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  1. The Ellwood P. Cubberley High School opened in the Fall of 1956 and closed in 1979, as a result of budget cuts from California Proposition 13 (1978). Cubberley High School is perhaps best known as the setting of Ron Jones' 1967 social experiment The Third Wave , helping to teach Fascism.

  2. Ellwood P. Cubberley, Monroe’s Encyclopedia of Education–Cubberley Articles on School Administration Box 4 William Martin Proctor, Charles Gilbert Wrenn and Glidden Ross Benefield, Workbook in Vocations

  3. Page 63 - A school or schools shall be established in each county by the legislature for the convenient instruction of youth, with such salaries to the masters paid by the public, as may enable them to instruct youth at low prices: and all useful learning shall be duly encouraged and promoted in one or more universities.

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  5. MISSION. The mission of Cubberley K-8 School is to meet the educational needs of a diverse population by providing an academic program that reflects high expectations, community and parental involvement, cultural awareness and pride, and responsible citizenship.

  6. The experiment was not well documented, being briefly mentioned in two issues of the Cubberley High School student newspaper, The Cubberley Catamount. Another issue of the paper has a longer description of the experiment when it was finished. Jones wrote a detailed recollection about nine years after.

  7. Since his death in 1941, Cubberley's celebrationist historical account has been attacked, perhaps most memorably by Lawrence Cremin's The Wonderful World of Ellwood Patterson Cubberley (1965). Historiographically, some academicians have used Cubberley's methodology as a cautionary tale and termed his approach anachronistic and evangelistic.