Livingston High School (California)

Livingston High School
Location
1617 Main Street.
Livingston, California, 95334

United States
Coordinates 37°22′32″N 120°43′23″W / 37.3756°N 120.723°W / 37.3756; -120.723Coordinates: 37°22′32″N 120°43′23″W / 37.3756°N 120.723°W / 37.3756; -120.723
Information
Type Public
School district Merced Union High School District
Principal Mandy Ballenger
Faculty 50.4 (on FTE basis)[1]
Grades 9 to 12
Enrollment 1172[1] (2005-06)
Student to teacher ratio 23.3[1]
Color(s) Purple and gold          
Mascot Wolf
Team name Livingston Wolves
Website https://lhs.muhsd.org/lhs

Livingston High School, in Livingston, California, United States, is a public secondary school in the Merced Union High School District. The school contains grades 9-12. Students come from Livingston Middle School and Ballico Middle School.

Administration

The new principal, beginning in the 2015-2016 school year, is Mandy Ballenger. Currently, the three associate principals are Charles Jolly, Anita Masaniai Robert, and Steven Menezes.

Scandals

In May 2011, a science teacher was arrested for helping students get intoxicated through the use of chloroform that she ordered through the school for her "lessons". [2] A few days later, she was arrested for possession of explosives.[3]

In May 2012, an agriculture teacher was charged with having had sex with a 15-year-old student in 2010 and 2011.[4]

Courses

Classes are usually approximately an hour in length. Subjects include English, mathematics, science, social science, foreign language, photography, art, and band. Regional Occupation Program classes are also available in areas such as medical, business, education, and computers. The school provides tutoring to students in need of help for their classes.

Livingston High School also offers Advanced Placement (AP) college-level courses. In the past, any student could register for any AP course. However, in preparation for the coming school year, this policy has changed. Students are now required to sign a contract stating they would not drop any AP class, as well as get permission slips signed by teachers recommending them to a particular AP class. This has caused some stir among the faculty and students. A possible reason for the contract is so teachers don't end up teaching only a few students during a period, since they could be more useful teaching a regular class and cutting down class size on other teachers. The following AP courses are available as of the 2011-2012 school year:

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/20/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.