Improvement needs to start at the schools
We have often pondered what the Westside of Costa Mesa would look
like in the future -- vibrant shopping centers, streets with medians
and trees, well-kept homes and clean parks with the sounds of
children laughing.
And we know that those who call themselves improvers have a
similar vision.
But what cannot be left out of that equation as the “improved”
Westside of the future emerges are schools that regularly perform in
the top percent of the state.
Which brings us back to the here and now.
Last week, the state released its API testing results, and once
again, Newport-Mesa Unified School District had bittersweet results.
On the sweet side, 18 schools posted rankings that were the same
as before, and four schools, College Park, Paularino and Woodland
elementary and Orange Coast Middle College High School, saw their
rankings improve over last year.
And seven of those 18 schools that remained the same, stayed at a
10 ranking, the highest in the state.
As for the bitter, seven schools experienced a drop in rankings,
with four in the heart of the Westside -- Wilson, Whittier, Pomona
elementary and Estancia High School -- at or near the bottom of the
statewide rankings.
Newport Harbor High also dropped, as did Adams and California.
We acknowledge that there have been serious efforts to improve the
rankings at these schools. Notable are reading programs and the
efforts of such people as Sharon Blakely, the principal at Whittier
Elementary, who has instituted reading programs for immigrant,
non-English speaking children and their parents.
And the Westside schools face a daunting challenge. A large
portion of the school population consists of Spanish-speaking
children who have little or no literacy.
Many have parents who live nomadic lives, traveling from job to
job, city to city, giving the children little chance to gain any
academic momentum.
Still, we can’t help but pine for the future. We long for a time
when Costa Mesa’s schools will be on par with schools like Andersen,
Eastbluff, Lincoln, Harbor View, Mariners, Newport Coast and Corona
del Mar High, which all hold the top state ranking.
So we lay down a challenge: To those who have cast themselves in
the roles of improvers of Costa Mesa, we say, take the battle to the
school grounds.
Instead of spending energy trying to close down the Job Center and
local charities, we urge those improvers to focus on the classroom
and find a way to improve the academics at Westside schools.
Perhaps to set the example, Councilmen Chris Steel and Allan
Mansoor could volunteer for the successful Reading by 9 program.
Either way, the Westside and those members of its improvement
movement have done much to call attention to their plight. And for
that, they will most likely reap the benefits of a better community.
We just want to make sure the schools don’t get left behind.
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