MUSE Global School | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Address | |
![]() | |
1666 Las Virgenes Canyon Road , 91302 United States | |
Coordinates | 34°5′37″N 118°42′14″W / 34.09361°N 118.70389°W |
Information | |
Type | Private school |
Established | 2006 |
Founders |
|
NCES School ID | A0990016[1] |
Head of school | Jeff King[2] |
Teaching staff | 28.0 (on an FTE basis)[1] |
Grades | PK–12 |
Gender | Co-educational |
Enrollment | 178 (2017-2018)[1] |
Student to teacher ratio | 6.4[1] |
Campuses | 2 |
Website | www |
MUSE Global School is a PK–12 co-educational private school in Calabasas, California, United States. It was co-founded by Suzy Amis Cameron and her sister Rebecca Amis in 2006. It operates from two campuses nestled in Malibu Canyon and has been described as the first vegan K–12 school in the country.
MUSE Global School was co-founded by Suzy Amis Cameron and her sister Rebecca Amis in 2006.[3] The motivation for starting the school is the founders' and their children's[4] lack of satisfaction with the quality of education on offer with particular reference to the environment, in their children's context, and the desire to raise children for whom environmentalism is a way of life.[3] The school was described as a "utopia", where children learn to respect nature, and be happy about diversity.[5] The school built its own grade-level goals to align with the California state standards and centers its education philosophy on academics, passion-based learning, sustainability, communication and self-efficacy. Students and educators work together to build a personalized curriculum based on students' interests and passions. In September, 2019 the school had 205 students from kindergarten to 12th grade.[6]
The school operates from two campuses nestled in Malibu Canyon. In May 2015, five solar panel towers, each generating 300 kWh, designed in the shape of sunflowers by James Cameron, were installed on the premises. These provide 75 to 100 percent of the schools electricity requirement, depending upon incident solar radiation and demand.[12]
In 2014, a National Labor Relations Board ruling criticised the school's employer confidentiality policy and declared it illegal.[13]