In Ampersand: The Student Journal of School & Work, students came together after working at their internships to create a yearbook of their experiences, so they could be shared with their peers.
Teachers devised a project to stimulate students to think critically about their communities. They created conceptual maps of the city to communicate a message they cared about.
Does My Vote Matter introduces students to the wide array of voting systems that exist and to various measures of fairness in those systems.
How does the border affect the lives of people in the San Diego/Tijuana region?
What have the History Books left out? How have our most influential leaders been misrepresented or not represented at all?
Students made their own kinetic sculptures inspired by artist Rubin Margolin, who makes wave generating machines.
To explore our personal relationship with technology and unpack the complex role it plays in our existence.
Students decided to test the quality of San Diego’s coastal waters and produce media in multiple formats to inform the public about what they discovered.
In Reading Buddies: the Children’s Literature Project, 11th graders were each partnered with an elementary student as a “reading buddy” to help them grow as a reader and write their own stories.
Students learned about rotational volumes by cutting shapes into books and rotating the pages around the axis of the book spine to create a three dimensional shape.
December Sky combine the thrill of speed with the something that every young person dreams about—our future in the cosmos.
In this project, students chose a “food philosophy” and kept a journal of all they ate for the eight weeks of their study. They interviewed family members about favorite recipes and their history, tried them out, and wrote a cookbook containing the best of them.
Students in the Wicked Soap Company use the engineering design process to make and then sell amazing soap.
This project allowed students to explore methods of data collection, analysis, and research into public health at a local and global level
Teachers devised a project to stimulate students to think critically about their communities. They created conceptual maps of the city to communicate a message they cared about.
In Reading Buddies: the Children’s Literature Project, 11th graders were each partnered with an elementary student as a “reading buddy” to help them grow as a reader and write their own stories.
Students made their own kinetic sculptures inspired by artist Rubin Margolin, who makes wave generating machines.
To explore our personal relationship with technology and unpack the complex role it plays in our existence.
What have the History Books left out? How have our most influential leaders been misrepresented or not represented at all?
This project allowed students to explore methods of data collection, analysis, and research into public health at a local and global level
Students in the Wicked Soap Company use the engineering design process to make and then sell amazing soap.
How does the border affect the lives of people in the San Diego/Tijuana region?
Students decided to test the quality of San Diego’s coastal waters and produce media in multiple formats to inform the public about what they discovered.
December Sky combine the thrill of speed with the something that every young person dreams about—our future in the cosmos.
In Ampersand: The Student Journal of School & Work, students came together after working at their internships to create a yearbook of their experiences, so they could be shared with their peers.
Students learned about rotational volumes by cutting shapes into books and rotating the pages around the axis of the book spine to create a three dimensional shape.
In this project, students chose a “food philosophy” and kept a journal of all they ate for the eight weeks of their study. They interviewed family members about favorite recipes and their history, tried them out, and wrote a cookbook containing the best of them.
Twelfth grade Environmental Science students discovered that growing food is not as easy as it first may seem.
High Tech High Chula Vista
Does My Vote Matter introduces students to the wide array of voting systems that exist and to various measures of fairness in those systems.