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Talk:Palm Springs Unified School District

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Desert Hot Springs

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In the 1980s, Desert Hot Springs Elementary school became a K-8 school by including middle school classes until Desert Springs Middle school opened in 1988. Before 1980, middle school students from Desert Hot Springs went to Raymond Cree in Palm Springs. Before Nellie Coffman's relocation in 1975, Rancho Mirage and Cathedral City middle school students had to go to Nellie Coffman in Palm Springs. And Katherine Finchey was a part-elementary/middle school in the 1980s for mostly Palm Springs students. I find interesting before 1991 when Cathedral city high opened, Palm Springs High School's service area covered 60 square miles to include Desert Hot Springs until their high school opened in 1998. And before 1938, Palm Springs high school students went to Banning, while Indio students went to Coachella Valley high school before Indio high opened in 1958. The first public school in DHS in the 1930s-closed in 1960s is now the private (Christian) Desert Adventist Academy. 2605:E000:FDCA:4200:24F3:157C:31F4:1568 (talk) 03:52, 22 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Pre-1950s schools

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There were 8 local "colored" schools or public schools assigned for non-white students until racial integration of public schools took place in most of CA by 1950. 5 of them in Palm Springs: Agua Caliente (first one), El Camino, Harry Oliver, Mount San Jacinto and Palm Valley (grades K-8) all in the Section 14 (Agua Caliente Indian Reservation) where Blacks/African-Americans, Latinos/Mexican-Americans, Filipinos/Asian-Americans and Cahuilla/Native Americans lived at the time-they were closed by 1950. In Indio, there was the William McKinley, Howard Taft, Warren Harding and Calvin Coolidge (then Indio "Colored" grades K-8) schools-also were closed by 1950. And the tendency for Hispanics to be majorities in Coachella (Palm View and Peter Pendleton-grades K-8) down to the Salton Sea, therefore no segregation in (Riverside) county-run schools. 67.49.89.214 (talk) 03:34, 3 March 2017 (UTC)[reply]