Schools try to be more welcoming to parents
Orange Coast Middle College High School is the smallest site in the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District -- so small, in fact, that many
of its neighbors don’t even know its location. The campus, which
enrolls students seeking to learn outside the standard high school
setting, sits tucked behind the technology center at Orange Coast
College.
“It’s hard to find our school,” Principal Bob Nanneysaid. “It’s
been one of the best-kept secrets in town for a long time.”
In the near future, though, the school may be easier to find.
Earlier this year, administrators put new signs on the lampposts
around campus, and they hope to place additional signs on the two
major intersections by the college.
Also on the school’s docket this year are family potluck dinners,
student exit surveys and a newly furnished reception area.
Nanney’s campus is one of eight in the Newport-Mesa district
embarking this year on the Family Friendly Schools program, a
districtwide push to help parents feel more involved at their
children’s school sites. Over the next year, parents who visit
campuses may find more visible staff in the front office, more signs
pointing the way to different parts of campus, or even personalized
websites for their children’s teachers.
The net result, in the end, may be better grades.
“There are those families that are very engaged with the schools,
and those that aren’t,” said Cheryl Galloway, the district’s director
of program improvement. “We know from research that the more families
are involved, the more student achievement goes up.”
At the school board’s meeting on Aug. 23, administrators from each
of the secondary campuses in Newport-Mesa -- Middle College,
Estancia, Costa Mesa, Newport Harbor and Corona del Mar High Schools,
Ensign Intermediate School, TeWinkle Middle School and the Back
Bay/Monte Vista continuation site -- presented individual improvement
plans. The reports represented the end result of more than a year of
planning within the district.
In December 2003, at the annual convention of the California
School Board Assn., Newport-Mesa board members heard a speech on
family outreach by Steve Constantino, a former Virginia principal
whose work at Stonewall Jackson High School had earned it Time
magazine’s High School of the Year Award in 2001. After Constantino’s
presentation, the board members invited him to travel to Costa Mesa
and share his ideas further.
“What really piqued our interest was that he was talking about
secondary education,” said board president Serene Stokes. “We know we
have a lot of participation at elementary schools, but when
youngsters get in high school, we have a group of moms in the PTA,
but the majority of parents rarely have any contact with the high
school unless their child is in trouble.”
After Constantino’s visit, each site formed a Family Friendly
Schools committee and created plans for the next one to five years.
During the 2004-05 school year, Constantino served as a mentor to the
district, returning three times to deliver seminars on reaching out
to the community.
This fall will mark the official beginning of the Family Friendly
Schools program -- although some campuses, busy with Measure A
construction, may get a later start. Despite the large number of
changes outlined in the plans, the program will not likely cost the
district a great deal of money. Most of the proposals, such as
posting signs or sending out additional newsletters, can be achieved
at a minimal cost.
“We thought, ‘Ah, we don’t have to reinvent the wheel,’” said
board member Dana Black.
Some of the schools’ plans deal specifically with problems raised
by Measure A, a districtwide construction project that closed a
number of classrooms and put many offices in portable buildings.
Michael Vossen, principal of Newport Harbor High, said he wanted to
set two or three informational kiosks around the outdoor campus to
direct first-time visitors.
Guy Olguin, co-principal of Corona del Mar High, said he also saw
the need for better on-campus directions at the campus. “Corona del
Mar is a relatively large campus, so if they [visitors] are parked in
the front lot and they need to get back to the gym, they may not
recognize it as the gym compared to the boys’ or girls’ locker room,”
he said.
Many of the schools also sought measures to improve relations with
their English-learner communities. Ensign’s principal, Ed Wong,
mentioned a desire to translate the school’s website into Spanish,
while TeWinkle principal Dan Diehl said he wanted a bilingual call
system to send messages home.
In addition, Diehl said, the school hoped to convert its abandoned
woodshop building into a parent resource center, with community
liaison Tony Valenzuela -- an longtime advocate for English-learner
students -- in charge. For the moment, though, with the campus still
undergoing repairs, administrators may have to make do with posting
signs.
“As we move out of construction next year, hopefully we’ll do
something bigger,” Diehl said.
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