New principals fill district vacancies
Danette Goulet
NEWPORT-MESA -- Almost as fast as the principals fled Newport-Mesa,
new administrators are pouring in.
Two new principals, who assumed the top posts at Adams and Wilson
elementary schools, were introduced to the community at Tuesday night’s
school board meeting.
“There’s definitely a sense of relief and I think everyone is looking
to move forward now,” said Jennifer Knapp, a parent at Adams.
Candy Cloud officially took the helm four days ago on Adams’
back-to-school night. She comes to the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District from the Cypress School District, where she taught for 30 years.
In addition to her experience as a classroom teacher, Cloud also served
as a mentor for new teachers; a promotion and retention specialist; and
was a teacher negotiations representative for 15 years.
Cloud devotes her spare time to Kevin, her husband of 28 years, her
two sons, and their boating and traveling interests.
She’s was as thrilled to be at Adams, and in Costa Mesa, as parents
are to have her.
“I think that I’ve been very blessed with a lovely school and
outstanding educators,” she said. “And it’s almost like you’ve died and
gone to heaven because they are so helpful.”
Across town, there’s another new principal on the block. Candy
Sperling on Monday will begin her tenure as the principal of Wilson
Elementary School in Costa Mesa.
Coming to Newport-Mesa after a two-year stint as assistant principal
at Kings Elementary School in Santa Ana, Sperling is just the sort of
principal Wilson parents were looking for -- bilingual.
“She is very good,” said Fabiola Delgato, PTA president at Wilson. “It
is better because she speaks Spanish. You can talk to her -- you can
communicate.”
Sperling grew up in Los Angeles -- her mother was a principal there --
and began her career teaching English as a second language in the Los
Angeles Unified School District, where she spent 14 years.
She moved to Santa Ana, where she taught for 10 years before following
her mother’s footsteps as an administrator.
“When you step out of the classroom, you can see the effect of things
on a school level,” she said. “It gets really exciting to see program
adjustments add up and have an impact.”
Also added to the Newport-Mesa roster of administrators this week was
Evelyn Karrigg, who was named assistant principal at Ensign Intermediate
School in Newport Beach.
Karrigg spent the last several months as a consultant to the Fairfax
County Department of Education, where she broke down test scores and
applied the data to student achievement.
That experience could be very helpful here in Newport-Mesa, said Susan
Despenas, assistant superintendent of elementary and special education.
Karrigg was also a middle school teacher in Santa Ana for nine years.
With longtime teacher Mike McQuire sitting as interim principal at
Ensign for the year, the district has filled many administrative
vacancies less than a month into the school year.
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