EDUCATIONALLY SPEAKING
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Gay Geiser-Sandoval
It’s school registration time. Those huge registration packets are
easier to tackle when you have your kids fill out everything, and then
just review it. I have skimmed the hundreds of district and school rules.
I figure part of the big push for reading is so that kids can read all of
the school rules before school starts.
The district invested in a new computer system last year, which is
called SASSY, and which is supposed to make scheduling much more
efficient. At one of the secondary schools, I understand that the program
has not delineated the type of class needed for each student, be it for
an academy, a certain program, or some other core section. At another
secondary school, the students were told their schedule received at
registration is tentative in nature, and might require changes the first
day. No classroom numbers are listed. Some of the students are in a
panic, figuring they are sure to get lost the first day. With these
scheduling headaches ahead of them, I would guess the counselors and
computer techs aren’t feeling too “sassy.”
This year, I helped at a school that got a lot of things accomplished
during registration. School pictures were taken and identification cards
were completed. Lockers were assigned. Student information was input into
the new SASSY system. Internet permission slips were gathered and
stickers were affixed to ID cards. I figure we basically added a day of
classroom instruction by removing these time-grabbers from the first week
of school. However, quite a few kids still haven’t registered. So, if you
were away on vacation, get to school, and get it done.
I read where a group of parents in the Capistrano Unified School
District has put together a “Survival Guide” that is for parents of
entering high school freshmen. This tells you such information as what to
bring to different sports events, how to get a planning session with a
counselor, or when to plan your summer vacation. I’m hoping Harbor
Council takes on the task.
A lawsuit has been filed against the state Department of Education and
the L.A. Unified School District to force schools to provide “an equal
and adequate program for AP studies.”
Since last year’s UCLA applicants had an average grade point average
of 4.19, a child that doesn’t have the opportunity to take advanced
placement classes has a hard time competing with those that do.
One hundred and twenty-nine public high schools in California offer no
AP courses, while 333 schools offer four or fewer. One hundred and
forty-four public schools offer more than 15 classes at their site, and
there are currently 32 possible AP courses. However, the average is seven
courses, which seems about right. Is it in our best interest to push high
school sophomores into taking courses that are supposed to be equivalent
to college courses? At one of the magnet high schools in the county, some
kids are taking six AP courses in one year. This destroys any hope of
taking fine arts, journalism, or yearbook classes. Apparently, it also
destroys any hope of sleep for those students. While I applaud the
efforts of the lawsuit to try to have AP courses offered more equitably,
I hope our district focuses on letting high school kids experience some
of the fun of high school.
A local newspaper published the Stanford 9 test results for all of the
public schools in the county.
The results listed scores, as well as the percentage of limited English
proficient students tested, and percentage of disadvantaged students at
that school site. My non-statistical analysis leads me to believe that as
the percentage of disadvantaged and LEP kids increases, the scores
decrease. It didn’t seem to matter too much in which school district the
school was located.
The exception was for those students going to magnet schools, or
academies, where students had to apply for admission. There, motivated
parents and students helped raise the scores. Our school district did
seem to have the highest disparity in the percentage of disadvantaged
students attending a specific school. That number went from 0% to 95%.
Test scores went from 93 to 6. Maybe they should use our district as a
microcosm of the nation and pour unlimited funds into education here to
see what happens. Finally, a recent article about a high school in Walnut
talked about the ability of the students to get along, even though the
school is quite ethnically and culturally diverse. It said that those
students are learning “cultural fluency.” Instead of just sharing, the
students are creating entirely new intercultural mixes. Constance Rice is
quoted as saying, “it’s not just an advantage, it’s essential” for the
future of America. “Without intercultural fluency, we’re never going to
reach that dream of pluralism, that ‘e pluribus unum’ -- out of many
one.”
Well, that course comes free at Costa Mesa High School, and almost
everyone is “interculturally fluent” before they graduate. The Student
Council there represents a lot of continents, culturally speaking, but
the kids don’t seem to notice. When one student was identifying two girls
of obviously different races to her mom, she distinguished them by their
T-shirt color.
A Mesa alum, home from her first year in college, was telling me how
many of her fellow classmates in college had either experienced extreme
racism in school, or had not been exposed to anyone of a different race.
She said she really hadn’t ever thought about the diversity at Mesa, and
didn’t know it was so different at other schools. Maybe we should add
“intercultural fluency” to the district’s graduation requirements. Maybe
that’s the best job skill of all.
* GAY GEISER-SANDOVAL is a Costa Mesa resident. Her column runs Mondays.
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