The Los Angeles City High School District annexed the Beverly Hills elementary school district on August 18, 1921. The elementary school district unified on March 23, 1936 as it established high school operations, therefore separating it from the Los Angeles high school district. In June 2010 the BHUSD began to deny permits to allow out of district students at BHUSD schools to continue attending BHUSD, stirring local controversy. The district superintendent is Michael Bregy.
The BHUSD Board of Education consists of five members elected by the residents of Beverly Hills. Noah Margo, Isabel Hacker, Rachelle Marcus, Tristen Walker-Shuman, and Mel Sptiz are the current members of the school board. The current student board member is Thomas Recupero. Meetings are held bimonthly. Meetings are streamed live by KBEV on .
Demographics
The reputation of Beverly Hills Unified was one of the factors that attracted large numbers of Iranian Jews to the Beverly Hills area beginning in the 1970s. By 1990 about 20% of the students of the BHUSD were Iranian, prompting the district to hire a counselor for Iranians and to write announcements in Persian. The Iranian Education Foundation donated money to the district. In the BHUSD Nowruz is a school holiday.
Schools
The District supports three elementary schools, one middle school, and one high school.
Elementary schools
El Rodeo School
used to serve students in kindergarten through eighth grade. Beginning in 2019, El Rodeo serves students only in kindergarten through fifth grade. El Rodeo School was established in 1927, and enrolls 743 students in its campus at 605 Whittier Drive. The Principal is Kevin Allen and the Vice Principal is Kevin Painter.
Hawthorne School
Hawthorne School used to serve students in kindergarten through eighth grade. Beginning in 2019, Hawthorne serves students only in grades kindergarten through fifth grade. Established in 1914, the school enrolls approximately 600 pupils and occupies most of the 600 block of North Rexford Drive. It is the oldest elementary school in BHUSD. Among its alumni are Jack Abramoff and Monica Lewinsky. In 2014, Hawthorne received the California Distinguished School Award. Additionally, it was awarded with the National Schools to Watch Award in 2015. Hawthorne had the highest Academic Performance Index score in the district for the 2007-2008 year, based on the CaliforniaSTAR tests.
Horace Mann School is named for Horace Mann, and used to serve students in kindergarten through eighth grade. Beginning in 2019, Horace Mann serves students in kindergarten through fifth grade. Established in 1929, the school enrolls 723 students in its campus at 8701 Charleville Blvd. The principal is Dana Findley. On April 14, 2010, the school board voted Steve Kessler, a middle school math and P.E. teacher at the school, as the new principal of Horace Mann. He took over as On March 18, 1929, construction began on a two-story, 30-room Spanish style school building. In July, the school was named Horace Mann School, and 307 students and 11 teachers entered its doors in Kindergarten through sixth grade on December 9, 1929. The school was officially dedicated on March 21, 1930. The first seventh grade students began attending in February 1930, and the first eighth graders arrived in the fall of 1930. The first graduating class of 30 students was in June 1930. In 1932 and 1933, the school was expanded, closing off most of Arnaz Drive for playground space and to ensure safe passage for the students between the buildings. In 1962-63, the music, art and industrial arts wing were remodeled. In 1966, the auditorium was reconstructed, and in 1968, the school's tower building was opened. A faculty parking structure, with middle school classrooms above, was built in 1975. Additional property on Robertson Boulevard was acquired in the 1980s. Horace Mann School was awarded the California Distinguished School Award in 1987, 1997, 2004 and 2008. The school is ranked 639 of 5365 elementary schools in California and is rated 93 on a 100-point scale. The Horace Mann PTA is an all-volunteer, parent/teacher partnership organization. Teachers and administrators rely on PTA support to enhance and enable the academic and social experience for students at Horace Mann. Horace Mann PTA Presidents have a storied history of community involvement.
Middle school
Beverly Vista School
Beverly Vista School used to serve students in preschool through eighth grade. In fall 2019, Beverly Vista School began serving students in grades six to eight. Established in 1924, the school enrolls 723 students in the 200 block of South Elm Drive. A new building B was dedicated on October 3, 2007. Beverly Vista School was awarded the California Distinguished School Award in 1989, 1993, 1997 and 2004. Beverly Vista School also received the No Child Left Behind - in 2005. Beverly Vista's B building includes a bell tower, an auditorium with a balcony, and classrooms for band, choir, kindergarten and preschool.
The district attempted to utilize Evidence-Based Incorporated's armed guards to protect the students after the Beverly Hills City council refused to continue their School Resource Officer program, at the request of then Police Chief Dave Snowden. EBI declared bankruptcy the very same year. Police Chief Snowden was a salaried consultant for EBI. The district was sued by Madison, the financier of EBI, for breach of contract. In 2018, the district hired Nastec International, Inc. to provide armed guards, filling the vacancy left by Chief Snowden and EBI. The Beverly Hills Unified School District implemented another phase of their safety program in 2018, to begin in the fall of 2019. The school district could become "the most advanced public school district in the nation when it comes to safety."
Subway extension
As the LA Metro system sought to expand its Purple Line with a tunnel beneath Beverly Hills High School, the BHUSD Board of Education, led by president Lisa Korbatov, opposed the move at every turn. Korbatov led a public campaign called "Stop the Purple Threat" to try and stop the extension of the Purple Line subway underneath the high school, garnering over 5,300 signed petitions and sending them to President Trump. Korbatov pressed the administration, even appealing directly to Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao, to cut off federal funding for the project. Korbatov's main argument for opposing the extension of the subway beneath the high school was student safety. Korbatov's other concerns about the extension included incineration by underground gases, poisoning from fumes, terrorist attacks, and a "subterranean construction accident."