TeWinkle takes scare out of middle school
Jessica Garrison
COSTA MESA -- The scariest part of starting TeWinkle Middle School
for many incoming sixth-graders wasn’t the giant eighth-graders, the
school’s formidable reputation for flaming bathrooms and graffiti or even
the thought of school dances.
It was the prospect of having six different classes instead of one,
more comfortable classroom as they did in elementary school.
“I thought it would be really hard to go to all the different
classes,” said sixth-grader Dena Mora.
So imagine Dena’s, and her mother’s, delight when they arrived at
TeWinkle and learned that, over the summer, Principal Sharon Fry had
started a “sixth-grade academy.”
The program, which Fry dreamed up herself, tries to offer
sixth-graders the best of both the elementary school and the middle
school worlds. It may be the first of its kind in Orange County.
Instead of six teachers, the 150 sixth-graders at TeWinkle have two --
one for math and science, and one for arts and literature.
As they did in elementary school, they will be subjects of
parent-teacher conferences, and will be able to get to know their
teachers and each other very well. But they also can take advantage of
middle-school extras such as music, foreign language and advanced math
classes. The students will never have to go to more than two classrooms
in a day.
And, unique to the academy, each sixth-grade class is taught by two
teachers who work with each other in teams -- which allows classes to
explore curriculum in-depth.
Another advantage of the program, said Fry, is that it inspires
teachers to be creative about their assignments and get excited about
teaching.
In a few months, for example, science teacher Rebecca Ellis will
present a unit on archeology.
She will talk about precise measurements, the scientific method and
how objects become preserved in layers of dirt. The English teacher she
works with will offer lessons on the history of archeology, about
pharaohs and the Sphinx and the role of archeology in literature.
Teachers hope that, through this interdisciplinary approach, students
will -- in keeping with education’s newest buzzword -- be able to
integrate scientific and literary views of archeology.
Many students, however, are just happy not to be wandering the halls,
lost, embarrassed and weighed down by a backpack full of books.
“I’m not scared anymore,” said student Kristina Sharp.
Her classmate, Sarah Muradian, agreed. ‘It’s a lot easier than having
to go to lots of different classes.”
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