A short day’s work
Danette Goulet
NEWPORT BEACH -- High school juniors flooded the marketplace Thursday,
but their debut was a bit too short-lived.
After six months of planning, the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce
launched a mentor program Thursday for 40 students at Corona del Mar and
Newport Harbor high schools.
Participants lauded the program, but there was one complaint -- it was
not long enough.
“By far, not enough time,” said Joseph Spiegel, who had two students
shadow him for the morning at J & S Automotive. “We got a car up on the
lift -- we were going to do a four-wheel brake job. We got one wheel
done.”
Nearly every student and mentor echoed the complaint.
It began at 8 a.m. with an introductory breakfast at the Radisson
Hotel, and it ended four hours later with a luncheon at the
Bahia-Corinthian Yacht Club.
Bookended by the meals was the students’ opportunities for a glimpse
inside the profession of their choice.
Students went on tours, visited with clients, went to court, went on a
police ride-along, and several wrote community commentaries for the Daily
Pilot.
“We visited some clients,” said Brittany Rosenblatt, 17, who spent the
morning with Peggy Fort, president of California Marketing Concept of
Newport Beach. Fort “explained what advertising and marketing really
was.”
After shuffling around Newport Beach visiting advertising clients,
including Starbucks, and doing a sales pitch at Bloomindale’s, Brittany
said the business was nothing like she thought it would be.
“I thought it was all drawing logos for companies,” she said.
While the various academies at Newport Harbor have offered yearlong
mentoring programs to students for years, the experience is new for
students at Corona del Mar High.
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