Grass Valley Charter School

Coordinates: 39°12′55″N 121°03′40″W / 39.215240°N 121.061211°W / 39.215240; -121.061211
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Grass Valley Charter School
Address
Map
225 South Auburn St.

,
95945

United States
Coordinates39°12′55″N 121°03′40″W / 39.215240°N 121.061211°W / 39.215240; -121.061211
Information
School typepublic charter school
Opened1993
School districtGrass Valley School District
PrincipalLuke Duchene
GradesTK8
Enrollment517 (2018–19)
Websitecharter.gvsd.us

Grass Valley Charter School is a K–8 charter school in Grass Valley, California, USA, part of Grass Valley School District. It was the first charter school in that part of Nevada County.

School[edit]

Grass Valley Charter School had an enrollment of 517 in the 2018–19 school year.[1] The principal is Luke Duchene.

The school uses expeditionary learning[2] and was a mentor school for the approach in 2011–12.[3] Student schedules combine five-day-a-week classes and independent study.[2] The school was founded to appeal to families who were home schooling,[4] and has a parallel program for home-schooled students.[5]

History[edit]

The school opened in 1993, the first charter school in the area. It initially had 115 students and was housed in modular classrooms on the campus of Hennessy School.[2] By 2005 enrollment was 211 and the school was moved to the former Bell Hill School.[2] As enrollment continued to grow, middle school and home study students were moved back to the Hennessy campus in 2011–12[3] and the following school year, after the closure of Hennessy and with an enrollment of 448, the remainder of the school moved there.[2] During that year enrollment reached 450, 70 of whom were home-study students.[6]

The Grass Valley Charter School Foundation holds an annual family festival, the Blue Marble Jubilee, as a fundraiser. The 2019 event was canceled as a precaution after internet conspiracy theorists associated with the QAnon theory interpreted the first letters in a list of past jobs posted on Twitter by former FBI head James Comey, GVCSF, as a veiled reference to the foundation suggesting that Comey planned to stage a "false flag" terror attack at the event. The school, the local police, and the FBI all received warnings, and the school decided not to take the risk of vigilantes attending "to guard the place", as a police sergeant put it.[7][8][9]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "School profile: Grass Valley Charter". California Department of Education. Retrieved May 11, 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e Jennifer Terman (May 6, 2013). "Charting a new course? Nevada County charter schools present choice, competition". The Union.
  3. ^ a b Ben Smith (November 4, 2011). "Grass Valley Charter School noted as an Expeditionary Learning Mentor School". EL Learning.
  4. ^ Commission on California State Government Organization and Economy (1996). Jeannine L. English (ed.). The Charter Movement: Education Reform School by School. Sacramento: Little Hoover Commission. p. 37. ISBN 9780788182204. OCLC 34637235.
  5. ^ "Discovery Studies: Home Study Program". Grass Valley Charter School. Retrieved May 12, 2019.
  6. ^ 2012–13 Nevada County Grand Jury. "Charter Schools: What Are They? A Report on Western Nevada County Charter Schools" (PDF). Superior Court of California, County of Nevada. Retrieved May 12, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ "QAnon conspiracy theory on James Comey shuts school festival". BBC News. May 10, 2019.
  8. ^ Kimberly Veklerov (May 9, 2019). "Conspiracy theory on James Comey tweet cancels NorCal charter school festival". San Francisco Chronicle.
  9. ^ Niraj Chokshi (May 11, 2019). "How a James Comey Tweet Fueled a Conspiracy Theory That Upended a California Town". The New York Times.