Schools
Silicon Valley Students Stranded By Shuttered Schools
A popular Bay Area charter school system is closing its two Sunnyvale campuses this June despite months of attempts to save them.

By Loan-Anh Pham, San Jose Spotlight
March 3, 2023
A popular Bay Area charter school system is closing its two Sunnyvale campuses this June despite months of attempts to save them, but parents and teachers said the ordeal is far from over.
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Board members from Summit Public Schools voted to shut down the middle and high schools in Sunnyvale, called Summit Denali, at a special board meeting Thursday. Families and educators said theyāre reeling from the decision and now face an uncertain future.
More than 600 students are currently enrolled at Summit Denaliās Sunnyvale schools, according to state data. Officials have encouraged students to apply to other Summit locations, but many parents say those schools are far away and would require hours of commuting.
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More than 100 parents, students and teachers tuned in virtually for the board meeting. About a dozen attendees spoke during a half-hour public comment window.
āThe fact that we are here less than two months after the initial announcement of Summitās plan to close Denali gives families and students very little time to plan for the future,ā Unite Summit President Justin Kim, who represents the teacherās union, said. Officials said teachers can apply to transfer to other Summit locations but employment is not guaranteed.
After shuffling into a closed-door meeting, the board members emerged a half hour later and voted unanimously to close the two schools.
āThe board is being asked to make a decision today from which nothing positive is going to come,ā Summit Public Schools CEO Diane Tavenner said. āTo all of the members of the Denali community, Iām very sorry.
Parents, teachers and the Santa Clara County Board of Education called on Summit Public Schools to make a final decision after the abrupt announcement of Denaliās probable closure in January. Officials blamed a loss of pandemic-era stimulus funds, declining student enrollment and a yearslong budget deficit for the closure. But families have called for accountability, questioning claims of financial problems amid a $31 million investment to construct Denaliās high school, which opened in 2021.
After the controversial vote, Summit Denali parent organizer Shan Sankaran said heās worried the upheaval is impacting quality of education. The Sunnyvale resident said heās concerned about the mental health of his young children, who are in sixth and eighth grade, and their peers with a transition to a new school looming.
āWe need to figure out our next options,ā Sankaran told San JosĆ© Spotlight. āThe kids are still in denial. They couldnāt comprehend that the school is going to get closed because they love the school.ā
Kim Nicholson, a teacher at Summit Denali, said sheās afraid that the schoolās fate will extend to other Summit locations. The system has six other California locations, including one in San Jose and others in Richmond, Daly City and Redwood City. Nicholson said community input is critical and the board meetings happen when most teachers and parents are working.
āThereās a lot of unanswered questions,ā she added, āand just a question about the future of Summit (Public) Schools in general.ā
Contact Loan-Anh Pham at loan-anh@sanjosespotlight.com or follow @theLoanAnhLede on Twitter.
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