Fountain Valley outscores Huntington Beach schools
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Andrew Wainer
Fountain Valley schools scored significantly better than their Huntington
Beach counterparts in the state’s first Academic Performance Index,
according to results released Tuesday.
The index, which ranks schools between a high of 1,000 points and a low
of 200, was based on Stanford 9 standardized test scores.
For the most part, Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach schools fell in
the middle ranks of schools countywide.
A single school, Courreges Elementary School, landed a spot among the
county’s top 25. With 877 points, the Fountain Valley school is the 12th
highest ranked in the county.
Likewise, a single school from the area fell in the county’s bottom 25 --
Oak View Elementary School in the Ocean View School District. It was
ranked 450th out of the county’s 462 schools, making it the 13th lowest
ranked school in the county.
District officials said 98% of Oak View students are English language
learners, clearly putting them at a disadvantage on the Stanford 9
exam.Fountain Valley elementary schools were given an average of 804
points on the index, surpassing the Department of Education’s statewide
goal of 800. Elementary schools from the Huntington Beach City School
District earned an average score of 762. Pat McCabe of the state
Department of Eduction said the median score for elementary schools
statewide was 629.
“I think our scores are excellent,” said Fountain Valley School District
Assistant Supt. Catherine Follett. “We have quality instruction, a lot of
parent involvement and a student population that is very solid.”
District Director of Curriculum Lynn Bogart was also pleased with the
results.
“It’s terrific,” she said. “We are proud of all the instructional
accomplishments of parents, students and teachers.”
Middle schools from both cities fared well, with Fountain Valley
averaging 791 points between its three middle schools and the Huntington
Beach City School District earning an average of 769 points between its
two middle schools. The median score for middle schools statewide was
633.
Although schools in Huntington Beach did not fare as well as Fountain
Valley schools, administrators from Huntington Beach districts
nevertheless lauded the results.
“We are very pleased,” Ocean View’s Director of Curriculum Karen Colby
said. “We feel that our showing is good.”
Ocean View School District, whose schools are mostly in Huntington Beach,
received an average elementary school score of 692.
The district’s highest-ranking middle school, Vista View, lies within
Fountain Valley city limits.
Vista View scored 779 points, with only 11% of middle schools statewide
scoring 800 or more.
Fountain Valley also shined at the high school level.
The highest ranked school in the Huntington Beach Union High School
District, which includes Huntington Beach and parts of Fountain Valley
and Westminster, was Fountain Valley High School.
Fountain Valley High School received a score of 739. The state average
for high schools was 620.
Jerry White, district director of curriculum, also credited “good parent
backing” and “hard-working students” for the school’s high scores.
The Academic Performance Index was born of the Public Schools
Accountability Act, initiated by Gov. Gray Davis. The act was put into
state law in April 1999.
Bogart of the City School District said 60% of the test is based on
language arts and 40% is based on math.
Although district staff in the Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley areas
were generally supportive of the test, many saw its assessment as being,
at best, rough indicators of a school’s performance.
“I’m not sure at this point that the scores mean a whole lot,” said
Edison High School Principal Brian Garland. “Kids are being given a test
that has yet to be proven as a valid instrument of assessment.”
Education officials cite disparities between the Stanford 9 material and
statewide classroom content standards as one of the index’s most glaring
errors.
“It’s a Catch-22,” said Jerry White, director of curriculum for the
Huntington Beach Union High School District. “The state has adopted
content standards that are different than the Stanford 9. Are we supposed
to teach the standards or the test?”
White cited the fact that the Stanford 9 tests high school freshmen on
economics, a subject they are not expected to take until after their
freshman year.
“Kids are being put in an unfair position,” Garland said. “Districts and
the state have got to get together to decide what it is they want the
schools to do: follow state guidelines or teach the test.”
Still, most district officials agreed that the index assessment was a
good start.
“I am supportive of the governor’s stress on accountability,” Ocean
View’s Colby said. “I think the state’s goals are attainable over time.”
Colby praised the state for including all schools in the index, not only
high performing ones. Colby said there are only six states nationwide
that publish rankings for all its schools..
“We’re on the cutting edge,” she said.
McCabe of the state Department of Education said the index will include
additional indicators over time, relying less on the Stanford 9 and
integrating attendance and standards-based materials.
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