New facilities open up around campus
Looking at Gunn culture 50 years ago
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Palo Alto Unified School District Henry M. Gunn High School 780 Arastradero Rd Palo Alto, CA 94306
THEORACLE Henry M. Gunn High School
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Friday, September 12, 2014 Volume 52, Issue 1
780 Arastradero Road, Palo Alto, CA 94306
PAUSD welcomes superintendent Matt Niksa
Business Editor
1966: First Gunn class graduates.
2003: PAUSD allows students to set their own dress code.
2010: Westboro Baptist Church pickets Gunn; Student body responds with successful counter-demonstration. Elizabeth Zu
Shawna Chen Forum Editor
The 2014-2015 school year marks Gunn’s 50th anniversary. To honor the school’s five decades of achievement, a celebration will take place on campus from today to Sunday. “Everyone is welcome,” organizer and Gunn alumni Sheryl Humble said. “We hope to have a lot of alumni, a lot of former staff, current staff, and current students [in attendance].” The event will begin with a barbecue this afternoon, where The Ace of Sandwiches will cater. At 7 p.m., the home football game will commence with alumni cheerleaders cheering alongside the current cheer team as alumni band members perform alongside the band. At half-time, there
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By the numbers
will be special presentation called the Parade of Decades while alumni and current students dressed in the fashions of different time periods will walk in between a procession of vintage cars carrying accessories that depict the important occurrences of each decade. “It’s basically going to be a walking chronological history,” Humble said. Junior Joowon Lee, who will lead the cheer team during the game, encourages all students to come out and participate in Friday night’s festivities. “It’s going to be really cool seeing old alumni come back and see what Gunn used to be like,” Lee said. “It’s a time capsule of Gunn all wrapped up into one football game, and we get to be a part of that.” Tomorrow, an official ceremony will begin in the Titan Gym at 10 a.m.,
Gunn’s 50th
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where the jazz band will perform to welcome audience members. Keynote speakers, including new superintendent Glenn McGee, principal Denise Herrmann, Henry M. Gunn’s granddaughter and Gunn alumnus, news anchor Janelle Wang, will deliver speeches throughout the commemoration. Herrmann will additionally conduct a rededication of all the buildings recognizing the individuals after which various campus structures are named. Afterwards, former and current teachers will perform a song written exclusively for the event. The ceremony will close at 11 a.m. with a video montage that “discusses history, who Henry M. Gunn was, the history of Gunn, then and now, why we should ANNIVERSARY—p.4
Number of students enrolled in Gunn in its first year, 1964 (2014 has 1,900 students)
800
On May 23rd, 2014, the Palo Alto Unified School District’s (PAUSD) Board of Education announced Dr. Glenn “Max” McGee, a long-time educator from Illinois, as the new district superintendent. McGee was chosen after an extensive interview process by the Board of Education. After interviewing administrators, teachers and education officials who worked with McGee at IHMSA (Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy), the Board confirmed McGee as the new superintendent on Fri. McGee’s superintendent contract stretches for four years, and includes a $1 million home loan to help him transition to living in Palo Alto. McGee believes that there are many ways to improve the education system, but he has a list of goals he hopes to meet this year. McGee’s first goal is that he hopes to try and unite PAUSD by creating a balanced curriculum for all schools. “I am learning it would benefit our students to be more consistent in assessment, instruction, curriculum, etc.,” McGee said. McGee’s second goal is to encourage innovation in PAUSD schools. He believes that in time, we will be able to share innovative ideas within our schools and beyond. The third goal McGee hopes to accomplishment this year is to promote a culture conducive to academic and athletic excellence. “We need to prepare students for careers that don’t even exist yet. If we [the school district] do our job well, our students will be the ones to invent new careers and solve global problems,” he said. The final goal McGee hopes to complete in the 2014-2015 school year is establishing frequent, open communication among the superintendent, the Palo Alto Board of Education and all PAUSD schools. McGee’s path to the position of PAUSD superintendent has taught him many lessons about working in public education. Between 1998 and 2001, McGee worked as the Illinois state superintendent, a role that involved overseeing two million students in 900 school districts. “It was the opportunity of a lifetime. People thought I was nuts for taking the job, they said [the job] was all politics, which it was,” McGee said. “But it was an opportunity to make such a change on a large scale, and some of those have endured. I look back on my career, I think I’m probably most proud, thus far anyway, of what I did as state superintendent to benefit a large number of students.” During his three-year tenure, new programs were created to help to improve the Illinois public school system. To help improve the literacy rate for younger students as well as close the achievement gap, McGee helped to increase the funds for early childhood education. To kickstart Illinois’ public school system, McGee and Illinois legislators SUPERINTENDENT—p.3
Number of clubs, teams and organizations offered to students in 2014.
90