Hillcrest High School

Hillcrest High School may refer to:

In New Zealand

  • Hillcrest High School (New Zealand), in New Zealand

In Zimbabwe

  • Hillcrest College (Mutare), in Zimbabwe

In South Africa

  • Hillcrest High School (South Africa), in South Africa

In Canada;

  • Hillcrest High School (Ottawa), in Ottawa, Ontario

In United States

  • Hillcrest High School (Evergreen, Alabama), in Evergreen, Alabama
  • Hillcrest High School (Tuscaloosa, Alabama), in Tuscaloosa, Alabama
  • Hillcrest High School (Inglewood, California), in Inglewood, California
  • Hillcrest High School (Riverside, California), in Riverside, California
  • Hillcrest High School (Idaho), in Ammon, Idaho
  • Hillcrest High School (Country Club Hills, Illinois), in Country Club Hills, Illinois
  • Hillcrest High School (Kansas), in Cuba, Kansas
  • Hillcrest High School (Springfield, Missouri), in Springfield, Missouri
  • Hillcrest High School (New York), in New York City, New York
  • Hillcrest High School (Dalzell, South Carolina), in Dalzell, South Carolina
  • Hillcrest High School (Simpsonville, South Carolina), in Simpsonville, South Carolina
  • Hillcrest High School (Tennessee), in Memphis, Tennessee
  • Hillcrest High School (Dallas, Texas), in Dallas, Texas
  • Hillcrest High School (Midvale), in Midvale, Utah

Famous quotes containing the words high and/or school:

    It is fatally easy for Western folk, who have discarded chastity as a value for themselves, to suppose that it can have no value for anyone else. At the same time as Californians try to re-invent “celibacy,” by which they seem to mean perverse restraint, the rest of us call societies which place a high value on chastity “backward.”
    Germaine Greer (b. 1939)

    The child to be concerned about is the one who is actively unhappy, [in school].... In the long run, a child’s emotional development has a far greater impact on his life than his school performance or the curriculum’s richness, so it is wise to do everything possible to change a situation in which a child is suffering excessively.
    Dorothy H. Cohen (20th century)