Here are some items the board will...
- Share via
Here are some items the board will consider tonight:
EARLY COLLEGE HIGH SCHOOL
The Newport-Mesa district and the Coast Community College District
have proposed to start an Early College High School for the 2006-07
school year. The school would combine college and high school
curricula and allow students to graduate in five years or less with a
diploma and an associate of arts degree. To offset the cost of the
project, Newport-Mesa and Coast officials seek to apply to the Bill
and Melinda Gates Foundation for a $400,000 grant over five years.
If the Gates Foundation provides the grant, it will cover
approximately $93,000 of the project expenditures for 2005-06, which
the applicants intend as a planning year for the Early College High
School. Newport-Mesa would put up $163,598 for the next school year,
while the college would contribute $41,691.
District officials are seeking the approval of the board to apply
for the Gates grant and, contingent upon its award, to budget the
appropriate funds for the upcoming year.
WHAT TO EXPECT
The board members are unlikely to approve the Early College High
School project at this point without the Gates grant, so unless the
district expenditures are too steep for the next year, they will
likely give Newport-Mesa the go-ahead to apply. The Coast board of
trustees approved the project at its meeting on May 4.
NEW SECONDARY CLASSES
Jaime Castellanos, assistant superintendent of secondary
education, will submit a number of new elective high school courses
for approval. The offerings are advanced placement music theory,
which covers notation, scales and other fundamentals of music, at
Corona del Mar High School; developmental reading for beginning to
intermediate English learners; digital photography, an art elective
using Adobe Photoshop, at Newport Harbor High School; history of rock
and roll, covering popular music from slave chants to psychedelia, at
Newport Harbor High School; and 12th-grade world literature,
featuring Middle Eastern mythology, satire, romanticism and more, at
Costa Mesa High School.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Approval. Castellanos said the district rarely turns down new
elective courses.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.