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Amphitheater Public Schools

Coordinates:32°17′10″N110°58′57″W / 32.28611°N 110.98253°W /32.28611; -110.98253
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
School district in Arizona, United States

Amphitheater Public Schools
F. O. Holaway Elementary School, one school part of Amphitheater Public Schools
Address
701 West Wetmore Road
,Arizona,85705
United States
Coordinates32°17′10″N110°58′57″W / 32.28611°N 110.98253°W /32.28611; -110.98253
District information
TypePublic
EstablishedJuly 3, 1893; 132 years ago (1893-07-03)
SuperintendentTodd Jaeger
Schools21
Enrollment13,500
Other information
Websitewww.amphi.com

Amphitheater Public Schools, also known asAmphi orDistrict 10, is the third largestpublic school district inTucson,Arizona, in terms of enrollment, with about 13,500 students and a staff of about 2000 employees[1] Amphi was established on July 3, 1893. With its headquarters inFlowing Wells,[2][3] presently serves segments ofNorth Tucson (an area that is known asAmphitheater),Casas Adobes,Catalina Foothills, and the communities ofOro Valley, easternTortolita, andCatalina northwest of the city.

District history

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Following theMexican–American War of 1848, American pioneers began to settle the Tucson area in increasing numbers. Ranchers and settlers developed homesteads in the rural area northwest of the city along the banks of the Rillito River. The community of Rillito was gradually established, and by 1889 the Rillito School District was organized (later to become the Flowing Wells School District).

Rillito residents desired a local school so district children would not be required to travel to the Congress Street School in downtown Tucson. The Rillito School Board proposed a site for a school, but a number of settlers asserted that the proposed location was as undesirable as the Congress Street School. These settlers resided on the eastern edge of the Rillito School District and eventually petitioned thePima County Board of Supervisors to establish an independent school district. On July 3, 1893, Amphitheater Public Schools became a reality. According to Amphitheater High School graduate and historical writer for the Arizona Daily Star newspaper, David Leighton, the founding board members were rancher and assayer Edward L. Wetmore (the Wetmore family is the namesake of Wetmore Road in North Tucson), homesteader and carpenter Levi Marston Prince (namesake of Prince Road in North Tucson), and rancher Joseph D. Andrews.

The district's unique name relates to the geography of the Tucson basin. J. D. Andrews looked north toward theTortolita Mountains and theSanta Catalina Mountains, east to theRincon Mountains, south to theSanta Rita Mountains, and west to theTucson Mountains and was reminded of an enormousamphitheater.

The original Amphitheater School opened in October 1893 with 11 students. In 1904, the district opened a permanent school building on the southeast corner of East Prince Road and North First Avenue in Tucson. Due to decreased enrollment, the school closed temporarily in 1910, quickly reopening with the enrollment increase. A final site for Amphitheater School was selected and the new school opened in 1913 at the present site of L. M. Prince School and Amphitheater Middle School on East Prince Road near North Stone Avenue.

The school expanded to include four additional classrooms in 1924. By 1928, the district established the Amphitheater Carnival, an annual community event that endured until 1958. By 1934 district enrollment had grown to over 500 students from 48 students in 1919.

By the 1930s, district residents desired the establishment of a district high school rather than continuing to send district high school students to Tucson High School in theTucson Unified School District located near theUniversity of Arizona in central Tucson. Using a combination of state and federal (Works Progress Administration) funding,Amphitheater High School was completed in 1939 on East Prince Road under the direction of E.C. Nash, the district's first superintendent appointed in 1937. Amphitheater High School became Tucson's second high school.

The Amphi district experienced gradual population growth, ultimately being dubbed Tucson's first suburb in the 1930s by theArizona Daily Star newspaper. As residential and commercial growth progressed northward along the Oracle Road corridor, additional school sites were developed. The district boundaries and population continued to expand with the growth of the Tucson area, and by 1942, the district extended north of the Rillito River into the foothills of the Santa Catalina Mountains north of Tucson. By 1943, the district boundaries were finalized and extended north to the Pima County line. Dramatic growth transformed the district in the 1950s from a rural district into one of relatively urban character. Marion Donaldson was hired as district superintendent in 1951 and served in such a capacity until 1967, directing the development of the district.

Donaldson brought innovation in educational programs that received national recognition and also championed the construction of new schools in a community with a very limited tax base. A new junior high school was constructed with federal funds and later bond money, opening on September 8, 1952.[4] In 1955,[5] the junior high on West Yavapai Road became the campus for Amphitheater High School and the old senior high school building on East Prince Road became Amphitheater Junior High School.

The tremendous growth in the Tucson area followingWorld War II in the 1950s prompted changes in the district. A divide gradually emerged in the district between the urban neighborhoods of North Tucson and the increasingly affluent suburbs north of the Rillito River. There was a continuing effort to purchase land for future school sites in the face of rising land costs in the foothills of the Santa Catalina Mountains. In 1955 a 20-acre (81,000 m2) parcel northwest of North Oracle Road and West Ina Road cost the district $7,000 and was considered too far north and too costly. The parcel became the site of Winifred Harelson School in 1960. In 1958, Lawrence W. Cross became the assistant superintendent for the district.

The construction of Walker School in 1963 north of the Rillito River brought the "open classroom" and educational innovations to the district under the leadership of Evelyn Carswell as principal. The concept for learning at Walker School was focused on the individual student and individualized schedules, small and large group settings, and anungraded school. These innovations brought national attention to the Amphitheater District, but eventually these changes were perceived as too radical and a return to more traditional educational structure was the final outcome.

Beginning in the fall of 1962, theCanyon del Oro School opened at the base ofPusch Ridge in the Santa Catalina Mountains serving as a middle school and later the district's second high school (beginning in the fall of 1964). CDO's first graduating class was in the summer of 1968. Population growth continued in the district as additional schools opened. By 2001, the district opened a third high school (Ironwood Ridge High School) to meet the growth needs in Oro Valley and the north side of the district.

At present, Amphi has a current enrollment of about 13,500students across the 109-square-mile (280 km2) district.[6] Only Tucson Unified School District andSunnyside Unified School District enroll more students in the Tucson metropolitan area. Amphi is an economically diverse district, servingdisadvantaged communities in North Tucson, and affluent communities in Oro Valley and the Catalina Foothills.[7]

Nine-year-old Christina-Taylor Green, a student at Mesa Verde Elementary, died in the2011 Tucson shooting. The school provided grief counselors in response to the event.[8]

Note: The Wetmore family and L. M. Prince were both featured in David Leighton's popular weekly column, Street Smarts, Sept. 18, 2012, and August 20, 2013, in theArizona Daily Star newspaper.

District schools

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The following schools are part of Amphitheater Public Schools:

High Schools
NameLocationEstab.MascotColors
Amphitheater High SchoolSawtelle Place, Tucson1939PanthersKelly green, white
Canyon del Oro High SchoolLinda Vista Citrus, Oro Valley1964DoradosForest green, gold
Ironwood Ridge High SchoolOro Valley2001NighthawksNavy blue, silver, white
Middle Schools
NameLocationEstab.MascotColors
Amphitheater Middle School[9]Catalina, Tucson1893, 1956Scholarly PiratesDark green, black
L. W. Cross Middle SchoolCasas Adobes1974RamsRed, black
La Cima Middle School[10]Casas Adobes1989CardinalsRed, yellow
K–8 Schools
NameLocationEstab.MascotColors
Coronado K8 School[11]Catalina1976CougarBlue, silver
R. B. Wilson K–8 SchoolOro Valley1996WranglersBlue, green
Elementary Schools
NameLocationEstab.MascotColors
Helen Keeling School[12]Coronado Heights, TucsonNovember 12, 1947[13]CougarsBlue, yellow
L.M. Prince School[14]Pastime Acres, Tucson1953MustangsKelly green, white
F.O. Holaway School[15]Richland Heights, Tucson1957CoyotesRed, white
Winifred Harelson School[16]Catalina Citrus Estates, Casas Adobes1960BobcatsRed, white
E.C. Nash School[17]Miracle Mile, Tucson1960RoadunnersBlue, white
Lulu Walker School[18]Riverside Terrace, Casas Adobes1963WolvesTeal, tan
Marion Donaldson School[19]Rancho Palos Verdes, Casas Adobes1971DolphinsBlue, yellow
Mesa Verde School[20]Casas Adobes1978Mountain lionsBlue, silver
Río Vista School[21]El Abrigo, Tucson1986BulldogsLight blue, white
Copper Creek School[22]Copper Creek, Oro Valley1988HawksCopper, teal
Painted Sky School[23]Oro Valley2001ThunderbirdPurple, yellow
Innovation AcademyOro Valley2017ScorpionsPurple, Blue, Orange
Alternative Schools
NameLocationEstab.
Amphitheater Alternative High School[24]Casas Adobes1981
El Hogar de la Paz[25]Roberta Terrace, Tucson
Rillito Center[26]Catalina, Tucson

References

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  1. ^2006-2007.pubArchived December 23, 2005, at theWayback Machine
  2. ^"2010 Census - Census Block Map: Flowing Wells CDP, AZ" (Archive).U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved August 16, 2015.
  3. ^"Amphi School District Locations" (Archive). Amphitheater Public Schools. Retrieved August 16, 2015. "701 W. Wetmore | Tucson, AZ 85705"
  4. ^"Arizona Daily Star 24 Aug 1952, page Page 47".
  5. ^"Tucson Citizen 12 Jul 1955, page 8".
  6. ^"Amphitheater School District & School Attendance Areas"(PDF).amphi.com. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on January 28, 2006.
  7. ^"Amphithteater School District Heritage". Archived fromthe original on December 17, 2005. RetrievedJune 5, 2022.
  8. ^Holland, Catherine."Mesa Verde Elementary School mourns youngest victim of Tucson shooting"Archived January 13, 2011, at theWayback Machine. AZFamily.com. January 10, 2011. Retrieved January 10, 2011.
  9. ^Amphitheater Middle SchoolArchived December 21, 2008, at theWayback Machine
  10. ^La Cima Middle SchoolArchived 2010-12-21 at theWayback Machine
  11. ^Coronado K–8 SchoolArchived December 2, 2008, at theWayback Machine
  12. ^Helen Keeling SchoolArchived May 16, 2008, at theWayback Machine
  13. ^"12 Nov 1947, 5 - Tucson Citizen at". Newspapers.com. November 12, 1947. RetrievedJune 5, 2022.
  14. ^L.M. Prince SchoolArchived December 21, 2008, at theWayback Machine
  15. ^F.O. Holaway SchoolArchived December 21, 2008, at theWayback Machine
  16. ^Winifred Harelson SchoolArchived 2011-01-26 at theWayback Machine
  17. ^E.C. Nash SchoolArchived December 21, 2008, at theWayback Machine
  18. ^Lulu Walker SchoolArchived 2011-01-08 at theWayback Machine
  19. ^Marion Donaldson SchoolArchived 2011-02-17 at theWayback Machine
  20. ^Mesa Verde SchoolArchived 2010-12-28 at theWayback Machine
  21. ^Rio Vista SchoolArchived December 21, 2008, at theWayback Machine
  22. ^Copper Creek SchoolArchived December 10, 2008, at theWayback Machine
  23. ^Painted Sky SchoolArchived December 7, 2008, at theWayback Machine
  24. ^Amphitheater Alternative High SchoolArchived December 21, 2008, at theWayback Machine
  25. ^El HogarArchived November 23, 2008, at theWayback Machine
  26. ^Rillito CenterArchived October 7, 2008, at theWayback Machine

External links

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