Name | Homestead High School |
---|---|
Established | 1962 |
Type | Public 4-year comprehensive |
Staff | 97 (in 2007) |
Principal | Graham Clark |
Students | 2,270 (in 2007) |
Grades | 9–12 |
City | Cupertino |
State | California |
Campus | Suburban |
Country | USA |
Coordinates | |
Colors | green white |
Mascot | Mustang |
Rival | Fremont High School (Sunnyvale, California) |
Newspaper | The Epitaph |
Website | www.hhs.fuhsd.org |
! 2003 | ! 2004 | ! 2005 | ! 2006 | ! 2007 |
1,844 | 1,823 | 2,001 | 2,089 | 2,270 |
Source:
As of the 2007 school year, the racial composition was as follows:
Approximately 5.5% of the student population were economically disadvantaged.
Source:
Academically, Homestead ranks in the top 20 high schools in Santa Clara County. Based on the average standardized test scores of its diverse student body, Homestead is ranked fourth of five in the Fremont Union High School District, below top-ranked Monta Vista High School,second-ranked Lynbrook High School, and third ranked Cupertino High School and above Fremont High School. In science, math, and business, Homestead students have matched or outperformed students at Lynbrook and Monta Vista, and Homestead students have regularly placed among the top schools in the United States.
The paper also received one of its highest honors, The Press Freedom Award from the Student Press Law Center, in 1988 for its successful defense of a story about a junior boy who was HIV positive, one of the first such stories in any high school newspaper. The story had been initially censored by the principal but was allowed to run when the newspaper invoked California Education Code section [48907] California Education Code 48907, a California law that protected students' rights to free expression. The story was reported nationally in the wake of a Supreme Court's decision in Hazelwood School District et al. v. Kuhlmeier et al., 484 U.S. 260 (1988) This case gave school officials greater latitude in determining the content of a school's official student publications. The California law made the ruling moot in the state.
During that same period, the paper also won numerous local and state awards. The San Jose Mercury News named the paper the best in its annual contest for Silicon Valley student newspapers ten of the twelve years the paper ran the contest. It was also awarded the top prize from the San Francisco Press Club several times during that period, as well as the top prize from the now-defunct Palo Alto Times.
The paper's unusual name was selected by the school's first students in 1962. In keeping with the school's western theme and Mustang mascot, they named the paper after the first newspaper west of the Rockies, The Tombstone, Arizona Epitaph, which had been popularized in a television series of the time about Wyatt Earp, "Tombstone Territory."
Some of the newspaper's former staffers have gone on to work in journalism professionally. Among them, Alex Williams ('83) and Michael D. Shear ('86) write for The New York Times. Erica Werner ('89) is a White House correspondent for The Associated Press.
The paper's adviser from 1976 to 1994, Nick Ferentinos, was the 1994 Dow Jones News Fund's National High School Journalism Teacher of the Year.
The newspaper's official website can be found at www.thehhsepitaph.com
The marching band has enjoyed a continuous run of championships and sweepstakes starting in 1993 with their field show rendition of The Phantom of the Opera. Since then, the Mighty Mustang Marching Band has performed such shows as The Who's Tommy, and Miss Saigon. In their first foray into statewide competition in 2005, the band tied for 6th place in the 5A division at the Western Band Association (WBA) State Championships.
The following competition results illustrate the marching band's growing success: Grand Sweepstakes Award and Sweepstakes Awards in Music, Marching, Showmanship and Field Show at the Cupertino Tournament of Bands in both 2006 and 2007; The band's colorguard placed 2nd at the 2006 WBA State Championships; Competing against bands from across the Western United States, the band placed 5th in finals at the 2007 Bands of America regional.; Breaking the 90 mark in WBA competition for the first time in 2008, the marching band placed 5th in the WBA finals with a score of 91.22; The band's percussion section placed 1st in the 5A division at 2009 WBA State Championships.
The jazz, vocal, string and wind ensembles consistently rank superior in competitions. Many of the musical groups have traveled internationally, performing at world-class venues. The Wind Ensemble and Orchestra performed in Carnegie Hall at the 2007 New York Band and Orchestra Festival, winning Silver Awards for each group. Participating in the 2009 Australian International Music Festival held in the Sydney Opera House on a trip to New Zealand and Australia, the Wind Symphony received a Gold Award and the Jazz Ensemble took home a Silver Award.
In accordance with Homestead's long-standing reputation as a leader in internet technology at the high school level, the HHS Marching Band maintained the first website in the Fremont Union High School District, hand-coded by alumna Shanna Roberts in 1995. The site continued, albeit from a different domain, after her graduation by alumnus Trenton Hill, and is now maintained by the Homestead High School Music Boosters.
Category:Educational institutions established in 1958 Category:Fremont Union High School District Category:Blue Ribbon schools in California Category:High schools in Santa Clara County, California
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