Homestead High School (Cupertino, California)


Homestead High School is a four-year public high school serving western Sunnyvale, southern Los Altos, and northwestern Cupertino, in Santa Clara County, California. Established in 1962, the school serves 2,405 students in grades 9 to 12 as part of the Fremont Union High School District. In 2003 and 2009, the California Department of Education recognized Homestead as a California Distinguished School, and in 2004, the Department of Education recognized Homestead as a Blue Ribbon School.

Demographics

The table below represents the increase in enrolling students between the years 2003 and 2017.
200320042005200620072008200920102011201220132014201520162017
1,8441,8232,0012,0892,2702,2422,2402,1902,2702,3112,3672,2702,3792,3952,459

As of the 2017 school year, the racial composition was as follows:
14.8% qualified for free or reduced-price lunch.

History

Homestead High School has played a large role in the development of Silicon Valley. During the late 1960s and 1970s, the school was a haven for students interested in electronics and the emerging computer age. The school's electronics class is considered as seminal as Frederick Terman's program at Stanford University. During this period, the electronics teacher, John McCollum, created a hands-on classroom in which students like Stephen Wozniak learned while designing, building, repairing, and understanding a range of equipment. Today, would-be engineers, mathematicians, and entrepreneurs find support through the school's programs in robotics, mathematics, science, business courses, and its Future Business Leaders of America chapter.

Campus

Homestead High School is bordered by Homestead Road to the north and Interstate 280 to the south. Beginning in the summer of 2009, solar panels and shade structures were added over both parking lots and the fields were reorganized so that a new stadium could be constructed. The other half of campus, facing Homestead Road, consists of several school buildings. The majority of the buildings have an inner corridor with outdoor corridors connecting the buildings. Green-colored hoofmarks decorate Homestead High School's sidewalks and walkways, which are from the school's official mascot and color. The front walls of the school are decorated with murals of a similar theme, including a large mural of a mustang.

Academics

Homestead High School's curriculum includes preparatory courses, vocational training, and general education. The school has a variety of special programs to meet the needs of exceptional students. Homestead offers 8 honors classes and 17 open-access Advanced Placement courses. Several programs promote positive learning for all students, including AVID and inclusion classes to support the needs of English Language Learners and special education students. The school also offers a peer tutorial program to serve the needs of students unable to pass the California High School Exit Exam and finish graduation requirements.

Music department and marching band

Homestead has a music program consisting of more than a dozen performing groups, including concert bands, a jazz ensemble, a marching band, choral groups, string and symphonic ensembles, and extracurricular performing arts groups such as winter guard and winter percussion. The marching band has enjoyed a continuous run of championship awards, starting in 1993 with their field show rendition of The Phantom of the Opera. Since then, the Mighty Mustang Marching Band has performed such shows as The Who's Tommy, and Miss Saigon. In their first statewide competition in 2005, the band tied for 6th place in the 5A division at the Western Band Association State Championships. In April 2010, Homestead's marching band was one of only 10 high schools nationwide selected to participate in the 2011 Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York City. On November 2015, the band traveled to their first appearance at BOA Grand National Championships, and finished 19th-place as a semifinalist, out of 95 bands. On November 19, 2017, Homestead's Marching Band placed 3rd overall at the 2017 WBA Grand Championships with a score of 94.15, the highest score in Homestead history. On New Year's Day 2018, the band participated at the 129th Annual Tournament of Roses Parade.
The Homestead marching band is under the direction of John Burn and Joseph Paul Rendon.
The jazz, vocal, string and wind ensembles consistently rank Superior in competitions. Many of the musical groups have traveled internationally. The Wind Ensemble and Orchestra performed in Carnegie Hall at the 2007 New York Band and Orchestra Festival, winning Silver Awards for each group. Participating in the 2009 Australian International Music Festival held in the Sydney Opera House on a trip to New Zealand and Australia, the Wind Symphony received a Gold Award and the Jazz Ensemble received a Silver Award.

Winter Guard

The Winter Guard program has won the California Color Guard Circuit championship six times, as well as Winter Guard International regional competitions.

Winter Percussion

Homestead's Winter Percussion has competed in the California Color Guard Circuit, the Northern California Percussion Alliance, and San Joaquin Valley Color Guard and Percussion Review circuits. Homestead's percussion ensemble is the CCGC 2010 Scholastic World Division Champion, and placed 15th, 7th, 11th, 12th, 13th, and 8th in 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2019 respectively at WGI world championships in Dayton, Ohio.

Economics Challenge

Every spring, Homestead High School participates in the David Ricardo division of the National Economics Challenge for students not taking AP economics courses, consistently sending teams to the state level. In 2015, Homestead High School placed first nationally in the David Ricardo division of the National Economics Challenge.

The Epitaph

Homestead's award-winning student newspaper, The Epitaph, won eight Gold Crowns from the early 1980s to the mid-1990s from the Columbia Scholastic Press Association. During that same period, it received eight Pacemaker Awards from the National Scholastic Press Association. As late as 1994, those were the most national awards ever given to a high school paper.
In 1988, the paper received one of its highest honors, The Press Freedom Award, from the Student Press Law Center, for its successful defense of a story about a junior boy who was HIV positive, one of the first such stories in any high school newspaper. The story, which had been initially censored by the principal, was allowed to run when the newspaper invoked California Education Code 48907, a California law that protects students' rights to free expression. The story was reported nationally in the wake of a Supreme Court's decision in Hazelwood School District et al. v. Kuhlmeier et al., 484 U.S. 260 This case gave school officials greater latitude in determining the content of a school's official student publications. The California law made the ruling moot in the state.
During that same period, the paper also won numerous local and state awards. The San Jose Mercury News named the paper the best in its annual contest for Silicon Valley student newspapers ten of the twelve years the paper ran the contest. It was also awarded the top prize from the San Francisco Press Club several times during that period, as well as the top prize from the now-defunct Palo Alto Times.
The paper's unusual name was selected by the school's first students in 1962. In keeping with the school's western theme and Mustang mascot, they named the paper after the first newspaper west of the Rockies, the Epitaph of Tombstone, Arizona, which had been popularized in a television series of the time about Wyatt Earp, "Tombstone Territory".
Some of the newspaper's former staffers have gone on to work in journalism professionally. Among them, Alex Williams and Michael D. Shear write for The New York Times, while Angela Chen writes for The Wall Street Journal. Erica Werner is a White House correspondent for the Associated Press.
The paper's adviser from 1976 to 1994, Nick Ferentinos, was the 1994 Dow Jones News Fund's National High School Journalism Teacher of the Year.
With a gift from alumnus Steve Wozniak, co-founder of Apple, The Epitaph adopted desktop publishing in 1986, among the first high school newspapers to use the technology to produce a student publication.
In 2013, the Epitaph limited print distribution for financial reasons. The Epitaph has been available on-line since then.

FIRST Robotics Team

Homestead has a robotics team that competes in the FIRST Robotics Competition. The team, which is FRC team number 670, was created by students in 2001. Alumnus Steve Wozniak has served as a key supporter of the team over the years. The team has a website detailing its history, mission, news, and ongoing activities.

Interact Club

Currently the largest student-run organization on campus, Interact is a club dedicated to develop leadership and character skills as well as allowing members to find their passions. Consisting of over 200 active members, Interact's mission is to provide its members with opportunities to perform service, build character, and develop leadership. The Homestead Interact club is part of District 5170, which is the largest Interact district in the world. Homestead Interact stays in close relations with the district to provide students with volunteer and leadership opportunities that range from learning how to help and interact with local communities to making an impact internationally through causes that are chosen by the district. The interact club at Homestead is also closely connected with the interact clubs in the Fremont Union High School District and they work closely together to create ways to fundraise for the international projects through car washes, talent shows, dances, and more.

Mathematics competitions

Members of the mathematics team have regularly qualified for the American Invitational Mathematics Examination. Over the past five years, the team has placed among the top 10 schools in the Mu Alpha Theta National Log 1 Contest Mathematics Contest, taking fifth place nationally in 2009-10, third place in 2008-09, ninth place in 2007-08, and fourth place in 2006 and 2007. From 2003 through 2006, Homestead's math team placed among the top 10 teams nationally in the Ciphering Time Trials, a contest sponsored by National Assessment & Testing. During this period, Homestead's team also placed among the top 20 teams in several other contests sponsored by National Assessment & Testing, including the Team Scramble, the Four-by-Four, and the Collaborative Problem Solving Contests. In 2002, the Mathematical Association of America's American Mathematics Competition awarded the Edyth May Sliffe Award for Excellence in Teaching to Homestead teacher and team faculty advisor Steve Headley.

''Pegasus''

Homestead's yearbook, Pegasus, has been its most award-winning publication of recent years, capturing two National Pacemaker Awards from the National Scholastic Press Association in 2002 and 2005. The Pacemaker is awarded to the 20 best yearbooks in the country, often out of more than a thousand contenders. The yearbook was also an NSPA Pacemaker Finalist in 2000 and 2001. In 2006, the CSPA awarded the Pegasus a Silver Crown. The yearbook has also won a number of other awards, ranging from CSPA Gold Circles to various Best in Show awards.

Science Bowl

Homestead has a team competing in the Science Bowl, a competition sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy. Over the years, Homestead students have won awards at the National Chemistry Olympiad and the National Science Bowl. Teacher Gareth Wong initially organized and advised the team, and in 2002 the American Chemical Society recognized his work with a High School Teacher Award for the Western Region. The team is currently advised by chemistry teacher Chris Nafrada. On February 10, 2007, Homestead's team won the regional competition at the Stanford Linear Accelerator, eventually repeating their regional victory on February 2, 2008. At the 2007 National Science Bowl Competition in Washington D.C., Homestead's team placed twelfth out of more than sixty high-school teams, winning a $1,000 prize for the school's science department. In 2009, Homestead made it to the National competition for the third time in a row. At the National Science Bowl Competition, they placed in the top eight out of sixty-seven other high schools.

Athletics

Homestead athletic teams compete in the mighty SVCAL De Anza League, home to a very competitive set of athletic schools, including Los Gatos High, Palo Alto High and Los Altos High. The athletic fields and gyms at Homestead recently underwent reconstruction in 2015-2016, and now boast a state of the art football field with jumbotron, and new Field House gymnasium, the original gymnasium and a brand newly constructed artificial turf baseball field.
Homestead has teams in the following sports:
Baseball
The Baseball program at Homestead has fielded many collegiate and pro players over the years, including Scott Erickson, a Major League Pitcher. The original baseball program was under the direction of Chuck Camuso, a long time experienced mentor and leader, who received the CCF Coaches Honor Award in 1993-1994. The 2018 Varsity Men's baseball team, headed up by new head coach Eric Pini, is currently on a 5 game winning streak according to the San Jose Mercury News. The baseball team plays its games in the Chuck Camuso Baseball field, a state of the art artificial turf field dedicated to the long time coach in 2014.
Soccer
Homestead Mustang Soccer hosts a Winter Tournament, the Christmas Cup, on a yearly basis at Mustang Field. This tournament brings in highly ranked boys soccer teams from around the valley, and has been in existence for over 20 years. 2018 Varsity Women's Soccer Team made it to the second level of the CCS finals, where they finally lost to St. Francis High School in a heartbreaker. The Homestead team had an award-winning season, including beating top runner Palo Alto in a closely watched contest.

Track and field

Homestead High School's distance runners broke a number of records in the late 1960s. It set the national postal 2-mile postal record on November 9, 1968. Five runners averaged 9:26 for two-mile. In total, eleven Homestead runners broke ten minutes that day. The runners contributing to the national record of 47:11.2 were Jack Christianson, Mike Ferguson, Tom Brassell, Steve Flynn, and John Hanes.

Notable alumni

Homestead High has a direct connection to the development of Apple Computer. Co-founders Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak both graduated from Homestead, as did the early Apple employee who introduced them, Bill Fernandez. Another graduate was Chrisann Brennan, who was Jobs' first girlfriend and the mother of his first child, Lisa Brennan-Jobs.
Additional notable alumni of Homestead High School include:
Steve Jobs founder of Apple