Giving kids a Running Start
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Angelique Flores
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -- Daniel Magennis, 6, will start first grade next
month. But he’s still a little behind his peers with his numbers and
sounds.
He’s getting help from a new program -- Running Start.
Fountain Valley School District developed the program, which began
Monday, to give struggling students a boost before the new school year
gets underway.
Young students who have a hard time learning often end up being
mislabeled as having behavioral problems, kindergarten teacher Jan
Johnson said.
“If we catch kids early, we can instill positive reinforcement and
confidence, and don’t see failing later on,” Johnson said.
Sixty-six students who just completed kindergarten, first, sixth and
seventh grades are attending Tamura and Talbert elementary schools over
the next two weeks for the Running Start program. Every teacher of one of
those grades in the district selected a student to be in Running Start.
The district chose the grades because none of the other summer school
programs target this group, said Catherine Follett, the district’s
superintendent of instruction.
“It’s a great way to kick start him into the school year,” said
Elizabeth Magennis, Daniel’s mom.
The younger children focus on pre-reading and reading skills. Older
students work on reading and reading comprehension. In the classes, the
students review what they learned last year and get a taste of what
they’ll be learning next year.
Daniel was getting nervous about going into the first grade, his mom
said. But that anxiety is starting to fade.
“He felt like a big boy because he had homework,” Magennis said.
“Yesterday he thought he was a big shot studying for a test.”
Besides academics, teachers are trying to improve the students’
discipline, responsibility and organizational skills.
“We get kids that don’t speak English, never went to preschool or are
hyperactive,” Johnson said.
The same children, unlike some of their peers who have gone to
preschool for three years, are a step behind academically and socially.
“We have kids failing in the upper grades because they’re not helped
early enough,” Johnson said.
Programs such as Running Start hope to catch children early and keep
them on the right track.
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