Rosemary Elementary School

History Museum’s Carriage House to Feature Student-Created Exhibits

Exhibit opens Saturday, April 30, as part of District’s Centennial Celebration

Partnering with our community is a core tenet of ours, and our school-community partnership with the Campbell Historical Museum and Campbell Union School District is another example of this. Some of our TK-8 students throughout the district are putting the history—and the future they imagine—of our district on display in the museum’s Ainsley House/Carriage House as part of the district’s centennial-themed Design Challenge. 

Some 600 students have been researching, designing and refining their exhibits about the past, present and future of local schools and education. Classes across the district have been using design thinking and engineering design processes to create the museum exhibits. 

“We’ve been anticipating and planning for this event for some time and are excited to see this connection to the community and commitment to innovation come to life,” said Superintendent Shelly Viramontez. “Our students are collaborating, innovating, problem-solving, and developing skills they’ll need for their future jobs, all while learning about our district’s past, appreciating our present and imagining what the future will bring.”

If you’re going…

  • Bring your smartphone to the exhibit, as many of the projects have a QR code for visitors to scan for multimedia explanations.

  • Parking is available at nearby public lots.



Castlemont kindergarteners imagine a future school with farm-to-table lunches where food is grown on campus.


girl with old yearbook
Old yearbooks and conversations with alumni helped students learn what school was like in the past.


student with laptop showing magazine art

RHMS Digital Art students created professional-looking magazine covers depicting their “feature story” about the district’s centennial.


two young girls show their prototype

Capri students incorporated their study of solar energy and transportation into their futuristic design for a mind-reading teleportation device to get them to school and back.