Schools await word about money
Danette Goulet
WESTSIDE -- Six Westside elementary school communities will have their
collective fingers crossed until June.
That is when they will hear if the state has agreed to pay for
additional preschool programs in their neighborhoods like an extremely
successful one at Whittier Elementary.
“It’s a major piece for language proficiency and for early
intervention,” said Julie McCormick, principal at Pomona Elementary
School, one of the two schools hoping to get a preschool on their campus.
“It’s going to be a big assistance.”
The Newport-Mesa Unified School Board granted program coordinators
permission last Tuesday to apply for a major expansion grant, which will
be handed out June 30.
Administrators have applied for funding from the state to open two
satellite preschools, each with 48 children, at Wilson and Pomona
elementary schools and a third at the Harper school site with 144
children.
Gladys Green, who runs the state preschool at Whittier and would
oversee the new facilities, said she hopes to have the two smaller sites
up and running in the fall if she gets the go-ahead from the state.
The Harper site, which would serve preschoolers from the College Park,
Sonora, Paularino and Woodland (formerly Kaiser Primary) elementary
school zones, as well as special education students, is set to open in
the middle of the next school year if all goes well.
The Whittier preschool program, which expanded last year from one
classroom to two and has a third waiting for a new building to be
completed, is funded by the state, Green said.
The state pays $16.98 a day per student, she added.
The schooling is free for students, but acceptance into the program is
based on gross family income and family size, she said.
To be eligible for the program, students must live in the Newport-Mesa
area and be between 3 and 5 years old.
The rest depends on the parents. They must volunteer in the classroom
at least once a month and are strongly encouraged to take adult education
classes.
The first children accepted are those referred by Child Protective
Services.
When asking for board approval to expand the program last week, Green
shared with trustees and district staff some of the current programs’
successes.
Among these were findings of significant gains in various language
scores.
“It had a major impact,” Green said. “It prepared kids for
kindergarten, brought parents into the education system. We were able to
identify kids who were not ready for kindergarten. Kids who have
preschool experience are ready to sit down and listen and are used to a
school routine.”
Bringing this program to Wilson and Pomona also would mean an end to
the preschool programs already in place at those sites, but it is a
superior program, said Lisa Overholt Dillon, the district program
improvement coordinator.
“[Those] preschools, which have no more than 17 students in a class
... do not have the higher requirements for teachers that the state
preschool does,” she said.
Those students would be served by the new preschool, Dillon added.
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