Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Palo Alto High School
Comprehensive high school in Palo Alto, Santa Clara, California, United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Palo Alto Senior High School (commonly referred to locally as "Paly"[4]) is a comprehensive public high school in Palo Alto, California. Operated by the Palo Alto Unified School District, the school is one of two high schools in the district, the other being across town: Gunn High School, with which Paly has a rivalry.
Palo Alto High School was originally established as a private school in 1894. The school was later established as a public school four years later, and a new campus was built in 1918. The school's property is adjacent to Stanford University, who provided the land for the school.
The school admits roughly 500 students each year and features various extracurriculars, including a variety of student-led publications, glassblowing, robotics, and a theater program. It is a two-time National Blue Ribbon School.[5]
Remove ads
History
Palo Alto Senior High School initially opened in 1894 as a private school. At the time of its opening, the school consisted of 24 students to 3 teachers. The school would later become a public school in 1918. Classes were initially held in the Channing Avenue Grammar School; a three-room high school was later built using funds from a trustee. An expanded campus began construction in 1917 and finished construction by December 1918.[6]
Remove ads
Demographics
Summarize
Perspective
2021–22[3]
- 2,010 students: 1,042 Male (51.8%), 968 Female (48.2%)
2015–16[7]
- 1,994 students: 982 Male (49.6%), 1004 Female (50.4%)
Standardized testing
Remove ads
Student media
Summarize
Perspective
In October 2014, a new Media Arts Center (MAC) was unveiled at Paly. The MAC is the hub of journalism at Palo Alto High School.[12]
Year-round student publications
These publications have a dedicated class associated with them.
- The Campanile is the high school's newspaper. It prints 24 broadsheet pages once every three weeks. The Campanile has been in the National Scholastic Press Association Hall of Fame since 2004, and has also won four Pacemaker awards as well as a West regional award for editorial excellence from Time.
- C Magazine is the high school Arts and Culture Magazine. C Magazine has won a Gold Crown award from Columbia Scholastic Press Association in 2015 and 2016.[13]
- Verde is Paly's school magazine publication, founded in 1999.[14] It is published five times each year and available online. Verde has won Pacemaker and Gold Crown awards for scholastic journalism, including the 2005 Gold Crown award in the Newspaper category.[citation needed] In 2006 Verde won the Best in Show at National Journalism Convention held in San Francisco.[citation needed] In 2008 Verde was one of four newsmagazines awarded the Pacemaker award from the National Scholastic Press Association.[15] In 2023, Verde was named Best in Show in the Newsmagazine category for schools with 1,800 or more students.[16]
- Viking is Paly's sports magazine publication, published five times each year and available online. Founded in 2007, Viking was the first publication at the high school level to solely cover athletics in the country. It won the National Scholastic Press Association's Student Journalist Impact Award in 2008.[14]
- The Paly Voice, launched in 2003,[14] is Paly's online news source. It features searchable archives of all other Paly publications as well as exclusive online content. In the spring of 2005, the site won both the People's Voice and Overall Webby Award in the "Student" category.[17]
- InFocus is Paly's broadcast TV news program. Founded in 1998, it airs daily during school.[14]
- Madrono, the Palo Alto High School yearbook founded around 1918, has won numerous awards; one of the most prestigious being a gold medalist for the Columbia Scholastic Press Association. It will publish its 103rd issue in 2022.
Additional student publications
These publications are clubs but do not have a dedicated class.
- Proof is Paly's arts and entertainment magazine. It was first published second semester of the 2009–10 school year.
- Agora is Paly's foreign affairs magazine.[14] First published in 2012, it is the first high school foreign affairs publication in the country.[18] It publishes once a semester.
- Littera is Paly's club literary magazine. The club was created in the fall of 2018. It publishes an online issue every semester.
Remove ads
Athletics
Titles won by teams from Palo Alto High School range from CIF State Championships in Boys Varsity Basketball in 1993 and 2006,[19] a football Division I state championship in 2010,[20][21] volleyball Division I state championships in 2010 and 2011,[22] to CCS Championships in Football in 1995, 2006, 2007, 2010, 2022, and 2023 [23] and countless CCS titles in other sports. In 2010, both the Boys and Girls Lacrosse teams won the inaugural Santa Clara Valley Athletic League Championships.
Paly has 25 varsity teams, including football, swimming, as well as badminton, softball, basketball, track and field/cross country running, golf, lacrosse, soccer, tennis, volleyball, water polo, field hockey, ice hockey, and wrestling teams.[24] Since 2023, former NFL quarterback Andrew Luck, drafted first overall by the Indianapolis Colts in the 2012 NFL draft and four-time NFL Pro Bowler, has served as an assistant coach to Paly's football team. The school is also home to several athletic clubs, including an Ultimate Frisbee Club.[25]
Remove ads
Notable alumni
- Davante Adams (2011), NFL wide receiver
- Jeremy Anderson (artist) (attended 1940s), sculptor, professor of art[26]
- Rink Babka (1954), Olympic discus thrower
- Joan Baez (1958), folk singer[27]
- Lisa Brennan-Jobs (1996), writer and daughter of Steve Jobs
- Charles Brenner (1961), APL implementer and forensic mathematician[28]
- Ron "Money-B" Brooks (1987), rapper (Digital Underground)
- Ron Christie (1987), Republican political strategist[29]
- Birge Clark (1910), architect
- Whitfield Crane (1986), rock singer (Ugly Kid Joe)
- Aarón Díaz (2001), Mexican-American actor and model (Quantico)
- Tim Dickinson (1992), political journalist (Rolling Stone, Mother Jones)
- Dave Feldman (1983), sportscaster (CSN Bay Area)
- Karen Joy Fowler (1968), author (The Jane Austen Book Club)
- Dave Franco (2003), actor (Scrubs, 21 Jump Street, Now You See Me)
- James Franco (1996), actor (Spider-Man trilogy, Pineapple Express, Milk, 127 Hours)[30]
- Tom Franco (1998), artist
- Erle Stanley Gardner (1909), detective fiction author & creator of Perry Mason[31]
- Ariel Gore, writer, she attended for two years and has written about the experience.[32]
- Charles Haid (1961), actor and director, (played Andy Renko on TV series Hill Street Blues)[28]
- Jim Harbaugh (1982), football player and coach, current coach of the LA Chargers[33][34]
- Peter Hansen (1997), football coach
- Douglas Hofstadter (1961), professor of cognitive science and author[28]
- Allan Hoover (1925), financier, son of President Herbert Hoover[35]
- Jon Huntsman, Sr. (1955), billionaire founder of Huntsman Corporation[36]
- KeeSean Johnson (2014), football player[37]
- Ollie Johnston (1930), Academy Award-winning Disney animator (Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Fantasia)[38]
- Morris Kirksey (1913), gold medal-winning sprinter and rugby player at the 1920 Summer Olympics[39]
- Bill Kreutzmann (1965), drummer (Grateful Dead)[40]
- Bill Lane, Sunset magazine publisher, American diplomat, and philanthropist[41]
- Cory Lerios, founding member of the band Pablo Cruise
- Jeremy Lin (2006), basketball player[42][43]
- Jim Loscutoff (1948), basketball player, won seven NBA championships with the Boston Celtics[44][45]
- John Markoff (1967), New York Times journalist and author
- Ron "Pigpen" McKernan (1963), musician (Grateful Dead) (didn't graduate)[40]
- Rob Minkoff (1980), film director and animator (The Lion King, Stuart Little)
- Sean Nolan (1990), Olympic water polo team, Sydney 2000
- Jesse Moss (1988), documentary filmmaker
- Hank Norberg, football player
- Teresa Noyola (2008), soccer player[46]
- Téa Obreht (2002), novelist (The Tiger's Wife)[47]
- Luke Paquin (1996), guitarist (Hot Hot Heat)
- Joc Pederson (2010), Major League Baseball player (Los Angeles Dodgers, Chicago Cubs, Atlanta Braves, San Francisco Giants)[48]
- Stu Pederson (1978), Major League Baseball player (Los Angeles Dodgers)[49]
- Bill Pidto (1983), sportscaster (ESPN, MSG Network)
- Hal Plotkin (1975), journalist and activist[50]
- Keith Raffel (1968), technology executive, novelist, US Senate aide[51]
- Tom Ritchey (1974), (Ritchey Design), cycling engineer and pioneer of the mountain bike
- Rosalind Ross (2008), screenwriter, film director and equestrian[52]
- Karl Schnell, Major League Baseball player (Cincinnati Reds)
- Dave Schultz (1977), 3x NCAA Champion, Olympic and world champion wrestler[53]
- Mark Schultz (1978), 3x NCAA Champion, Olympic and world champion wrestler[53]
- Joe Sebok (1995), professional poker player
- Joe Simitian (1970), California State Senator (2004–12) and former California State Assemblyman (2000–04)
- Grace Slick (1958), rock singer (Jefferson Airplane) (attended 1–2 years, but graduated from Castilleja)
- Les Steers (1937), high jumper[54]
- Tom Stern (1964), Oscar-nominated cinematographer (Million Dollar Baby, Mystic River, Changeling)
- Dink Templeton (1915), multi-sport athlete, 1920 Olympic gold medalist and Hall of Fame Stanford track & field coach[55]
- Christopher Tin (1994), Grammy Award winning composer
- Molly Tuttle (2011), Grammy Award-winning Bluegrass musician[56]
- Lew Welch, Beat poet, educator, and writer[57]
- Tad Williams (1975), author (Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn, Otherland, and Shadowmarch science fiction/fantasy series)
- Kirk Wise (1981), film director/animator (Beauty and the Beast, Atlantis: The Lost Empire)
- Remi Wolf (2014), Pop/funk singer-songwriter and former reality TV contestant [58]
- Ron Wyden (1967), U.S. Senator from Oregon (1996– )[59]
- Lily Zhang (2014), U.S. Olympic table tennis player, London 2012[60]
- Jan Zobel (1965), accountant and LGBTQ community organizer in Bay Area
Remove ads
See also
- Gunn High School, Palo Alto's other high school
- Cubberley High School, Palo Alto's now-defunct third high school
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads