Newport Harbor brings home the hardware
Danette Goulet
NEWPORT BEACH -- Bleary-eyed but proud, a small delegation of Newport
Harbor High School representatives returned from Washington, D.C. on
Monday, having received the highest national honor bestowed upon a school
-- the National Blue Ribbon Award.
While its travels may have been rough, the group was ecstatic to be
one of only 88 high schools in the country to receive the award this
year.
“It’s a bigger honor than I realized,” said Da Vinci Academy teacher
Joe Robinson, upon discovering how exclusive the group of honorees was.
“It just says what we’re doing here is the right thing.”
Newport Harbor was one of only four high schools in Orange County --
15 in California -- to be named a Blue Ribbon school this year.
Developed by the Secretary of Education in 1982, the Blue Ribbon
program was designed to identify and give recognition to outstanding
schools throughout the country.
Before any school can claim a Blue Ribbon, it must first earn the
honor of being a California Distinguished School. Once a school receives
that award, it is invited to apply for the national award.
“It was a grueling application process,” said Robinson, who completed
the lion’s share of the paperwork. “They want to know you’re as good as
you say you are.”
Robinson was accompanied to Washington by his wife, Mary, student
Meredith Chinn and her father, and recently retired principal Bob Boies
and his wife, Barbara.
“It was really just a great experience,” Boies said. “It’s a nice way
to end my career, but it’s also great for Newport Harbor.”
Even more exciting than the presentation banquet, Chinn said, was a
one-on-one seminar with other student-delegates.
“Every student shared a little about their school; why they deserved
the award and how you can have a role as a leader,” Chinn said.
But what most inspired the 16-year-old student was not the successes
of other schools, but their shared woes.
“It’s just nice know that there are other people out there dealing
with the same issues we are,” she said.
Each member of the delegation attended their own seminar and each took
something different with them.
“On a more personal note, it’s also saying that not all schools have
bad test scores. Public schools can work,” Robinson said. “We’re doing a
really good job, I think, and I’m proud of our school.”
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