About early admittance
Andrew Edwards
Picking a college can be tough, but building the skills needed to get
into a top school can be even harder. Hoping to get an early start on
the college race, some students at Dwyer Middle School are getting by
with a little help from their friends.
Eighth-graders in Kerry Sawdon’s class participate in a program
called AVID, which stands for Advancement Via Individual
Determination. The program is designed to help bolster the skills
needed to get into and succeed in college.
AVID students help each other out through bi-weekly tutorials and
get some extra assistance from college students who drop by Dwyer on
Tuesdays and Thursdays.
During a tutorial, Sawdon’s classroom was like a hive full of
students buzzing with questions. The eighth-graders broke off into
groups to study different subjects, like math, biology or physical
science.
“They’re all learning new stuff, everyday, and they end up helping
each other,” said Brian Zitt, a student at Cal State Long Beach who
works with the class.
“It’s a pretty good little system they got,” he continued.
Students wanting math help sat in a row to join forces on an
algebra problem that was written in front of them on a white board.
Typically, the students brainstorm over puzzling homework
assignments.
“If we can’t figure out a problem we bring it here,” 14-year-old
Carina Green said.
Others in the class had science questions ranging from arteries to
electrons.
“I’m figuring out, with my two friends right here, what’s the
stuff inside an atom,” 13-year-old Anzac Houchen said.
Students said their grades have improved since they joined AVID.
“I went from a 2.4 [GPA] to a 3.5,” 14-year-old Dana Hassan said.
“I took this class and then I started getting 4.0s,” 14-year-old
Brittany Saichek said.
When not honing their study habits in tutorial, AVID students
research and visit colleges and welcome guests who tell the students
about their careers.
The class has already visited UC Irvine and plans to take a trip
to Cal State Long Beach, Sawdon said. Guests the class has hosted
include a psychologist, fitness expert and magazine editor.
At Dwyer, AVID class is currently only for eighth-graders, though
plans are in the works to expand into the seventh grade, Principal
Duane Cox said.
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