District’s decision is in students’ best interest
Shutting down a program that serves children is always distressing.
But sometimes it can be right decision.
This week, the Newport-Mesa Unified School District announced that
it will shut down the preschool program at Newport Harbor High School
in January. The program, which has been in operation for 25 years,
uses high school students to care for the children. It does provide
invaluable experience to those high school students, but it was also
using valuable dollars that are meant for the children in the
district.
The program was meant to be funded by the tuition parents pay but
has been unable to support itself. The district, therefore, has been
footing the bill for the program for years.
District spokeswoman Jane Garland, properly pointed out that it is
not the district’s job to run private day care programs. It may seem
heartless, but the school district’s first priority must be to
students in its kindergarten through the 12th-grade classes. The
closure will not affect the high school students’ hands-on learning
experience since they will be sent to other preschools in
Newport-Mesa to work with children.
District officials warned parents in August that the school would
have to meet the same standards as state-funded preschools. But the
enrollment quota has not been met, and the part-time class lacks a
teacher with the proper state-required credentials.
Making it a properly credentialed, quality part-time program would
take more money and effort from the district, which should be
worrying about its principle responsibility -- school-age children
who attend its schools. Those students must be its first priority and
parents should be glad the district has clearly demonstrated that.
Garland also said the district will work with the parents of the
preschool children to find an alternative. It is an unfortunate
circumstance for them, but one that in the long run was the right
decision on the part of the district.
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