Charting a school’s course
Jessica Garrison
MESA VERDE -- Trying to start a new school can be an education in
itself.
That, at least, has been the lesson for a group of Mesa Verde parents
who want to open the district’s first-ever charter school.
The parents, who say they want to start the school to lure back Mesa
Verde children who have forsaken public schools for private ones, haven’t
even turned in a formal application to the board of education yet.
They plan to sometime this month, and the school board will then have
30 days to consider the proposal and hear the public’s views on it before
voting.
To make sure they are prepared to go before the board, parents have
been working furiously for the past 13 months. They visited other charter
schools around Orange County, studied education models and met with
countless parents to try and turn their vision into a reality.
They also have presented their ideas to Supt. Robert Barbot and board
members Serene Stokes and Wendy Leece, although the education leaders
were quick to stress that they have not yet taken a position on the
proposed school.
And though parents say the response has been overwhelmingly positive,
there have been a few hurdles -- especially last spring from parents and
teachers at California Elementary School who feared the parents were
trying to change that school.
Many of the parents organizing the charter school now send their
children to California, and they had explored the idea of converting
California to a charter school. But they dropped it after many parents
expressed concern about the plan.
“There was a lot of controversy when the idea was first brought out
into the open,” said California parent Pat Ary, a member of the PTA at
California who is not involved in the charter school plans.
Some parents and teachers, Ary said, thought the charter idea amounted
to a criticism of their school.
“People felt like ‘What’s the matter with what we have? Why is this
big movement taking place?’ ” she said. “A lot of it has been resolved.”
Kara Handy and Byran de Arakal, California parents who are behind the
charter movement, said it was never their intention to criticize their
present school or transform it against parents and teachers’ wills.
“This is an extremely complicated issue, politically and legally, and
it took a huge amount of research,” said de Arakal, whose children
currently attend California Elementary and TeWinkle Middle schools.
Handy said she first dreamed up the idea for the school more than a
year ago, when she realized that almost none of the children in her Mesa
Verde neighborhood attend Costa Mesa public schools.
“This is not about California school,” said Handy, who grew up
attending Costa Mesa public schools. “California is a great school. I’m
really happy with it.
“The reason I explored the charter option was that, from this corner to
the next corner in my neighborhood, none of the children attend the same
school,” she added. “People are not moving to Costa Mesa for the schools,
like they do Irvine or Laguna Niguel, and we need that here.”
Charter schools were first conceived as a way to reform failing
schools. They are publicly funded but are granted freedom from many
portions of the state education code because they are considered to have
a special educational purpose.
Handy said she envisions the Mesa Verde Charter School as a place that
would challenge children and promote accountability among parents,
teachers and students.
All parents would be required to volunteer a minimum of four hours
each month at the school. Teachers would be paid as much or more than
regular district teachers, but would not have tenure, meaning they could
be let go at any time. This, said de Arakal, would ensure that teachers
are “on fire to teach.”
The curriculum would emphasize reading, writing, mathematics and
character education. Students would still be required to meet state
standards in all areas, and would take state-mandated exams. But students
also would be able to study drama, foreign languages, arts and music.
After dropping the idea of converting an existing school such as
California to a charter school, parents hit on the idea of starting a new
school. Now they want to open a 500-student elementary school serving
kindergarten through fifth grade at the old Mesa Verde Elementary School
campus. The site is currently leased to Coastline Community College, but
parents hope to take it back and open the school in the fall of 2000.
Originally, the 16-member group of parents and community leaders who
are planning the school had thought to give children living within a
one-mile radius of the school first priority at enrolling, but parents
have since dropped that idea because they learned it was illegal.
By law, charter schools must reflect the same level of ethnic
diversity as the district, which is about 30% Latino. Most of the
families within a one-mile radius of the proposed site are in Mesa Verde,
an upscale suburban enclave tucked next to less-affluent West Side Costa
Mesa neighborhoods.
Upon learning of the requirement, the group dropped the one-mile idea
and decided the school would be open to all Newport-Mesa students.
“There was no attempt to make this an all-white school,” said de
Arakal. “That’s not our motivation. The idea of this charter is to
provide a really rich and diverse environment for all kids to excel.”
More than 250 parents have already signed a petition in favor of the
charter, de Arakal said. They plan to file their proposal soon.
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