Walter Reed Middle School

Walter Reed Middle School

Walter Reed Middle School
Be safe, Be responsible, Be respectful. Have a nice day.
Location
4525 Irvine Avenue
Studio City, CA, 91602

Los Angeles, California
United States
Information
Type Public
Established September 1939
School district Los Angeles Unified School District
President TBA
Dean Edward Torres
Principal Jeanne Gamba
Faculty 70
Grades 6 - 8
Enrollment ~1,800
Campus size Medium Size
Campus type Urban
Color(s) Green, White         
Athletics lacrosse
Mascot Wolves
Information 818-487-7600
Website http://www.reedms.com

Walter Reed Middle School is located in the Studio City neighborhood of Los Angeles, California.[1][2] Originally called North Hollywood Junior High School, it was later renamed in honor of U.S. Army Major Walter Reed.

The school is a part of Local District 2 of the Los Angeles Unified School District and feeds into North Hollywood High School. Several areas, including parts of North Hollywood, Valley Village, Studio City, and Woodbridge Park, are zoned to Reed.[3]

Academies and electives

The school offers a variety of special academic programs: the IHP (Individualized Honors Program), the School for Advanced Studies (SAS), the Humanities Academy, the Technology Academy, and the Environmental Studies Academy. IHP was called by Time magazine "perhaps the most successful junior-high curriculum in the U.S."[4] Founded in 1971 by William Fitz-Gibbon, the IHP's purpose is to serve the needs of highly gifted children. IHP students are usually one or two levels above average grade math classes. Pre- Algebra and Algebra are taught in 6th grade, Algebra and Geometry are taught in 7th grade, and Geometry and Algebra 2 are taught in 8th grade. Walter Reed also provides an AP Physics course for 8th graders.

Walter Reed has a very active parent body organized under its PTSA.

Gifted program

As of 1998 the school had an "individual honors" academic program for gifted students; that year there were 180 students in the program.[5] The parents who place their children in the program want them to be social peers; the students would otherwise be able to skip middle school and enroll directly in high school or in some cases tertiary education.[6]

Filming

Television shows filmed there include Head of the Class (which was based on Reed's IHP program;[7] one of the actors on the show was an IHP graduate), Growing Pains, 7th Heaven, Parks and Recreation.

Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, CSI, Malcolm in the Middle, Parenthood, The West Wing, and Tell Me You Love Me. Scenes from movies such as Transformers, Joe Dirt, License to Drive, The Shaggy Dog, Role Models, and Accepted and"Scooby Doo and the Curse of the Lake Monster" were also filmed there. In 2006, the fee for one day of filming at an LAUSD school was $2,500.[8]

In the news

At the 2008 Republican National Convention in Saint Paul, Minnesota, the façade of Walter Reed Middle School was displayed behind GOP nominee John McCain as a backdrop to his acceptance speech, raising questions as to why, starting in the blogosphere. Blog posts referencing "Walter Reed Middle School" jumped from roughly 0% in the previous six months to .0325% the night of the convention according to the BlogPulse search engine. Although the campaign has not released an official statement, many have speculated that the campaign had intended to display a picture of Walter Reed Army Medical Center, the Army's leading medical institution and a facility widely associated with care for Iraq war veterans.[9]

The then principal of Walter Reed Middle School, Donna Tobin, released a statement on the school's website saying that the school had not given permission for the footage to be used, "nor is the use of our school’s picture an endorsement of any political party or view." [10]

Notable alumni

References

  1. "Studio City Neighborhood Council Bylaws" (PDF). Studio City Neighborhood Council. 2008. Retrieved 6 February 2012.
  2. http://montserrat.globat.com/~scnc.info/PDFS/SCNC_Map.pdf
  3. Nola Sarkisian-Mille (September 24, 2006). "Bradys put this Valley niche on the map". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2008-09-06.
  4. Bowen (6/24/2001), "Launchpad for Superachievers," Time
  5. Hardy, Terry. "Top of the Class" (education section). Los Angeles Magazine. Emmis Communications, October 1998. Vol. 43, No. 10. ISSN 1522-9149. Start: p. 52. CITED: p. 52.
  6. Hardy, Terry. "Top of the Class" (education section). Los Angeles Magazine. Emmis Communications, October 1998. Vol. 43, No. 10. ISSN 1522-9149. Start: p. 52. CITED: p. 62.
  7. Unz, Ron (October 30, 2012). "No Quotas, No Elite Public High School". The American Conservative. Retrieved February 8, 2016. The only long-term consequence of our years of effort [to establish an IHP high school] was that ABC soon created a successful television sitcom called “Head of the Class,” which ran from 1986 to 1991 and featured ten ultra-bright students in a public school program called “IHP.”
  8. Kandel, Jason (2006). "Burbank gives new meaning to 'Film School'" (PDF). Daily News. Retrieved 2007-05-24. A text version
  9. "McCain Uses Walter Reed Middle School, Not Army Hospital, as Backdrop". September 2008. Retrieved 2008-08-05.
  10. "Republican National Convention". September 2008. Retrieved 2008-08-05.

External links

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