Jump to content

El Camino High School (Oceanside, California)

Coordinates: 33°13′7.1″N 117°19′2.3″W / 33.218639°N 117.317306°W / 33.218639; -117.317306
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Tecmo (talk | contribs) at 20:31, 12 March 2016 (Added notable alumni section). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

El Camino High School
Address
Map
400 Rancho Del Oro Drive Oceanisde, CA


United States
Information
TypePublic
Established1975
School districtOceanside Unified School District
PrincipalAlexander Bennett [1]
Faculty144
Number of students3,000+
Color(s)   
Brown and Gold
AthleticsCIF San Diego Section, Avocado West League
MascotWildcat
RivalOceanside High School
Newspaperthe sun
Websitehttp://echs-ousd-ca.schoolloop.com/

El Camino High School is one of two high schools of the Oceanside Unified School District, located at 400 Rancho Del Oro Drive in Oceanside, California. Declared a California Distinguished School in the early 2000s, it was originally named "Oceanside High School East", and officially became El Camino High School in 1976. El Camino's Truax Theatre was built in the early 1980s and houses a large performance venue, an adjacent classroom with stage and large music and drama rooms. It also recently built a new Science and Technology Building and is undergoing constant construction to clean up the campus. El Camino maintains a close athletic rivalry with Oceanside High School. The ECHS mascot is the "Wildcat" and the school colors are brown and gold.

Notable alumni

Media attention

The school drew national media attention in June 2008 for staging a controversial fake car accident, telling students their classmates had died as part of an anti-drunk driving program called "Every 15 Minutes--Extreme".[2] The hoax was orchestrated by counselor Lori Tauber. "I would rather see a couple people (disturbed), versus see a couple people dead," offers Tauber.[3] However, the tactics have been criticized in the media, and by students, one of whom remarked, "You feel betrayed by your teachers and administrators, these people you trust,". At school assemblies, some students held up posters that read: "Death is real. Don't play with our emotions."[4] The Chronicle Herald said "While their objective was laudable, school officials deliberately lied and, far worse, did so in an elaborate hoax. In trying to instill one important message, school officials undermined their credibility and weakened their authority by such an unconscionable stunt."[5] while The Daily News Record said "Each day, driving under the influence kills a young American full of life and hope for the future. Plenty of frightening tragedy is in that truth. Manufacturing such trauma was stupid, insensitive and possibly dangerous, and we can only hope that a similar ill-conceived idea does not surface here."[6]

References

  1. ^ http://echs-ousd-ca.schoolloop.com/cms/page_view?d=x&piid=&vpid=1240065089008
  2. ^ Baram, Marcus (2008-06-06). "Scared Straight or Scared Stiff: Do Alcohol Awareness Programs Sometimes Go Too Far?". Abcnews.go.com. Retrieved 2011-05-22.
  3. ^ Video clip of ABC interview[dead link]
  4. ^ The Associated Pres: Teachers defend shock tactics in DWI program Archived 2008-06-17 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Nova Scotia News - TheChronicleHerald.ca[dead link]
  6. ^ "A School Fakes Death - Bad Idea Doesn't Help A Bad Problem". Dailynews-record.com. 2008-06-14. Retrieved 2011-05-22.

33°13′7.1″N 117°19′2.3″W / 33.218639°N 117.317306°W / 33.218639; -117.317306