Schools’ equivalent of cramming for finals
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Danette Goulet
NEWPORT-MESA -- The staff of six elementary schools are breathing easier
today as their applications to be named distinguished schools arrive in
Sacramento in time to meet the state deadline.
“I took it to Fed Ex an hour ago,” Daryle Palmer, principal at Kaiser
Elementary School, said Thursday. “It is a major process, but it was very
rewarding.”
Part of the School Recognition Program created in 1985, being named a
distinguished school is one of the top honors bestowed on California
schools.
In October, 14 elementary schools in the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District were listed on the state Board of Education’s Web site as being
eligible to apply. To be eligible, a school’s Stanford 9 test scores were
required to fall in the upper half of the state’s schools.
Of the 14 Newport-Mesa qualifiers, Kaiser, Newport Heights, Victoria,
Davis, Harbor View and Killybrooke elementary schools decided to tackle
the extensive application process.
“My staff decided to go for it,” said Mary Ann Gilbreth, principal at
Killybrooke. “We’ve been working on it for a month and a half, but I
think it was important for us because we’re such a unique and special
school.”
An application to become a distinguished school is a lengthy, complex
document, which uses a points system and requires schools to demonstrate
how theirs is an exemplary school.
When Paularino Elementary School received its invitation to apply, the
staff celebrated, said principal Pat Insley.
“But it was a long application and a short time frame,” she said. “It was
such a complex process that we didn’t feel the timing was right.”
That sentiment is completely understood by Insley’s peers.
“I feel like I’ve been working on it for a million years,” Palmer said.
Each school approached the process a little differently. Kaiser staff
members gathered information, made charts, and even brought in an outside
facilitator.
Killybrooke officials tapped every available resource. Besides a total
commitment from staff and parents, Gilbreth organized a school-wide
project that had students writing why their school was special.
“Our school is the best school ever and I wish that all the people could
like this school as much as I do,” wrote 9-year-old Brittany Derieg. “I
am going to tell you one more thing that is the best about our school.
That one thing is the teachers. Our teachers rule compared to other
teachers.”
Despite the enormity of the task, each school took away something from
the process itself.
“The recognition really comes from within,” said Newport Heights
Principal Brooke Booth. “It’s just validating to bring the school
community together and motivates people to continue to do well.”
At the end of January, the state Department of Education will announce
150 schools as nominees.
“Yes, we’re going to be hurt if we don’t get it,” Palmer said. “But even
if we don’t, it was a wonderful process.”
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