Number of students held back triples
- Share via
Danette Goulet
NEWPORT-MESA -- The number of students held back in Newport-Mesa
schools because of poor academic performance more than tripled this year
after new stringent state laws demanded an end to “social promotions.”
Historically, students in California have almost automatically
advanced to the next grade level, with parents having the final say.
But three bills signed by Gov. Gray Davis in 1998 called for some
drastic changes in policy. He put the power of student retention in the
hands of school districts and mandated that students meet certain state
standards before advancing.
In kindergarten through sixth grade, 175 of about 14,000 students were
retained in Newport-Mesa this year. Last year, only 49 children were held
back and 59 the year before.
The number of students being retained in the seventh and eighth
grades, which fall under secondary education, have not been made
available by the district.
“I think certainly what this tells us is the policy is working,” said
Susan Despenas, assistant superintendent for elementary education.
While imposing the new mandates, district and school officials have
also stepped up their intervention and identification programs, Despenas
said.
Students who are having trouble and are “at risk” of retention, are
now identified and their parents notified by January.
During the spring semester, teachers develop an individualized
learning plan for each “at risk” student in an attempt to help them get
up to speed.
At the end of the school year, those children are then reevaluated and
their Stanford 9 test scores are taken into account.
In January, 499 students were in danger of being held back. That
number dropped to 175, but the intervention doesn’t stop there.
There is also a monthlong summer school program in August for students
who need to prepare for the upcoming year.
Summer school should prevent those students from being “at risk” in
the coming school year, and it will also give students in
Spanish-speaking homes a chance to return to an English-language
environment a full month before school begins, Despenas said.
There are 879 “at risk” students enrolled in Newport-Mesa’s new summer
intervention program.
“What we did was we raised the bar as to what they had to do to
graduate or be promoted. But we realize you can’t raise the bar without
offering more help,” said Supt. Robert Barbot. “I am quite candidly
pleased that the numbers are as low as they are.”
With the upcoming year being the first with the complete intervention
program in effect, district officials expect the number of retained
students to decline again.
“I’m optimistic that whatever we can do to serve children, that’s what
we should do,” said school board member Martha Fluor. “If that means
retaining them so they’ll be successful, that’s great.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.