Palos Verdes Homes enjoy excellent schools

Palos Verdes Homes enjoy the “best” school district

Best High Schools Report

imageAccording to the superintendent of schools for the Palos Verdes Peninsula Unified School District and as reported in the “Best High Schools – US News Rankings”…

Peninsula High and Palos Verdes High Ranked Among the Best in the Nation

Once again, both high schools in the PVPUSD have received national recognition for their outstanding academic programs. In the latest US News & World Report rankings of the nations’ best high schools, Palos Verdes Peninsula High was #23 in California and Palos Verdes High was # 53.  In the Washington Post rankings that were just released, Peninsula High was # 24 in California, and Palos Verdes High was # 61.   Both schools are competing with private schools, small charter schools, academies, and magnet programs across the nation.

You can read more information from the Superintendent on the quality of Palos Verdes schools and what’s happening with the school district by visiting the Palos Verdes School District website here and then click the pictures below to get information on both Palos Verdes Peninsula High School and Palos Verdes High School

Meanwhile if you would like to have more information on how to search for homes for sale in Palos Verdes, feel welcome to visit my website

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Palos Verdes Schools Measure M

Peninsula voters asked to toss school levies’ time limit
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The strong academic performance of Palos Verdes Peninsula schools is often cited as a reason newcomers buy expensive homes on The Hill, and residents have for years been generous in support of the school district.

Now, faced with continuing cuts to Sacramento’s education budget, the district is asking homeowners on Nov. 8 to open their wallets indefinitely in support of a $374 annual parcel tax with no expiration date and an adjustment for inflation.

The tax, which provides an exemption for senior citizens, amounts to the exact same dollar figure that property owners are paying now for two parcel taxes – at $165 and $209 per year – that are set to expire in 2013. The funds can only be used for district educational programs, not for facilities or construction.

But the fact that Measure M includes no sunset date has generated more pushback for a district that has asked voters to fund three construction bond measures and three parcel tax measures since 2000.

There’s no organized opposition – and no ballot measure argument against it was submitted – but handmade signs opposing Measure M have been spotted on the Peninsula.

“This is a hard sell. But because it becomes a no sunset, the district can rely on this money,” said Julie Trell, a Palos Verdes Estates mother of two and co-chairwoman of the pro-M campaign, Keep Our PVP Schools Strong.

The measure comes as the school district has been in the spotlight in recent months

for a lawsuit over land use in Palos Verdes Estates, a contentious battle over parent-proposed football stadium lighting at Peninsula High, and criticism from neighbors over new bleachers installed at Palos Verdes High.
But district officials feel confident because voters have been so supportive in the past.

The measure needs approval from at least two-thirds of voters. A 2009 parcel tax measure – one of the two that will expire in 2013 – garnered a fairly close 68.9 percent of the vote.

The two existing parcel taxes bring in about $7 million for district operations each year, a big chunk of the Palos Verdes Unified School District’s $90million general fund budget, Deputy Superintendent Pearl Iizuka said.

“If we were to lose that portion of that funding, we’re talking devastating cuts,” Iizuka said.

Without that $7 million, the district forecasts layoffs for 90 teachers and 40 support staffers, plus cuts to athletic programs, counseling, academic intervention initiatives, library and technical employees. Class sizes would increase as well.

Those cuts would come on top of a loss of $25 million in state funding since 2008-09 – money that’s owed to the district.

The precarious state budget situation is yet another reason that the district wants a reliable source of local revenue, Measure M supporters said.

When cuts began three years ago, the district had the equivalent of about 629 full-time teachers, counselors, nurses and psychologists. Today, that figure is 565, while the district serves about the same number of students – nearly 12,000.

And though it covers an affluent area, the 15-campus district is considered a “poor” education agency because it receives less money per pupil than many other nearby districts because of an arcane state funding formula.

Still, with a generous education foundation that recently pledged to raise $2.7 million for the district this year, Palos Verdes Peninsula schools haven’t seen truly deep cuts found in other districts.

Andrea Sala, executive director of the Peninsula Education Foundation, said the nonprofit has witnessed increasing belt-tightening among area residents, but parents have continued to give.

“Schools are very important in this community, whether you’re living in an apartment and you’re a single parent or you’re in a $10 million home. … Most of the people who moved here – whether they’re 35 or 85 – moved here because of the schools,” Sala said.

However, voters, she said, are more “leery” about Measure M than in the past because of the lack of a sunset date.

At a City Council candidate forum in Rancho Palos Verdes last week, most of the contenders expressed alarm about the issue, though none specifically said they outright opposed Measure M. (School board President Dora de la Rosa is among those running for a Rancho Palos Verdes council seat, and she has enthusiastically backed it.)

Trell said she explains to voters that the school board can move to stop levying the tax at any time in the future. And voters can choose to place an initiative on the ballot to overturn the parcel tax if they decide it’s unfair. That could be passed by a simple majority vote.

“The misconception that people have is that no sunset means it’s permanent. That’s not the case,” Trell said.

As for concerns about the tax’s built-in inflation adjustment based on the consumer price index, Trell notes that the board has to hold a public hearing and vote each year on whether to make that adjustment – typically a small percentage.

Iizuka, for her part, said it’s hard to foresee a future when the district won’t rely on money from the parcel tax.

“If we look at history as to how the state is, maybe there will be a time when we’re able to be made whole again. At that time, maybe we can evaluate the parcel tax,” Iizuka said.

 
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Palos Verdes Real Estate Report | Peninsula High School Ranks “One of the Best”

Peninsula High Ranked One of Best Schools for Math, Science

The high school comes in at No. 78 on a U.S. News & World Report list of just over 200 schools.

Palos Verdes Peninsula High School was ranked as one of the best high schools in the nation for math and science, based in part on student performance in those subjects, according to a U.S. News & World Report ranking released last week.

The school came in at No. 78 on a list of 208 schools. To qualify for the Math and Science ranking, a school first had to be listed as either Gold, Silver, or Honorable Mention in the U.S. News Best High Schools rankings published in December 2009. Peninsula High was ranked as a Silver Medal school.

The nearly 600 schools were evaluated based on their students’ participation rates and performances on AP exams in math and science.

“Any school that ranks first on our list is doing an extremely good job motivating and educating its students,” said U.S. News & World Report Editor Brian Kelly in a statement. “But all of these schools are doing a good job for America by making sure the country is producing the next generation workforce.”

Peninsula was joined by Maritime and Science Technology High School in Key Biscayne, Fla. in the No. 78 spot.

The top-performing high school for math and science was High Technology High School in Lincroft, N.J.

This was the first ranking of STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) schools by U.S. News & World Report.

 


 

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Homes for sale in Palos Verdes Estates
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George Fotion
Call Realty Company
(310) 346-6467
gfotion@emailtreo.com