The San Diego Unified School District Board of Education will consider changing the nickname for Clairemont High School’s athletic teams from Chieftains to Captains to comply with a state law banning the use of any derogatory Native American terms.
The proposed new nickname was selected “after a nearly yearlong community engagement process,” according to the district.
In a letter to board trustees, Clairemont Principal Karly Johnstone wrote that the Captain’s nickname “was chosen largely for its inclusive application and being a title students can strive to attain.”

“Though Captains is a human reference, we are looking for our mascot to be a gender-neutral animal or symbol that will represent the inclusive culture of Clairemont High School and we look forward to working this into our school culture,” Johnstone added.
If the school board approves it, the change would take effect for the 2026-27 school year, according to SDUSD.
San Diego Unified and Clairemont High School first considered changing the nickname last April, after the Board of Education revised an administrative regulation and policy “to provide clearer direction on changes to school names and mascots.”
According to the board policy, before changing a school name or mascot, the school leaders should consider:
If a school name or nickname reflects historical harm or exclusion;
Including the principles of equity, belonging and community empowerment;
Cultural, historical, or community significance; and
Any proposed school name or nickname change must also include an evaluation of costs for signage, uniforms, or other associated charges.
To avoid criticism over proposed nickname changes, district leaders said they “were determined to ensure this time would be different,” with “a very active community engagement effort,” including:
A 10-person naming committee featuring a board representative, area superintendent, site principal and athletic director, teacher and two community members and two students;
An open call for nickname suggestions, which were then discussed during town halls, was made to determine further consideration.
Six town hall meetings were also live-streamed.
A community survey on the final four names, with over 500 responses, and
Regular updates on the Clairemont High Mascot Rebranding web page.
Sabrina Bazzo, SDUSD board vice president, described the process as “comprehensive and inclusive.”
“Change is difficult, and the way our Clairemont High School students, staff and community navigated this name change was outstanding, ” Bazzo said.
Bazzo congratulated Johnstone, students and the school community for working together.
“It wasn’t always easy, but all voices were heard, and we reached a consensus that the Clairemont Captains is a mascot everyone can be proud of and root for,” she added.
“Clairemont High School was the first school in the district to implement a mascot name change under the new state and district policy,” they added.
Local tribal leaders sent a letter supporting the change, according to SDUSD.
The meeting is set to begin at 5 p.m. in the Eugene Bruckner Education Center Auditorium, 4100 Normal St.
The proposed nickname change is fifth on the agenda, listed under operational matters.