Parent alleges students get unfair treatment
Danette Goulet
COSTA MESA - A TeWinkle Middle School parent has filed complaints with
the state alleging that schools in the district are sabotaging Latino
students’ educations.
Mirna Buricaga of Costa Mesa filed a document with the California
Department of Education with 10 bullet points outlining the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District’s shortcomings, including one which begins,
“Students at all sites are often placed on a track for failure.”
TeWinkle Principal Sharon Fry, whose school was the main target in the
complaint, said Buricaga’s allegations are just not true.
“The complaint is that we are not servicing children, and that is
absolutely wrong,” Fry said.
Buricaga said English-language learners at TeWinkle are not getting
the education they are entitled to by law.
“The complaint is about English as a Second Language students not
receiving the core curriculum classes,” she said. “They are supposed to
follow standards. They have to be exposed to math, science and English.”
While not all English learners are taking science classes, Fry said,
those students are taking two language development classes, social
studies, math, physical education and an elective class such as art or
music.
“Science has a very specific language: mitosis, cell membrane,” she
said. “You’ve got to work with where they are.”
The students take an elective because it offers those who may have
trouble in other subjects because of the language barrier to have a place
to shine, she added.
Buricaga asserts that the law is being broken.
The state, which sent the complaint to the district, is investigating
the charges.
Buricaga also complained that students are put into mainstream classes
before they are ready and without parental consent.
Fry denied the charge.
“Many students are put into mainstream [classes] because their skill
level was beyond that of the English as a Second Language class,” Fry
said. “The state does not say you can’t put a child in mainstream
classes. We do that when we think that’s the best level for a child to be
in. If, for example, a student is doing well in a sheltered class, we may
move them to a mainstream [class] with support.”
Buricaga’s complaints don’t stop with the students.
She also alleges that TeWinkle’s administration and PTA group cut
Latino parents out of the loop and keep them from having a voice at the
school.
“We are bending over backward to reach Hispanics,” said Jill Money,
TeWinkle’s PTA president.
The last PTA meeting, Money said, was held at Wilson Elementary School
for the benefit of parents in the area who lack means of transportation.
The entire meeting also was translated into Spanish, she added.
“Next week’s [meeting] is at Rea Elementary School, again with Spanish
translation,” she said. “So, I’d say we’re making a real effort to reach
out to all parents.”
The complaints also allege that newsletters and informational fliers
are routinely sent out without translation.
Both Money and Fry said that although they are not required to
translate notices, the majority of all mailings are translated.
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