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Detailed Information
Openning hours
  • Monday 8:00 AM – 6:00 PM
  • Tuesday 8:00 AM – 6:00 PM
  • Wednesday 8:00 AM – 6:00 PM
  • Thursday 8:00 AM – 6:00 PM
  • Friday 8:00 AM – 6:00 PM
  • Saturday Closed
  • Sunday Closed
Photos
Los Amigos Elementary School The Friends Elementary School
Los Amigos Elementary School The Friends Elementary School
Los Amigos Elementary School The Friends Elementary School
Los Amigos Elementary School The Friends Elementary School
Los Amigos Elementary School The Friends Elementary School
Los Amigos Elementary School The Friends Elementary School
Los Amigos Elementary School The Friends Elementary School
Los Amigos Elementary School The Friends Elementary School
Los Amigos Elementary School The Friends Elementary School
Reviews
Isabel Cook (07/17/2017)
My daughter loves this school she is actually going to Kindergarten next month and the teachers and staff are really nice and I'm a stay home mum with three daughters. And my husband works at Shell petrol station, so if your interested to enroll your kids to Kindergarten i recommended this school is 5/5.
solae smith (02/21/2017)
I used to go to this school and I loved it. All the teachers are kind and funny and the fact that we get 3+ recesses is sooooo awesome breakfast was good and everywhere is awesome. I miss this placenn-solae (remember me?ud83dude03)
Rodrigo Rodriguez (10/24/2016)
I love this school i have kid in 5 grade she learns a lot ud83dudc4dud83dude1a
Simone Schomberg (02/12/2017)
GREATEST RESPEKT! Over 80 percent of the students who attend Los Amigos Elementary School in Rancho Cucamonga, Calif., are from socioeconomically disadvantaged families, but that didn’t stop them from doing everything they could to raise money to save an animal in need.nnIt began in early December, when a school employee found an injured black Lab mix hiding in bushes near the parking lot.nn“There’s this really hurt dog,” Vice Principal Sharon Linville heard over a walkie-talkie, according to the Inland Valley Daily Bulletin. “I’m sure this dog is going to die, he’s in so much pain.” She and other employees brought the dog blankets and water, and contacted the Rancho Cucamonga Animal Care and Adoption Center.nnThe center’s staff veterinarian, Cynthia Servantez, visited the school a few days later to give the students a not-so-good update on the dog they’d named “Black Bart.” He’d been hit by a car and would probably survive, but he needed surgery that would cost about $3,000.nnAn X-ray had revealed that both of Bart’s hips were dislocated. As Dr. Servantez told the students, Bart’s “puzzle pieces had come undone.”nLove This? Never Miss Another Story.nnThe schoolchildren immediately took action to help put those pieces back together. The school launched a “Pennies for Paws” campaign to collect spare change for Bart’s surgery.nnEvery single student made a donation. “They looked through sofa cushions, they gave up their allowance, some of them gave us IOUs,” Linville told KABC. “We have a bunch of Chuck E. Cheese coins that we got.”nnOne week later, the school gave the animal care center a check in the amount of $471.37.nnServantez told the Daily Bulletin it was the first time ever that anyone had offered to pay for the medical care of an injured stray dog.nnThe Los Amigos students continued their Pennies for Paws campaign and the momentum continued to build. Yvonne and Art Alvarez, owners of Doggie Couture in Rancho Cucamonga, were so impressed by the students’ efforts that they matched the funds that had been raised.nn“We wanted them to know if they do something nice, it can make other people do it and then it becomes something big,” Yvonne Alvarez told the Daily Bulletin.nnSeveral weeks after he’d been discovered at the school, “Who Let the Dogs Out” played over the speakers as Bart returned for a special guest appearance at a Jan. 23 rally in his honor.nnLinville announced that the Los Amigos students had surpassed their $3,000 goal – by over $4,200. The extra money would be donated to the animal shelter to help other pets in need.nnVeterinarian Victoria Impett, who accompanied Bart, told the schoolchildren to give themselves a pat on the back. Most of them complied. “It might not have seemed like big deal to go home and dig in the couch for a few pennies, but each and every one of you made a huge difference in someone’s life,” she told them.nnBart had no ID tag or microchip, and no one has come forward to claim him. He still needs surgery on his right hip. Once he recovers, he’ll be ready for adoption. “He’s starting to kind of blossom into a fabulous dog,” Impett said.nnAs Linville told the students, “This has been an incredible journey, and it’s really cool to be kind.”
Miguel Gonzalez llamas (03/26/2017)
This place is a big helpful place and all of the teachers are nicenud83dude05ud83dude05
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