Information
Osborn School District #8
Osborn
Elementary School
District
1879-
to present
When
the first
Osborn
School
opened at the corner of
Seventh Street
and
Osborn Rd
, the district served children in the
Tonto
Basin
. G. W. VanDerzen, the first teacher, was granted a teaching
certificate in 1879. By 1887 a little frame building with a porch
around it was built at
7th Ave
and Osborn. John Preston Osborn had donated the land on which the
one room wooden structure stood. Ten years later, the little brick
school house opened at
Central Avenue
. With sixty children soon enrolled, the district built an
additional four-room, two story brick school facing Central. This
building was
Osborn
School
#1, serving the district well until its sale in June of 1963 to the
Financial Corporation of
Arizona
for $1,342,850.50 The Building and its surrounding facilities had
grown to thirty classrooms and six-and-a-half acres.
Longview
School, at
12th Street
and
Indian School Rd
, was added in 1924, beginning with a single first-grade room. The
next year, rooms for three more grades and a library were added. One
of the first teachers, Lee Johnson, drove a Model T Ford equipped
with benches in the back to pick up children living too far away to
walk. By 1929, grades 5 to 8 had been added; and the school had
grown to become the district’s largest school. Since the
demolition of the
Old
Osborn
School
,
Longview
is also honored as the oldest school in the district.
Longview
School
was remodeled in 1992 and became a K-6 school that year. There are
currently more than 550 students enrolled. At
Longview
, students are STARs, demonstrating Safety, Teamwork, Achievement,
and Respect.
Longview
’s promise is that there is a professional educator in every
classroom who cares that every student, every day, learns and grows
and feels respected as an individual.
Osborn
Middle School
, originally named
Grandview
, at
11th Avenue
and Camelback, opened in 1930, also starting as a one-room school
with four grades and two teachers on land purchased from Joel Rice.
The school grew throughout the years, becoming an upper grades
school in 1965. An interesting footnote to
Grandview
’s growth was the purchase of a little over two acres along
Camelback in 1955 for $20,000. Today’s prices for this land would
be astronomical.
Grandview
was remodeled in the 1990s when it was renamed
Osborn
Middle School
. The original facade was saved when the building was razed, and can
now be seen on an office building at
24th Street
and
Missouri Avenue
. Currently, OMS is a beautiful facility that houses approximately
700 7th and 8th graders. With a strong academic focus on
mathematics, science, language arts, social studies and music,
Osborn
Middle School
boasts many unique programs for students, such as the 8th
grade Government class in which students visit the state legislature
and can earn the opportunity to visit our nation’s capital to tour
and address our congressman.
Encanto
School, at Osborn and
15th Avenue
, was added in 1949, opening with ten classrooms and 300 students.
This larger building, the first Osborn school to open with more than
four classrooms, reflected the population pressure in the area. By
the 1950’s growth was so strong that Encanto’s overflow was
housed in
Temple
Beth Israel for three years. In 1952, Encanto’s unique
amphitheater was built. The old Encanto was demolished and a brand
new Encanto, retaining the flavor of the original school with tile
roofs and wrought iron, was built on the former playground. Today
there are approximately 700 students attending Kindergarten through
Third grade. Encanto provides an environment in which our children
can feel safe, learn and grow academically, socially, and
emotionally. Encanto is a community of learners who value, respect
and celebrate the differences and the diversity of those around
them. The school focus is on Early Childhood Education. Teachers
help children strive to meet their highest potential in class and
after school through unique after school programs such as Ballet.
Confident, hard working Third Graders move on to Encanto’s
sister school, Clarendon, where they attend grades Fourth through
Sixth. Encanto has a strong dual language program in which students
fluent in English are taught in both the English and Spanish
languages.
Clarendon
School, at
12th Avenue
and Clarendon, was ready to help the over-flowing
Encanto
School
by February of 1954 on land purchased from the Sciot family.
Although originally built for 450 children, 650 arrived on opening
day. The school is situated on eighteen acres of land which was
purchased two years earlier. Currently, there are over 500 students
attending grades Four through Six. Clarendon is proud of its diverse
community combining students from many ethnic backgrounds.
Clarendon
School
sees themselves as a community of learners where diversity and
difference are valued and respected.
Clarendon
School
's curriculum encourages life-long learning through the development
of thinking and problem-solving skills, literacy and numeracy
skills, hands-on projects, science, social studies, technology and
the arts. Like their sister school Encanto, Clarendon also has a
strong dual language program. Additionally, there is a strong focus
on the performing arts highlighted by Ballet and an award-winning
band.
Solano
School
opened in 1957 and was remodeled
in 1990. The school is located at
15th Ave
and
Missouri
, the most northern of the Osborn District schools. Built to relieve
overcrowding at Grandview, Solano has had many additions over the
years, including a playground which was originally nothing but a
field (or sea of mud during rainy weather) left barren when former
landowner Mr. Chris Harri (Christown) stopped running his vegetable
garden. Solano today is a very desirable school for in-district and
out-of-district parents alike with 17% of our approximately 850
Preschool through Sixth grade students, attending through Open
Enrollment. "The Mission of Solano School is to provide an
opportunity for all students to become self-reliant, knowledgeable
individuals so that they can advance academically, socially, and
emotionally to their highest potential."
Montecito
Community
School
, at
7th Street
and Montecito, is the District’s most recent school. Built in
1998,
Montecito
Community
School
provides its students with a strong academically focused curriculum
reflected in Montecito’s mission: Our fundamental purpose is
learning and we share a collective responsibility to ensure that ALL
students learn what we intend. There are nearly 600 students
enrolled in grades Preschool through sixth at Montecito, where they
are involved in curriculum aligned and assessed in accordance with
the Arizona State Standards. Students at
Montecito
Community
School
are offered a wide variety of special area classes to enhance their
education. Students in first through sixth grade participate
in special area classes; Art, Music, Library, Physical Education,
and Technology. Additionally, many special programs are in place at
Montecito
Community
School
to meet the various needs of the student population, their families,
and the surrounding community. Some partners participating in these
programs include: Osborn Health Partnership, SCOPES Mental Health,
First Credit and Price Kong.
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