Crossroads School for Arts and Sciences | |
---|---|
Address | |
| |
1714 21st Street , California United States | |
Coordinates | 34°01′28″N 118°28′26″W / 34.02444°N 118.47389°W |
Information | |
Opened | 1971 |
Founder | Paul Cummins, Rhoda Makoff |
Head of school | Bob Riddle |
Grades | K–12 |
Number of students | 1,139 |
Color(s) | Red, white, and blue |
Athletics conference |
CIF Southern Section Gold Coast League |
Nickname | Roadrunners |
Publication | Kollektiv (academic journal), Dark as Day (literary arts journal) |
Newspaper | Crossfire |
Yearbook | Crossroads Yearbook |
Website | http://www.xrds.org/ |
Crossroads School for Arts & Sciences is a private/independent, college preparatory school in Santa Monica, California, United States. The school is a former member of the G20 Schools Group.
The school was founded in 1971 as a secular institution affiliated with St. Augustine By-the-Sea Episcopal Church in Santa Monica. [1] Although the founders, and many of the school's original students, came from the former St. Augustine By-the-Sea Episcopal Day School in Santa Monica, Crossroads School has always been a secular institution. Crossroads started with three rooms in a Baptist church offering grades seven and eight, and an initial enrollment of just over 30 students. [1] The name Crossroads was suggested by Robert Frost's poem, " The Road Not Taken", in which Frost writes:
Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, and I,
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference. [2]
As St. Augustine's grew to junior and senior high school, the founders started Crossroads with a separate board of directors and separate campus, which eventually merged in the 1980s under the name Crossroads. Co-founder Paul Cummins became the first headmaster and served until 1995. [3]
The 2004 book Hollywood, Interrupted, by Andrew Breitbart and Mark Ebner, dedicated a large section to Crossroads; it depicted the school (and the celebrities who send their children there) in a negative light, focusing mainly on a handful of high-profile parents and "drug problems" stemming from the 1980s. The school was also featured in a May 2005 issue of Vanity Fair; like Breitbart's book, it also focused on the school's celebrity clientele. [1]
Elon Musk alleges that Crossroads teaches “full-on communism,” and blamed his daughter's transition, alleged communist ideology, and decision to cut him out of her life on Crossroads in his upcoming biography. [4]
In 1997, Hudson graduated from Santa Monica's Crossroads School, where students participate in performing arts and community service in addition to taking traditional classes.
Crossroads School for Arts and Sciences | |
---|---|
Address | |
| |
1714 21st Street , California United States | |
Coordinates | 34°01′28″N 118°28′26″W / 34.02444°N 118.47389°W |
Information | |
Opened | 1971 |
Founder | Paul Cummins, Rhoda Makoff |
Head of school | Bob Riddle |
Grades | K–12 |
Number of students | 1,139 |
Color(s) | Red, white, and blue |
Athletics conference |
CIF Southern Section Gold Coast League |
Nickname | Roadrunners |
Publication | Kollektiv (academic journal), Dark as Day (literary arts journal) |
Newspaper | Crossfire |
Yearbook | Crossroads Yearbook |
Website | http://www.xrds.org/ |
Crossroads School for Arts & Sciences is a private/independent, college preparatory school in Santa Monica, California, United States. The school is a former member of the G20 Schools Group.
The school was founded in 1971 as a secular institution affiliated with St. Augustine By-the-Sea Episcopal Church in Santa Monica. [1] Although the founders, and many of the school's original students, came from the former St. Augustine By-the-Sea Episcopal Day School in Santa Monica, Crossroads School has always been a secular institution. Crossroads started with three rooms in a Baptist church offering grades seven and eight, and an initial enrollment of just over 30 students. [1] The name Crossroads was suggested by Robert Frost's poem, " The Road Not Taken", in which Frost writes:
Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, and I,
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference. [2]
As St. Augustine's grew to junior and senior high school, the founders started Crossroads with a separate board of directors and separate campus, which eventually merged in the 1980s under the name Crossroads. Co-founder Paul Cummins became the first headmaster and served until 1995. [3]
The 2004 book Hollywood, Interrupted, by Andrew Breitbart and Mark Ebner, dedicated a large section to Crossroads; it depicted the school (and the celebrities who send their children there) in a negative light, focusing mainly on a handful of high-profile parents and "drug problems" stemming from the 1980s. The school was also featured in a May 2005 issue of Vanity Fair; like Breitbart's book, it also focused on the school's celebrity clientele. [1]
Elon Musk alleges that Crossroads teaches “full-on communism,” and blamed his daughter's transition, alleged communist ideology, and decision to cut him out of her life on Crossroads in his upcoming biography. [4]
In 1997, Hudson graduated from Santa Monica's Crossroads School, where students participate in performing arts and community service in addition to taking traditional classes.