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Alpine School District

Coordinates: 40°23′18″N 111°47′47″W / 40.3884°N 111.7963°W / 40.3884; -111.7963
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Alpine School District
Alpine School District Education Center (headquarters)
Location
575 North 100 East
American Fork, Utah
United States
Coordinates40°23′18″N 111°47′47″W / 40.3884°N 111.7963°W / 40.3884; -111.7963
District information
Established1915 (1915)
SuperintendentShane Farnsworth
Other information
Websitealpineschools.org

Alpine School District is the primary school district in northern Utah County, Utah, United States

The district covers Alpine, American Fork, Cedar Fort, Cedar Hills, Eagle Mountain, Fairfield, Highland, Lehi, Lindon, Orem, Pleasant Grove, Saratoga Springs, and Vineyard (as well as the portion of Draper that is located within Utah County).

The district includes all grades from kindergarten through high school (K-12). As of 2018, there were 58 elementary schools, 14 junior high schools, 11 high schools, and 9 special purpose schools[1] serving approximately 78,659 students,[2] making it the largest school district in Utah.

Structure

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The district is governed by a board of education which consists of a seven-member group of citizens elected to four-year terms.[3] The day-to-day operations of the district are managed by a superintendent. As of 2021, the district superintendent is Shane Farnsworth.

As of 2018, the district has ten large high schools, and only seven school board members, leading some parents and students to express concerns over inadequate representation on the school board.[4] Some parents would like to see the district split into two or three new school districts, allowing more direct control over their local schools. As of 2018, a member of the Alpine School Board represents more people than a member of the state legislature in the house.[4]

The district offices are located in American Fork.[5] The district boundary includes: American Fork, Alpine, Cedar Fort, Cedar Hills, Eagle Mountain, Fairfield, Highland, Lehi, Lindon, Orem, Pleasant Grove, Saratoga Springs, Sundance, and Vineyard. It also includes portions of Provo and the Utah County portions of Bluffdale and Draper.[6]

Future

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During the 2024 general election, there were ballot measures in the northern communities of the Alpine school district to split off into their own school districts. Proposition 11, if passed, would create a new school district consisting of Alpine, American Fork, Cedar Hills, Highland, and Lehi, as well as the Utah County portions of Draper. Proposition 14, if passed would create a new school district consisting of Cedar Fort, Eagle Mountain, Fairfield, and Saratoga Springs. Lindon, Orem, Pleasant Grove, and Vineyard did not have a ballot measure and would be organized into their own district if the other cities passed Propositions 11 and 14. As of Nov 6, 2024, it appeared the ballot measures would pass. [7]

List of schools

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Elementary schools

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  • Alpine (Alpine)
  • Aspen (Orem)
  • Barratt (American Fork)
  • Belmont (Lehi)
  • Black Ridge (Eagle Mountain)
  • Bonneville (Orem)
  • Brookhaven (Eagle Mountain)
  • Cascade (Orem)
  • Cedar Ridge (Cedar Hills)
  • Cedar Valley (Cedar Fort)
  • Centennial (Orem)
  • Central (Pleasant Grove)
  • Cherry Hill (Orem)
  • Deerfield (Cedar Hills)
  • Desert Sky (Eagle Mountain)
  • Dry Creek (Lehi)
  • Eagle Valley (Eagle Mountain)
  • Eaglecrest (Lehi)
  • Foothill (Orem)
  • Forbes (American Fork)
  • Fox Hollow (Lehi)
  • Freedom (Highland)
  • Geneva (Orem)
  • Greenwood (American Fork)
  • Grovecrest (Pleasant Grove)
  • Harbor Point (Saratoga Springs)
  • Harvest (Saratoga Springs)
  • Hidden Hollow (Eagle Mountain)
  • Highland (Highland)
  • Legacy (American Fork)
  • Lehi (Lehi)
  • Liberty Hills (Lehi)
  • Lindon (Lindon)
  • Manila (Pleasant Grove)
  • Meadow (Lehi)
  • Mount Mahogany (Pleasant Grove)
  • Mountain Trails (Eagle Mountain)
  • North Point (Lehi)
  • Northridge (Orem)
  • Orchard (Orem)
  • Orem (Orem)
  • Pony Express (Eagle Mountain)
  • Ridgeline (Highland)
  • Riverview (Saratoga Springs)
  • River Rock (Lehi)
  • Rocky Mountain (Lindon)
  • Sage Hills (Saratoga Springs)
  • Saratoga Shores (Saratoga Springs)
  • Sego Lily (Lehi)
  • Sharon (Orem)
  • Shelley (American Fork)
  • Snow Springs (Lehi)
  • Springside (Saratoga Springs)
  • Suncrest (Orem)
  • Thunder Ridge (Saratoga Springs)
  • Traverse Mountain (Lehi)
  • Valley View (Pleasant Grove)
  • Vineyard (Vineyard)
  • Westfield (Alpine)
  • Westmore (Orem)
  • Windsor (Orem)

Junior high/middle schools

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  • American Fork Junior High (American Fork)
  • Canyon View Junior High (Orem)
  • Frontier Middle School (Eagle Mountain)
  • Lake Mountain Middle School(Saratoga Springs)
  • Lakeridge Junior High School (Orem)
  • Lehi Junior High School (Lehi)
  • Mountain Ridge Junior High School (Highland)
  • Oak Canyon Junior High (Lindon)
  • Orem Junior High (Orem)
  • Pleasant Grove Junior High (Pleasant Grove)
  • Timberline Middle School (Alpine)
  • Viewpoint Middle School (Lehi)
  • Vista Heights Middle School (Saratoga Springs)
  • Willowcreek Middle School (Lehi)

High schools

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Alternative schools

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History

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The district was created in 1915 with 92 teachers, 4,906 students, 21 grade schools, and four high schools: Lehi High School, American Fork High School, Pleasant Grove High School (Utah), and Spencer (Orem).[8]

Its name and original boundaries were taken from the Alpine Stake of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.[9]

2023 book controversy

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In the summer of 2022, Alpine School District made headlines after removing 52 books by 41 authors from school libraries, 42% of which "feature LBGTQ+ characters and or themes."[10][11] Another 32 books will be subjected for cover-to-cover review by autumn to determine if the books will remain available to students.[11][12]

A total of 275 books were initially selected for review following the implementation of a new law, H.B. 374, "Sensitive Materials In Schools", but the majority of the books were found to have no objectionable content.[11] All 275 books had previously received parental complaints and urging from Utah Parents United saying the titles "are inappropriate for children."[12] Following guidance from the Office of the Attorney General, "an internal library audit determined that [the questioned books] contain 'sensitive material' ... and 'do not have literary merit.'"[11] In addition to removing the books from school libraries, Utah Parents United curriculum director Brooke Stephens "also filed a police report ... to report a list of 47 books" she claimed to contain pornographic material.[12]

Alpine School District spokesperson David Stephenson indicated that the books have been temporarily "placed away from students (who are currently out for summer break) until Alpine can conduct a 'review of content.'"[12] Critics of the policy claim "it is a violation to remove the books before [the internal review of content]."[12] Utah Parents United and other supporters have applauded the books' removal and have characterized the questioned material as pornographic.[12]

According to the Utah Library Association (ULA), however, "removal of these...books does not seem to be in accordance with the law" and some of the questioned books were found in other cases to have literary merit.[13] Critics also characterized the review as hasty,[14] question if proper policies were followed,[11] and claim the questioned books may be helpful or enlightening to some students.[12]

2023 Sexual Assault Compliance Review

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In September 2023, the Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights sent a 21-page letter to the superintendent of Alpine School District. This letter detailed the district's failing results of a compliance review that took place from 2017 to 2020. The report found eight violations of Title IX and three concerns related to compliance with Title IX. This letter used five employee-to-student sexual harassments and assaults and more than 100 student-to-student harassment incidents, of which eighty-eight were sexual assault, over the review period of 2017-2020 to illustrate the district's failings. In many of these instances, the district failed to report the issue or investigate it properly, according to Title IX. In multiple cases, the offending teachers were allowed to retire to resign quietly with no notes made on the teacher's license. Alpine School District has until January 2024 to make the required changes from the report.[15]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "District Schools". Retrieved March 31, 2018.
  2. ^ "Enrollment History and Projection". November 15, 2016. Retrieved March 31, 2018.
  3. ^ Alpine School District - School Board
  4. ^ a b Dodson, Braley. "Too big? What an Alpine School District split could be like". Daily Herald. Retrieved November 17, 2018.
  5. ^ "Home". Alpine School District. Retrieved October 17, 2022. 575 N 100 E, American Fork, Utah 84003
  6. ^ "2020 CENSUS - SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP: Utah Lake County, UT" (PDF). U.S. Census Bureau. p. 2-3 (PDF p. 3-4/7). Retrieved October 17, 2022.
  7. ^ "Historic Alpine School District poised for three-way split". Deseret News. November 6, 2024. Retrieved November 6, 2024.
  8. ^ "ASD History". alpineschools.org. Alpine School District. Retrieved December 29, 2014.
  9. ^ Plewe, Brandon S. (2014). Mapping Mormonism: an atlas of Mormon history (2nd ed.). Provo, Utah: BYU Press. p. 128. ISBN 978-0-8425-2879-5.
  10. ^ "School District Removes 52 Books From Libraries". Kirkus Reviews. Retrieved August 5, 2022.
  11. ^ a b c d e "Ban on 52 Books in Largest Utah School District is a Worrisome Escalation of Censorship". PEN America. August 1, 2022. Retrieved August 5, 2022.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g Tanner, Courtney (August 2, 2022). "Utah school district pulls 52 books after concerns and flagged another 32 for later review". The Salt Lake Tribune. Retrieved August 5, 2022.
  13. ^ Mullahy, Brian (July 28, 2022). "Alpine School District pulls dozens of books from school library shelves". KUTV. Retrieved August 5, 2022.
  14. ^ "What Is "Soft" Censorship? When School Districts Don't Ban Books, They Still Limit Student Access". Them. August 24, 2022. Retrieved August 26, 2022.
  15. ^ Romine, J. Aaron (September 20, 2023). "Alpine School District" (PDF). Retrieved September 22, 2023.
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