Herbert Hoover High School (San Diego, California)
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Herbert Hoover High School is a comprehensive, public
secondary school A secondary school, high school, or senior school, is an institution that provides secondary education. Some secondary schools provide both ''lower secondary education'' (ages 11 to 14) and ''upper secondary education'' (ages 14 to 18), i.e., b ...
in the City Heights neighborhood of
San Diego San Diego ( , ) is a city on the Pacific coast of Southern California, adjacent to the Mexico–United States border. With a population of over 1.4 million, it is the List of United States cities by population, eighth-most populous city in t ...
, California, United States.Burks, Megan.
San Diego Campus Builds On School Discipline Reform With Wellness Center
" '' KPBS''. Friday August 21, 2015. Retrieved on May 18, 2016.
It is part of San Diego Unified School District. It is one of the oldest schools in San Diego.Bell, Diane.
Historic chunk of Hoover High reappears

Archive
. '' San Diego Union-Tribune''. July 27, 2015. Retrieved on January 18, 2016.


History

The school was established in 1930 and named in honor of then U.S. President
Herbert Hoover Herbert Clark Hoover (August 10, 1874 – October 20, 1964) was the 31st president of the United States, serving from 1929 to 1933. A wealthy mining engineer before his presidency, Hoover led the wartime Commission for Relief in Belgium and ...
. The first principal was Floyd Johnson. It originally opened as a beige stucco building with a red-tile roof and unreinforced concrete, giving it a Spanish-style appearance. As part of a tradition related to signing their yearbooks, 12th grade (senior) students climbed a tower that became a signature defining aspect of the campus. In 1954 '' California Concerts'' (also referred to as Jazz Goes to High School) was a live album by saxophonist and bandleader Gerry Mulligan featuring performances recorded at Stockton High School and Hoover High. The school underwent renovations in the early 1970s. The tower and other architectural features were erased by the renovation. As of 2004, Douglas Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Douglas Williams, the authors of ''Five Years Later'', stated that before 1998, Hoover had been known as the "ghetto school" of San Diego USD, and that schools with higher academic performances poached the best students from Hoover.Douglas, Frey, and Williams, p
147
Adam Berman,Douglas, Frey, and Williams, p
160
who previously taught at Hoover,Douglas, Frey, and Williams, p
159
wrote that in 1988 Hoover had low teacher morale, acts of violence, and a high dropout rate in addition to poor academic performance. The school joined the City Heights Educational Initiative, along with two other high schools and San Diego State University, in 1998 as part of an effort to improve.Douglas, Frey, and Williams, p
148
In 2000 the school met its California state accountability target. This was the first time it had done so in 15 years. Circa 2000 Berman, by then a California Department of Education employee, wrote an independent review of the changes made at Hoover. The review, titled "A focus on literacy: Hoover High School in San Diego," was published in the ''California High School Newsletter''. Around 2015 the school was scheduled to receive a renovation of the administrative area and main entrance, and parents and community members lobbied for a restoration of the tower and other historic architectural features as part of this renovation. Burt Nestor, a member of the Hoover class of 1946, gave the school a chunk of an ornamental archway from the original building. His son gave it to him as a gift around 1973, as the renovation had destroyed portions of the original campus. The piece is to be either used in the 2015 renovation, or displayed separately. In 2015 Michael Shefcik, the supervisor of plant operations at Hoover, discovered that a sculpture in the library was actually a 1940 Works Progress Administration (WPA) statue, titled ''Girl Reading'' and created by Donal Hord, depicting a girl reading a book.


Student body

As of 2016 the school had over 2,100 students. The school consists of 73% Hispanic, 10% African American, 10% Indochinese, with Asian at 1.8% and white at 1%. Hoover is a Title 1 school. That status is determined by the number of students who receive free or reduced lunch. 90% of Hoover students qualify for meal eligibility. The City Heights neighborhood, in the school's attendance area, houses many immigrant families and low income families.


Programs

As of 2015 Hoover High is establishing a wellness center which will offer counseling services as well as some medical services.


Student discipline

In 2013 the school enacted a program in which teachers learn to recognize signs of trauma in students. Suspensions from school were reduced by 80%.


Academic performance

In 1999 the school had a 444/1000
Academic Performance Index The Academic Performance Index (API) was a measurement of academic performance and progress of individual schools in California, United States. The API was one of the main components of the Public Schools Accountability Act passed by the California ...
(API), the lowest score in San Diego County. It had a statewide rank of the lowest 10% (first decile), and the lowest 20% of schools with similar demographics. The Gates-MacGinitie reading assessments at this school resulted in a 5.9 grade level equivalent for the average student. At that time the school was among the twenty high schools in California with the worst academic performance. In 2002 it had an API of 506, an increase by 62 points. By 2000 the reading achievement scores had risen by an average of 2.4 years.


Athletics

By the 2010s Hoover High received renovations that improved its football stadium. Artie Ojeda of NBC San Diego stated that it then had "one of the nicer high school stadium facilities in San Diego".Ojeda, Artie.
Judge: Hoover HS Night Games Can Resume
" NBC San Diego. February 7, 2014. Retrieved on May 18, 2016.
In 2012 the school began holding football games at night. Some residents of Talmadge were unhappy with this, so a legal battle between the school and residents was begun, and night football games stopped in September 2013. In 2014 a judge ruled that the night football games could continue.


Alumni

* Tony Banks (b. 1973) — former NFL quarterback * Ben Chase (1923-1998) — former NFL player * Michael Davis (b. 1959) — played for Oakland A's and for LA Dodgers 1988 World Series team * Jerry DaVanon (b. 1945) — former MLB infielder * Bob deLauer (1920-2002) — former NFL player * Bennie Edens (1925-2008) — 2002 NFL
High School A secondary school, high school, or senior school, is an institution that provides secondary education. Some secondary schools provide both ''lower secondary education'' (ages 11 to 14) and ''upper secondary education'' (ages 14 to 18), i.e., ...
Coach of the Year * William Gay (b. 1955) — former NFL defensive end * Ted Giannoulas — San Diego Chicken ( The Famous Chicken) * Gene Leek (b. 1936) — baseball player for first
Los Angeles Angels The Los Angeles Angels are an American professional baseball team based in the Greater Los Angeles, Greater Los Angeles area. The Angels compete in Major League Baseball (MLB) as a member club of the American League (AL) American League West, ...
team * Jimmy Liggins (1918-1983) — R&B musician * Joe Liggins (1916-1987) — R&B musician * Bill McColl (b. 1930) — collegiate All-American and NFL player * Dave Morehead (b. 1942) — former MLB pitcher, Boston Red Sox * George Myatt (1914-2000) — former MLB player, coach, and manager * Volney Peters (1928-2015) — former NFL defensive tackle * Robert O. Peterson (1916-1994) — founder of the Jack in the Box restaurant chain * Rick Shaw (b. 1946) — former CFL defensive back and wide receiver * Gina Simmons Schneider — psychotherapist and writer * Willie Steele (1923-1989) — Olympic gold medalist * Burr Van Nostrand (b. 1945) —
avant-garde In the arts and literature, the term ''avant-garde'' ( meaning or ) identifies an experimental genre or work of art, and the artist who created it, which usually is aesthetically innovative, whilst initially being ideologically unacceptable ...
composer American Composers Alliance
"Burr Van Nostrand"
Retrieved 25 January 2017.
* Ted Williams (1918-2002) — Major League Baseball Hall of Fame, Boston Red Sox * Eddie Williams (b. 1964) — former MLB first and third baseman * Mickey Wright (1935-2020) — pro golfer, member of World Golf Hall of Fame


See also

* Primary and secondary schools in San Diego, California * List of high schools in San Diego County, California * List of high schools in California


References

* Fisher, Douglas, Nancy Frey, and Douglas Williams. ''Five Years Later'' (Chapter 9). In: Strickland, Dorothy S. and Donna E. Alvermann. ''Bridging the Literacy Achievement Gap, Grades 4-12'' (Language and literacy series). Teachers College Press, January 1, 2004. , 9780807744871. START: p
147


Notes


External links


Hoover High School

SDUSD website
{{Portalbar, Schools, California, Education School districts in San Diego County, California Educational institutions established in 1930 1930 establishments in California San Diego Unified School District Public high schools in California Schools in San Diego County, California Schools in San Diego High schools in San Diego High schools in San Diego County, California Education in San Diego County, California Education in San Diego