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Overview
Mission Statement/ Board
Goals
Demographics
Administration
History
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The desire of the local residents to have
a free public education for their children led to the formation
of the Los Altos School District in February 1909. One year later
4.5 acres of land along San Antonio Road and Hillview Avenue was
purchased and construction of the first school was begun. This school,
San Antonio School, served students in grades kindergarten through
eighth grade and was the only school in the district until after
World War II.
The period from 1948 to 1961 was one of great
expansion and a time when the school community embraced the concept
of smaller neighborhood schools. Faced with an increasing student
population and state mandates against having single schools with
greater than 800 students, the district trustees recognized the
need to add additional school sites to serve the growing population.
In 1948 the district annexed lands and purchased the old Purissima
School site (in Los Altos Hills) from the neighboring Palo Alto
School District. One year later additional lands were purchased
and construction of three new schools - Hillview, Loyola, and Portola
- was started. For the start of school in September 1949, four schools
were serving primary (K - 3) students - Hillview, Loyola, Portola,
and Purissima - while San Antonio School served the students in
grades 4 through 8.
Over the next eleven years (1950-61) the district
grew to include sixteen schools. Covington School, which became
the first true junior high school (7 - 8), was constructed in 1950.
Following Covington were Springer (1955); Almond, Carmel, Santa
Rita, Blach, and Egan (all in 1957); Oak (1958); and Bullis, Eastbrook,
and the new Purissima (1960). These schools were needed to serve
the ever-increasing student population and to preserve the small
neighborhood school concept. In 1956 the original school of the
district, San Antonio, was closed as an active school site and became
the home of the district’s administrative operations. Partly
due to structural inadequacies, San Antonio School was vacated in
the early 1970’s, demolished, and its land was subsequently
sold.
As enrollment declined in the 1970’s and
early 1980’s, the district sold off some of its sites. Since
1986 enrollment has continued to grow again. The district currently
consists of nine open schools (seven elementary and two intermediates),
and one closed school (Eastbrook). Eastbrook has been leased to
a private school which has an option to buy the site for $1 at the
end of its 30 year lease.
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| 1 |
70 |
(approx) |
| 1 |
100 |
(approx) |
| 1 |
250 |
(approx) |
| 1 |
310 |
|
| 5 |
1,585 |
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| 13 |
5,719 |
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| 14 |
5,924 |
(peak) |
| 13 |
5,239 |
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| 8 |
2,897 |
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| 8 |
2,972 |
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| 8 |
3,931 |
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| 9 |
4,245 |
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