Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Fontana Unified School District is located in and serves most of the city of Fontana, California, a community in San Bernardino County about 50 miles east of Los Angeles. The district contains 45 schools, which serve students from K-12 to adult education. It was established in the 1920s and unified in 1956. [2]
Kaiser High is one of five comprehensive high schools within Fontana Unified School District. The school is named after renowned American industrialist Henry J. Kaiser, who founded the famous Kaiser Steel Mill, which helped to revolutionize the city of Fontana. [2] The school was established in 1998. As of 2023, the principal is Christopher ...
A product of the Southern California post war boom, Fontana High (referred to locally as "FoHi") was completed in September 1952. The school was needed to serve the children of thousands of blue collar families from across the country who came to work at the Kaiser Steel plant – built just outside Fontana in the 1940s – and at the time the only steel production plant of its kind west of ...
FUSD is an acronym used to refer to the following school districts: Flagstaff Unified School District; Fontana Unified School District; Fremont Unified School District;
A Sequoia Middle School teacher can be heard repeatedly using a racial slur during an exchange with a student in class that was captured on video. Fontana teacher captured on video repeatedly ...
A.B. Miller High School is named after Azariel Blanchard Miller, who is credited as the founder of the city of Fontana.In 1905, he brought 200 head of horse, mules, plows, scrapers and tents into the area and began transforming 17,000 acres of sand, sage brush and rock into a great citrus fruit, poultry and livestock farm.
Summit High School in Fontana, California, is one of five comprehensive high schools in the Fontana Unified School District. It is located at 15551 Summit Avenue. The Summit Branch Public Library is located on the school campus. The school was opened on September 5, 2006.
The district had 68.4% of Hispanic or Latino students in 2018-19, and the percentage increased to 69.3% for 2022-23. “That’s been like that for at least 10 years.