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Deterding Elementary School

5.0 (4 reviews)
Closed • 8:00 am - 2:45 pm

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3 years ago

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4 years ago

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9 years ago

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7 years ago

Best school in the neighborhood. Awesome teachers and community. We love their programs, especially their art and music center.

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Jesuit High School - Congrats to our Marauders that are 2019 Optimist All Stars!

Jesuit High School

(15 reviews)

A MUST READ IF CONSIDERING SENDING A STUDENT. Worth noting-…read moreWe did lots of research prior to deciding on this school and saw the reviews good and bad on every school review site. I have to say the bad reviews are 100% accurate. Our student had no issues academically or with regards to conduct and completed primary grades in another Catholic school, we are familiar with the system. This is an honest review sharing points that I find valuable to know ahead of time as this is a huge commitment for families Let's be clear, there is no "brotherhood" here. This is a study in what politics and donations can do in EVERY aspect. If you are not donating (in addition to tuition), alumni or "legacy" you should expect nothing. We realized this a few months in and gave our child time to come to it on his own. Six months later, we left. It's a hard lesson..learn from ours. Here is what they do not tell you: *Not all families pay full tuition-so be prepared to take it on the chin subsidizing others while they continue to ask you for more. *The school is proud of how many families travel from all over the Sacramento area to attend-yet they do not respect families time. I'm not sure who can handle fluctuating start and end times each week, but it got old really quick. *Additionally, you will have additional trips to the school numerous times a year to satisfy other requirements for performing arts participation -when your child is not in performing arts. This may not sound like much, but it added up to extra HOURS for our family. *There are some really good teachers there, but a few that shared their views on racial issues too frequently. *A staff member was inclined to call and try and pick a fight to remind us that we signed and agreed to our son participating in what the school believes in when we questioned the safety of a required "volunteer" activity around homeless. A child is not a car contract , and parents never relinquish their rights by signing their kid up for school. If you are familiar with Catholic education, most schools acknowledge they are the secondary, behind parents in forming students. That is not the case here. *Be prepared that if you are not doing the extras above, your child will not see any real athletic opportunities for sports. These spots and spotlights are reserved for donors/alumni, etc. *They say they do not offer athletic scholarships. Yet, many kids are there because the school enticed them $ and openly share the details with other students. Several sleep in class and do not appear to want to be there or understand the opportunity given to them. * No surprise, drugs are on campus and the admin does a decent job addressing it. * They have no tolerance cheating policy which is great. But we lost count of how many messages we saw other students asking to copy our students' work. We thought we did our homework and jumped through every hoop-and for us it was a joke. We spent over 3 hrs a day commuting, + $ and we have no idea what it was for. Save your money for your child's college.

Hated this school. The administratio from the principle on down. Best decision we ever made…read more Thriving now. Our experience was, straight kids don't fit in no matter how hard they try to be accepting of the differences. Mather and science teachers were good.

Will Rogers Middle School - Mushroom bloom mural coming soon

Will Rogers Middle School

(13 reviews)

I've lived in this area for years several people that have attended this school as well as their…read morechildren staff and administration are excellent would definitely recommend the school for people that live in the area

This middle school wasn't an institution of learning. It was a barely supervised warehouse for…read morehormonal disasters, a breeding ground for drugs, violence, and predators where "education" was the last thing on anyone's mind. Every single day felt like stepping into a war zone dressed up with lockers and faded motivational posters. The adults pretended to be in charge while the place rotted from the inside out. I hated it then, and looking back, I hate it even more now for what it stole from kids who deserved better. The drug situation was so normalized it might as well have been part of the morning announcements. Every kid brought drugs. Weed pens, pills, whatever cheap garbage they could get their hands on--passed around in bathrooms, traded at lunch like Pokémon cards, and smoked openly enough that the whole campus reeked on bad days. Teachers either looked the other way or were too overwhelmed to care. Lockers got searched once in a blue moon, but the flow never stopped. Kids showed up high, nodded off in class, or spent recess making deals. It wasn't some edgy rumor; it was the culture. The school didn't protect us from that environment--it enabled it by failing to enforce any real boundaries. What kind of place lets children treat narcotics like after-school snacks? Then there were the fights. They erupted constantly, over nothing and everything. Shoves in the hallway turned into full brawls with kids piling on, phones out recording for clout while blood hit the concrete. Teachers screamed into walkie-talkies that might as well have been toys. Security--if you could even call the bored guy wandering around that--showed up late every time. The message was clear: this is just how it is here. You toughen up or you get trampled. I watched kids get jumped for sneakers, for looking wrong, for existing. The administration talked big about "zero tolerance" in their emails and assemblies, but the reality was zero follow-through. Fights weren't exceptions; they were the rhythm of the day. The school created an atmosphere where violence felt inevitable because no one with power cared enough to crush it. And then there was the incident that still makes my blood boil. I almost got raped. In that building. By someone who belonged there, surrounded by the same chaotic energy that let everything else slide. The environment was so predatory and unchecked that it emboldened monsters. No real security, no real supervision, just kids left to their worst impulses while adults counted down the clock to dismissal. That moment crystallized everything wrong with the place: it wasn't safe. It wasn't caring. It was negligent at a level that borders on criminal. The fact that I had to navigate that fear every day, wondering if today was the day something worse happened, is unforgivable. That middle school failed on every level. It failed to educate, failed to protect, and failed to provide even basic order. Instead of preparing us for the future, it hardened us to a world where rules are suggestions and safety is optional. The drugs, the fights, the constant threat--they weren't "kids being kids." They were symptoms of a rotten system that prioritized convenience over responsibility. I hate that place for what it was and for what it allowed. I hate the administrators who collected paychecks while looking away. I hate the culture it fostered. Most of all, I hate that so many kids had their innocence ground down in those hallways. If schools like that still exist, they deserve to be called out, torn down, and replaced with something that actually gives a damn. Mine sure as hell didn't. The experience was sure as hell good though.

Deterding Elementary School - elementaryschools - Updated May 2026

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