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The Hanford Joint Union High School District in Hanford consists of a total of 3,522 students from three comprehensive high schools - Hanford High School and Hanford West High School along with Earl F. Johnson Continuation School, and Hanford Adult School. A third comprehensive state of art high school - Sierra Pacific High School opened on August 13, 2009 with 217 freshman children. HJUHSD serves the northwestern portion of Kings County, California. The schools are located in Hanford, the county seat. Hanford High School and Hanford West High School each serve approximately 1,700 students. Earl F. Johnson High School serves about 250 students. Hanford Adult School serves a wide variety of students through its many and varied programs.HJUHSD students attend Hanford High School, Hanford West High School or Sierra Pacific High School based on their home address. These attendance areas were created with input from parents and other community members to create neighborhood schools and to balance student population between the schools.Sierra Pacific High School is the only HJUHSD school currently open for Intra-District transfers ==History== Hanford High School held its first classes in 1892 with one teacher, W. S. Cranmer, and an average enrollment of fourteen.〔Gibson, Harold, ''History of Kings County Public Schools,'' Hanford, CA, 2004〕 In May, 1895, Hanford High School celebrated its first graduation. Originally, the high school was located in the back of a local bank in Downtown Hanford. When more room was needed, classes were moved to a house on Elm Street before the school found its final home on Grangeville and Douty streets. Funded by a 1919 bond measure for $350,000 and a $30,000 sale of school property, Hanford High’s “Main Building” on Grangeville Boulevard was opened in 1921 and would be the school’s home for more than 50 years. In 1952, a new cafeteria, auto shop and metal shop were added to the school, followed by new classrooms and other facilities in 1959. Around 1940, the student body broke the 1,000 mark. Just over 20 years later, the school population had grown to the point that a separate facility was needed. In November 1962, voters approved a $2.5 million bond issue to build a second campus. Land was purchased on West Lacey Boulevard and construction of “West Campus” began in 1963. It opened in 1964 to freshmen, and by 1968, 1,250 9th and 10th graders were enrolled. By the late 1980s, both campuses were serving all four grades. In 1970, Earl F. Johnson Continuation High School - named for a long-time educator who died in 1967 - was built at the north end of the Hanford High School East Campus. In 1975, the community bid a sad farewell to historic Main Hall at the East Campus when it was demolished because it did not meet earthquake and education codes. In 1978, the district celebrated the opening of the replacement administration and library building. It was joined by a new auditorium in 1981 (later named the Stratton L. Tarvin Presentation Center for the Performing Arts in honor of a long-time administrator). In 1980, Hanford Adult School was built on Campus Drive. In 1994, Earl F. Johnson High School was moved a few blocks south on Douty Street to a former elementary school. A $1 million modernization in 2002 expanded classroom space there. In 1997, the district began its biggest construction project in many years: A $18 million local bond and matching state grants funded the construction of classrooms, labs, a library, a performing arts building, an event center and more to transform West Campus into Hanford West High, an independent school. The 2001-2002 school year marked an important milestone for the 100+ year old district: Four independent high school graduations. Hanford West High’s first graduating class numbered 291. Hanford High graduated 342; Earl F. Johnson had 21 graduates and Hanford Adult school gave out 41 high school diplomas. On August 13, 2009 A third comprehensive state of art high school called Sierra Pacific High School opened with 217 freshman with some ball fields and one of the largest brand new state of art gym in Kings County. Sierra Pacific High School phase two of the high school will include additional buildings such as an administration building, a second academic building, a wrestling room, a pool an aquatics center, maintenance facilities, library and media center according to student growth and the need. Sierra Pacific High School was built because two existing comprehensive high schools Hanford High School and Hanford West High School were over their enrollment capacities. Hanford High School and Hanford West High School are each built to hold about 1,700 students, but the student population at each was approaching 2,000 students. The Board of the Hanford Joint Union High School believes it is in the best interest of all students to keep high school enrollment at or below 1,700 students each. Studies have shown that this is a size that is big enough to allow for a variety of quality academic and extra-curricular activities, but small enough to allow for the personal interactions that help drive student success that why Hanford Joint Union High School went with this way to build there high schools . For future growth, no plans have yet to determined to build any more high schools in the near future in Hanford, but as Hanford continues to grows to estimated 70,177 residents by 2020, Hanford Joint Union High School District will continue to plan ahead to best serve all students. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Hanford Joint Union High School District」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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