El Tejon Unified School District

(Redirected from Hurst v. Newman)

The El Tejon Unified School District serves kindergarten-through-12th-grade students in the Mountain Communities of the Tejon Pass, which include Frazier Park, Lebec, and Pine Mountain Club in the southern mountains of Kern County, California. Lockwood Valley is part of the district even though it is within Ventura County, and Gorman students (in Los Angeles County) are accepted into the high school by special permit.

El Tejon Unified School District
Address
4337 Lebec Road
Lebec
, California, 93243
United States
District information
TypePublic
GradesTK–12[1]
NCES District ID0600026[1]
Students and staff
Students740[1]
Teachers34 [1]
Staff150 [1]
Student–teacher ratio20.33[1]
Other information
Websitewww.el-tejon.k12.ca.us

Schools

edit

Grades K-8

edit

Frazier Park Elementary School educates children in kindergarten through fourth grade. El Tejon Middle School in Lebec takes district students from fifth through the eighth grade.[2]

Frazier Mountain High School

edit

Frazier Mountain High School, also in Lebec, was founded in 1995 for ninth- through 12th-graders.[2]

Academics

edit

The Frazier Mountain High School curriculum offers college prep, honors and advanced placement (AP) courses. Beginning in the fall of 2013, they also began offering dual enrollment courses for English and Chemistry. Students enrolled in these courses receive both college credit and credit toward high school graduation.[3] The school also hosts a "school within a school" via a California Partnership Academy, which accommodates the needs of both "at-risk" students and those who are college bound in team-oriented learning, project-based instruction and cross-discipline thematics.[4][clarification needed]

Activities

edit

Clubs and activities include art, baton, cheer, California Scholarship Federation, drumline, Future Farmers of America, Friends of Rachel, Student School Ambassadors, and others.[5]

Athletics

edit

Frazier Mountain High School belongs to the High Desert League in the Central Section[6] of the California Interscholastic Federation. Prior to fall 2013, the school and the High Desert League had competed in the Southern Section of the CIF. The teams, known as the Falcons, compete in baseball, basketball, football, golf, soccer, softball and volleyball. 2013 proved to be a stellar year for FMHS athletics. The 2013 Varsity Football team and the 2013 Varsity Softball team both made it to the first round of playoffs. The 2013 Varsity Girls' Soccer team finished league 10-0 and contended in playoffs.[7] The 2013 FMHS baseball team finished their league play undefeated and won the High Desert League championship for the first time in the school's history.[8] Additionally, the baseball team made it to the third round of playoffs before they were defeated.[9]

Robotics

edit

In 2001, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration awarded the school a sponsorship to compete in a robotics competition.[10] Then in 2004 it won a robotics competition in Southern California.[11] In 2013, the FMHS Robotics team "Snobotics" placed 2nd at the 2013 LA Regional competition.[12]

Intelligent design class

edit

In 2006, Frazier Mountain High School received national attention in the case Hurst et al. v. Newman et al. when eleven parents sued the district for its scheduling an intersession course on "The Philosophy of Design."[13] The class, taught by Sharon Lemburg, who was married to an Assembly of God pastor, was criticized for bringing intelligent design creationism into the class.[14] Lemburg was accused by Ken Hurst, one of the parents who filed the lawsuit and is a researcher at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Canada, for falsely including him and Nobel Prize winner Francis Crick (who had been dead for two years) as lecturers on the syllabus presented to the Board of Trustees.[15] The suit was settled out of court when the school district agreed that no school "shall offer, presently or in the future, the course entitled 'Philosophy of Design' or 'Philosophy of Intelligent Design' or any other course that promotes or endorses creationism, creation science, or intelligent design."[13][16]

Missing student body funds

edit

On October 14, 2009, the school board heard the results of an audit of the books of the Associated Student Body organization for the school year 2008-2009, when revenues were $224,012 from dances, a student store, and athletic events and expenses were $201,301.[17] The audit was ordered after two students complained about what they said were missing funds amounting to about $10,000.[18] It found a deficiency in the student books and "lack of controls," County Assistant Superintendent of Schools Mark Fulmer told the board.[17]

In the wake of an investigation by Jason Kaff of the Kern County Superintendent of Schools office, School District Board Chairman Anita Anderson told an Enterprise reporter in June 2010 that "Kids raised the money and then the money was used for other purposes." But the school district put new procedures in place to avoid irregularities in the future, the newspaper reported, "such as taking regular inventories in the student store, immediately counting and filing cash reports signed by two people following fundraising events, reconciling bank statements . . . and keeping mandated files of signed minutes to document that [Associated Student Body] members agreed to purchases."[19]

Student walkout

edit

About two hundred high school students staged a walkout from their classes on January 25, 2011, to protest the layoff of bus driver Jesus "Chuy" Saldana after a parent complained that the bus he was driving rolled backward and caused her to run over her son's foot with her car. "They chanted, 'Chuy, Chuy,' and interviewed with local and television media before the media was shooed away by administrators."[20] The Mountain Enterprise contacted the California Newspaper Publishers Association about the alleged interference with the media and was told that the students have the right to "speak to the media and express their opinions."[21]

Charter schools

edit

Frazier Park hosts a branch of the Charter Oaks Community Charter School, headquartered in Bakersfield. The charter school is designed to "provide opportunities, support, and accountability for parents in their homeschooling endeavors."[22]

Pine Mountain Learning Center is a district-sponsored charter school 3.5 miles west of Pine Mountain.[23]

Home schooling

edit

Home schooling is important in the Mountain Communities, according to a March 2008 report in the local weekly newspaper, The Mountain Enterprise, which added:

Per capita, the Mountain Communities may have one of the highest rates of homeschooling in the state, far above the national average of 2 to 4 percent, Holly Van Houten . . . [a home-school parent of the area] said. Estimates range between 8 and 30 percent—somewhere between 100 and 400 children, she reports.[24]

Administration

edit

As of August 2024 the administrative staff of El Tejon district consists of:[citation needed]

  • Sara Haflich, Superintendent
  • Mike Vogenthaler, Principal, Frazier Mountain High School
  • Corey Hansen, Principal, El Tejon Middle School
  • Michael McNelis, Principal, Frazier Park Elementary School


References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d e f "Search for Public School Districts – District Detail for El Tejon Unified". National Center for Education Statistics. Institute of Education Sciences. Retrieved 2022-03-05.
  2. ^ a b Home page of the El Tejon Unified School District. Archived 2008-11-20 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "Academics," FMHS web site,November 8, 2013
  4. ^ "About," ComTec Academy web site,November 8, 2013
  5. ^ "Activities," FMHS web site,November 9, 2013
  6. ^ http://www.bakersfieldcalifornian.com/sports/preps/x1322505655/Rams-to-move-into-SWYL-Falcons-to-SYL. Retrieved 2013-06-08. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  7. ^ "Frazier Mountain High School (Lebec, CA) Varsity Football".
  8. ^ "Falcons vanquish defending CIF Division 6 champs :: The Mountain Enterprise".
  9. ^ "Falcons' Dream Season Comes to a Close :: The Mountain Enterprise".
  10. ^ "NASA Sponsorships Awarded to High School Students". NASA. November 29, 2001. Retrieved 2008-05-17.
  11. ^ "2004 FIRST Robotics Competition Southern California Regional Award Winners". NASA. November 29, 2001. Archived from the original on 2008-04-03. Retrieved 2008-05-17.
  12. ^ "FMHS Snobotics Team :: The Mountain Enterprise".
  13. ^ a b "Settlement in Hurst v. Newman". National Center for Science Education. January 17, 2006. Retrieved 2009-11-12.
  14. ^ Associated Press, "California School Sued Over Intelligent Design," nbcnews.com, January 10, 2006
  15. ^ "False Information on Intelligent Design Course Given to Board". The Mountain Enterprise. Dec 30, 2005. Archived from the original on 2008-07-03. Retrieved 2008-05-17.
  16. ^ Complaint, Hurst v. Newman
  17. ^ a b "ASB Audit Questions Linger" The Mountain Enterprise, October 23, 2009
  18. ^ Patric Hedlund, "Audit of ASB Funds In for 2008-09," The Mountain Enterprise, October 16, 2009, page 8
  19. ^ Patric Hedlund, "Sloppy Tracking of Student Funds Leaves $439,000 Still in Question," The Mountain Enterprise (online edition), June 11, 2010)
  20. ^ Barrientos, Jorge (February 4, 2011). "Community Rallies Around Dismissed Bus Driver". Bakersfield Californian. Archived from the original on July 7, 2011.
  21. ^ "School Sit-In Seeks to Send Message," The Mountain Enterprise, February 4, 2011, page 2
  22. ^ "KCSOS : Valley Oaks Charter School : Mission Statement". Archived from the original on 2008-05-17. Retrieved 2008-10-09. Mission statement of Charter Oaks Community Charter School.
  23. ^ "Pine Mountain Learning Center". Archived from the original on 2009-02-27. Retrieved 2009-10-16.
  24. ^ "Mountain's home schools oppose state intrusion," Mountain Enterprise, March 14, 2008
edit