GAY GEISER-SANDOVAL -- Educationally speaking
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Should we limit techniques for raising students’ test scores to only
those schools on Costa Mesa’s West Side? Should the committee that
decides how to get better test results be limited to four people?
I’m willing to act as the electronic suggestion box for all of you who
have suggestions for improving test scores. I’ll present them to the
school board and/or the governor, if you want.
Those with good ideas shouldn’t wait to be asked. We all should
volunteer the information.
On that note, here are some of my suggestions to improve elementary
school test scores:
1. Make sure each student has had the proper prenatal environment,
with no exposure to harmful substances or adequate nutrition.
2. Have someone read, one-on-one, to each child each day, from infancy
through elementary school.
3. Keep the school population stable, so kids start in kindergarten
and continue through all grades at the same school.
4. Have someone listen to the student read each day from kindergarten
on.
5. Make sure each student comes to school having had adequate sleep
and a nutritional breakfast. Make sure the student eats well-balanced
meals.
6. Make sure each student communicates in English for at least four
hours each day, all year-round.
7. Each student should have a quiet place to study and read, without
TV or other noise distraction--and someone on hand to ensure that they
study and read.
8. Each student should have an adult available to help him or her each
day with homework, so the student can keep up with class assignments.
9. Expose students to jobs that require a good education, so they can
see why they need to study each and every day.
10. Expose students to adults who tell them each day that they are
expected to go to college, and that to got to college they need to study
hard and get good grades. Have each student believe that someone cares
about how he or she does in school and succeeds. Failing is not an
option.
***
Rumors are flying about whether the schools that are missing
principals and assistant principals will have them in place in time for a
smooth opening day transition. School starts in less than a month.
The district’s largest high school--Newport Harbor High School--is
still without a principal, even though the previous principal’s
retirement date was known for months.
District officials should know from past recruiting efforts that the
applicant pool shrinks considerably once the school year begins. And if
the position is filled from within the district, then a new hole will
need to be filled.
Because an elementary school often has only one administrator, a
principal, that person is critical to ensure adequate staffing and that
facilities are in good shape for opening day.
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