Webster Elementary
- West Portal Elementary
- Yick Wo Alternative Elementary School (formerly Sarah B. Cooper Elementary)
- J. Eugene McAteer High School (1973-2002) was located at 555 Portola Drive.
- Polytechnic High School (1895-1972) [22] was located on Frederick Street across from Kezar Stadium.
- Urban Pioneer Experiential Academy (2002-2004) [23]
- Aim High Academy, 2003-2006 (relocated to Luther Burbank MS site and renamed as Small Middle School for Equity at the end of the 2005-2006 academic year)
- Luther Burbank Middle School (closed at the end of the 2005-2006 academic year)
- Benjamin Franklin Middle School (closed at the end of the 2004-2005 academic year) was located at 1430 Scott Street and renamed in the fall of 2006 as the Burl L. Toler Campus and is now a part of Gateway High and KIPP SF Bay Academy.
- Enola Maxwell Middle School (closed at the end of the 2005-2006 academic year)(formerly Potrero Middle School)
- Treasure Island School (closed mid-term, December 16, 2005)
- Twenty-First Century K-8 (became Willie L. Brown College Preparatory 2004-2005)
- Cabrillo Elementary School (closed at the end of the 2005-2006 academic year) was located at 735 24th Avenue in the Outer Richmond District.
- Farragut School (closed in the early 1970s) was located on Holloway between Capitol and Faxon in the Ingelside District. Currently there are townhouses located there.
- Golden Gate Elementary (closed at the end of the 2004-2005 academic year) was located at 1601 Turk Street between Steiner and Divisadero.
- John Swett Alternative Elementary (merged with John Muir after 2005-2006 academic year) was located at 727 Golden Gate Avenue, between Franklin and Gough.
- JBBP West (Japanese Bilingual Bicultural Program in the Sunset) was located at 3045 Santiago Street at 42nd Avenue for 3 years. The program moved to Rosa Parks Elementary at 1501 O'Farrell Street after the 2005-2006 academic year.
- San Miguel Elementary (closed in the 1980s) was located at 300 Seneca Avenue in the Excelsior District.
- William R. DeAvila Elementary (formerly Dudley Stone) (closed at the end of the 2003-2004 academic year) was located at 1351 Haight Street, between Masonic and Central in the Upper Haight.
- San Francisco Unified School District
- United Educators of San Francisco represents close to six thousand paraprofessionals and teachers in SFUSD
- Parents for Public Schools - SF
- San Francisco Schools blog
- San Francisco History Center - history and records of the SFUSD 1854-2003