Looking forward
Marisa O’Neil
Fifth-graders at Wilson Elementary School will face a whole new world
next year, a world of physical education classes, after-school sports
and -- no recess.
Students got a hint of what they can look forward to as
sixth-graders next year at middle school when TeWinkle Intermediate
School counselors Meghan Hanna and Heather Houvenier visited Wilson
on Monday. What they said drew plenty of gasps of excitement,
nervousness and shock from the anxious students.
“For lunch at TeWinkle, we have pizza and nachos and cookies and
ice cream every day,” Hanna told the fifth-graders.
They gasped in awe at the prospect.
Hanna told the students about clubs at the school, like the Nature
Academy, which goes on special field trips to an astronomy camp and
to Catalina Island. That drew more gasps.
The Club Live after-school program has parties and goes to an
Angels game, she said. Jasmine Dominguez, 10, gasped and grabbed her
friend with excitement.
And the Renaissance Club -- which requires students to get no
grade lower than a C -- gives out passes that lets students go to the
front of the lunch line one day a week or have a night off from
homework. That one drew really big gasps.
“Does a C-minus count?” 11-year-old Matt Castaneda asked.
Turns out it does. And teachers at TeWinkle, Hanna said, know that
some students don’t do as well on tests, so they make sure to give
them the opportunity to perform well on homework.
“It’s very, very, very important that you do all of your homework
every day,” she advised.
Grisel Villafana, 11, wondered if she’d get to write essays at
TeWinkle. Jasmine wanted to know if she’d have homework on Fridays.
Yes, and no, Hanna answered, respectively. But they have to read
every night.
At TeWinkle, Houvenier said, they don’t wear uniforms. The
students let out a relieved sigh when they heard that.
The school does have a dress code, however. That means no sagging
pants, no hats in class and no makeup.
“Do we have school dances?” 10-year-old Yaritca Rentera asked.
She looked a little disappointed when Hanna told her she’d have to
wait until seventh grade for those.
After the counselors left, the buzz of excitement remained as the
students talked among themselves about what’s in store next year.
Before they left, Principal Candy Sperling chipped in with some
friendly advice about the awe-inspiring lunch fare offered at the
school. But her words could apply to everything they’ll face in the
year to come.
“I know we want to try it all, but don’t try it all in one week,”
she said. “Pace yourselves.”
* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot
education writer Marisa O’Neil visits a campus in the Newport-Mesa
area and writes about her experience.
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