Anaheim Union High School District | |
---|---|
Address | |
501 Crescent Way
Anaheim , California, 92803United States | |
Coordinates | 33°50′20.27″N 117°56′56.03″W / 33.8389639°N 117.9488972°W |
District information | |
Type | Public |
Motto | Unlimited You |
Grades | 7th-12th[1] |
Established | 1898[2] |
Superintendent | Michael Matsuda[3] |
Asst. superintendent(s) | Dr. Jaron Fried, Dr. Nancy Nien, Brad Jackson[3] |
Accreditation(s) | Western Association of Schools and Colleges |
Schools | 22 |
Budget | $566,368,409 (2022-2023) |
NCES District ID | 0602630 [1] |
Students and staff | |
Students | 29,183 (2020–2021)[1] |
Teachers | 1,203.57 (FTE)[1] |
Staff | 1,294.22 (FTE)[1] |
Student–teacher ratio | 24.25:1[1] |
Athletic conference | CIF Southern Section |
Other information | |
Website | www |
The Anaheim Union High School District (AUHSD) is a public school district serving portions of the Orange County cities of Anaheim, Buena Park, Cypress, La Palma, and Stanton. It oversees eight junior high schools (7-8), eight high schools (9-12), and one non-magnet, secondary selective school, Oxford Academy (7-12).
Its superintendent, Dr. Elizabeth Novack, was fired in December 2013 without public explanation.[4] The Board of Trustees appointed Michael Matsuda, the district's former BTSA Coordinator who also currently serves as Secretary on the North Orange County Community College District Board of Trustees.[5]
The school district has gained brief national notoriety twice: once in 1968 when members of the organization Mothers Organized for Moral Stability, inspired by the information in the pamphlet "Is the School House the Proper Place to Teach Raw Sex?", flooded a school board meeting and demanded that a course in sex education at the school be suspended,[6] and again in 1978 when it banned the novels Silas Marner and Gone with the Wind from the school curriculum.[7] The books and the course have long since been reinstated.
In 2024, the school district has received backlash from the local community as a result of its decision for a mass reduction in force (RIF), with the intent to lay off 10% of teachers (119 out of 1,259) increasing to now 253 teachers district-wide.[8][9][10] In response to recent backlash, Michael Matsuda claims the layoffs were because of the expiration of federal funding at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic and a drop in student enrollment.[9] As of May 2024, the district has released a joint statement with the Anaheim Secondary Teachers Association that they’ve rescinded all RIF notifications.[11]
AUHSD Brochure
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).AUHSD Organizational Chart
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).