Three schools head to D.C. for Blue Ribbons
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Delegates from three Huntington Beach schools will travel to
Washington, D.C. next week to accept the nation’s highest educational
honors.
Marine View Middle School, Isaac Sowers Middle School and Pegasus
School have all been named National Blue Ribbon Schools by the U.S.
Department of Education.
It is the highest distinction a school can receive from the
federal government, and one that takes time and dedication from the
administration, staff and parents to earn, Marine View Principal
Elizabeth Williams said.
“I think it would be very difficult for a school to be a Blue
Ribbon school without all those folks,” she said. “It was the
teamwork.”
Developed by the secretary of education in 1982, the Blue Ribbon
program was designed to identify and give recognition to outstanding
schools nationwide.
Before any school can claim a Blue Ribbon, it must earn the honor
of being a California Distinguished School. Once a school receives
that award, it is invited to apply for the national award. Those
applications are evaluated by the state Department of Education,
which determines finalists to be forwarded for the national
evaluation.
“They all contributed to making that school outstanding,”
Huntington Beach City School District Supt. Gary Rutherford said of
Sowers’ staff. “This group of people doesn’t see this award as an end
product. They’re still looking at improvement.”
Pegasus School Founder and Director Laura K. Hathaway was
“stunned” by the news that her school was honored.
“It’s exciting to be in that category of schools,” she said.
“We’re very honored to have been chosen. We worked very hard for it.”
Beauty and brains
at the beach
Applications are now available for the 2003 Miss Huntington Beach
Scholarship Pageant. This year’s theme is “Beauty and the Beach.”
Young women between the ages of 17 and 24 who live, work and attend
school in Surf City are encouraged to apply for the pageant, which is
part of the Miss American Organization.
The pageant began in 1963 under the guidance of the Women of
Action/Sand Dollars of the Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce.
It was originally started as a traditional beauty pageant, but
that changed in 1994 when the Women of Action bought a franchise with
the Miss California Organization. Obtaining scholarship money for
participants then became the pageants main objective.
Young women interested in competing can pick up an application at
the Huntington Beach Chamber or Commerce, 2100 Main St., Suite 200.
Applications must be turned in by 5 p.m. Nov. 15. For more
information, please call (714) 536-8888.
Union high district leaders mastering governance
Huntington Beach Union High School District board members Matthew
Harper and Susan Henry recently completed the California School
Boards Assn. Master in Governance program.
Both received their masters in governance certificates after
completing 56 hours of training as part of the governance program.
The goal of the program is to provide school trustees and
superintendents with the knowledge and skills to effectively function
as teams. There are nine sessions administered over a two-year
period.
Ocean View teacher learns to create leaders in students
Ocean View High School teacher Brenda Clark was one of 23 teachers
from across the nation to participant in the Presidential Classroom
Scholars program.
The teachers visited the White House and foreign embassies and
spent two days on Capitol Hill learning hot to prepare high school
juniors and seniors to be responsible citizens and leaders.
Clark took part in a d debate about the framework of federal
government, Washington culture and democracy and helped direct small
group discussions on current issues such as juvenile justice, human
rights and the role of the media in politics.
She will apply the skills she learned to her work as a language
arts teacher and involve her students in similar debates and
discussions.
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