Comments on progress reports don’t match students
Danette Goulet
NEWPORT-MESA -- An apparent glitch in the school district’s
computer software caused parents of students in at least three schools to
received progress reports with incorrect information on them.
The comment section of reports from TeWinkle Middle School, Newport
Harbor High School and Costa Mesa High School contained comments that
didn’t match the students named on the reports, said Sharon Fry,
principal at TeWinkle.
This first progress report of the year had calls from irate and
bewildered parents filling up teachers’ voice mailboxes as soon as Friday
morning.
“My daughter is a straight-A student,” said Kathy Miller, whose daughter
is in the sixth grade at TeWinkle. “It had comments like poor work habits
and excessive talking.”
The most perplexing thing about the report, she said, was the conflicting
information.
“It had an outstanding in citizenship -- and next to it was poor work
habits,” Miller said.
The grades on the reports were correct, explained Jaime Castellanos,
assistant superintendent for secondary education.
But comments entered for students from the first school in the computer
system were then printed on progress reports for every subsequent school.
A stay-at-home mom, Miller got her mail at 10 a.m. and began frantically
calling other mothers asking if they had received any thing or if she had
the only misbehaver.
Llewelyn Smith had no idea what she was talking about -- her mail doesn’t
come until 2 p.m. But when the mail came, Smith couldn’t believe it.”We
get glowing reports every week,” said Smith, whose daughter Kascy attends
TeWinkle. “I was looking at the worst report I’d ever seen.”
Both mothers called the teachers. Smith said she intended to go down to
the school if she didn’t some answers. Once parents learned of the error
and were reassured of their children’s good behavior they said they were
both relieved and amused.
But what about those parents who would not get their mail until after the
school was closed?
“What’s really going to be bad is mothers and fathers who get this at 6
p.m. when they get home from work --they have no recourse,” Smith said,
pondering how many children were grounded unjustly for the weekend.
Fry said the staff at TeWinkle planned to call parents Monday and that
each child would be given a note to take home.
Castellanos said each home in the district will also soon receive a
correction in the mail.
“I feel bad -- I heard through the grapevine that there were students
disciplined over this,” he said.
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