School Overview
What kind of school is Alvarado?
We prioritize literacy, smaller class sizes, art and science throughout our school experience. Alvarado has a strong Latin American and multi-cultural identity that is felt throughout the school – from our annual Día de los Muertos festival to our students’ beautiful artwork decking our historic 1926 building. Our PTA contributes significant resources so that our children can enjoy a well-rounded education that includes lab science, studio art, physical education, music, environmental education and technology instruction. Many of our staff, extracurricular instructors and parent volunteers speak English and Spanish, among many other languages.
What programs and curriculum are offered at at our school?
Alvarado is a dual-immersion TK–5th grade school with approximately 500 students in four programs: General Education (GE), Spanish Immersion (SI), Special Education and Transitional Kindergarten (TK). GE and SI each have two classes for K through 3rd grade; a 4th grade, a 5th grade, and a 4th-5th split class. GE also has one (English) TK class.
Admission to Alvarado’s GE and SI programs are handled separately through San Francisco Unified School District (SFUSD). The curriculums mirror each other and are based on Reading & Writing Workshop for language arts, Common Core for mathematics, project based learning for social studies using Macgraw Hill, and the Amplify science curriculum. Both SI and GE programs also provide daily instruction in English Language Development.
How does Spanish Immersion work at Alvarado?
SFUSD ideally divides each immersion class into one-third native Spanish speakers, one-third English-only speakers, and one-third bilingual speakers. Like other district schools that offer language immersion, kindergarteners enrolled in our SI track are taught in Spanish 90 percent of the day. The amount of Spanish spoken in the classroom decreases by about 10 percent each year, so by 4th grade students are taught in equal parts English and Spanish.
What is a typical school day like at our school?
We offer a curbside morning drop-off at our 22nd Street entrance. Our Safety Patrol – made up of 4th and 5th graders (supervised by an adult) – open and close car doors, and direct traffic. Our school day begins at 7:50 a.m. when students, parents and staff gather on our upper yard. On Fridays, our principal Sheera Sadja leads announcements, songs and recognizes students’ achievements. The school day ends at 2:05 p.m. except Wednesdays, which ends at 12:50.
What are our options for after school care?
Mission Graduates heads our onsite program from 2:05–6 p.m. (starting 12:50 on Wednesdays) Students from our four academic programs are combined and divided into groups according to their grade. Most Alvarado students are eligible, and some scholarships are available for those who qualify financially or academically. Other children walk to a program run by the San Francisco Recreation & Parks Department at Douglass Playground.
What is a kindergartener’s typical day?
Kindergarteners and TKers (see below) are separated from our older students for much of their day so that they can ease into our grade school. There are bathrooms and drinking fountains inside each kindergarten classroom, and our youngest students have their own lunchtime and designated recess yard. In general, they start the day working on the calendar and the weather. Each class may work as a whole or split into groups for listening, reading/phonics, writing and art centers. Each of our four kinder teachers work with small groups on reading skills. Children take turns learning responsibilities like line leader, office messenger and recycler. Outside the classroom, they rotate through more focused enrichment programs throughout the year. (See chart.) Students take home a book bag each week and write and/or draw a book report. Alvarado has a Book Buddies program, in which our 4th and 5th graders partner up with a kindergartener and read to them once a week. Each also takes home a weekly science bag to conduct age-appropriate experiments with their parents.
What is Transitional Kindergarten (TK)?
Designed as the first year of a 2-year kindergarten program, TK is taught by one of our veteran teachers and offers a modified curriculum based on the California Preschool Learning Foundation and the Kindergarten Common Core Standards. Children who turn 5 between September 2 and December 2 of a given school year are eligible for the program. Alvarado has 18, General Education (English) TK students and is one of many schools taking part in the SFUSD program. While admission into Alvarado’s TK does not guarantee admission into our kindergarten, it is currently considered a tiebreaker in the district’s enrollment process.
What does Alvarado offer for Special Education and Inclusion students?
Alvarado includes children with disabilities within the general population in a manner that is fair and appropriate as determined by a child’s family and SFUSD. Special Education has two Special Day Classes: K–2 and 3rd–5th grades. Onsite resources include 2 full time SDC teachers and 2 full time resource teachers, American Disabilities Act upgrades (including an elevator), and a parent-run Inclusive Schools Committee. A number of specialists – including occupational, physical and speech therapists – also work in and out of the classroom with students with Individual Education Programs (IEPs).
How can parents get involved at Alvarado?
Every classroom has opportunities for parents to volunteer during the school day – assisting with small group work or activities, field trips, etc. – or at home helping our teachers with prep work. We have an active PTA and School Site Council (SSC) – elected parents and staff who make decisions regarding our curriculum and how we spend our budget. We also have many parent committees supporting the arts, literacy, math, science, the environment, inclusion, technology and English learners (English Learner Advisory Committee or ELAC) and APPAC among others. Parents and teachers work together to plan events like our Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) celebration in the fall, book fairs, math and science events, and more.
How much money does the PTA raise and how is it used?
Our PTA budget for the 2021-22 school year is nearly $410,000 – raised in large part through our annual auction, parent contributions and grants. The majority of the money helps pay for extra days for art, a music teacher, science programs (including a science lab teacher), art and school supplies, and literacy programs. The PTA also works with the SSC, which receives discretionary funds from the district that we use to pay for a computer teacher, a classroom size-reduction teacher, a family liaison and literacy specialists. In addition long term capital projects are fundraised over the course of several years.
What are some of Alvarado’s enrichment programs?
Art: TK - 5th Once a week, all year. Art projects reinforce classroom curriculum and are taught in our studio by a resident artist – a model created at Alvarado in 1968 by Ruth Asawa, a nationally renowned artist and education activist.
Music: K - 5th Once a week, all year. 4th and 5th grade students can participate in weekly instrumental music. K-2 student have a 9 week music program
Science: K - 5th Every other week, all year. Amplify-based science curriculum is taught in all of our classrooms. Students also take science in our laboratory with a certified science specialist. K–1st graders are assigned weekly Science Sacks filled with experiments to do at home.
Library: TK - 5th Every other week, all year. English and Spanish books are available in our recently remodeled library with our longtime bilingual librarian.
Literacy: TK - 5th All year. Literacy specialists and volunteers help augment classroom libraries, which have 500-700 books each. Lower grades take home book bags once a week filled with Spanish or English books.
Math: K - 5th All year. In addition to a district-designed Common Core curriculum, all of our students receive differentiated math instruction.
Physical Education: 3rd - 5th 100 minutes per week, all year
Technology: TK - 5th Once a week, all year. A certified teacher teaches digital literacy, computer science and programming, and offers general technology access in our computer lab. Each classroom uses a large monitor and screen mirroring to share content with students. Chrome books and tablets are available for sign-out.
This page was last updated on September 28, 2022