Two new principals great for Costa Mesa
Change is hard for most of us because we overestimate the value of
the status quo, and underestimate the value of what could be gained
by change.
At Costa Mesa High School, we have just gone through a major
change. We started this year with a brand new administration with two
new principals: Fred Navarro for the high school, and for the first
time, John Garcia, as a separate principal for the junior high. The
two new principals are working well together as a team, but many of
the students have found it hard to adjust to their new ways of
running the school. I assert that this duo of principals is just what
we need.
Among the controversial new policies they have introduced is one
to deal with a persistent attendance problem at the school.
Apparently, our past is littered with “too many tardies.” The
principals recognized that tardies are very disruptive to the
educational experience of first period, since the late arrivals
interrupt the class for all.
They decided to address the issue of tardiness by locking the
school gates at 7:40 a.m., when classes start. Students who arrive
after the gates are closed are required to report to the office
before going to class. Some argue that this just makes tardy students
even later to class than they already would be. But really, if this
happened to you once, I would bet that you would make every effort
not be tardy again.
Another unfortunate consequence of the new policy is that students
around campus have started calling our school a “prison” because the
gates that were once open during all hours of the school day are now
locked during the school day. But why, we may ask, is this bad? Our
school has always been a “closed campus,” so really, the principals
are not introducing new rules to inconvenience the students; rather,
they are implementing previously existing ones.
Perhaps the students at Mesa who are opposing the new ways are
really objecting to having to change their ingrained habits. Perhaps
they view all change as undesirable because it requires them to give
up the comfort of the familiar. But hindsight usually shows the
opposite: that change is invigorating, and new ways of doing business
can stimulate yet more new ideas for further change.
A sad feature of the current debate is that many of the students
who claim to dislike the new administration cannot really articulate
a reason for their disapproval. It seems that they just assume that
because many students do not support the principals, they should not
be backing them either. If conformity is what is being practiced
here, why not conform behind the new principals, instead of against
them?
Next year’s incoming freshman class will not be affected in the
same way as the current students because they will really only know
the new way and have nothing to compare it to. As a result, they will
appear to be less resistant to change.
Navarro and Garcia are a breath of fresh air at Mesa, and they
have rolled up their sleeves to begin tackling some of the persistent
problems that drag our school down. Surely we all want our school to
be the best that it can be, so that one day we can look back with
pride and say, “I went to Costa Mesa High School!”
* SARA BRYANT is a Costa Mesa High School student whose columns
will appear occasionally in the Forum section.
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