20-514: The Phoenix Union High School District is a high school -only school district in Phoenix , Arizona , United States . It is one of five high school-only districts in the Phoenix area. The school district serves students within a 220 square miles (570 km) area of Phoenix, and enrollment sits around 26,000 students, enrolled within its 23 schools. Its boundaries are largely coextensive with
40-725: A mask mandate in 2021, during the COVID-19 pandemic in Arizona even though Governor of Arizona Doug Ducey signed a ban against mask mandates on June 30. High school (North America) High schools in North America are schools for secondary education , which may also involve intermediate education . Highschooling in North America may refer to: North High School (Phoenix, Arizona) North High School (Formerly known as North Phoenix High School )
60-574: A result of the closures, two lawsuits were filed, accusing the Phoenix Union High School District of discriminating against ethnic minorities and low-income students by closing schools in their neighborhoods, in addition to unfair resource allocations. An Office for Civil Rights investigation also found that the school district had an open enrollment policy that, while designed to alleviate school overcrowding, resulted in racial imbalance. The school district, according to
80-607: A year after a judge at the Maricopa County Superior Court ruled school segregation in Phoenix high schools was unconstitutional, in the case Phillips vs. Phoenix Union High Schools and Junior College District . PUHS, along with Carl Hayden High School and South Mountain High School , took on the bulk of the school district's African American students after desegregation. To this day, Phoenix Union High School District's website makes few references to
100-533: Is a high school that forms part of the Phoenix Union High School District in Phoenix, Arizona . North Phoenix High School opened its doors in 1939, becoming the first high school built after George Washington Carver High School , a school that was built for segregation purposes. By 1981, the school's enrollment had fallen to 814. As a result, North High was closed in 1981, and would become one of four schools to close during
120-497: The Phoenix Union Colored High School (later George Washington Carver High School ) was purchased in 1925. The site, a former four-acre landfill that was surrounded by warehouses, drew protests over safety and sanitary concerns. The school, however, was opened in 1926, and was the only one ever built exclusively to serve African American high school students in Arizona. The school was closed 1954,
140-501: The 1960s. Trevor G. Browne opened its doors in 1970s, along with alternative schools Bostrom High and Desiderata Program The racial makeup of Phoenix Union High School District schools began to change during the 1950s and 1960s. PUHS' African American and Hispanic population increased during those two decades, and by 1970, the school's White population fell to 19.3% of the student body. Despite that rise, PUHS' ethnic minorities had little say in determining and conducting education at
160-463: The 1980s. As a result of the closures, two lawsuits were filed, accusing the Phoenix Union High School District of discriminating against ethnic minorities and low-income students by closing schools in their neighborhoods, in addition to unfair resource allocations. The lawsuits were later consolidated into the Castro v. Phoenix Union High School District lawsuit, in which a federal judge ruled against
180-525: The building of a number of specialty schools. Suns-Diamondbacks Education Academy (since renamed Linda Abril Educational Academy ), a school for at-risk students , was established in 2001. Franklin Police and Fire High School , a first-of-its-kind public safety-oriented school, opened in 2007. Bioscience High opened in 2006. The district was considering whether to open another high school as other high schools were above capacity. The district chose to enact
200-741: The city of Phoenix prior to the 1960s. As of 2020, the district covers much of Phoenix and portions of Glendale , Paradise Valley , and Scottsdale . The district has a population including 81.7% of its students being identified as "Hispanics" , and 52.4% of its students speaking Spanish at home. In all, 71 languages have been identified as primary home languages. The district employs approximately 3,000 staff, with 1,617 of them being teachers. The school district has no elementary or middle schools, and as such, it has identified 13 elementary school districts as its Partner Elementary Districts, with students who enroll with those districts being fed into PUHSD's high schools. The school district's roots lie with
220-411: The establishment of magnet programs across the district, continued summer school programs, increased transportation options for students, and the building of two more high schools. In 1999, Cesar Chavez High School opened its doors, becoming the first Phoenix Union High School to be built in 27 years. Another comprehensive high school, Betty H. Fairfax High School , opened in 2007. The 2000s also saw
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#1732793896726240-423: The investigation, was fully aware of the policy's impact, and, despite numerous recommendations, chose not to take action of the matter. The lawsuits were later consolidated into the Castro v. Phoenix Union High School District lawsuit. Eventually, a federal judge ruled against the school district. A consent decree followed the ruling, which resulted in the reopening of North High, as well as, among other things,
260-423: The opening of Phoenix Union High School in 1895. In that same year, Arizona's Territorial Legislature passed a law that allowed districts with at least 2,000 residents to form a high school. Phoenix Union High School first opened with four classrooms and 90 students, on the second floor of an elementary school building, but eventually moved into its final location, near 7th Street and Van Buren. The school campus
280-472: The school district. That ruling resulted in the reopening of North High, as well as, among other measures, the establishment of magnet programs across the district. Phoenix Union High School District's website makes no reference to the controversy surrounding the school's closure and eventual reopening, merely stating that the school closed, due to declining enrollment, and later reopened. The school reopened in 1983, and in 1984, 875 students were enrolled at
300-615: The school's segregated past, merely stating that Carver High was built to accommodate the district's African American population, and stating that the school closed, following integration. Until 1926, Phoenix Union High School was the school district's only school. By 1939, PUHS' student population reached 5,219, and North High School , the first school not built for the purpose of segregation, opened its doors. Between 1949 and 1957, five additional high schools were built: Camelback , Carl Hayden , Central , West , and South Mountain . Those were followed by Alhambra , East , and Maryvale in
320-552: The school. The school's campus was built using funds from the Works Progress Administration and Public Works Administration , both established as part of the New Deal . The school is noted for having built-in lockers in the hallways, at a time when every other school within the Phoenix Union High School District has removed theirs. Film and commercial producers have said the school reminds people of
340-447: The school. Meanwhile, violence between the school's Hispanic and African American population eventually played a large role in everyday school life, with each side blaming the other side. A riot brought on by racial tensions also happened during the 1970s at South Mountain High School . In the 1980s, Phoenix Union High School District's board voted to close North High, PUHS, and East High, and West High, due to declining enrollment. As
360-408: Was a former mansion, and was chosen at the time because it was located in a residential area, bordered in part by two arterial streets. PUHS also affected later developmental patterns in the area. In 1920, Phoenix Union High School District opened Phoenix College as Phoenix Junior College, after consultation with University of Arizona and the designing of a two-year curriculum. The school, however,
380-708: Was considered to be extra-legal, as no laws authorized its existence. That changed in 1927, after the Arizona State Legislature authorized and legalized the creation and maintenance of Junior Colleges in Arizona. Phoenix Union High School District would vote to transfer Phoenix College to the Maricopa County Community College District in 1963. Beginning in the late 1910s, Phoenix Union High School District began segregating its White and African American students. While segregation of elementary schools in Arizona
400-533: Was mandated, segregation of high schools was never required under Arizona law. In 1918, a "Department for Colored Students" that was established at a rear room of Phoenix Union High School 's Commercial Building, with one teacher. The school's African American students were then housed in two small cottages that was separated from the PUHS campus by an irrigation ditch., and later placed at a rented house on 9th Street and Jefferson. A plot of land that would later become
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