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Franklin High School

 
Wikipedia: Franklin High School (Seattle, Washington)
This article is about Franklin High School in Washington state. For others of a similar name, see Franklin High School (disambiguation)
Franklin High School
Franklin High School seen from Cheasty Boulevard South.
Unity, Honor, Truth
Location
3013 S Mt. Baker Blvd
Seattle, WA 98144-6139

Information
Type Public
Established 1920
Principal Jennifer Wiley
Enrollment 1,278 (October 2008)
Information (206) 252 - 6150
Mascot
Colors
School Rival
Quaker
Green, White & Black
Garfield High
Website

Franklin High School is an inner-city public high school in Seattle, USA, administered by Seattle Public Schools.

Contents

Mission Statement

To graduate students who have achieved academic excellence and who look forward to sharing their expertise, understanding, and compassion to create an increasingly peaceful and productive society.

Academics

Franklin High School is home to over 1,300 "Quakers" who have the opportunity to learn with and from one another. As freshmen, each ninth grade student is randomly assigned to a team of teachers when entering Franklin High School. That team is composed of a Language Arts teacher, a World History teacher and a Physical Science teacher. Those three teachers share the same group of students and those students travel together as a class between those three classes. This structure makes a student's entry into Franklin more personal by giving students a common group of peers and a common group of teachers.


From the 10th grade on, Franklin has continued to develop small learning communities in which they have 4 academies—CREATE Academy, John Stanford Public Service Academy (PSA), Academy of Finance (AOF), and Humanities. Each academy specializes in a particular study with their own mission statement and required classes.

The John Stanford Public Service and Political Science Academy (PSA), founded in 2000, is a college preparatory small learning community (SLC) that offers students a rigorous 3 year academic program that meets and exceeds state standards for Language Arts and Social Studies. State standards in LA and Social Studies are overlaid with an emphasis on the role of the public sector in societies, past and present. PSA students are challenged to develop their critical thinking skills and to develop their own vision of the role that they and their government should take in confronting the opportunities and problems of their local, national, and international communities. The PSA combines Public Service and Political Science (the study of law, government and NGOs, history, political systems, etc.) in a way that empowers our students to make meaningful change in their communities.

The Humanities classes consist of integrated Language Arts and Social Studies classes with special emphasis on project based learning, the history of art and culture, and rigorous skills and content development. The Humanities program covers history through the lens of humanism starting in the Italian Renaissance and following through to modern times. A thorough discussion of the effect of western civilization on world history includes extensive primary and secondary source readings.

The Academy of Finance is an integrated social studies and language arts program supported by the nationally recognized and represented National Academy Foundation. Students study world history and literature from the point of view of trade and economic development. By combining accounting, social studies, and language arts, the Academy of Finance develops skills needed in the business environment. Mastery of technology, knowledge of available resources, and good communication are prioritized.

The mission of the CREATE Academy is to bring students and faculty together in a 3-year small learning community. In the CREATE classes (math, language arts, and woods) we as a community strive to relate these subjects to the different aspects of the building trades. Through this course of study our mission is to prepare students for both university studies and work in the trades by presenting a challenging integrated curriculum, as well as mentorship and internship opportunities in construction related fields. This mission of the members of our community is to work hard as a group and as individuals to be successful. This includes being respectful, and knowing how to learn and have fun simultaneously.

Notable alumni

Athletics

Performing Arts

  • Kenny G - Jazz musician. As of 2003, Kenny G was named the 25th-highest selling artist in America by the RIAA, with 48 million albums sold in the USA. In 1994, Kenny G won the Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Composition for Forever in Love. He also has a substantial worldwide following. He jokes that it was in Franklin that he had his first sax solo and his first kiss and it is hard to decide which was more important.
  • Amy Hill - actress
  • John Keister - comedian, writer, commentator and motivational speaker
  • Dave Lewis - key figure in the creation of the Northwest sound in the rock'n'roll years; popularized Louie Louie and played a key role in desegregating the Seattle music scene.
  • Mark Morris - Critically acclaimed modern American dancer and choreographer. He started the Mark Morris Dance Group in 1980 and helped to establish the White Oak Dance Project in 1990. He is now retired, but has choreographed productions for many companies, including the New York City Opera, English National Opera, and the Royal Opera House.
  • Total Experience Gospel Choir founded at Franklin in 1973, still active as of 2008, probably Seattle's best-known gospel group

Others

Larry Gossett addressing a Martin Luther King, Jr. Day rally at the Franklin High School gymnasium (2006).
  • Larry Gossett - Politician. He was arrested for unlawful assembly during a March 29 sit-in at Franklin High School.[1]
  • George Herbert Hitchings - American chemotherapist. He shared a 1988 Nobel Prize for developing drugs to treat leukemia and gout.
  • Gary Locke - 1982 chairman of the Appropriations Committee in the Washington House of Representatives who, in 1993, became the first Chinese American to be elected King County's County Executive. In 1996, he won the race for governor of the state of Washington, making him the first Chinese American head of government in all of the United States. He was reelected in 2000 and in 2003, he was selected to give the response to George W. Bush's state of the Union address on behalf of the Democrats. Current U.S. Secretary of Commerce
  • Scott Oki - Former senior vice-president of sales and marketing for Microsoft who conceived and built Microsoft's international operations. In five years as vice president, he increased company sales tenfold. He now owns a non-profit organization known as the Oki Foundation.
  • Franklin Raines - Associate director for economics and government in the Office of Management and Budget and assistant director of the White House Domestic Policy Staff from 1977 to 1979. He then worked eleven years and became a partner at Lazard Freres and Co. In 1991, he became Fannie Mae's Vice Chairman, a post he left in 1996 in order to join the Clinton Administration as the Director of the U.S. Office of Management and Budget. In 1999, he returned to Fannie Mae as CEO, one of just a few African American CEOs of Fortune 500 companies.
  • Victor Steinbrueck - An architect who did most of the design for the Space Needle. In 1960, he also successfully fought to save the more significant historical landmarks of Seattle, including the Pike Place Market. November 2 is Steinbrueck Day in Seattle.

References

  1. ^ Alan J. Stein, College and high school students sit-in at Seattle's Franklin High on March 29, 1968, HistoryLink, June 14, 1999. Accessed online 27 April 2008.

External links


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