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Amador Valley High School

Coordinates: 37°40′08″N 121°52′27″W / 37.6689°N 121.8743°W / 37.6689; -121.8743
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Amador Valley High School
File:AVlogo.png
Location
Map
1155 Santa Rita Road
Pleasanton, CA 94566

United States
Coordinates37°40′08″N 121°52′27″W / 37.6689°N 121.8743°W / 37.6689; -121.8743
Information
TypePublic high school
Established1923
School districtPleasanton Unified School District
SuperintendentJohn Casey
PrincipalBill Coupe
Faculty109.4 (on FTE basis)[2]
Grades9-12
Enrollment2,597 (as of 2007-08)[1]
Student to teacher ratio22.4[2]
Color(s)   Purple and Gold
MascotThe Don. This is a Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian term used as a mark of high esteem for a distinguished nobleman, similar to the British respect title "Lord." The man for whom Amador Valley was named was called Don Jose Maria Amador.[3]
Feeder schoolsHarvest Park Middle School, Pleasanton Middle School, Hart Middle School
Information925-461-6600
WebsiteSchool web site

Amador Valley High School (commonly Amador, Amador Valley, or AVHS) is a public high school located in Template:City-state, a suburban town east of San Francisco, California. Amador is a part of the Pleasanton Unified School District which also includes Foothill High School, Village High School, and Horizon High School. The school was founded and had its first class graduate in 1923. The school is a two-time National Blue Ribbon School,[4][5] a National School of Character,[6] and a three-time California Distinguished School.[7][8][9]

Currently enrolling around 2,500[1] students and located near Main Street, the school is close to Pleasanton downtown. It is bordered on the east and southeast by Santa Rita Road and the Altamont Commuter Express.[10] Because of the school's proximity to Main Street and downtown, the city of Pleasanton uses Amador Valley High School as the launch point for the annual Pleasanton Hometown Holidays Celebration parade.[11] A building on the Amador Valley campus, the Amador Theater, has been the city's central performing arts facility for over 60 years.[12]

Former President George W. Bush has asked to meet Amador Valley basketball player Kevin Laue.[13] Amador Valley's J8 team has also met former President George W. Bush while representing the United States at the G8 Summit of World Leaders.[14] In national competitions such as We the People: The Citizen and the Constitution, the Amador Valley We the People team has placed in the top four nationally for the past four consecutive years.[15] The Amador Valley Robotics Team is recognized for being the only high school team in the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International autonomous underwater vehicle competition.[16][17]

History

The Library and Media Center at the center of the Amador Valley campus. The facility includes a career center, instructional labs, and computer labs for students, and meeting rooms for faculty.

Named after the Amador Valley (part of the Tri-Valley area of the San Francisco East Bay), which in turn is named after Don Jose Maria Amador,[3] Amador Valley High School had its first class of eight students graduate in 1923. The school was part of the Amador Valley High School district founded in 1922. Originally this district would also include schools in the Dublin area.[10] By its first year, 1923, Amador Valley High School was already providing the area with municipal bands and sports teams.[18] From the school's inception to the late 1960s, Amador Valley was the only high school in the Amador-Livermore Valley Region.[19]

During the school's early years, most of the City of Pleasanton was a rural community.[20] After the addition of freeways due to the Federal Aid Highway Act of 1956, the resulting increase in population produced a concurrent increase in the number of students.[21][22]

Much of the original Amador Valley High School building was torn down in 1968 to accommodate for newer additions. In 1969, forty-seven years after the founding of the school, Amador Valley hit its maximum capacity level; as a result, Dublin High School was founded in order to alleviate the overflow of students. As more people came to the Pleasanton region, Foothill High School was formed in 1973.[23][19]

In 1978, the Amador Valley Joint High School District challenged the constitutionality of California Proposition 13 in Amador Valley Joint Union High School District v. State Board of Equalization but failed to overturn the cap on property tax. The judges distinguished "amendment" and "revision." The court confirmed that an initiative cannot revise the constitution; California Proposition 13 did not, however, revise the California Constitution but amended it.[24] Amador Valley was cited by dissenting Justice Carlos R. Moreno in arguing the non-constitutionality of California Proposition 8.[25]

In 1988, voters approved the unification of separate Pleasanton and Dublin school districts. As a result, the Pleasanton Unified School District was created, combining the Amador Valley Joint High School District and the Pleasanton Joint School District.[26]

Following the 1996-1997 school year, a renovation process was conducted to bring the school to the modernized conditions of today; new building structures were built, and the school grounds were refurbished. The school was able to revive one of the last original structures that date back to the original creation of the school: The Amador Theater. The theater serves as the city's leading performing arts facility.[12][19]

In 1999, the school district identified character education as one of its goals. Chosen by the community, six character traits (Responsibility, Compassion, Self-Discipline, Honesty, Respect, and Integrity) formed the "expected behaviors" for Pleasanton. In 2004, Amador Valley and the entire school district won national recognition (National School of Character) for its program emphasizing the Community of Character.[26]

In 2005, Amador Valley High School was the first high school to join the worldwide Go Green Initiative.[27]

Academics

President George W. Bush and Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda talk with United States J-8 representative Manogna Manne of Amador Valley High School at the 2008 G-8 Summit in Toyako, Japan.[28]

Amador Valley operates on a 7:00 a.m. to 3:09 p.m. schedule (8:48 a.m to 2:55 p.m. on the Wednesday collaboration schedule). This includes seven periods, a lunch, and a brunch. Students have the option of taking only six periods instead of seven.[29]

Students from Amador Valley have ranked highly in the Scripps National Spelling Bee,[30] the National Vocabulary Championship,[30] and the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair.[31][32] A student of Amador Valley has won the prestigious Presidential Scholar award.[33] In 2008, a team of Amador Valley students won the national UNICEF-sponsored "J8 Competition," to represent the United States. The team traveled to Japan to attend the G8 Summit of World Leaders to collaborate on solutions to world problems.[14]

Amador Valley High School campus with the Pleasanton Ridge in the background

Amador Valley curriculum covers 26 Advanced Placement exams. 47.6% of Amador Valley students, of grades 9-12, participate in Amador Valley's AP Program. The average participant takes 4.3 exams and 87.5% of participants pass.[34] The school offers the complete range of Advanced Placement courses in the STEM fields (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics), as well as Advanced Placement Language courses and their Literature complements in English, French, German, Japanese, and Spanish. Amador Valley also offers Advanced Placement courses in Social Sciences and Visual and Performing Arts. AP Music Theory is offered as an independent program, catering mostly to the students in Amador Valley's concert bands.

2008 performance results show Amador Valley with an Academic Performance Index (API) of 10 out of a ten-point scale.[35] Newsweek ranked Amador Valley High School 317th in its 2008 list of the 1300 Best High Schools in America.[36] As of the 2006-07 school year, the school had an enrollment of 2,552 students and 109.0 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student-teacher ratio of 23.4.[2]

Enrollment

In the 2008-2009 school year, Amador Valley High School had an enrollment of 2,515 students. The student population at Amador Valley is predominantly White, with a large Asian American minority and smaller Hispanic and Latino Americans and African American minorities.[37]

According to the California Department of Education, the school is 68.5% White, 19.9% Asian American (including 2.2% Filipino American), 6.9% Hispanic and Latino Americans, 2.3% African American, 0.9% American Indian or Alaskan Native, 0.2% Pacific Islander, and 1.4% Other.[37]

Extracurricular activities

Two Amador Valley students prepare the AUV for deployment at TRANSDEC during the 2008 competition.

Robotics Team

The Amador Valley Robotics Team, founded in 1999, is the only high school team to compete in the International Autonomous Underwater Vehicle Competition.[38] At the 2001 competition, Amador Valley placed second to MIT.[17]

Each year, the team must develop an autonomous underwater vehicle that is able to maneuver an underwater obstacle course. Amador Valley Robotics Club's AUV (autonomous underwater vehicle), Barracuda Mark VII, is made for the annual AUVSI International Autonomous Underwater Vehicle competition.[39]

According to the 2008 Amador Valley Robotics Club journal, "The vehicle is propelled by two laterally mounted SeaBotix thrusters controlling speed and heading and two auxiliary thrusters aligned vertically controlling pitch and depth. A pressure sensor, compass, camera, and hydrophone array provide navigation data to the computer: an OQO Model +01 running Windows XP, which provides autonomous control of the vehicle."[39]

In 2008, the team made several fundamental changes to the robot. The focus for the team was stability and flexibility. The control system has been reorganized, and the mission control software has been revamped to communicate more clearly and to limit overhead. This is meant to give improve reliability and responsiveness during operation and troubleshooting.[39]

The team has also added a low-level microcontroller-based control system to free up system resources on the main computer. This extra processing capability is now used for mission control and image processing tasks. This both improves the responsiveness of the controls and the agility of the Barracuda.[39]

The Amadon

Amador Valley's student newspaper is entitled The Amadon. Individuals writing for the paper are students of the Journalism class.[40] The Amadon is generally published once a month. The paper has won individual awards from programs such as the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards,[41] and articles on the online edition of the Amadon have been featured by My High School Journalism's national edition.[42]

Athletics

Athletics have been provided at Amador Valley since its inception in 1923.[18] As of 2009, the school offers 12 Varsity sports teams for boys and 11 Varsity sports teams for girls. Additional sports run by the Amador Valley Athletics Boosters include golf and cross country.[43] Amador Valley competes under the East Bay Athletic League and has won four East Bay Athletics League Championships. [44][45]

The Amador Valley boys' water polo team was founded in 2002. After leadership of a new varsity coach and guidance from former UCSB water polo captain Neal Sorensen, the boy's water polo team was able to advance to North Coast Section for the first time, finishing 12th out of 153 qualifying schools. This led to a first round bye in their next round, the 2008 North Coast Section/Les Schwab Tires Boys' Water Polo Championship.[46]

The Amador Valley Marching Band and Color Guard performs its show titled "Heroes, Gods, and Mythical Creatures" at the 2008 WBA Championships at Diablo Valley College.

Band and Color Guard

Amador Valley's band program consists of four different concert bands: Wind Ensemble I, Wind Ensemble II, Wind Symphony, and Symphonic Band.[47] At the annual California Music Educators Association Band Festivals, all four of Amador Valley's concert bands (Wind Ensemble I, Wind Ensemble II, Wind Symphony, and Symphonic Band) consistently earn "Unanimous Superior" ratings.[48]

The marching band competes in the Western Band Association (WBA) circuit. The band focuses on a competitive field show, performed at football halftime shows and competitions. The Marching Dons are classified into WBA Class AAAAA.[49] The Amador Valley Marching Dons have received sweepstakes and first place awards and, in 2008, earned sixth place at WBA Championships with a score of 90.33.[50][51]

In 2006 the marching band competed in the Bands of America Regional Competition for the first time, and placed 4th in the 2007 Bands of America Regional Competition. In 2005 and 2009, Amador Valley was invited to perform at the annual London New Year's Day Parade based on the overall reputation of the program.[52]

The marching band staff includes several members of the Blue Devils, as well as RCC, Sacramento Freelancers, and the Santa Clara Vanguard.[53]

Math Team

Pleasanton Math League placed as the 4th Bay Area math team (6th overall) at the 2009 Stanford Math Tournament out of 42 teams. Forty-two students, most from Amador Valley represented the Pleasanton Math League.[54]

Amador Valley's Math Team has placed 5th nationally on the 2008 Collaborative Problem-Solving Contest[55] and placed in the top 20 nationwide for the 2005,[56] 2006,[57] 2007,[58] 2008[59] Fall Startup Events. Both of these contests are hosted by National Assessment & Testing.

In addition to on-campus math competitions, Amador Valley's Math Team also competes in local competitions. At the 2009 Northern California Championships on April 25, 2009, the Math Team placed 2nd in Northern California, behind Lynbrook High School and ahead of Cupertino High School, thus receiving an invitation to mathleague.org's championship. Amador Valley High School is the first ever school to represent California at MathLeague.org's multi-state championship in Kansas City. The team finished 5th in the multi-state championship among many Midwestern teams.[60]

The Math Team combines teams with neighboring schools from Pleasanton, San Ramon, and Danville to compete as the Pleasanton Math League[61] at events such as the 2009 Stanford Math Tournament and the Stanford High School Puzzle Hunt. The Pleasanton Math League filled five Stanford Math Tournament teams and part of a sixth.[54]

The Math Team also hosts the Amador Valley Geometry Bee which is modeled after the Scripps National Spelling Bee. This competition invites students from Amador Valley, Foothill High School, and the district's three middle schools to compete in timed rounds. The bee covers a wide variety of Geometry questions, including asking the competitors to identify the developer of the coordinate system, and "What is the maximum number of closed regions formed by seven lines on a plane?"[62]

In 2009, the style of the Bee was changed to rounds of 10 questions each, as the traditional spelling bee format did not seem to fit the needs of the competition. The same year, a middle school student won the Geometry Bee.[62]

Students of Amador Valley We the People team testify in a simulated congressional hearing.

Speech and Debate

Amador Valley's main Speech and Debate teams place a heavy emphasis on law.

Notable alumni

Amador Valley alumnus Aliya Deri is presented with a $40,000 scholarship after winning the 2008 National Vocabulary Championship.

References

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External links

37°40′08″N 121°52′27″W / 37.6689°N 121.8743°W / 37.6689; -121.8743{{#coordinates:}}: cannot have more than one primary tag per page