Silver Creek High School (San Jose, California)

Silver Creek High School

We lead, others follow.
Address
3434 Silver Creek Road
San Jose, California
USA
Coordinates 37°18′14″N 121°48′26″W / 37.30389°N 121.80713°W / 37.30389; -121.80713Coordinates: 37°18′14″N 121°48′26″W / 37.30389°N 121.80713°W / 37.30389; -121.80713
Information
Type Public high school
Established 1969
School district East Side Union High School District
Principal Adolfo Laguna
Faculty 212 (2011-2012)
Grades 9-12
Enrollment 2,465 (2014-2015)
Campus Suburban
Color(s) Silver, Orange, and Black             
Mascot Raider
Yearbook SC Galleon
Website http://schs.schoolloop.com/

Silver Creek High School is a high school located in San Jose, California which is operated by the East Side Union High School District. It is a California Distinguished School.

Accomplishments

Silver Creek High School (San Jose, California) Silver Creek is one of only eight high schools in the nation to produce two Olympic Champions. Millard Hampton, a graduate of Silver Creek, won a Gold Medal at the 1976 Olympic Games in the 400-meter relay and a Silver Medal in the 200-meter dash. Andre Phillips, also a Silver Creek graduate, won a Gold Medal at the 1988 Olympic Games in the 400-meter hurdles.[1]

Silver Creek holds an annual Track and Field invitational titled "Hampton Phillips Classic" held at San Jose City College. The Track and Field meet in named after Millard Hampton and Andre Phillips. Silver Creek has won several CCS, League, and State titles in Track and Field and Cross Country. Silver Creek's Track and Field team remains in "Mt. Hamilton Division" in the Blossom Valley League. Silver Creek's Cross Country team also remains in "Mt. Hamilton Division" ever since the Blossom Valley League was created.

The AP Program at Silver Creek is the largest in its district, offering 18 AP Classes.

Silver Creek is also the only school in the district that offers a Japanese language program.

Silver Creek was shown on the television show MTV "Made" featuring a girl student trying to be made into a football player.[2]

Silver Creek is ranked #1,563 out of about 21,000 high schools nationwide.[3]

Renovations

Silver Creek had a traditional "dirt" track until after the 1998–1999 school year. An 8-lane, red colored track, was then installed. The installation included surfacing for high jump, and the long/triple jump runways. Starting on June 27, 2012, all of Silver Creek's buildings have been painted to match the newer U-Building, and the new theater that was finished in 2014. The new colors are tan with green trim, replacing the older colors, white with maroon trim. Along with the new colors of the buildings, all of the light posts have been painted black, replacing the old maroon. In addition to the painting of the lights, new will be added and all existing lights on campus will be changed from yellow/sodium colored lights, to brighter LED lights. The school received a new turf football field, resurfaced track lanes, and stadium lighting in 2012. Photovoltaic panels were also installed in the student parking lot .

Track records

Men

FAT - Fully Automated Timing

Women

Demographics

As of 2014–2015, the school enrolls 2,465 students. The 2015 population is 56% Asian (Pacific Islander and Filipino included), 36% Hispanic, 5% White, 2% African American, and 1% other.[7] The student demographic at Silver Creek is very diverse, but is mostly (Vietnamese American). In 1969 the student demographic was 68% White, 29% Black, 1.5% Hispanic, 0.5% Asian, and 0.5% Native American.

Notable alumni

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.