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Lake Elsinore Unified School District

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Lake Elsinore Unified School District
Location
United States
District information
TypePublic
Motto"A Culture of Learning and Success!"
GradesKindergarten – Grade 12
SuperintendentDr. Doug Kimberly
Students and staff
Students22,078[1][2]
Teachers1,203[1]
Staff1,024[1]
Other information
Websitehttp://www.leusd.k12.ca.us/

Lake Elsinore Unified School District was formed on July 1, 1989, when the Elsinore Union High School District merged with the Lake Elsinore School District (elementary).[3] The Lake Elsinore Unified School District is a public school district located in Lake Elsinore, California, USA. It encompasses 131.78 square miles.[4] The Lake Elsinore Unififed School District is the 8th (out of 24) largest school district (in student population) in Riverside County.[5]

District profile

With roots going back to two schools built in 1884, Lake Elsinore's school system is one of Riverside County’s oldest.[6] The district now includes thirteen elementary schools, two K-8 schools, five middle schools, three comprehensive high schools and five alternative education schools.

Lake Elsinore Unified has recently seen a sharp increase in enrollment due to the fast growth of residential development. To match that growth, the district opened four new schools between 2005 through 2007: Lakeside High School (2005), Lakeland Village Middle School (2005), Ronald Reagan Elementary School (2006) and Earl Warren Elementary School (2007).

Jean Hayman Elementary was closed at the end of the 2008 school year due to budget cuts. Built in 1984, Hayman was the district's fifth-oldest elementary school.[7] Seismic findings will keep the school from reopening. In February, 2010 the school board voted to close Butterfield Elementary School, the district's fourth oldest and fifth largest of 15 elementary schools, at the end of the 2009/2010 school year in order to save approximately $500,000.[8][9] $1,500,000[10] will be spent to remodel the local middle school, Lakeland Village Middle School, to accommodate the students from Butterfield, remaking the school into a K-8 facility. Another elementary campus, Luiseño Elementary, was also be converted into a K-8 school (adding a year at a time) at the cost of $12.5 million.[11][12][13] This eventually grew to a total cost of $13,657,928.[14]

While dealing with the rapid growth, it is also making strong gains when it comes to academic achievement. In August 2008, scores released by the California Department of Education showed that Lake Elsinore Unified was the highest improving school district out of 23 districts in Riverside County. The district’s third-place showing (county-wide) in 2008 was a marked improvement from 11th place four years before. LEUSD had the fifth highest gain of all K-12 Districts in the State of California in 2008.

Three of Lake Elsinore's middle schools were in the top 15 middle schools in the California for API growth. They are: Lakeland Village Middle School (#1 middle school growth in California), Terra Cotta Middle School (#7 middle school growth in California), and Elsinore Middle School (#13 middle school growth in California). Four of Lake Elsinore's schools were among the top 50 schools in Riverside County for overall API score in 2008. They are: Tuscany Hills Elementary (#10), Withrow Elementary and Rice Canyon Elementary (tied at #32), and Luiseno Elementary (#38). Eight of the top 20 schools with the greatest API growth in Riverside County are from LEUSD. They are: Lakeland Village Middle (#2), Ortega High (#5), Machado Elementary (#6), Elsinore Elementary (#7), Butterfield Elementary (#11), Terra Cotta Middle (#13), Elsinore Middle (#18), and Jean Hayman Elementary (#19). Two of Lake Elsinore's schools were in the top 10 for API growth for comprehensive high schools in Riverside County. They are: Temescal Canyon High (#2),and Elsinore High (#6).

The district is beginning to receive recognition as one of Riverside County’s best and so too are some of its schools. In April 2007 only two high schools in Riverside County were given the prestigious California Distinguished School designation by state education officials: Elsinore and Temescal Canyon high schools, both Lake Elsinore Unified schools. They joined Luiseno Elementary School, which received the honor when elementary schools were chosen in 2006,[15] and Tuscany Hills Elementary School which was named a California Distinguished School in 2008, making it the fourth district school to receive this designation.[1] Lakeland Village and Terra Cotta Middle Schools are now officially named California Distinguished Schools for 2009 and will be recognized by the California Department of Education during the month of May.[16] With an API gain of 111 points, Lakeland Village Middle School was the highest-improving middle school in the state. With its 70-point gain, Terra Cotta was the seventh highest-improving middle school in the state.

Late in 2009 the district decided to experiment with a K-8 format for two of its schools. Administrators decided to close the distinguished Butterfield Elementary School at the end of the 2009-2010 school year and move its entire student (700 students) and teacher population to the nearby (3 miles south) Lakeland Village Middle School.[17] Half of the existing Lakeland Village Middle School students and teachers would be moved to other schools to make space for the incoming elementary students. $1.5 million[10][18] would be spent on the four-year-old Lakeland Village Middle School campus to adapt it for use by the kindergarten through fifth graders that would be added. 400 middle school students (Grades 6 - 8) would remain at the campus. This campus was renamed Lakeland Village School.[19] The Butterfield heritage was kept by renaming the theatre/MPR as the Butterfield Performing Arts Center. A new principal was named to head the combined campus.[20] As a finale, in its closing year the Butterfield Elementary API tests scores increased to 853, a growth of 76 points,[21] the second largest elementary increase in all of Riverside and San Bernardino counties.

At the same time a different approach was being tried at the former Luiseño Elementary School located in the Horsethief Canyon community. At this campus only sixth graders would be added for the first year (current fifth graders), followed by seventh and eighth grades the following two years. This facility was renamed Luiseño School. $12.5 million[13] would be spent to adapt it for use by the sixth through eighth graders that would be added.[22] This "growth" model would keep a continuity of students from the previous elementary grades, and not introduce younger students to an older population of existing middle school students as was implemented at Lakeland Village School.

On February 13, 2014 the district voted to hire architectural and construction firms[23] for 3 new (or rebuilt) campuses. Plans were to partially reopen the closed Butterfield Elementary with a rebuilt campus by Fall of 2015 (expanding to 6th grade by 2016) After investigation by the planning and architectural firms, it was decided that reconstruction costs of the Butterfield campus would be too high to deal with possible seismic refits and the plan to reopen that school has been cancelled. Plans continue to build new elementary campuses on district-owned land in the Summerly Housing tract near the Lake Elsinore Diamond, and to build a new elementary school on district-owned land near Wasson Canyon Road.

During the 2013/14 school year planning groups and boundary committees began working on a plans to move most 6th grade students back onto elementary campuses in many areas of the community by the Fall of 2016. This will reverse district actions taken in 1995/96 to move 6th grade students from elementary campuses to create middle school campuses. However, it is expected than several middle schools will retain their 6th grade students in areas that are highly impacted by large in enrollments in elementary schools.

Elementary class sizes

In July 1, 1989 the Elsinore Union High School District merged with the Lake Elsinore School District (elementary) to form the Lake Elsinore Unified School District.[24]

In 1995/96, all Grade 6 classes were moved from district elementary schools to create Grades 6 through 8 middle schools. In 1996/97 the district implemented California's Class Size Reduction (CSR) program by placing only 20 students in Grade 1, then added Grade 2 to the program in 1997/98, and Kindergarten and Grade 3 (Primary Grades) in 1998/99. In 2011/12 the district began increasing class sizes in grades K – 3 in response to lower state funding. The new upper limit was 24 in most classes.

Starting in 2012/13 school year the district starting using a new standard of having an "average" of 24 students in primary classrooms. The goal was to have an average of students "over the year" of no more than 24 students. The district expanded on this in 2013/14 by having no more than an average of 24 students in all elementary classes across the district, but not limited to an individual classroom or even school. As of 2014 there are numerous primary classrooms across the district with classes of up to 29 per class.

For 11 years, 1991/92 through 2001/02, most district schools were on a single-track, Year-round school schedule with classes held year round except for August, December and April. Some district schools had multiple-track, year-round schedules. In 2002/03 the district moved back to a traditional school calendar schedule with all schools starting in August and finishing in June.

Student ethnicity

The Lake Elsinore Unified School District's ethnicity, and comparison to State Averages, is as follows:

Response District Percentage[25] State Average [26]
Hispanic: 50% 48%
White: 38% 29%
African American: 5% 8%
Asian: 2% 8%
Filipino: 2% 3%
Multiple/no response: 2% 3%
Pacific Islander: <1% <1%
American Indian: <1% <1%

Superintendents over the years

The historical record is as follows:

Dates Superintendents Length of tenure
1989 to 1992 Dr. Larry Maw 3 years
1992 to 1999[27] Dr. David Long 7 years
1999 to 2005[28] Dr. Sharron Lindsay 7 years
1/2006 to 7/2012[29] Dr. Frank Passarella 6.5 years
7/2012 to present[30] Dr. Doug Kimberly in 2nd year

Schools

Elementary

  • Cottonwood Canyon Elementary School
  • Donald Graham Elementary School
  • Earl Warren Elementary School
  • Elsinore Elementary School
  • Machado Elementary School
  • Railroad Canyon Elementary School
  • Rice Canyon Elementary School
  • Ronald Reagan Elementary School
  • Tuscany Hills Elementary School
  • Wildomar Elementary School
  • William Collier Elementary School
  • Withrow Elementary School

K-8 Schools

The Lake Elsinore Unified School District converted two schools to K-8 (kindergarten through 8th grade schools) starting in the Fall of 2010.

  • Luiseno School (was Luiseño Elementary School until it became a K-6 school in the Fall of 2010. It grew into a K-8 over the next two years to become, in 2012, a K-8 school.)
  • Lakeland Village School(was Lakeland Village Middle School until it becomes a K-8 school with the addition of the K-5 students from the closing Butterfield Elementary School beginning in the Fall of 2010.)

Middle

High

Alternative

  • Gordon Kiefer Independent Study School
  • Keith McCarthy Academy
  • Ortega High School
  • Tri-Valley Community Day School
  • Valley Adult School

Charter schools

  • Sycamore Academy of Science and Cultural Arts
  • Southern California Online Academy

Closed Schools[31]

New school plans[23]

  • Butterfield Elementary School (plans to rebuild campus and partially reopen with primary grades by Fall of 2015, and further to 6th grades by Fall 2016)After investigation by the planning and architectural firms, it was decided that reconstruction costs would be too high to deal with possible seismic refits and the plan to reopen the school has been cancelled.
  • Rosetta Canyon Elementary
  • Summerly Elementary

References

  1. ^ a b c d LEUSD School Matters, Summer 2008, Vol 1, No. 2
  2. ^ http://www.ed-data.k12.ca.us/navigation/fsTwoPanel.asp?bottom=%2Fprofile.asp%3FLevel%3D06%26amp%3BCounty%3D33%26amp%3Bdistrict%3D67041%26amp%3Bschool%3D0000000%26amp%3Breportnumber%3D16%26amp%3Btab%3D0
  3. ^ North County Times/The Californian - John Hunneman's Knee Deep in the Hoopla column
  4. ^ Lake Elsinore Unified School District, CA - Lake Elsinore Unified County Schools in California / CA
  5. ^ 2007 Report to the Community, Riverside County Office of Education
  6. ^ Hudson, Tom. Lake Elsinore Valley, its story 1776-1977 pp. 27, 164. Published for Lake Elsinore Valley Bicentennial Commission by Laguna House (1978) ISBN 0-931700-01-9
  7. ^ Lake Elsinore school board votes to close Hayman Elementary | Southwest Area | PE.com | Southern California News | News for Inland Southern California
  8. ^ http://www.pe.com/localnews/lakeelsinore/stories/PE_News_Local_S_close10.46aec54.html
  9. ^ https://leusd.csbaagendaonline.net/cgi-bin/WebObjects/leusd-eAgenda.woa/files/MTI2ODY4MzE2Nzc0OC9sZXVzZGVBZ2VuZGEvMTUxLzEyNDkvRmlsZXM=/ada_1.29.10.pdf
  10. ^ a b http://leusd.csbaagendaonline.net/cgi-bin/WebObjects/leusd-eAgenda.woa/wo/4.0.7.1.3.0.0.7.2.0.40.14.0.19.3.22.3.2.13.1.1.0.0.3.1
  11. ^ http://leusd.csbaagendaonline.net/cgi-bin/WebObjects/leusd-eAgenda.woa/wo/2.0.7.1.3.0.0.7.2.0.40.12.0.19.3.0.3.2.13.1.1.0.0.3.1
  12. ^ http://leusd.csbaagendaonline.net/cgi-bin/WebObjects/leusd-eAgenda.woa/wo/43.0.7.1.3.0.0.7.3.1.9
  13. ^ a b http://www.pe.com/localnews/stories/PE_News_Local_D_sluiseno16.3b47f7b.html
  14. ^ http://leusd.csbaagendaonline.net/cgi-bin/WebObjects/leusd-eAgenda.woa/wo/35.0.7.1.3.0.0.7.2.0.40.18.0.19.3.10.3.1.13.1.1.0.0.3.1
  15. ^ Lake Elsinore Unified School District
  16. ^ http://www.pe.com/localnews/k12/stories/PE_News_Local_E_schools03.461b570.html
  17. ^ http://www.pe.com/localnews/lakeelsinore/stories/PE_News_Local_W_sb13_leusd.37c95cb.html
  18. ^ http://leusd.csbaagendaonline.net/cgi-bin/WebObjects/leusd-eAgenda.woa/wo/59.0.7.1.3.0.0.7.3.1.9
  19. ^ http://leusd.csbaagendaonline.net/cgi-bin/WebObjects/leusd-eAgenda.woa/wo/40.0.7.1.3.0.0.7.3.1.9
  20. ^ http://www.nctimes.com/news/local/lake-elsinore/article_5b847628-d057-5858-ae4f-2d46c8af16ba.html
  21. ^ http://www.greatschools.org/modperl/achievement/ca/4347#from..HeaderLink
  22. ^ http://leusd.csbaagendaonline.net/cgi-bin/WebObjects/leusd-eAgenda.woa/wo/19.0.7.1.3.0.0.7.3.1.9
  23. ^ a b http://leusd.csbaagendaonline.net/cgi-bin/WebObjects/leusd-eAgenda.woa/wo/2.0.7.1.3.0.0.7.2.0.40.13.0.19.3.20.3.1.13.1.1.0.0.3.1
  24. ^ That Saturday column : North County Times - Californian
  25. ^ LEUSD School Matters, Summer 2008, Vol 1, No. 2]
  26. ^ Lake Elsinore Unified School District schools - district elementary, middle, and high school information
  27. ^ http://gov.ca.gov/index.php?/press-release/5753/
  28. ^ http://thefridayflyer.com/FF-2005-9-23/FFS-2874.htm
  29. ^ http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2005/12/14/news/californian/0_26_4512_14_05.txt
  30. ^ http://www.pe.com/local-news/riverside-county/lake-elsinore/lake-elsinore-headlines-index/20120607-lake-elsinore-douglas-kimberly-selected-as-new-superintendent.ece
  31. ^ http://www.nctimes.com/news/local/lake-elsinore/article_c834a254-e3b6-5972-baca-179ab55fc929.html
  32. ^ http://www.nctimes.com/news/local/lake-elsinore/article_a7690bfe-f320-53e5-bb7a-110074d63f86.html
  33. ^ http://www.pe.com/localnews/rivcounty/stories/PE_News_Local_N_hayman17.45b0dc7.html