Blue times two
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Danette Goulet
They tied a blue ribbon around the old oak tree, and the fence and the
shrubs and the students and every doorknob in the schools.
Two Corona del Mar elementary schools -- one public and the other
private -- celebrated Monday morning after learning they had been named
National Blue Ribbon Schools late Friday afternoon.
“It’s just such an exciting day,” said Karen Kendall, principal of
Harbor View Elementary School, the eighth school in the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District to earn the honor. “I had a fire drill on Friday
and pulled the whole school to the area where we have our morning flag
deck and told everyone. The children went nuts. It was so cute.”
Despite the impromptu announcement Friday, Kendall still decked out
the school Monday with blue balloons and ribbons.
As did the parents and administrators at Our Lady Queen of Angels
School, who spent the weekend decorating the campus with blue ribbons,
balloons, streamers and banners bearing congratulations.
“It’s really neat,” said Matthew York, 10, a student at Our Lady Queen
of Angels. “It’s very special to be a Blue Ribbon School.”
The school is the first Catholic elementary school in Orange County to
earn the national honor, said Sister Joanne Clare Gallagher, one of the
school’s two principals.
Being named a National Blue Ribbon School is the highest distinction a
school can receive from the federal government, and one that takes time
and dedication from the administration, staff and parents to earn.
Developed by the secretary of education in 1982, the Blue Ribbon
program was designed to identify and give recognition to outstanding
schools nationwide.
Before any California school can claim a Blue Ribbon, it must first
earn the honor of being a California Distinguished School.
When a school receives that award, it is invited to apply for the
national award.
Last spring, Harbor View was one of three Newport-Mesa elementary
schools to become a California Distinguished School and was invited to
apply for the blue ribbon award.
This year, it was the only one to make it through the rigorous process
and earn the prestigious title.
“This has been a two-year road for us, so [the students] really
understand,” Kendall said. “They were exultant.”
For Our Lady Queen of Angels, the application process took Ajay and
Elizabeth Patel about 30 days and 300 hours once they picked up the job
in August. And they said administrators were working on it months before
they came on board and wrote the application.
Now the couple said they would like to take the process a step
further.
“What we’re thinking is we’ll help other schools [earn the blue
ribbon] because the better our education system, the better our society,
right?” Elizabeth Patel asked.
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