The Denver Post

Decade after split, West High School is reunited and reborn

- By Melanie Asmar Chalkbeat Coloraod Chalkbeat Colorado is a nonprofit news organizati­on covering education issues. For more, visit co.chalkbeat.org.

Principal Mia Martinez Lopez stood at the entrance of the gym Wednesday, her back against one side of a bright orange double door. As students streamed by, Martinez Lopez greeted them.

“Good morning, good morning, good to see you,” she said. “Make sure your mask is pulled up, OK? Hi, hi, good morning. We’re going to sit with our grade, OK?”

Martinez Lopez was welcoming students to the first pep rally of the school year — and the first ever pep rally of the reunified West High School. Ten years after the historic school was split into two smaller ones in an attempt to boost academic scores, the school is once again a single comprehens­ive high school with about 850 students spread over three stories. A new reunified middle school, West Middle School, shares the same building.

At this time last year, middle and high school students were learning from home, often seeing their peers only as boxes on a video call. This year, students from the two small schools — West Early College and West Leadership Academy — are starting the year in person, together.

“It’s better now that we aren’t fighting about which side is better,” said sophomore Gianna Morello, who previously attended West Early College. “We can all work as a team.”

The West High reunificat­ion represents an undoing of more than a decade of education reform efforts in Denver Public Schools. Some of those reforms, like breaking up large high schools that served communitie­s of color, proved deeply unpopular.

At West, students advocated for reunificat­ion to quash what some saw as a rivalry between the two small schools and to resurrect a neighborho­od hub with a proud history. West was founded in 1883, making it one of Denver’s oldest schools, and its current grand building dates back to 1924. Many students are the second or third generation in their family to attend. West also has a history of activism. In 1969, Chicano students held marches against the racism and discrimina­tion they experience­d in the classroom in protests known as the West High “blowout.”

A similar high school reunificat­ion will happen next year in far northeast Denver, where Montbello High School was split into three smaller schools the year before West.

West High junior Nico Gomez-lucero described the reunificat­ion as the breaking of an invisible barrier that divided students for a reason he never understood. Gomez-lucero previously attended West Early College. But he’s thrilled that when he graduates next year, his diploma will say West High School, just like his mother’s diploma. “Breaking that wall opens us to more leaders and opens us to more people who have ideas and have thoughts,” Gomez-lucero said. “That builds our community, and that builds our family.”

He and other students said they were nervous for the first day of school this week. Even though they’re attending school in the same building as always, they don’t know half of their classmates. The two small schools previously had separate classes, separate bell schedules, separate dress codes and separate traditions. Students played on sports teams and held pep rallies and dances together, but they said a division still existed.

“It felt like we were always cliqued up, even playing sports together,” said senior Erica Luzayadio who went to West Early College.

In a sense, all 850 students at West are like freshmen in a new school.

“I like it,” Luzayadio said. The school, she said, “just feels ‘one’ now.”

Back in the gymnasium, teachers directed students to sit with their class. After the hype music died down, students watched informatio­nal videos, had a basketball free throw contest and competed in a scavenger hunt. Then assistant principal Derek Pike took the microphone.

“You’ve heard all week about West High School making history this year,” he told the students. “We are the first school in all of Denver to unify as a campus and come together.

“Make some noise for making history this year!” he said. And the students in the gym roared.

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