Course gives a head start
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Bertha Garcia knows quite a few more English words than she did at
the beginning of the summer. In fact, she knows approximately 350
more -- and she’s hung them on a classroom wall to prove it.
The 12-year-old Costa Mesa resident, who will enter the seventh
grade at Ensign Intermediate School next month, participated this
summer in Jump Start on Junior High, a preparatory class for students
making the transition from elementary school.
On Tuesday, the Newport-Mesa Unified School District held a
luncheon at Ensign to celebrate the end of the course, and
instructors handed out awards to students -- including one to Bertha,
whose 350 words led her class.
“First I read some books, and when I came to words I didn’t
understand, I was curious what they meant,” said Bertha, whose
vocabulary sheets on the wall included “nightingales,” “vagueness”
and “latecomers.”
Bertha was among 14 former Rea Elementary School students honored
Tuesday for completing the Jump Start class, a first-year summer
program. During the five weeks of the course, students learned to
write summaries of short stories, tried advanced methods of
note-taking and read a portion of Stephen Covey’s best-selling book
“The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People.”
Jump Start on Junior High is the brainchild of Julie Chan, the
director of literary instruction for Newport-Mesa. She conceived the
course as an affiliate of Read 180, a nationwide reading program for
middle school and high school students that Newport-Mesa has offered
since 2003.
While the district has offered Read 180 -- which serves seventh-
through 12th-graders who are two or more years behind their grade
level in reading -- for the last three years, Chan said the program
is often sparsely attended during the summer months.
“It’s a real hard sell to get kids to come back to school after
summer begins by saying, ‘This is a reading program,’ but it was easy
to tell the parents, ‘Your kids are going to get a head start on
junior high with these skills,’” Chan said.
The summer course at Ensign also served as training for faculty
who will be leading the Read 180 program in the near future. Rea
sixth-grade teachers Amy Medina and Alida Castaneda, whose school
will be the only elementary site offering Read 180 this fall, led the
class.
At the Tuesday luncheon, Medina handed out prizes to students for
their achievements. Luis Ramirez led the class by reading 924 pages,
while Luz Alvarez set another mark by writing 2,051 words for class.
Fatima Gutierrez, who said she hadn’t been a compulsive reader before
the summer class, listened to six novels by audiotape in July and
August -- totaling 1,166 minutes.
“I looked on the cover and on the back where they had a small
summary, and they looked interesting to me,” said Fatima, 12.
* MICHAEL MILLER may be reached at
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