Kelseyville High School Explained

Kelseyville High School
Streetaddress:5480 Main St.
City:Kelseyville
State:California
Zipcode:95451
Country:USA
Coordinates:38.9745°N -122.8303°W
District:Kelseyville Unified School District (KVUSD)
Principal:Mike Jones
Teaching Staff:29.73 (FTE)
Ceeb:051-290
Ratio:18.16
Schooltype:Public
Grades:912
Hours In Day:8:15am – 3:22pm
(374 minutes)
Conference:North Central League 1, Coastal Mountain Conference
Accreditation:Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC)
Team Name:Knights
Established:1921
Students:540 (2022–23)[1]
Homepage:Kelseyville High website[2]

Kelseyville High School is an American public high school located in Kelseyville, in Lake County, California. Kelseyville High serves grades 9-12 and is the only source of secondary education in the Kelseyville Unified School District (KVUSD).

History

In 1923, Kelseyville Union School District supervisors voted to submit to district taxpayers a measure to finance the land acquisition and construction of Kelseyville Union High School.[3] The proposition passed, and the construction of a $40,000 building with six classrooms and laboratories began in fall of 1924,[4] near the site of Kelseyville Academy, a cross-shaped building that hosted students between 1886 and 1890.

In November 1929, a fire destroyed Kelseyville Union High School, prompting rumors of arson, as several other structures had also recently burned in the region.[5] Classes were moved to former churches until the new school building was erected in the fall of 1930.

The school was expanded in 1954, and in 1957 a bond was put up for a vote to finance the construction of a new gymnasium, which was completed in early 1959.

In January 2019, improvements were made to existing buildings and a shop building was added, financed through a bond measure passed in 2016.

Mascot

The school adopted the Indians as their team's mascot in the 1940s. In 2006, the Kelseyville Unified School District agreed to drop the name, deemed offensive by some Native American and community members (Mountain Vista Middle School's mascot, the Braves, was also abandoned).[6] Kelseyville High adopted the Knights as their new teams' name two months later.[7] In 2008, the school board approved a motion to turn down a return to the Indian mascot brought about by a petition.[8]

Academics

For the 2022-2023 school year, Kelseyville High School's cohort dropout rate was 5.8%, and the graduation rate was 90.9%.

The only Advanced Placement course offered is in mathematics. The school contracts with Advancement Via Individual Determination to offer an elective class to prepare students for college. It has an agriculture mechanics program, working with the Kelseyville FFA Chapter and providing University of California-approved A-G classes. The school also offers vocational education pathways for agricultural science; cabinetry, millwork and woodworking; design, visual and media arts; as well as hospitality.

Demographics

In addition, California Department of Education reported the following demographic percentages of students for the 20222023 school year.

Demographic descriptorPercent of
total enrollment
English learners13.7%
Foster youth0.6%
Homeless6.5%
Migrant4.3%
Socioeconomically disadvantaged65.6%
Students with disabilities12%

Athletics

The Kelseyville Knights compete in the North Central League 1 in the Coastal Mountain Conference.

The school competes in baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf (coed), soccer, softball, tennis, track and field, wrestling, and girls volleyball.

The school established a mountain biking program in 2011, and Kelseyville High students participate in the Middletown Composite team to compete in the NorCal Interscholastic Cycling League's Division 2 of the Redwood Repack.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kelseyville High. National Center for Education Statistics. June 4, 2024.
  2. https://www.kvusd.org/schools/khs/
  3. News: Kelseyville will vote on bonds for high school soon. The Press Democrat. 3 June 1923.
  4. News: Kelseyville plans $40,000 high school. The Press Democrat. 13 September 1924.
  5. News: 29 November 1929. Petaluma-Argus Courier. Gigantic plot to destroy buildings arson board holds.
  6. News: School board unanimously orders change after 5 Lake tribes call use of 'Indians,' 'Braves' demeaning. The Press Democrat. 23 March 2006.
  7. News: Despite recall threat, Kelseyville school board stands firm on Indian mascot decision, chooses "Knight" symbol. Lake County Record-Bee. 25 May 2006.
  8. News: Kelseyville school board votes down return to 'Indian' mascot. Lake County News. 18 March 2008.