Board members plan for future
Mike Swanson
The Board of Education met early Aug. 22 at Hotel Laguna and stayed
late for a biannual retreat in which the board members laid out lofty
goals for their district in the upcoming school year.
One member, Bob Whalen, spent his Saturday after the retreat
developing a list of data-oriented goals to help the board and the
district improve students’ success.
“I’m not quite grabbing everything we came up with that day,”
Whalen said Tuesday. “I heard quite a few good ideas, but it’d be
helpful as a district to develop a form of data to be referenced that
backs up our ideas.”
Whalen split his suggestions into two sections: A list of 17
figures focusing on students’ progress to be collected and reported
to the board at every August retreat, and a list of eight aims to
improve upon the 17 figures.
Suggested data included a list of colleges being attended by the
graduating class, along with the percentages attending two- and
four-year schools; average SAT scores from the previous year and
ranking among county high schools; the percentage of students deemed
physically unfit by grade level; the number of students retained at
each grade level; the percentage of English as a second language
students by grade not yet fluent in English; and by subject area, the
number of students receiving Ds or Fs.
Whalen offered 11 more suggestions, with his second list primarily
pointing out actions to either increase or decrease the students’
numbers to a more favorable level. The most specific action suggested
is to agree upon a grade level by which all returning English as a
second language students should be fluent in English.
“By collecting this data into one short document, we would have,
and could offer to the community, an executive summary of our status
as a district with, as we move forward, year-to-year comparisons,”
Whalen said in his proposal.
The board and district staff supported keeping Whalen’s
suggestions in mind as the new school year starts, and Supt. Theresa
Daem said she’d like to introduce them to the district’s leadership
team for discussion.
When talking about the whole child, Assistant Supt. Steven Keller
said, there is a quantitative aspect, but he didn’t go into detail
about any of Whalen’s specific suggestions.
Whalen called his proposal “one man’s view” at the board meeting.
Another view Tuesday, which she admitted involved no handouts and
probably wasn’t quite as thought out, came from board member Jan
Vickers:
“I really want us to make progress with music and foreign
languages,” she said. “We always say we’re addressing it to younger
students, but I’d like to see more of it.”
Tuesday morning, after a half-hour presentation that addressed
“Where We Were (1998), Where We Are (2003-04) and Where We Are Going
(The Vision),” the board and staff described and discussed the year’s
goals until about 4 p.m. They were:
“Goal One: Quality Construction Program -- Tour of Sites,” “Goal
Two: Strategic Budgeting Plan -- Designing the Process,” “Goal Three:
Quest for Excellence -- Presentation of California Healthy Kids
Survey,” “Goal Four: Superb Schools -- Concept Presentation and
Discussion,” and “Goal Five: Promote Students and Their
Accomplishments -- Designing the Process.”
The new school year starts Thursday.
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