Leadership Public Schools, Hayward

Not to be confused with Leadership High School in San Francisco.

Coordinates: 37°37′30.09″N 122°5′26.56″W / 37.6250250°N 122.0907111°W / 37.6250250; -122.0907111

Leadership Public Schools, Hayward
Address
28000 Calaroga Avenue
Hayward, California
United States
Information
Type Charter high school
Established 2005
School district Leadership Public Schools[1]
Dean Omar Wandera
Principal Michael DeSousa
Teaching staff 23
Grades 9-12
Enrollment 455 (2012-2013)
Color(s) Purple
Mascot Royals
Accreditation WASC[2]
National ranking Gold - US News and World Report
API average 861 (2011-2012)
Website LPS Hayward Website

Leadership Public Schools, Hayward (colloquially known as LPS, Hayward) is a charter high school in Hayward, California. Founded in 2005, it is one of four schools in the Leadership Public Schools charter network in the California Bay Area. In 2011, Intel named LPS, Hayward a finalist in mathematics for its Intel Schools of Distinction program.[3]

Demographics

2012-13 total enrollment was 455.[4] Enrollment by ethnicity was: Hispanic or Latino (any race), 280; Filipino (not Hispanic), 48; Asian (not Hispanic), 49; African American (not Hispanic), 28; Caucasian (not Hispanic), 16; Other, 13.[4]

Courses and Achievements

Leadership Public Schools, Hayward offers college preparatory and Advanced Placement classes. Current AP classes include: biology, calculus, English language, English literature, government, physics, Spanish, statistics, and US history.

In 2012, a study from the University of Southern California ranked LPS, Hayward as the #2 charter school in California.[5] In 2015, LPS Hayward earned a prestigious Gold medal by ranking 54th nationwide among charter schools in U.S. News & World Report's "Best High Schools." In the same study, LPS placed 32nd in California and 186th in the nation among all high schools.[6])

Sports

LPS, Hayward is a member of the Bay Area Charter Schools Athletic Conference.[7] LPS offers teams in cross country, soccer, basketball, baseball and flag football.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/23/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.