Hillsdale High School (San Mateo, California) Explained

Hillsdale High School
Established:1955
Type:Public Secondary
Faculty:91.14 (FTE)
Students:1,645 (2018-19)[1]
Grades:9–12
Ratio:18.07
Streetaddress:3115 Del Monte Street
City:San Mateo
State:California
Zipcode:94403
Country:United States
Pushpin Map:San Francisco Bay Area#California#USA
Campus:Suburban
Principal:Jeff Gilbert
Team Name:Fighting Knights
Conference:Peninsula Athletic League
Rival:Aragon High School
Colors:Columbia Blue, Scarlet Red
Newspaper:Hillsdale Scroll[2]
Yearbook:The Hillsdale Shield

Hillsdale High School is a public co-educational high school in San Mateo, California, serving grades 9–12 as part of the San Mateo Union High School District. Hillsdale generally serves the residents of San Mateo and Foster City. The main feeder schools to Hillsdale are Abbott, Bayside, Borel, and Bowditch Middle Schools of the San Mateo-Foster City School District.

History

When it opened in 1955, Hillsdale High School was awarded the School Design Award from the American Institute of Architects. It served as the prototype for Bay Area high schools, with indoor/outdoor passages, landscaped courtyards, and skylights in classrooms.[3] The design is credited to John Lyon Reid.[4]

In the late 1980s and early 1990s, teachers Greg Jouriles and Sue Bedford developed and implemented an integrated humanities curriculum, scheduling social studies and English classes back-to-back. The extended periods were first rolled out to first-year honors students in 1989, followed by a parallel program implemented by Christine Del Gaudio and Marty Kongsle for the remaining first-year students in 1992.[5] 1994 marked the start of the annual Battle at Dawn, a re-enactment of the Battle of Neuve Chapelle for first-year students at HHS as part of their studies about World War I.[6] [7]

In 1996, HHS proposed implementing a senior exhibition as a graduation requirement to pass fourth-year English classes. Students would have to defend a fifteen-page thesis before a three-member panel for their senior exhibition, which drew attention from parents concerned their children would not pass.[5] The senior exhibition requirement was implemented in 1997, and the review of multiple drafts added a substantial load to teachers' grading burden, including one-on-one assistance and mentoring. As a result, a tutorial period was added to the teachers' schedules in 1999, and the English, social studies, and math teachers collaborated to create the Reflective, Eager, Aspiring, Learning Masters (REALM) program to help personalize instruction.[5] Jeff Gilbert left HHS in 2001 to join the Stanford Teacher Education Program, introducing the two schools, and Stanford faculty entered into a Professional Development School relationship with HHS in the fall of 2001.[5]

In the early 2000s, HHS won multiple grants to transform school culture into small learning communities (SLC),[8] an approach championed by Linda Darling-Hammond,[9] who had introduced HHS faculty to the concept during a professional development day in January 2002.[5] The planning for SLCs at HHS was funded by a spring 2002 federal grant which culminated in Coyote Point Day, a two-day discussion and planning session held offsite at Coyote Point Park in November 2002.[5]

Under the SLC model, incoming first-year students at HHS are divided into three houses (Florence, Kyoto, and Oaxaca), named for important medieval centers of learning; each house has approximately 100 students, who stay with a common set of teachers covering math, English, social science, and science for two years.[10] Between their second and third years, students are reorganized into three upper-division houses (Cusco, Jakarta, and Timbuktu), where they remain for their final two years. Students take elective and advanced placement courses outside their houses.[11]

Campus

SMUHSD residents approved Measure D in 2000[12] and Measure M in 2006,[13] [14] which directly funded the repair and modernization of District schools, including Hillsdale.

Statistics

Demographics

2022-2023[1] 1,645 students: 845 male (51%), 800 female (49%)

Latino/HispanicWhiteAsianTwo or More RacesAfrican AmericanPacific IslanderAmerican Indian
57352233416924194
34.8%31.7%20.3%10.3%1.5%1.2%%

Athletics

Hillsdale participates in the Peninsula Athletic League (PAL) in the following sports:[15]

Awards

Hillsdale High School has received a number of awards and honors:

Notable alumni

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hillsdale High. National Center for Education Statistics. January 14, 2024.
  2. http://www.hillsdalescroll.org/ Hillsdale Scroll
  3. Web site: About Us: Hillsdale High School History . 18 June 2019 . San Mateo Union High School District.
  4. Web site: San Mateo Union High School District (SMUHSD), Hillsdale High School, San Mateo, CA . Michelson, Alan . Pacific Coast Architecture Database . 18 June 2019.
  5. Windows on Conversions: Hillsdale High School, San Mateo, California . 2005 . School Redesign Network . Stanford Center for Opportunity Policy in Education . 18 June 2019.
  6. News: Duck! Ninth-graders learn on the battlefield while squirt guns squirt . Mathews, Jay . Jay Mathews . March 25, 2018 . The Washington Post . 18 June 2019.
  7. Web site: A Knight's Tale: 2016-2017 . Hillsdale High School . 18 June 2019.
  8. News: A decade of small learning community success: Hillsdale continues to share its redesign with other U.S. high schools . Swartz, Angela . August 28, 2013 . San Mateo Daily Journal . 18 June 2019.
  9. News: My high school's surprise transformation, and what it says about education reform . Mathews, Jay . Jay Mathews . November 6, 2011 . The Washington Post . 18 June 2019.
  10. Web site: About Smaller Learning Communities . 16 January 2024.
  11. Web site: Smaller Learning Communities Model . 16 January 2024.
  12. Web site: Measure D: San Mateo Union High School District Bonds For Repair and Renovation . November 7, 2000 . Smart Voter . 18 June 2019.
  13. Web site: Measure M: Bond Measure — San Mateo Union High School District . November 7, 2006 . Smart Voter . 18 June 2019.
  14. Web site: Measure M . San Mateo Union High School District . 18 June 2019.
  15. Web site: Peninsula Athletic League . December 30, 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100114044001/http://www.smcoe.k12.ca.us/pal/index.htm . January 14, 2010 . dead .
  16. Web site: Blue Ribbon Schools Program, p.11 . U.S. Department of Education . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140630091138/http://www2.ed.gov/programs/nclbbrs/list-1982.pdf . June 30, 2014 .
  17. Web site: 2007 Distinguished Middle and High Schools – California Distinguished Schools Program (CA Dept of Education) . 2012-11-17 . 2014-03-04 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140304121403/http://www.cde.ca.gov/ta/sr/cs/disting2007.asp . dead .
  18. News: Hillsdale wins state Mock Trial. The Daily Journal . March 23, 2010.
  19. Web site: America's Best High Schools 2011 – Newsweek and The Daily Beast . . 2012-11-10 . https://web.archive.org/web/20111016060407/http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/features/2011/americas-best-high-schools.html . 2011-10-16 . dead .
  20. Web site: 2016 Recipients - Schools of Opportunity . April 4, 2017.
  21. Web site: Staff . Nathan Mollat Daily Journal . 2019-07-31 . Corbett: A badminton gold standard . 2023-07-05 . San Mateo Daily Journal . en.
  22. Web site: Hillsdale High School Hall of Fame: 2018 Inductees . Hillsdale High School Alumni . 18 June 2019.
  23. News: Famous local high school graduates . Sue Lempert . San Mateo Daily Journal . 28 July 2014.
  24. News: What Coach Vermeil Taught Me . Mathews, Jay . Jay Mathews . February 5, 2000 . The Washington Post . 18 June 2019.
  25. Web site: Hillsdale High School Hall of Fame: 2019 Inductees . Hillsdale High School Alumni . 18 June 2019.