Balboa High School (California)

Balboa High School, colloquially known as Bal, is an American public high school located near the Excelsior District in the Mission Terrace neighborhood of San Francisco, California, United States. Balboa serves grades nine through twelve as part of the San Francisco Unified School District (SFUSD).

Balboa High School
Address
1000 Cayuga Avenue

San Francisco
,
94112

United States
Coordinates37°43′18.58″N 122°26′27.86″W
Information
MottoFirst on the Pacific
Religious affiliation(s)Various
Founded1928
School districtSFUSD
SuperintendentVincent Matthews
CEEB code052916
NCES School ID05587
DeanTeyanna Walker
PrincipalCatherine Arenson
Teaching staff51.73 (FTE)
Enrollment1,217 (2018–19)


1,278 (2022-23)
Average class size21.1
Student to teacher ratio23.53
Campus typeUrban
Color(s)  Orange
  Blue
NicknameBAL
Team nameBuccaneers
YearbookThe Galleon
Websitewww.sfusd.edu/school/balboa-high-school
San Francisco Designated Landmark
Designated1995
Reference no.205
Last updated: March 6, 2018

Balboa is a comprehensive school located in an urban working class district. It educates a greater proportion of the city's disadvantaged and minority students relative to other city high schools. Mirroring conditions in the areas it serves, the school has a history marked by periods of violence, controversy, and low academic performance.

The school motto is "First on the Pacific". The campus is the only historic landmark school in the district and the only one operating in the city. Following the dismissal of the entire faculty in 1999, it became the first school in northern California to embrace and convert its curriculum to the concept of small learning communities. It was the first in California to start a school-based student health clinic. In response to the AIDS pandemic, it was the first school in California to distribute free condoms to students. In the last decade, Balboa has experienced a turnaround and has improved its reputation and academic performance. The school achieved placement on Newsweek's "America's Top Public High Schools" list in 2007 and 2008.

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