HOPE for tomorrow
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Deirdre Newman
About 40% of all children entering kindergarten are not ready for
school, district kindergarten teachers say.
To combat this startling statistic, the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District has embarked on a holistic readiness program.
The HOPE -- Health, Opportunities, Preparedness and Education --
School Readiness Program is an amalgamation of established services and
new resources that work synergistically with each other.
HOPE, which started earlier this spring, underscores the dire need for
school readiness on Costa Mesa’s Westside, where most students speak a
language other than English at home, said Lorie Hoggard, the district’s
new director of early childhood education.
Program funding comes from the Children and Families Commission of
Orange County, which gave districts money to research what they needed to
do to enhance school readiness .
Jane Garland, school readiness facilitator, became the district’s
visionary -- talking to teachers about what ingredients the district
lacked.
And it was Garland who created the name HOPE -- based on her first
granddaughter.
“I loved her name because it was hope for the future,” Garland said.
“I said, ‘Hope’s the perfect name for what we want for all of our
children.”’
Although a preschool serving 144 students and some adult classes
already existed on the Whittier Elementary School campus, Garland found
that they weren’t fully integrated.
The preschool classes now include a class for infants and toddlers, so
parents of very young children can attend the adult classes. In addition
to teaching English, the parenting classes now include health, nutrition,
parenting and school readiness. In the future, the program hopes to go
high-tech -- offering adult classes online with video streaming. A
preschool was also added at Wilson School and now serves 48 students.
Another addition is a pediatric nurse practitioner who spends 2 1/2
days a week at the Whittier preschool to help parents cope with the
intricacies of immunizations and other health issues.
There is also a new school readiness resource center that has a wealth
of resources, including information about early childhood education,
read-aloud books for parents and preschool teachers, and an online
research station.
And the new face of HOPE is Hoggard, who is still finishing out the
school year as principal of Sonora Elementary School.
Hoggard has an extensive background in early childhood education and
knows what students need to thrive.
“Parents need to be involved, kids need to be healthy, language and
motor skills need to be developed,” Hoggard said. “Our preschool puts
children on a positive trajectory with so many support systems.”
And if the past is any indication of future success, the initial
efforts at school readiness are already paying off, Hoggard said.
“Hands down, the kids that come to our preschool are outperforming
everyone else,” Hoggard said.
That’s a declaration that parent Claudia Monroy can attest to. Her
son, Jesse, attended his second year of preschool at Whittier last year
and couldn’t wait to start kindergarten.
“I think he was very well-prepared,” Monroy said. “He always told me
that kindergarten would fly by because he would know more than the other
kids.”
FYI
The HOPE program will celebrate its official opening at 10 a.m.
Thursday at the Whittier Elementary School preschool.
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