Keeping a handle on things
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All but one Newport-Mesa Unified school will return to class on Sept.
2 and the district was busy over the summer renovating and updating
several campuses and reinventing the curriculum.
On Friday, City Editor James Meier met with Supt. Robert Barbot to
discuss these improvements and changes to see what the school year
has in store for Costa Mesa and Newport Beach.
First of all, tell me a little about what improvements were made
over the summer that many students and parents will notice when they
return to school this year.
I’ll start with the construction. We’ll have Newport Coast
[Elementary School] completed. That means a whole additional wing has
been added to it. We’ve also done some adjustments in the classrooms
that we needed to do and class-size reduction. I’m not going to go
school by school because we have too many.
We have eight schools. Newport Harbor High because of the
condemnation by the state. We have actually moved all of the students
and are finishing this week the administration to relocatables while
we take on the task over several years of rebuilding the main hall.
People are working day and night and have been.
The other schools that are under construction -- it goes on till
November. We are finishing off the administration wings. We’ve run
into some difficulty at Harbor View. You know that. But generally
speaking, most of the schools have been completed. Even Harbor View
is really close to completion. It’s just that we didn’t feel
comfortable bringing in the kids [Labor Day] week.
What they’ll see when it’s all done is really carried through our
strategic plan and Measure A and so on. The classrooms are going to
be modernized, brought up to standards. They’re going to look good.
They’re going to have new paint jobs, electrical was readjusted, the
walls were gutted, new lighting, you name it. They literally stripped
their walls.
To give you an example, we’ve moved 118 classroom teachers this
summer alone in and out of relocatables. By the way, they’re nice
relocatables. They have air conditioning and all of that. By
October/November, as we finish off Phase I, we’ll have schools that
really are modern, address safety needs, have clean classroom walls,
new lighting, new electricity.
That’s it for construction. Curriculum-wise, strategically, what
we’re going to see different is we did generally very well on our
test scores but we obviously look at them. So we’re having our
administrators this summer meeting with teachers about are strengths
and weaknesses. [Assistant Supt.] Susan Despenas, for example, as we
speak is meeting with the principals. What we’re going to do is look
at what we do well and where we need to further improve and we’ll
focus our instruction on that.
What we have seen, generally speaking, is our biggest area of need
is in the reading and language arts area. You have to understand. We
get a lot of new students at school during the year. Certain schools
will turn over 67% of the student population. Even though people will
say “You fixed it once” like being in a hospital, these aren’t
patients.
What we’re doing is adopting new language arts standards. Unlike
most districts, we’ve really made it a priority to purchase [$1.5
million to $2 million] worth of new language arts curriculum. The
reason we’ve done it is because they’re 100% aligned with the new
language arts standards K-12, which helps every child. If they’re
advanced, they’ll move faster.
Then there’s our Reading 180 program for the high school kids. The
seventh through ninth graders are our primary targets because we
don’t want them coming into high school not reading what we want them
to read. It’s very diagnostic individual-wise and focused on making
sure our students are performing well and are ready for college.
So language arts and reading will be absolutely aligned with
state, national and worldwide standards. It’s coming together real
well.
What they’re also going to see that the preschool program has been
expanded. They’re going to see is that the state is demanding more
and more paperwork to be filled out by them in order to register for
school. So we’re working on that.
They’re going to see that we did some technological things to
really even further advance contact us if their child’s absent. We
did it the last few years, but we’ve really dramatically tightened it
up. Pretty much, we’re getting to the point that at most of our
schools, parents and teachers can e-mail back and forth for feedback
day and night. Parents are working and want to know what’s going on.
There will also be a new site where parents can sign up for
districtwide e-mails. We want to encourage them to use it because
we’re putting all of the new materials about what’s going on with
construction, the new language arts curriculum, what’s going on at
every school on the Web page. Day and night, they can get into it and
they can actually have those opportunities for feedback. If they have
a question, we can give them an answer. We also want feedback about
the Web sites’ usefulness.
The key is to have a communication between the parents and the
schools. That’s the key to our success, that they know what’s going
on. We want to stop miscommunication.
Basically, we’re asking all of our teachers and staff to focus on
what’s going on in the classroom: to make sure that the child is,
first of all, safe and that the instruction is focused on their
particular needs. We’ve also put in a number of additional security
issues.
Certainly, and I want to remind the parents, no one is allowed to
enter our sites unless they first check into the administration
building and get visitor tags. That’s something, you know, that two
years, you wouldn’t have thought about it. We’ve had great
cooperation. We also have resource officers at the high schools.
Another element is a major counseling grant. We’ve gone after some
grants because money is tight this year. We have one of only seven
grants for counseling in the whole country. We’re now trying to beef
up the after school outreach grant.
We’re one of the most diverse, economically and otherwise, school
districts anywhere in the world. We have extreme wealth, extreme
poverty, so our goal is for everyone to work together for the common
interest of every child. It’s not our place to judge. We tell our
staff that. Politicians talk about whether someone belongs here or
not. But our job is to educate every child that comes on our
doorstep. The politics of it belongs to someone else.
What we’re trying to do is work with every group around us. A
major thing that we have had, but we’re going to expand our
collaboration with every agency and group when it meets our
educational agenda, not theirs. We want it to help educate kids and
help parents to make this a strong community.
We’re also really focusing on the individual needs of children.
The GATE children need as much as the underachieving students. We
find their needs to be as great, so we’re really beefing up our GATE
program. People assume the gifted children do really well, but they
also have difficulties and issues. We received some grants and
dollars for that.
We’ve been really successful partnering with other groups. We have
to credit our staff and communities and parents. Our PTAs have helped
us get some grants and other things. It’s nice when people pull
together.
Also, one thing people don’t realize is how many homeless kids go
to our schools. Last year, we identified 193 kids. We also had 129
who left during the year. We just received a $100,000 grant for them.
Otherwise what we have are families walking the streets with
children. That’s just not acceptable. So we’re trying to reach out to
those kids. What we have found, contrary to what people might think,
is it doesn’t draw people in. These are people who homeless in this
community. About 99% of the time, they’ve been here. They can lose a
job and be out on the streets or the husband and wife can get into a
fight and someone can end up on the streets. That’s what’s happening.
They don’t move far to go out on the streets. That notion is
inaccurate. So we’re working with some of these interfaith shelters
to really get them to the schools or keep them in the schools. We
don’t want it to be a breaking point for them.
People think it’s just the poor communities, but it’s not. It’s
amazing.
What are the plans for Harbor View Elementary students to make up
for the four lost days?
We have to finalize them, but we met with the staff and have
talked to some of the parents, but we’ll finalize them on Monday. It
appears what they’re rather do than four days at the end of the year
is we have a couple of days in February, one in the beginning of the
school year that’s for staff development and then they’re going to
condense when they do parent conferencing, so they’ll be able to pick
up the four days without extending the year. That’s the proposal. We
believe that’s what the parents would like, but we’ll find out on
Monday.
What are the largest challenges facing the district this year?
Finishing off Measure A and delivering on the vision we all had.
We’re pretty much on target. It’s dealing with the unknown when we
open up a school during construction.
We’re adopting and will present the board Tuesday night a balanced
budget with a full reserve of 3%-plus. It’s balanced in the total
sense. We haven’t laid off any staff and in the process have kept all
the programs in place. So we’re proud of that. But one of the things
we have to watch is finishing up reconstruction and the unknowns of
how the state can impact us.... A second part of Measure A is in
March, with the bond dollars in Prop. 47. We’re real concerned that
that passes because we need that. Certainly, there’s a lot of turmoil
going on around us.
We’re also real focused on safety and security, as we need to be.
We have good plans, but we have to keep an eye on that. We’re in a
very unsafe world....
It’ll be a challenging year, but I’m optimistic. I’m not
pessimistic like people are statewide. We all have a lot of good
resources and good things can happen. It’s not a matter of “The sky
is falling.” It’s looking at what you can do.
Any final thoughts?
As the year goes on, we would really encourage our parents and
retired teachers in the community who really want to work with us to
give the district a call.... We have so many kids missing one or both
of their parents who could use role models. These schools do belong
to the community. They’re not ours. We’re the caretakers, but they
belong to them. The children are their children. So any help they can
give us, we’ll take it.
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