Newport-Mesa school rankings get sweeter
Deirdre Newman
NEWPORT-MESA -- The Newport-Mesa Unified School District celebrated
its continued academic success Wednesday, with one elementary school
again ranking at the top of the county and one Costa Mesa school finally
exceeding a benchmark figure as statewide scores were released.
“I commend the schools and their principals and the teaching staff for
the growth that they are continuing to show,” school board President Judy
Franco said after the release of the Academic Performance Index.
But district officials also expressed some concern that four schools
saw a decline in their statewide rank.
The Academic Performance Index, or API, was put in place by Gov. Gray
Davis to make schools more accountable. It is based on tests taken in the
spring and establishes a base score for each school from 200 to 1,000,
assigns statewide rankings from 1 to 10, with 10 being the highest, and
mandates a growth target for the following year for schools scoring less
than 800.
Schools are also ranked against other schools with similar
demographics and socioeconomic standings.
This is the first year the API scores are based on criteria other than
the Stanford 9 test. This year, the API base also includes the California
Standards Test in English Language Arts.
Seven Newport-Mesa schools received top rankings of 10 -- one more
than last year. Harbor View Elementary School in Corona del Mar earned
the highest score of all elementary schools in the county at 922, a score
that was off slightly from its previous year’s 936.
Newport Coast, the district’s newest school, received a rank of 10 its
first year to the delight of Principal Monique VanZeeBroeck. Students
there took the test in the spring after being on their new campus for
about two months.
“We’re very pleased for a new school to have a ranking of 10,”
VanZeeBroeck said. “We want to be world class, want to know how we can
improve and move forward.”
California Elementary School, the only Costa Mesa school to exceed 800
with a base score of 808, also was the first to meet the statewide
target. Principal Jane Holm attributed the growth to a committed
partnership with parents and a thorough analysis of the previous year’s
results.
“We were trying to improve from last year, and we did a really good
job of analyzing the test scores from last year and looking at what holes
we need to fill,” Holm said.
The four schools that saw a decline in their statewide ranks are
Woodland, Paularino, Pomona and Ensign. Pomona has received an
under-performing schools grant to help boost student achievement, said
Peggy Anatol, the school district’s director of kindergarten through
12th-grade assessment.
However, none of the district schools ranked in the bottom percentile.
“That is outstanding,” Franco said. “It shows the determination and
time and effort that have been put into it by our principals and teaching
staff and that our children can and will succeed.”
In future years, the API will also include results from other
standards tests and the California High School Exit Exam.
* Deirdre Newman covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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