San Marin High School


San Marin High School is a public high school located in Novato, California, in the United States.

History

San Marin High School opened in 1968 in Novato.
Robert Vieth became principal in 2007, following the dismissal of the former principal by the District's board, which led to extended protests from parents, staff, and students. Vieth established the first code of conduct for student athletes and coaches in Marin County and began the San Marin Plus school-within-a-school program in 2010 for credit deficient students. Vieth announced his retirement plans in March 2011.

Campus

The school occupies, with a total of 51 classrooms, one gymnasium and one mini-gym, a student center, library, college and career center, media room, art department, gym, and science lab. Many facilities, except the gymnasiums, have recently been upgraded thanks to the Facility Bond. The seniors have a tradition of chalking their graduating class year on a hill on the north side of the school, named "Senior Hill".
Athletic facilities include tennis and basketball courts, baseball and softball diamonds, a soccer field, a newly upgraded artificial turf football field, and an all-weather track.
The school also has a STEM building. In regard to their STEM program, the building was built in the north-eastern campus area. Construction concluded in 2020 and was specifically meant for students who participated in the program. The classrooms were of the 'modern' structure, with TVs, chemistry labs, and group work opportunities built in. There is even a 'lounge' and more.

Demographics

2023-2024
  • 1,186 students: 649 male, 535 female
WhiteHispanicAsianAfrican AmericanTwo or More RacesFilipinoPacific IslanderAmerican IndianNot Reported
6033659331899765
50.8%30.9%7.8%1.1%7.5%0.8%0.3%0.5%0.4%

Curriculum

San Marin High School serves grades 9–12, and offers a comprehensive program of study to approximately 1040 students. San Marin has established educational objectives aimed at providing students with challenging learning experiences in academics, as well as providing assistance with choosing future educational and career choices. Students are given opportunities to take classes in performing arts, visual arts, athletics, Regional Occupational Program courses, Advanced Placement and Honors Courses, and Sheltered Courses. In particular, R.O.P., A.P. and honors enrollment, has climbed dramatically.
STEM Programs – San Marin is notable for its strong and successful STEM programs. Both of San Marin's STEM programs focus on preparing students for college and career through rigorous, hands-on, project-based learning experiences. San Marin's STEM programs include STEM Marin and the Biotechnology Academy.
STEM Marin was founded in 2013. STEM Marin enrolls 60 9th graders each year, and students take two science or engineering courses each school year as well as math each year. STEM Mari,n courses are blocked together in 9th and 10th grades so students take physics and engin,eering every day for two hours per day in 9th grade and biology and biotechnology during 10th grade. In 11th grade, students take chemistry and one STEM elective, and in 12th grade, students take senior capstone engineering and one STEM elective. In 2015, STEM Marin teacher Nick Williams won the prestigious Milken Educator Award
Biotechnology Academy was founded in 2015, although there have been biotechnology courses at San Marin since 2009. Biotechnology Academy enrolls 60 9th graders each year, and students are cohorted together for technology of biology, English, and health/college and career readiness during 9th grade. Students are also cohorted together for chemistry of biotechnology and English 10th grade, and then take biotechnology 1 during 11th grade and biotechnology 2 during 12th grade.
San Marin High School was recognized as a 2017 California Gold Ribbon School for its STEM and arts programs.
The school has 62 teachers, 25 classified staff, and a regional occupational program. The school newspaper is called The Pony Express.

Athletics

San Marin High School athletic teams participate in the North Coast Section and Marin County Athletic League programs. The school is known for its successful athletic program. San Marin has thirty-two sports teams and three seasons of sports for girls and boys. The Sports Boosters is instrumental for raising funds for the athletic and sports programs at San Marin.
Fall Sports – Cross Country, Football, Girls Tennis, Girls Volleyball, Water Polo, Girls Golf and Co-Ed Sideline Cheerleading.
Winter Sports – Basketball, Boys & Girls Wrestling, and Co-Ed Sideline Cheerleading and Co-Ed Competitive Cheer. Soccer
Spring Sports – Baseball, Lacrosse, Boys Golf, Softball, Swimming, Boys Tennis, Track and Field, and Boys Volleyball.

Racial controversies

During the 1990s and early 2000s, San Marin received significant media coverage locally and nationally for the intolerant behavior of some students and parents.
Until it was banned in 1992, one of several themed annual "spirit days" was Slave Day. According to a 1999 Salon article written on the school's history, "students dressed in tattered clothes and chains were 'auctioned' to other students, whom they were then required to serve for the day." Images of this day from the 1987-1988 year book circulated in 2020, drawing shock from students and community members.
Reports of racial and ethnic intolerance began as early as 1995, when an American-born Asian-American senior at the school was beaten by a group of teenagers shouting racial slurs and telling him to go back to China. The one assailant who took responsibility was sentenced to 20 hours of community service.
In early 1998, a student yelled racial epithets at members of the visiting Tamalpais High School basketball team. In reaction to the slurs and actions committed by the San Marin High student, parents of four of the black students from Tamalpais filed suit against the Novato Unified School District, charging that a "climate of intolerance" was allowed at San Marin. The Marin County Athletic League put San Marin on probation for more than a year, citing its "hostile environment".
In the 1998–99 school year, San Marin received widespread media coverage after repeated incidents of hate crimes committed against one of their openly gay students. He was beaten by three youths off campus on September 15, 1998, soon after forming the Gay-Straight Alliance at San Marin. The Novato Police offered a reward, but the attackers were never identified. Some students at the school, which had been stressing tolerance at a series of "respect days" that year, spoke out in support of the victim, and 1000 students and faculty walked out of San Marin to show support for him and pride in their school. The next day, San Marin's principal was reassigned to a District office. Novato's city manager, Rod Wood, referred to "a small group of individuals who are fairly socially maladjusted", who identified themselves as white supremacists and called themselves "the hicks".
The school's behavior code was modified, outlining a range of punishments for racial/ethnic/sexual slurs, including reprimand, parental notification, detention on Saturday afternoon, expulsion, and police referral.
Misbehavior by the parents of a San Marin basketball player on February 2, 2008, in two games with Tam High teams led to drafting of the first code-of-conduct contracts for parents of athletes at a Marin County school. Following a girls junior varsity game at Tam, the mother of a San Marin player followed two referees, shouting obscene insults; later at San Marin, two parents of San Marin players confronted Tam's coach after he made a gesture indicating that the home team had choked. Novato police were called and the parents were later asked not to attend the remaining games of the season.
In 2022, the Novato Unified School District led a probe into a group of incidents where San Marin athletes used racial slurs during basketball and football games. The probe found “credible evidence” that San Marin athletes used racial slurs during games against San Rafael High, San Mateo High, and Tamalpais High.

Notable alumni