Q&A; -- Ecstatic with pride
In her sixth year as principal at Harbor View Elementary School in
Newport Beach, Karen Kendall has many honors to boast about. In May, her
kindergarten through sixth-grade school of 500 students earned the
National Blue Ribbon distinction. The year before, it was named a
California Distinguished School.
Then, on Oct. 15, she learned her school topped other county
elementary schools in the Academic Performance Index scores for the
second year in a row with a 936. The previous year was 934. In 1999, the
first year the state tracked such scoring, the school finished second in
the county with a 922.
On Thursday, a staff development day at the school, Kendall showed off
her award-winning school’s new computer lab -- made possible with the
monetary award the API scores provided last year -- and chatted with
Assistant City Editor James Meier in her office.
Q: What was your reaction to Harbor View besting the other county
elementary schools in the Academic Performance Index scores for the
second year in a row?
A: Over the top. Thrills. We’re absolutely ecstatic over our
continuing excellence and the ability to improve and stretch kids further
and further. It’s very gratifying after everyone’s hard work. That’s one
of our goals always: never-ending improvement. And when you’re already at
the top, it’s extremely difficult to keep stretching farther, so we were
just thrilled.
It shows us that what we’re doing works for kids, and that’s what
we’re all about.
Q: So, what’s the school’s secret to high test scores?
A: It’s so multifaceted: teamwork; collaboration; caring about each
and every child at this school; incredibly professional and talented
teaching staff; supportive parents; ongoing assessment of each child, and
then diagnosing and prescribing the appropriate instruction for each
child; having a lot of supports in place and interventions to help
struggling students; analyzing our data all the time -- because without
data, all you have is an opinion -- so that we really know where our kids
are and where we can take them; reinforcing a very positive school
climate -- the kind of place where children want to come to school, want
to achieve, want to please; we’re a very caring, nurturing environment;
everything we do is clustered around respect, responsibility, readiness
-- those are some of our themes. It’s part of an overarching theme called
“Sailing Away with Respect, Responsibility, Readiness.”
It’s a cycle of analyzing the data and looking to see what kids really
need and then giving them what they need and stretching them. I think it
all works together because all of the pieces come together to have a
really supportive environment for the children where they know how to
behave and how to be successful. And they’re such eager learners. They
want to learn, they want to be here, they know their parents and
guardians are in full support of the educational program. There’s
incredible community support here. And we pulled them all in. We like to
have a lot of collaboration and cooperation within the community.
We’re very communicative with our parents. I write a newsletter called
the Harbor View Highlights to the parents every single week. Throughout
the school, we have an open-door policy. The teachers give so much time
answering questions, meeting with parents and having them volunteer in
the classrooms, so we’re all on the same page.
Our parent group provides through their fund-raising enrichment
opportunities for our kids, too, which is another thing that comes into
the success of our school. It’s a strong group of very devoted
volunteers.
Q: What would you suggest other schools with low test scores do to
boost their scores?
A: Having a clear focus for school improvement is a really important
theme. Every September, we closely analyze our Stanford 9 data and all of
the data that we have on our children. And from that, each teacher
develops what I call an academic progress plan and we choose a schoolwide
improvement area. This year, we’ve chosen reading, comprehension and
vocabulary. And a positive school climate is always a goal for us because
without having that support and the kids feeling really nurtured and
really accepted -- I have all these clubs, the 100 Books Club. I want
every child to feel really connected to the school. So connection is an
incredibly important piece. If children feel connected to their teachers,
principal, volunteers and to the content, then they’re going to be
successful.
So, back to what you asked me. Develop a clear focus for schoolwide
improvement. Then narrow the objective because you can’t have too many
things going on or you don’t achieve your goals. We all know that from
our own lives. And regularly, address that goal. At Harbor View, we have
Wednesday study groups. Every Wednesday, the teachers come together for
school renewal and for collaboration so we can discuss research-informed
strategies. We truly, truly, truly try to be a data-driven,
research-informed environment, and we’re very committed and very
professional about that.
So, establish a clear goal and have an incredibly tight team. Every
single person who works at this school is committed to every single kid
at this school. That’s the way we are. We care about every single child
and don’t let our children slip through. If we see them at risk in any
way, we jump in to assist them.
I haven’t even told you about the California Distinguished School and
the National Blue Ribbon honor. Harbor View is such an awesome place. Two
years ago, we wrote for the California Distinguished School honor, and we
got it. Then, last year, we wrote for the National Blue Ribbon honor, and
we got that. So, in the process of examining every little aspect of
school life, you automatically improve. That’s what school renewal is all
about -- opening up all the little doors and looking in all the little
corners, finding out all the places where you can really help children.
So, against the backdrop of our commitment to be exemplary, we have
achieved even more success.
Q: Now, you’ve gotten the California Distinguished School award, the
Blue Ribbon, what’s next?
A: And the highest API in Orange County for two years! Oh my gosh.
Well, like I said, we’re on a never-ending improvement cycle. Part of
what we want to do is keep on achieving, seeing our children gain more
knowledge and more skills, continue to have them be happy, nurtured and
integrated little people because that’s what it’s all about. We’re
building citizens, we’re building leaders at our school.
Technology is a focus area for us this year because with all the money
we got with the API -- money doesn’t come our way that often in this kind
of a school -- we got a new computer lab with 28 IMacs and each teacher
has a new workstation computer in the classroom. We are finally online.
Our school was not completely online until we got this extra money. So,
an area that we’re excited about is to use technology powerfully as an
educational tool.
We received total about $60,000 from the various pots that the
governor appropriated. See, we got our money not because we had the
highest API. We got it because we met our API goal. It was fabulous for
us. We knew exactly what we wanted to do, and we did it. We’re very
action-oriented at Harbor View, in case you hadn’t noticed. We’re into
implementation at Harbor View so we’re very pleased and thrilled we could
do that for our children.
Q: With Sept. 11 and every day since, much is going on around the
world with the attacks and the anthrax scares. How do you teach kids at
this age, kindergarten through sixth grade, about these happenings? Or do
you?
A: Well, Sept. 11 was very painful, obviously, for everyone. I hope I
expressed adequately what a family we are here. So, let me start first
with family. We are successful because we are an incredible family. We
care about one another. Some of my teachers themselves were students here
at Harbor View. Many of our children have parents who went here. So, I
think the close family structure has supported our children and helped
them feel safe.
No. 2, we immediately began a loose change drive. We focused on
helping and community service to minimize children’s fears and to help
them feel they were doing something that they were empowered to assist.
So, we literally filled wagons with loose change. I talked about
communication being a major theme that I really believe in. So we have
daily opening ceremonies every day. I think it’s really important that
every teacher greet every other teacher and every child, so we convene
here on the lower playground every day. So, during the opening
ceremonies, we talked about collecting this money and then we filled
wagons with money and donated it all to the American Red Cross. The
children were very involved. It came out to $2,779.21.
Thirdly, like all of my colleagues, I did a lot of overt, explicit
things to let children know we provide a safe environment for them, and
we reminded them about all of our safety drills and about how much we
care about them and how they can come to one of us if they have a
concern.
So, I think we did a very good job. I think our children felt focused.
We wrote letters.
Q: Did you show anything on TV to them or is that something they would
do at home?
A: No. We were very open to students who wished to discuss it, but we
have children who are as young as 5 and then we have sixth-graders, so
our whole thing was to have age-appropriate activity. And one of the best
ways to guarantee age-appropriate activity is to concentrate on loving,
communicative support and positive things we can do to help the world be
a better place in terms of kindness to others. And certainly, with our
older children, there were discussions in our classrooms. We did not turn
on the TV. That was better placed in the home during those critically
difficult times.
BIO
Age: 56
Birthplace: Pasadena
Hometown: Newport Beach for 30 years
Education: Bachelor’s degree in English from UC Santa Barbara,
teaching credential from Cal State Fullerton, master’s degree in
educational administration from Pepperdine, and two administrative
credentials from UC Irvine
Family: Husband of 33 years, Bob; daughter Angie, married to Kelly
McCunniff; son J.R.; and two grandchildren, Molly, 4, and Cole, 6 weeks
Hobbies: Spending time with family, reading, exercise, walking and
traveling
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