Ensign named a Distinguished School
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Danette Goulet
NEWPORT BEACH -- In the gray light of dawn, long before students
arrived at Ensign Intermediate School on Tuesday, banners were being
strung around campus, declaring the campus a California Distinguished
School.
“We’re very excited for the staff, the kids and the community,” said
Mike McGuire, principal of the middle school. “And it’s a wonderful
accolade to the district as well.”
With the announcement, Ensign became the 13th school in the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District to earn the honor since the program
began in 1985. Newport Harbor and Corona del Mar high schools each earned
the honor twice, Newport Harbor first in 1986 and again in 1998 and
Corona del Mar first in 1988 and then again in 1996.
The California Distinguished Schools Award is part of the School
Recognition Program, which was created to reward schools and provide
working models for other schools.
Each year it identifies and honors some of the state’s most exemplary
and inspiring public schools. Elementary and secondary schools are
recognized during alternate years.
The reward is also the precursor to earning the nations highest honor
bestowed on a school -- the National Blue Ribbon School Award -- an honor
Harbor View Elementary in Corona del Mar is vying for this year.
When a school is named a California Distinguished School, it is
automatically eligible to apply for the national honor the following
year.
It is a step McGuire said he and his staff would most likely take.
But for now, they want to just enjoy the feeling.
“The teachers are ecstatic,” said Sean Bolton, the English teacher who
took the lead with parent Lisa George in preparing the application.
“[Teachers] worked hard on the whole thing, they worked on a lot of
material for us to go off of. It’s a tangible piece of evidence,
something that defines us and defines who we are from other schools in
California.”
It was with some amazement when putting everything together, Bolton
said, that he discovered all the things students, staff and community
members do behind the scenes that made Ensign a Distinguished School.
“I think it’s really the community and the students and the fact that
we have a staff that has really come together this year,” he said. “I
think we had to overcome a lot of adversity -- in not knowing who our
principal was going to be, losing our vice principal, having three
teachers go on maternity leave and another one get cancer and then get
better. This gelled a fragmented staff.”
TEASE FOR ALL-STARS
Academic All-Stars
Newport Beach’s best and brightest high school seniors are featured
today in the Daily Pilot. The city’s top 30 students will be honored this
morning at a breakfast featuring Rep. Christopher Cox. See page 4.
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