Sweetwater Union High School District Explained

Sweetwater Union High School District
Type:Public
Zipcode:91911
Country:United States
Address:1130 Fifth Avenue
Superintendent:Dr. Moises Aguirre, Ed.D[1]
Students:38,553 (2019–2020)

The Sweetwater Union High School District is a school district headquartered in Chula Vista, California.[2], the school district is the largest secondary school district in California.[3]

The union high school district serves over 42,000 high school-aged students and over 32,000 adult learners. Located in the southwestern part of San Diego County between Southeast San Diego and the International Border with Mexico, the district serves the cities of Chula Vista, Imperial Beach and National City, the exclave of South San Diego, the unincorporated community of Bonita and a portion of Coronado.[4]

Sweetwater is one of the most ethnically and economically diverse districts in California. Approximately 87 percent of students belong to an ethnic minority group and over 40 percent of students qualify for the free or reduced lunch program.

Overseen by a five-member Board of Trustees, the district operates 14 high schools (11 regular, two alternative, one charter); 11 middle schools; 4 Adult schools; a regional occupational program (ROP); and special education.

The district has earned recognition for its "Compact for Success" program, a deal made with San Diego State University that guarantees Sweetwater graduates admission to the university if they meet certain requirements all throughout their high school career.

Schools

High schools

Junior High school

Middle schools

Compact for Success

In 1999, former Sweetwater Union School District superintendent Ed Brand met with once San Diego State University president Stephan Weber to try and overcome the small number of students enrolling and graduating from San Diego State University. In order to address this issue, Brand and Weber engineered the idea of compact for success which would be a long-term partnership between Sweetwater Union School District and SDSU. Before Compact for Success could be put into execution, SDSU staff and Sweetwater School Board teachers worked with one another to alter the curriculum in order to concur with the requirements for college admission in California. After the curriculum was adjusted, students within the Sweetwater Union School District would be guaranteed admission to San Diego State University if they could meet the five benchmarks set out by the partnership between Brand and Weber. In order to qualify for compact for success, students must remain in the Sweetwater District from 7th grade onward. Along with this the requirements for admission are: maintaining a 3.0 GPA, fulfilling all A-G requirements, passing the English and Math proficiency test, and lastly, taking the either the SAT or ACT. Along with guaranteed admission through the program, students from 7th grade onward will take multiple field trips to San Diego State University and will have mentors along the way to help guide students by helping them prepare for a higher education at a university. Compact for Success went into the execution in the fall of 2000 and with that year incoming 7th graders enrolled in the district. From 2000 to 2012, compact for success has caused an 87% increase in Sweetwater students enrolling in San Diego State University; applications increased from 789 in 2000 to 1,770 in 2012.[5] As of 2012 compact of success has resulted in 1 of every 7 SDSU students being former Sweetwater School district students. Compact for Success was recognized in June 2012 by National Journal as a "leading innovator" in higher education and has served as a template for other programs. This partnership has influenced other ones like it around San Diego County, such as the one between Vista Unified School District and California State University San Marcos.[6]

"Pay for Play Scandal"

For four years, the ex-superintendent of the Sweetwater Union High School District, Jesus Gandara, along with four of his colleagues “regularly accepted what amounted to bribes in exchange for their votes on multimillion-dollar construction projects”, using bond money from proposition O. When the law caught up with Jesus Gandara, former SUHSD Superintendent, SUHSD trustees Arlie Ricassa and Pearl Quinones, former board member Greg Sandoval, and a construction company executive Henry Amigable, they all pleaded not guilty to the allegations made against them, including but not limited to: charges of perjury, filing a false document, and offering a bribe. The individuals involved in this scandal were said to have been spending thousands of dollars visiting San Diego-area restaurants, as well as accepting tickets to popular sports events and vacation getaways on a consistent basis from the year 2008 until 2011. Four board members involved were removed from the school board and reelections began, but this time based on geographic location instead of the votes counted altogether.[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sweetwater hires interim leader as permanent superintendent . April 27, 2021 .
  2. "Home ." Sweetwater Union High School District. Retrieved on March 30, 2010.
  3. Web site: Community . 2011 membership & resource guide . Chula Vista Chamber of Commerce . July 25, 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120313053852/http://www.chulavistachamber.org/PDF/CommunitySection.pdf . March 13, 2012 .
  4. https://statisticalatlas.com/school-district/California/Sweetwater-Union-High-School-District/Overview
  5. How to Transcend, Not Reinforce, Class Distinctions at College retrieved from NationalJournal.com, May 13, 2015
  6. http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2013/sep/28/compact-sweetwater-sdsu-path-college/ Compact provides path from Sweetwater
  7. News: City News Agency . January 13, 2012 . Five charged in Sweetwater high school district corruption scandal plead not guilty . KFMB-TV . San Diego . May 3, 2018 .
    News: McGlone . Ashly . June 26, 2017 . The Untold Story Behind the Sweetwater Schools Scandal . Voice of San Diego . May 3, 2018 .
    News: Fry . Wendy . August 4, 2012 . Superintendent Says Cash Exchange was for Campaign . KNSD . San Diego . May 3, 2018 .