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EAGLES Academy
Address
7060 Hollywood Blvd.

Hollywood, Los Angeles
,
California 90028

Information
TypePublic high school
Established1995
FounderJerry Battey
Closed2004
PrincipalJerry Battey
Grades7-12[2]
Enrollment35 students (1999)[1]
CampusUrban
AffiliationsLos Angeles Unified School District

EAGLES Academy Central High School was a public high school located in Hollywood, Los Angeles, designed for gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender young people, as well as those questioning their sexuality and educational dropouts. It was founded in 1995 along with the "Educational Options" program by the LAUSD and closed in 2004.

History

EAGLES Academy Central High School was a public high school run by the department of "Educational Options" of the Los Angeles Unified school district (LAUSD). The name EAGLES is an acronym from "Empasizing Adolescent Gay Lesbian Education Services."[2] The target group of this school was gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender students, as well as those questioning their sexuality and educational dropouts. The mission statement was "A safe place for youth to receive their education."[3] It was supervised by Ruben Zacarias, in that time period the superintendent of schools in charge, Elizabeth Newman, the options administrator, and Sunshine S. Sepulveda, an educational advisor to LAUSD. Founder and principal of the school was Jerry Battey, an English teacher.

In 1999, eleven teachers worked at EAGLES.[1] The curriculum followed the Carnegie Unit and Student Hour system with 45 minute units in core subjects like English, science, social studies, and mathematics plus German and Spanish as second languages.[1]

There were also one full-time and four part-time volunteer counselors.[1]

The school was closed in the Summer of 2004 due to financial shortages.

Literature

  • David Campos: Sex, Youth, and Sex Education: A Reference Handbook. Contemporary Education Issues, 2002. EAGLES Academy: Pages 164, 166-167. ISBN 978-1576077764.
  • Arianne MacBean, Greg Christensen, Alexander-Martin Sardina: Sweet Fantasy - Writing and Performance with High School Students. A Venture by the Los Angeles Central High School, Hollywood, in Collaboration with the California Institute of the Arts (CalArts). Los Angeles (California Institute of the Arts), 1999. No ISBN.[1]
  • Lisa Meyer: "Hostile Classrooms – The state of hate." In: The Advocate, No. 33, April 13, 1999. Pages 33-35.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e Entry in the OPAC of the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek, retrieved on Jue 8th, 2018.
  2. ^ a b Lisa Meyer: "Hostile Classrooms – The state of hate." In: The Advocate, No. 33, April 13, 1999. Pages 33-35.
  3. ^ David Campos: Sex, Youth, and Sex Education: A Reference Handbook. Contemporary Education Issues, 2002. Page 167. ISBN 978-1576077764.