yearbook – The 74 America's Education News Source Thu, 23 Apr 2026 16:49:25 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png yearbook – The 74 32 32 Opinion: High School Yearbooks Focus on the Fun Had, Obscuring the Pain People Also Experienced /article/high-school-yearbooks-focus-on-the-fun-had-obscuring-the-pain-people-also-experienced/ Sun, 26 Apr 2026 16:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1031533 This article was originally published in

High school students will soon take part in a more than in American education: receiving yearbooks at the end of the school year.

In an era of high-speed ephemeral images and social media, some may see high school yearbooks as outdated. But high school and college students have told me that they found it meaningful to look through their yearbooks and inscribe their classmates’ books with personal messages, poems, jokes or simply their signatures.

Many graduates will tuck away their yearbooks – some to be lost forever, but others to be revisited or rediscovered years or decades later.

, as time capsules and as a way to understand how youth culture, sports, gender and race relations have changed, or have not changed, over time. Despite their ubiquity, school yearbooks are a largely untapped .

But , people may probe an old high school yearbook to learn more about a mass murderer or to scrutinize whether someone is fit for public office. Some reporters, for example, dug into Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s while he was going through the confirmation process in 2018. His yearbook included a reference to a female student that some boys, including a young Kavanaugh, might have dated or had a sexual relationship with.

But as Eichhorn notes, some scholars seem to dismiss yearbooks as “cringy” documents created by teenagers, or as documents focused on personal nostalgia, unworthy of examination.

The Salinas High School yearbook staff of 1938 is seen working to produce their final product for the school year. (Michael A. Messner/CC BY)

An incomplete picture

Yearbooks are a limited source for accurately understanding history.

In my 2025 study of from Salinas High School in California, where I graduated from in 1970, I found nary a mention of the or the Salinas Valley’s violent , which Salinas High alum .

Nor did the Salinas High School yearbooks mention the war in Vietnam, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, or the mass social movements that opposed them.

Some yearbooks from the 2000s showed student clubs that addressed violence, substance abuse and LGBTQ+ issues. But over the years, yearbooks have mostly skipped the pain of high school and focused instead on the pleasure.

They shine a spotlight on sports, cheering and public rituals like all-school rallies and homecoming week. Photos and text blurbs celebrate the accomplishments and humorous antics of the “popular” kids and, at times, the most academically successful students.

A nostalgic rear window

It can be reassuring to dive into nostalgic remembering. It’s common for most people to idealize the past and remember it as better than today.

from 1939 found that 62% of Americans agreed that people were happier and more content a generation earlier. Since then, that most people think fondly about the good old days, and usually think 30 or 40 years ago was a better time than the one they are living today.

We can see this penchant for nostalgia in the Salinas High yearbooks of the late 1970s and 1980s. Students in these yearbooks are seen enjoying 1950s-themed dances echoing popular television shows like “” that idealized 50s culture.

In analyzing high school yearbooks of the past, I tried to not sidestep nostalgia – probably impossible to do anyway – but to consciously deploy an idea called critical nostalgia. This means acknowledging the pleasures of looking back in time, while remaining attentive to the ways that schools too often worsen, rather than challenge, .

A double focus

Taking on a critical nostalgia lens requires a double focus – first, looking at what high school yearbooks routinely illuminate, like football rallies and cheerleaders. It also means identifying what American writer and activist ,” like the voices, imagery and activities of marginalized students who have been left outside the frame.

Two examples from the Salinas High School yearbooks illustrate this approach.

Someone looking at Salinas editions from the early 1900s might be surprised to see girls baseball, track and field, volleyball and basketball teams engaged in interscholastic competition.

Yearbook photos show girls wearing school sports uniforms and being treated with respect.

By the early 1930s, girls sports teams disappeared from the yearbooks, absorbed into the Girls’ Athletic Association, a recently formed organization that was based on the idea that competition and vigorous exercise was unhealthy for girls.

For nearly half a century after the creation of the Girls’ Athletic Association, photos of girls playing sports were accompanied by captions that disparaged their athletic abilities.

In the mid-1970s, when competitive girls sports teams were reinstated at Salinas, the yearbooks started to give them more equitable and respectful treatment.

This history shows an uneven picture of social change, as changes in girls sports were driven by the waxing and waning of .

The Japanese Students’ Club at Salinas High School is seen in the 1941 yearbook. (Michael A. Messner/CC BY)

The spring 1941 and 1942 Salinas High School yearbooks, meanwhile, showed scores of Japanese American students – about 14% of the student body at the time – fully integrated into nearly all aspects of student life.

But by the time the yearbook was distributed in the spring of 1942, had been sent with their families to the Salinas Rodeo Grounds, where they were temporarily housed in converted horse stalls.

They were later transferred for the duration of World War II to an internment camp in Poston, Arizona.

The 1943 yearbook showed zero Japanese American students, nor did the editors of the book mention how or why their classmates had disappeared from campus.

For today’s Salinas students, reading their school’s old yearbooks against the backdrop of this history can help them to explore questions about how in their community and country today.

A starting point for understanding history

It’s not just Salinas High students who might benefit from reading their school’s past yearbooks. I have spoken with a handful of professors who are guiding their students into their university’s archive of yearbooks to explore race and gender relations in their own community.

Students discover that the size, content and organization of school yearbooks have shifted over time. But the books are a rich starting point for a group exploration of how schools create a pleasurable collective identity – for some, at least – while simultaneously shaping and celebrating students’ division and inequalities.The Conversation

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .

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Signed With Memories: The Enduring Tradition of the Student Yearbook /article/signed-with-memories-the-enduring-tradition-of-the-student-yearbook/ Thu, 03 Jul 2025 10:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1017643 School’s out … but thanks to a long-standing tradition, students across the U.S. have a keepsake to remember the past year.

Filled with superlatives, quotes, signatures and “H.A.G.S.” messages, school yearbooks celebrate the joy, inside jokes, school pride, loss, change and the overall story of the year. Behind every page, is an effort — often by student yearbook clubs — to document academic life.


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This tradition back to the 19th century — thanks to Boston-based photographer George K. Warren — who encouraged college students to bind and trade their “graduating class pictures.”

As school communities evolve, yearbooks remain a time capsule that preserves how students and educators saw themselves and each other. 

Here’s a visual journey spanning decades, exploring the nostalgia and joy of the last day of school:

From left, Whitney Blaine 8, Kyley (cq) Waitsman 8, Tiana Paul 8, and Natasha Poliakin 7, all second graders at Westlake Hills Elementary School in Thousand Oaks look over the schools yearbook on their last day of school. (Steve Osman/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
Tim Wilson, Lovonya DeJean Middle School music director, signns the yearbook of Julio Davila (not shown) after class on the final day of instruction at Lovonya DeJean Middle School on Thursday, June 8, 2017 in Richmond, Calif. (Lea Suzuki/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)
Nancy Lopez (cq), 8th grade, lays on her backpack reading what her friends wrote in her yearbook on the last day of school at Louisville Middle School in Louisville, Colorado June 07, 2007. (Mark Leffingwell/Digital First Ķvlog/Boulder Daily Camera via Getty Images)
Siraj Ameen, left, and Torian Carre look at a yearbook during lunch at Manual High School on Tuesday, May 10, 2011. The school, which re-opened in 2007 after it was closed due to subpar performance in 2007, released its first yearbook since reopening. (AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post via Getty Images)
Middleton High School yearbook staff works together, seated around tables, Middleton, Wisconsin, December 10, 1928. (Angus B. McVicar/Wisconsin Historical Society/Getty Images)
Myron Vaughan, 59, 5th grade teacher at Big Spring Elementary School in Simi Valley, signs the yearbook of teary eyed Alyson Thompson, 11, one of his students, after the end of class on the last school day of the year. (Mel Melcon/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
Last day of school tradition, the signing of the yearbooks. Jamie Smith,11, thinks of what to write in one of the many year books passed around by students and teachers at Meadows Elementary School in Thousand Oaks. (Carlos Chavez/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
1967: Students from Roslyn Heights And Wheat Ridge high schools look at a yearbook. (Bill Johnson/The Denver Post via Getty Images)
Marica Moore, holds the center fold of a yearbook that looks more like an art book than a high school yearbook, produced by Moore and a group of students at New Roads High School in Santa Monica, California. Carmela Vibiano, Cooper Nagengast, and Domanique Bjington are students who worked on the yearbook. (Carlos Chavez/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
Aug. 20, 2001: At the reunion of the Falmouth High School Class of 1951, Jackson Blake adds a new inscription to a classmates yearbook, “How did we make it this far?” (David MacDonald/Portland Press Herald via Getty Images)
Alli Tahmoush laughs at pictures in her school yearbook with old classmates at Newton Country Day School of the Sacred Heart. (ĶvlogNews Group/Boston Herald via Getty Images)
Students sit in the commons area and page their new yearbooks at Prospect High School on May 26, 2015, in Mt. Prospect, Illinois. Nearly 75% of all students order yearbooks in the school. This number includes 1,500 yearbooks. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)
June 5, 1998: Pausing as they recognize a friend, (L) Dominique Brogden,18, and Tomeka Robinson, 17, had been looking over a yearbook on the steps of the old Blair High School. Brogden had just graduated from Blair and was among the last class there. Robinson (a junior) says that while she’ll miss some things about the old Blair, she’s looking forward to being the first class to go to the new Blair. (Michael Williamson/The The Washington Post via Getty Images)
May 31, 2005 / Boulder, Co / Coco Miller (Cq), graduating senior, writes in a friends yearbook during English class Tuesday afternoon at Fairview High School.(Mark Leffingwell/Digital First Ķvlog/Boulder Daily Camera via Getty Images)
(L-R) Principal Alice Hom and teacher Laura Lai look over the recently arrived Class of 2021 yearbook at Yung Wing School P.S. 124 on July 22, 2021, in New York City. (Michael Loccisano/Getty Images)
Mariel Fulton lays in the grass signing a friend’s yearbook during the last day of school at Louisville Middle School in Louisville, Colorado, on June 7, 2007. (Mark Leffingwell/Digital First Ķvlog/Boulder Daily Camera via Getty Images)
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