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The school was originally known as East Los Angeles Area High School #2. In 2006 the school was named Esteban E. Torres High School, after retired U.S. Representative Esteban Edward Torres . [ 3 ] The school opened on September 13, 2010 [ 1 ] with students in grades 9–12.
This is a list of high schools in Los Angeles County, California. Catholic Los Angeles City ... Frederick K.C. Price III Christian Schools, Los Angeles [43] Glendale ...
List of school districts in Los Angeles County, California, United States. Primary and secondary (K-12) ... Los Angeles Unified School District;
Zoned schools. Elizabeth Learning Center (only K–8 is zoned) (Cudahy, opened 1927); James A. Foshay Learning Center, Exposition Park (only 6–12 is zoned; in order to attend Foshay LC for 9–12, a student has to have been enrolled as an 8th grader) (Los Angeles, opened 1924)
East Los Angeles Renaissance Academy (ELARA) Renaissance; officially East Los Angeles Renaissance Academy at Esteban E. Torres High School No. 2, unofficially East Los Angeles Renaissance Academy, School of Urban Planning and Public Policy, is a small public, coeducational, pilot secondary school of the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) located in East Los Angeles, California.
Inglewood Unified School District abbreviated (IUSD) is a public school system district headquartered in and serving Inglewood, California . [ 1 ] IUSD serves most of the city of Inglewood and much of the unincorporated Los Angeles County community of Ladera Heights .
In 2015, Lincoln High School's baseball team won the CIF Los Angeles City Section Division II baseball championship, defeating Cesar Chavez High School of San Fernando by a score of 3–0 in a game played at Dodger Stadium. It was the school's second baseball championship, and the first one since 1935.
The campus opened on July 5, 2005, with a three-track, year-round calendar to provide immediate relief for overcrowding at nearby Jefferson High School. It was the first new four-year high school to open in LAUSD in over 35 years. Funding came from a school construction bond issue passed by Los Angeles voters in 2000.