A special meeting of the FUHSD Board of Trustees has been scheduled for Monday, February 27th to receive public input regarding fiscal challenges the District is currently facing.  The meeting will take place at 6:30 p.m. in room 201 of Fallbrook High School.
 

Special Meeting of the Board of Trustees
Date: 2/27/2012
Time: 6:30 PM8:30 PM
Location: Room 201 of Fallbrook High School
Fallbrook High School Spring Open House
Date: 2/29/2012
REGULAR MEETING OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Date: 3/5/2012
Time: 6:30 PM8:30 PM
Location: Fallbrook High School Room 201, 2400 S. Stage Coach, Fallbrook, CA 92028

Student Tutorting Options Important message regarding tutoring options.
Special Meeting of the FUHSD Board of Trustees set for February 27, 2012
Regular Education Home-to-School Transporation at Risk Due to financial challenges the District faces, including the possible loss of State funding for home-to-school transportation, the Fallbrook Union High School District Board of Trustees is considering the elimination of regular education home-to-school transportation commencing with the 2012-2013 school year. For more detailed information regarding this issue, please click on the attached PDF.
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FUHSD has adopted as foundational documents for 21st Century Learning the Framework for 21st Century Learning as provided by the Partnership for 21st Century Skills and the National Education Technology Standards as developed by the International Society for Technology in Education, ISTE™.
 
These documents and other resources are posted below. 
read entire statement...


Educationally Speaking
January 2012

Due to declining enrollment and inadequate state funding, the Fallbrook Union High School District is again in the position of reducing programs and services that support students. While this unfortunate reality is not unique to our District, the impact will be.

One of the major factors adding to our challenge is the increasing expectations about our schools responsibilities to our students. When public schools originated back in 1640, they were established to teach basic reading, some writing, and arithmetic skills, and cultivate values that serve a democratic society. According to Jamie Vollmer, in his publication “The Ever Increasing Burden on America’s Public Schools,” since 1900 the curriculum expectations and additional duties required of public schools have expanded significantly. The following highlights some of the major shifts of responsibility to public schools:

1900 -1910 Nutrition and Immunization
1910-1930 Physical Education, Vocational Education, Home Economics
1940s School lunch programs
1950s Expanded math, science, music, foreign language, and art education. Added safety and driver’s education
1960s Consumer Education, Career Education
1970s Special Education, Character Education, Drug and Alcohol Abuse Education
1980s Multicultural/Ethnic Education, Bilingual Education, Global Education, Computer Education
1990s HIV/AIDS Education, Conflict Resolution, At-Risk and Dropout Prevention, Service Learning
2000s No Child Left Behind; Anti-Harassment Policies, Health and Wellness Programs
2010s Race to the Top

The above is not an exhaustive list. Just this school year alone, the District was expected to ensure whooping cough immunizations for all students along with new curriculum expectations.
What should we conclude? First, schools cannot do it all. There is not enough time. Over the past century, though these expectations have increased, the typical length of the school year and length of school day remain the same. Second, schools cannot do it all. There is not enough money. Money provides staff and resources to meet the myriad of expectations.

During the next few months, due to reduced education funding and declining enrollment, the Board of Trustees will need to reduce programs and services in order to align expenses with income. These decisions will not be easy. The Board is interested in public input regarding both priorities for continued implementation and those areas the public is receptive to program/service reduction and/or elimination. Input can be provided during regular Board meetings or through communications directly to the Superintendent’s office at dmitchell@fuhsd.net. Please consider providing your ideas to us as the District wrestles with these issues.

Dale J. Mitchell
Superintendent

read entire statement...

Welcome to the Fallbrook Union High School District. The Board of Trustees and staff are proud of our district and schools. Through this webpage and links, the district is pleased to inform you of the many quality programs, services, and opportunities for involvement for students and parent/community members.

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© Fallbrook Union High School District
2234 South Stage Coach Lane, Fallbrook, CA 92028
Phone: (760) 723-6332 Fax: (760) 731-6192
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