Up to 2,000 may repeat a grade this year
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Andrew Wainer
Fall parent-teacher conferences in Huntington Beach area elementary and
middle schools took on an urgent tone this year as more than 2,000
parents face the possibility of schools holding their children back.
In addition to parent conferences, Ocean View, Fountain Valley and
Huntington Beach City School Districts have just finished sending out
letters notifying some parents that their children are at risk for
retention under the new state legislation passed last year.
The law, signed by former Gov. Pete Wilson last fall, has sent local
districts scrambling to ensure that students don’t fall behind.
Districts are offering after-school and weekend tutoring, a special
summer session and continual assessment programs to help students at risk
for retention.
Fountain Valley School District Supt. Marc Ecker pinpointed the sense of
emergency the law has fostered among district officials: “We have never
been so focused on how we spend our classroom time as we have been this
year,” he said.
The law effectively ended the state’s previous practice of “social
promotion” -- advancing students based on their age rather than academic
performance.
Before the new law, parents had veto power over schools’ recommendation
that students be retained.
The new legislation gives school districts the final decision about
retaining students in grades two through six.
And with more than 2,000 local students identified as at risk for
retention, districts are now unrolling a battery of assessments and
remedial programs to help ensure that as many students as possible
advance.
Ocean View, the largest of the elementary and middle school districts in
the area, sent out almost 1,300 letters to parents warning that their
children were at risk for retention.
The number of letters equals about 10% of the district’s students.
“We prefer to err on the side of warning students about their status
rather than let them slip through the cracks,” Ocean View Supt. Jim
Tarwater said.
Still, he said that the number of students identified as at risk made him
nervous.
Ocean View students’ academic level was assessed this fall using district
math, reading and writing tests.
All students will be tested at least three times to gauge their academic
progress, with some students being tested up to six times, Tarwater said.
Students will also be required to take the state-designed Stanford
Achievement Test in the spring.
Students scoring in the bottom 22 percentile of the test will be at risk
for retention, Tarwater said.
Districts are using a combination of methods and standards to test
whether students are ready to advance in grade level.
The Fountain Valley School Distinct has used grades, teacher
recommendation and standardized test scores to determine if students are
ready to move ahead.
“I’m alarmed at the number of our students who are at risk,” Ecker said.
His district sent out more than 600 letters notifying parents that their
children were either “possibly” or “seriously” at risk for retention,
Ecker said.
Parents were also informed at parent teacher conferences about how they
can help improve their child’s performance.
Reading to their children and helping with homework are some of the
methods district administrators have suggested.
But just as the districts begin to finish parent conferences and mailings
to help parents get their children on track, the districts are also
offering a slew of extra programs to help students who are not making the
grade.
The Huntington Beach City School District, which sent home 268 parent
letters for at-risk students, is offering after-school tutoring and
Saturday classes, Supt. Duane Dishno said.
Some of the districts will also be offering a special summer school,
where students will have a final opportunity to increase their
performance before the start of the next school year.
But district administrators said that the state is not providing enough
money locally to maintain the remedial programs necessary to help
students.
“This is another example of the state mandating programs that they are
not willing to fund,” Ecker said.
He said districts are given $2.53 per student per hour for remedial
classes.
The funds are barely enough to pay teachers for working the extra hours
to teach the often-difficult classes, Ecker added.
But in spite of the lack of funds and the scare that the new law has put
into parents, teachers and administrators, many officials support it.
“I like the seriousness I have seen since the law was passed,” Ecker
said. “It has us focused as never before on how to optimally use class
time for teaching and learning.”
Huntington Beach City Assistant Supt. Mary Ellen Blanton said the new
standards have unified the district.
“Now we are all studying the same thing,” she said. “The standards have
put us on the same page.”
Donna Alexander, president of College View’s Parent, Teacher Student
Association, said the new law has boosted parents’ involvement in school.
“Parents have jumped into the educational process to help their
children,” she said. “This change is long overdue.”
Alexander said that in the past teachers had no choice but to promote
children due to parental pressure.
She said that while many students are worried about the social stigma
associated with being held back, most are able to advance if given the
proper help.
“Most of these kids can be saved,” Alexander said. “But it’s going to
take many hours of help from parents and teachers.”
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