LETTER OF THE WEEK
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Once again, we are engaged in a discussion as to the best way to
deliver instructional services to our children. For several years now,
the Fountain Valley School District Board of Trustees has been asked by
the community to open this debate and to begin the study of a possible
reorganization into a kindergarten through 12th-grade district.
In response to the community’s interest, the board chose to focus much
of its attention on this issue last fall. The board knows that this would
involve a major governance change, and we certainly acknowledge that
change is difficult. Moving outside one’s comfort zone isn’t easy, but
when it comes to meeting the educational needs of our students, we should
be guided by what is right, prudent and educationally sound.
Our two fine districts have been servicing students for many years.
The Huntington Beach Union High School District will soon be celebrating
its 100th anniversary. However times have changed over the past century.
New challenges rest on the horizon, and we should obligate ourselves
to at least looking at better and more efficient ways to educate our
children.
The Fountain Valley School District Board of Trustees has not yet made
a decision to proceed to the next phase of unification. The board and
staff are studying the financial reports and feasibility studies that
have recently come in from our consultants. During the course of this
year, the board has held study sessions and public hearings. We have
surveyed our parent community, and we have received staff reports on the
nine statewide criteria that we would need to meet in order to unify.
Preliminary reports would indicate that a unification effort on our
part could very well be successful. However our board and district staff
continue to seek additional data on the fiscal impact such an effort
would have on the high school district and on current programs offered at
Fountain Valley High School.
We are attempting to validate the modernization and deferred
maintenance needs of the high school and we have opened up communication
with the high school’s staff.
The times indeed have changed. We are being held accountable for
student academic progress as never before in recent memory. The high
stakes era of proving our effectiveness on rigorous academic assessments
is here to stay. We are looking straight into the eyes of high school
exit examinations, Academic Performance Indexes and state standards tests
that demand our students show proficiency before moving from one grade to
another and most critically before receiving a high school diploma.
We must begin preparing students to pass the high school exit
examination as early as the primary grades. This means that more than
ever we need a well-defined, articulated and rigorous kindergarten
through 12th-grade curriculum that doesn’t exist at present. While we
attempt to articulate with the high school, there is no formal
articulation policy between the two governing agencies.
This is why a unified school district is the preferred organizational
structure. One set of governance policies under one management and
teaching philosophy makes sense.
The issues of program and attendance policies, salary schedules and
facilities may cause us to continue doing the same thing we have done for
nearly a century. But these are issues that can be readily resolved. We
live in a time where choice is good. We hear about the blurring of
attendance boundaries and more of a free flow of students between
districts. That is why the Fountain Valley School District has an
open-enrollment policy. We are concerned that any school district would
take a position to deny families the right to pursue public educational
choices outside its district boundaries.
Charter schools have become popular and choice among public schools is
strongly supported by the electorate. A strong community will support a
unified school district and continue to build upon the successful high
school programs now in place. Our community is as proud of Fountain
Valley High School as it is of the successes of the Fountain Valley
School District.
It makes sense to so many people that these two entities should be one
and the same.
The trustees of the Fountain Valley School District have not yet made
a decision. This exploration is not intended to be personal or
vindictive. Our interest stems from our community and is driven by our
desire to be the best. So, we ask people to dream. We encourage people to
think outside of the box, to consider what might be and not be
constrained by comfortable, but old practices. Our students in our
community deserve the same resources that their counterparts enjoy in
other parts of the county and state.
Unification will bring that to them. This effort is about building,
strengthening and enriching our educational programs. If the studies show
that this is possible, why would we hesitate? It takes strength and we
are strong!
TONY MCCOMBS
President
Fountain Valley School District Board of Trustees
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