District on the right track teaching English
Marisa O’Neil
The school district is doing the right things to teach elementary
students how to speak English, according to a review team from the
state.
Following a weeklong visit to school sites, the reviewers from the
state board of education found that the district’s programs are where
they should be for elementary English learners. Secondary schools,
the report found, need more work but are close to state goals.
“[Newport-Mesa Unified School District has] completed a lot of
work at the elementary level,” bilingual education consultant Leroy
Hamm, told district leaders. “You just have a small piece left, and
we feel your district will be a model for the state.”
The district volunteered four years ago to be reviewed by the
Comite des Padres unit of the state board of education, said
Newport-Mesa board President Dana Black. The review focuses on the
district’s data-collection, assessment, monitoring and education of
students who are learning to speak English.
“We knew that we were letting kids fall through the cracks but
didn’t know where the cracks were or who the kids were,” Black said.
Volunteering for the inspections helped the district find the
children who need help and figure out how to help them learn, Supt.
Rob Barbot said.
“This is about: How do we do things better?” he said. “Not: How do
we get around it?”
Through the review process, inspectors identify weaknesses in the
school’s language education plans. Once this team finds that a
district is in full compliance with state expectations, the district
will undergo the normal review process by the state.
The part of the equation that needs work in Newport-Mesa, Hamm
said, is the process of transitioning nonnative speakers into classes
with the regular student population. Teachers in those classes need
to do a little extra work to help those students go from being
competent in English to being proficient enough to fully comprehend
course material, he said.
A review team will return in May to see what changes the district
has made. Hamm said he expects the district will be in full
compliance when the team comes back in the fall.
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