Countdown to 2000: 1990s Schools
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Andrew Glazer
New schools, tougher standards, smaller class sizes and three
superintendents defined the school district in the 1990s.
New mandates imposed by the state in the late 1990s required students to
pass exams to move on to the next grade. The idea behind the tests is to
put an end to “social promotions,” which historically allowed students to
almost automatically advance to the next grade each year.
The new tests also will make teachers and schools more accountable for
their performance. Students’ test scores will be measured against state
standards, and teachers and schools will be reviewed when student scores
consistently fall short of the state standards.
In the 1990s, school enrollment in Newport-Mesa grew to approximately
25,000 after an exodus in the 1980s brought it down to nearly 15,000. For
the first time since the 1970s, the district began opening new schools to
accommodate the influx of students.
As class sizes grew, a state mandate turned things around by requiring
one teacher for every 20 students in each kindergarten to third-grade
classroom.
In the 1990s, three superintendents managed the district. John Nicoll
left after 21 years as superintendent in 1993 after the embezzlement
scandal.
Mac Bernd, known for turning around districts in turmoil, replaced Nicoll
for nearly five years, but then abruptly left town for a post in
Arlington, Texas. In 1998, Robert Barbot was appointed superintendent. As
the decade comes to a close, Barbot is still the acting superintendent.
SOURCES
Newport-Mesa School District
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