Ferrahian Armenian School
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Students at Ferrahian High School are encouraged to take advantage of the extracurricular activities available. Some of them include: academic competitions, athletics, student council, student clubs and committees and yearbook editing. The school organizes a yearly trip to Armenia for its junior class.
History
The school was established in 1964, making it the oldest daily Armenian school in the United States. The first classes were held on September 14 of that year. It was initially established in an Encino ranch house. At the end of the first school year, 47 students graduated.[1]
By January 1986 the Holy Martyrs Armenian Elementary School, then in Encino, stated that violence in the Middle East had caused an increase in Student enrollment around 1985; as of that time the school had 650 students while it had a legal limit of 350 students. Homeowners in the area and a LDS Church, protested and sent complaints citing noise and traffic. In September 1985 the church sent a complaint document to the Los Angeles City Council that was ten pages long. The school argued that the community benefited because the recent immigrants attending did not burden the public school system.[2]
A zoning administrator for the city ruled that the Holy Martyrs school was required to reduce its enrollment to the legal limit but the city council voted 13–1 to overturn this ruling. It imposed 24 conditions that the school was to obey as a compromise.[2]
By August 1997 a total of around 1,000 students had graduated from the Ferrahian school. As of August 1997, of all schools in California, Ferrahian had the third largest Armenian student population.[1]
See also
References
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- ↑ a b Abram, Susan. "Armenian Realizes His Bicultural Goal." Los Angeles Times. August 17, 1997. Retrieved on July 4, 2014.
- ↑ a b Smith, Doug. "Conditions Added : Council Relaxes Student Limit at Armenian School." Los Angeles Times. January 25, 1986. Retrieved on July 4, 2014.
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External links
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Template:Encino, Los Angeles Template:San Fernando Valley Schools Template:LA County Private Schools Template:Armenian American schools
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- High schools in the San Fernando Valley
- Private K–12 schools in California
- Schools in the San Fernando Valley
- Armenian-American culture in Los Angeles
- Armenian-American private schools
- Educational institutions established in 1964
- 1964 establishments in California
- Schools in Los Angeles
- High schools in Los Angeles
- Encino, Los Angeles