GAY GEISER-SANDOVAL -- Educationally Speaking
The Newport-Mesa Unified School District Board of Education held more
public hearings than ever before to let the community have its say on the
2000-01 district budget.
The budget, which spells out how $146 million will be spent in the
next fiscal year, gives much more detail than ever before and ties the
money to clear, articulated goals. This is the first year that the goals
were determined before the money was budgeted.
The hearings had three speakers: two students of middle school-age who
had specific questions about the funding of programs at their schools,
and the president of the teachers’ union. Apparently, the rest of us are
satisfied with the allocation of dollars throughout the district.
However, there is a definite lack of equality when it comes to the
number of school personnel needed. For example, our traditional high
schools vary in population from 1,063 to 2,273 students. Yet, there is
almost exactly the same number of clerical workers at each school: The
school with the least number of clerical workers has almost double the
population of one that has more.
(The district has about 22,000 students and spends about $6,500 on
each student. However, because $6 million is spent on special education
students, the amount spent on each student is not equal.)
One campus has three counselors; the others have four and serve almost
or more than double the same amount of kids. Three schools have three
principals/assistants, while the biggest one has only four. The ratio of
support staff to students is even more skewed at the alternative high
schools, where the number of students assigned to counselors dips to 130
to one, as opposed to 568 to one at one traditional high school site.
Our elementary schools range in size from about 300 to 800 students.
Yet they each have about two clerical staffers and, except for the
largest school, one principal.
The budget has a line item for school safety and violence thanks to
grant funds that became available after recent school shootings
throughout the country. In Newport Beach, that money is being used to
fund police officers on secondary school campuses.
I would like to suggest a different strategy that wouldn’t take any
money, but just a few minutes of class time.
We recently hosted a dinner for a school choir that was formed at the
start of school. The kids are from different grade levels and take part
in different activities, so they did not necessarily know each other.
Within a few minutes, the teacher had them play some “games” where
they met and talked to each other, then discussed what they found out
with the group. Strangers discovered common interests and firmly placed a
name to the face they see each day in class.
These types of activities are often overlooked at the secondary-school
level. There, a person can sit in class all year, stereotyping fellow
students solely on activities or appearance. That makes it easier for
alienation to grow and hate to follow.
We should have students pair up with someone new each day in each
class and discover 10 things they have in common. Then, as they change
partners, they can find out who also shares those interests.
Let’s stop violence by making each student feel connected, instead of
hoping that some external force can save our students once the loner
brings a gun to campus.
* GAY GEISER-SANDOVAL is a Costa Mesa resident. Her column runs
Tuesdays. She can be reached by e-mail ato7 [email protected] .
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.