O'Farrell Community School
The O'Farrell Charter Schools is a network of college-preparatory charter schools in the Skyline-Encanto area in San Diego, Southern California. Often defined as schools within a school, O'Farrell operates under and charters an elementary (K-5), middle (6-8), high (9-12) and online (6-12) school. The school opened its doors in the San Diego Unified School District in 1959 with its name chosen in 1957 as Mabel E. O'Farrell Junior High.[2] It was voted to become a charter school in 1994. President Bill Clinton made a visit to San Diego in 1995 to sign the "Goals 2000" education bill and to visit O'Farrell because it was a charter.[3] It was also mentioned in Hillary Clinton's book It Takes a Village.[4] It has a code of conduct of how to become a good citizen called The Falcon Way, of Focus, Attitude, Leadership, Citizenship, Organization, and Non-Violence,[4] that is indoctrinated per student. Instead of being called principal, faculty and students refer to the educational leader as the Chief Educational Officer (CEO). The large conspicuous mural in front of the school on the side of the Theatre was a tribute to a faculty member by the nickname "Animal" who died. The mural was painted by students.
The O'Farrell Charter Schools | |
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Address | |
6130 Skyline Drive San Diego , CA 92114 United States | |
Information | |
Former names | O'Farrell Junior High School O'Farrell Community School O'Farrell Charter School |
Type | Public Charter School |
Opened | 1959 |
School district | San Diego Unified School District |
Principal | Jill Andersen (middle school) Brian Rainey (high school) |
Grades | K-5th (elementary) 6th-8th (middle school) 9th-12th (high) |
Age range | 5-18 |
Number of students | 1348[1] |
Education system | Charter |
Hours in school day | 7 |
Campuses | The O'Farrell Charter School campus (elementary and middle) The O'Farrell Charter High School (high) |
Campus type | Urban |
Color(s) | Gold & Royal Blue |
Mascot | Falcons |
Chief Educational Officer | Jonathan Dean |
Website | http://ofarrellschool.org/ |
For 2006-2007, the school academic progress place it with an Academic Performance Index of 710 base with 720 growth, where 800 is the California state goal.[5] The school boasted itself as being #1 in API compared to other surrounding schools in its November 2007 edition of its newsletter.[6] For October 2005, the demographic makeup of the student body consisted of 36% Hispanic, 31% Black, 24% Filipino, 3%White.[7]
Hillary Clinton also mentions the O'Farrell way extending beyond these rules that also includes the graduation requirement of time for community service.[4] However, the graduation requirement actually fits under The O'Farrell Standard which is just an award and recognition issued for those who have essentially accomplished (1) good academic performance, (2) portfolio compilation, (3) presentation of the portfolio, (4) 12 hours of community service equally distributed at home, work, school; (5) good citizenship The O'Farrell Way all of which were mentioned in the school's charter proposal.[8]
Alma mater
Hail O'Farrell this is our home
Hearts be ever true
Loyalty and honor sing
The gold and royal blue
Soaring far above it all
This is our family
Forever here, forever one
Falcons ever free
Family organization and designations
The school originally used a social structure called Educational Families.[9][10] The faculty of the family taught interdisciplinary subjects. For example, one teacher taught history in combination of biology while another teacher taught Spanish in combination of dance. The family structure was introduced in the 1990s and more connected to newer branded O'Farrell Community School than older O'Farrell Junior High School.
It was organized in such a way one set of families serve the 6th grade then another set of families serve both 7 and 8 grade students simultaneously, especially the main and usually class of the day is called homebase or homeroom. Associated close with the letters are a name of a broad theme for example: I for Inspirations; E for Exceeders; F for Fantastics; D for Discovery; A for Achievers.[11]
In later years, the school designated its families as Family 1, Family 2, ..., Family 6 with newer names such as "Great Force" for Family 5 and "Horizon Explorers" for Family 6.[12]
Schools within a school
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O'Farrell is divided into four of their current western academies as we know them today,
- The O'Farrell Elementary School
- The O'Farrell Charter Middle School
- The O'Farrell Charter High School
- Ingenuity Charter School
In the mid-to-early 2010s, "Ingenuity Charter School, Blended Learning Independent Study Program" was added as an official O'Farrell charter school. Students will attend in person at the two Ingenuity rooms located on the middle school campus, only on two weekdays of the student's choice, the rest being done independently and online.
Ingenuity, the middle school and the elementary are on the "same campus", the campus being called by the organization's former name, The O'Farrell Charter School campus. The O'Farrell Charter High School is located on a different campus and different address. (6150) The elementary school's main opening is located on the intersecting street. (61st St)
Each school has a principal and vice principal and has a separate program, teachers, and bell schedules. In the late 2000's, a new school was added for independent, mostly online classes called Ingenuity Charter. In 2020, O'Farrell Charter High was ranked the #3 high school in San Diego by U.S. News & World Report.
Awards
AVID National Demonstration School by AVID
National Excellence in Urban Education Award by the National Center for Urban School Transformation (NCUST)
Best High Schools in America by U.S. News & World Report, 2018, 2019, 2020.
Notable alumni
- Rosalie Hamlin known for 1960 song, "Angel Baby"[13]
- Tom Waits claimed to have attended this school and remembered it as an all-black school in a 1973 interview.[14]
- Shirley Horton, California assemblywoman and former mayor of Chula Vista[15]
References
- "SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT CARD (SHORT VERSION)" (PDF). San Diego Unified School District. Spring 2007. Retrieved 2008-02-07.
- "Celebrating 150 Years: The Sixties". San Diego City Schools. Archived from the original on 2008-05-10. Retrieved 2008-02-07.
- John T. Woolley and Gerhard Peters. "William J. Clinton: Remarks at the O'Farrell Community School in San Diego, California". The American Presidency Project. Retrieved 2008-02-07.
- Clinton, Hillary (2006-12-12). It Takes a Village. Simon and Schuster. p. 245. ISBN 1-4165-4064-4. Retrieved 2008-02-07.
o farrell san diego california charter 1994.
- "2006-07 Accountability Progress Reporting (APR)". California Department of Education. 2007-11-05. Retrieved 2008-02-07.
- "Volume 10 Issue 1" (PDF). O'Farrell Community School. November 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 12, 2008. Retrieved 2008-02-07.
- "2006-07 Accountability Progress Reporting (APR)". California Department of Education. 2007-12-13. Retrieved 2008-02-07.
- "Charter Renewal Petition" (PDF). 2003-10-09. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-08-23. Retrieved 2008-02-07.
- Theodore R. Sizer (1997-09-15). Horace's Hope: What Works for the American High School. ISBN 0-395-87754-7.
- Jacqueline S. Thousand, Richard A. Villa (2005). Creating an inclusive school. ISBN 1-4166-0049-3.
- "Welcome to O'Farrell Community School!". O'Farrell Community School: Center For Advanced Academic Studies. 1995-03-26.
- "Staff Directory - O'Farrell Community School". O'Farrell Charter School. 2007-03-08. Retrieved 2008-02-07.
- "The Biography of Rosie Hamlin".
- "Quotes: Childhood". Tom Waits Library. Retrieved 2008-02-07.
- "Biography of Shirley Horton". Archived from the original on 2008-05-16. Retrieved 2008-02-08.