Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo High School

33°47′37″N 118°13′03″W / 33.79374°N 118.21761°W / 33.79374; -118.21761

Long Beach
,
California

USA
InformationTypePublicMottoSuccess in the West! Pride of the Westside!Established1996School districtLong Beach Unified School DistrictPrincipalMrs. My Ngoc NguyenGrades9-12Enrollment2,101 (2019–20)[1]CampusUrbanColor(s)  Green
  Black
  WhiteMascotJaguarTeam nameJAGSWebsitehttps://cabrillo.lbschools.net/
Ethnic composition as of 2020–21
Race and ethnicity[2] Total
Hispanic or Latino 75.1% 75.1
 
Asian 11.7% 11.7
 
African American 8.5% 8.5
 
Pacific Islander 1.8% 1.8
 
Other 1.6% 1.6
 
Non-Hispanic White/Anglo 1.2% 1.2
 
Native American 0.1% 0.1
 

Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo High School is a high school in Long Beach, California. The school is a part of the Long Beach Unified School District.

History

In the winter of 1996, the ground was broken for Cabrillo High School on the west side of Long Beach. The school opened in September 1996 with grades nine and ten, and a student body of approximately 975 students. Because Cabrillo High School was still under construction, the original plan for the school was that upon completion of their tenth-grade year, all students would transfer to one of the other five comprehensive high schools to complete their secondary education. Efforts by the students and parents instead led to the Board of Education to add grade eleven and eventually grade twelve. In 1999, Cabrillo High School graduated its first class with approximately 75 students receiving their high school diplomas.

Academics

Throughout the years, Cabrillo has seen tremendous instructional changes through multiple 'house' pathways or (Small Learning Community–SLC):

Cabrillo Academy of Global Logistics (AGL)

Cabrillo Academy of Law and Justice (CAL-J)

Cabrillo Engineering and Design (CED)

Specialized Academy of Compute Media, Arts & Animation (SACMAA)

These SLC's are providing Cabrillo students with more options after high school—ranging from college to military (NJROTC) and career opportunities.

College admissions

The Class of 2021 spans throughout California within the California State University and University of California system, although alumni especially committed to universities in Southern California. The most popular destinations within both systems are Long Beach State (54 alumni), UC Santa Barbara (5 alumni), and Cal State Dominguez Hills (3 alumni).[3][4] Long Beach Cabrillo graduates are granted two years of free tuition at Long Beach City College, which has a dedicated Transfer Admission Guarantee resource center for transferring to the majority of UC and CSU Campuses.[5][6] Admissions at private universities are sparse, but enrollments have occurred at USC and Cal Lutheran.[7] Below are admissions tables derived from the University of California and California State University for the Class of 2021:

University of California[3]
Institution Applied Admitted Enrolled
Berkeley 0 0 0
Davis 0 0 0
Irvine 55 6 0
Los Angeles 0 0 0
Merced 16 13 0
Riverside 0 0 0
San Diego 30 4 0
Santa Barbara 19 15 5
Santa Cruz 0 0 0
California State University (SoCal)[4]
Institution Applied Admitted Enrolled
Bakersfield 13 11 0
Channel Islands 2 2 0
Dominguez Hills 73 69 3
Fullerton 67 29 1
Long Beach 134 108 54
Los Angeles 35 33 0
Northridge 8 8 0
Pomona 40 16 1
San Bernardino 3 3 0
San Diego 29 10 0
San Luis Obispo 16 2 0
San Marcos 5 4 0
California State University (NorCal)[4]
Institution Applied Admitted Enrolled
Chico 5 4 0
East Bay 3 1 0
Fresno 3 2 0
Humboldt 2 2 0
Maritime 0 0 0
Monterey Bay 0 0 0
Sacramento 1 1 0
San Francisco 14 9 1
San Jose 5 5 0
Sonoma 1 1 0
Stanislaus 0 0 0

Counselors

The school has 4 pathways, therefore there are multiple counselors specific for each pathway. Two of the counselors manage 9th graders, and the rest manage 10-12th graders.

Andrea Itson (Assistant Principal)

Nancy Freihaut (Head Counselor)

R. Lisa Wholey (CED Counselor 9)

Joel Lovelace (CAL-J/SACMAA Counselor Grade 9)

Karen Kim (CED Counselor Grades 10-12)

John Tran (AGL Counselor Grades 10-12)

Viseth Vann (SACMAA Counselor Grades 10-12)

Luz Romero (CAL-J Counselor Grades 10-12)

Trivia

The school was used as the location for one of the opening scenes from The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift.[8]

During the first season of the television series Glee (TV series), the school was regularly masked as William McKinley High School.[9]

References

  1. ^ "Cabrillo High". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved May 29, 2021.
  2. ^ "2020-21 Enrollment by Ethnicity and Grade: Cabrillo High". California Department of Education. Retrieved 9 April 2022.
  3. ^ a b "UC Admissions by source school". University of California. Retrieved 10 April 2022.
  4. ^ a b c "CSU Applications, Admissions, and Enrollment Dashboard". California State University. Retrieved 10 April 2022.
  5. ^ "Transfer Center at LBCC". Long Beach City College. 27 November 2019. Retrieved 10 April 2022.
  6. ^ "Long Beach College Promise". Long Beach City College. 27 November 2019. Retrieved 10 April 2022.
  7. ^ "Long Beach Cabrillo Signing Day 2014". YouTube. Retrieved 10 April 2022.
  8. ^ "Go On Location: Los Angeles Locations from The Fast and the Furious Movies". App (DiscoverLA). 2015-07-29. Retrieved 2021-09-09.
  9. ^ "Go On Location: Los Angeles Locations from The Fast and the Furious Movies". App (DiscoverLA). 2015-07-29. Retrieved 2021-09-09.

External links

  • Cabrillo High School
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