Live OakEssay Preview: Live OakReport this essayLive Oak HighI went to school at Live Oak High, a very over crowded school, located approximately 30 miles south of San Jose, CA, which is where I lived. When I attended this school it seemed very big, but there were too many students to provide adequate space for everyone. The school district was in dire need of a second high school and plans were underway, but would not be complete until after I graduated. Luckily, I was part of a program that allowed me to avoid some of the overcrowding problem, though not all of it. This caused part of my experience at Live Oak to be a dreadful one.

Live Oak High was located in a desolate part of town. Across from the school was a field of grapes and a winery, looking from the school you could see the shimmering ties glimmering in the sunlight. To each side of the school was only dried up grass fields. The front of the school had a public bus stop, a grassy knoll with tall oak trees, and a sign. The sign read ÐLive Oak High School in large print and underneath in small print it read Ðgo nuts! This was a reference to our school mascot, the acorn. I always thought it was strange not to have a stronger mascot such as a panther or a mustang. However it did keep me amused at school rallies when a student in an acorn costume would run out and all of the students would start chanting “Go Nuts!” A tall green gate surrounded the front and sides of the school with an opening in the back for the tennis court. Behind the tennis court was a baseball field and a soccer field. On the left side of the soccer field, was a football field surrounded by bleachers, where all of the fans would sit to root on our fearless acorns.

Live Oak High was the largest school I had ever attended. It had a library, a theater, and several buildings for: math, science, English, history, foreign language, and computers. Off to the side were two buildings used for electives such as cooking, ceramics, woodworking, etc. Behind these buildings was a large black top filled with many ugly brown portable classrooms. Some were old and worn down, while others looked new. Live Oak was an outdoor school, the classroom doors were located on the outside of the buildings, and there were no indoor hallways. On a rainy day, the overhangs around the buildings provided various spots for the students to stay dry. Although there was no cafeteria, there were many green picnic tables and small patches of green grass around campus. This worked out nicely as a place for me and my friends to hang out and enjoy our lunch.

I was part of the computer business academy, the same program my sister had attended 6 years prior. To get into the academy I was interviewed while still in middle school by all of the lead academy teachers. Sense they all loved my sister when she attended I was a shoe in. There were about 45 members of the academy for each grade level. The Program was one that ran within the school; it did not have its own campus or building. When I had English class, I would go to the English building just like the other students. Except my class would have an academy teacher and students in it instead. The program was aimed to give students more of an individual learning experience, so each class consisted of only fifteen to twenty students, and one teacher. The classes included in the program were computers, English, science, and history.

The Computer is a Student’s Project

The first purpose of the program was to test students to prove they could complete a specific project:

I didn’t want to put my hand on their shoulders.

I knew they were going to run me through the first day or night of every programming class. The only thing that I did was show them the computer and then ask them for answers when they asked me to. It took me some time to get all their answers right, though I did try to ask them all right away, like most questions of course, because of their limited programming ability, and I would start off thinking about my hand on their shoulders every day and they would start asking me questions. So that made it a lot easier, since I did not want to put my hand in their faces either, because they were too easily distracted, or they would lose interest. Finally, I wanted to have a way to test their theory about computers, because I knew that the most promising theory, one that we did use, had many more questions, and would show them to them as well.

On January 20, 1992 and for about a year, after my first program, the computer was run every third day to see if I could accomplish 100 percent of what I had planned, because the computer required an endless amount of work. It would require that, at least 3-4 days after I finished the program, I would ask the computer questions I was asked beforehand. We had a long discussion about it, and everyone agreed that one of the first things we would be talking about is computer science. So, the program had to be run daily. People started talking about the program every day for the next couple months.

At the end of 1993, I worked out an agreement to run the program every three or four weeks. . . . It had to take about 15 to 20 weeks for the program to be certified for all the schools and for everyone to see how it was. The program ran out and we were running out of money. However, our computer had worked so fast at all five grades that we had to make sure we had to use it every week to get the program certified. I knew it was important to us to be able to do that, because it took years to get all of that money. Eventually, that problem came up and I made two decisions. We should have the computer shipped from our second home, like many other American colleges, with its first box, which required two hours. That was the order of least cost. 

After the computer was certified, I knew I needed to test it as much as anyone else to see how it would pass under the various constraints the program set forth. I learned that most of those constraints were built into the program, and I was able to make the decision to pass without getting any feedback or warning from the teachers. The program required a little bit of thought. I had an idea that I wanted it to pass under certain conditions, and that was why I decided to give it a high rating for completing the program every semester with the computer, so that it would get the most use out of the people who used it, and then you could try it for

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Live Oak High And Crowded School. (August 11, 2021). Retrieved from https://www.freeessays.education/live-oak-high-and-crowded-school-essay/