On top of their education -- literally
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Lauren Vane
Tents were set up and campers sat in a circle around a lantern,
animal crackers in hand. Oldies played on a radio and the sound of a
motorized mattress pump purred in the background.
It was a regular camp out Nov. 10, except that the campground was
the bumpy surface of the roof of the Marina High School
administration building.
Marina High School Principal Steve Roderick and fellow
administrators, Assistant Principal Kirk Kennedy, Vice Principal of
Supervision Jon Van Tassell, Vice Principal of Activities Jeanne
Ellis, and School Business Administrator, Rick Ebel, were camped out
on the roof to fulfill a promise they made to the students.
Kennedy said the administration told students last spring, that if
they improved state testing scores, the administration would sleep
overnight on the roof.
“We promised the students that if they actually got the highest
score in the district, we’d spend the night on the roof,” Kennedy
said.
The students increased the testing score by 30 points, and
although that was not the top score in the district, Kennedy said the
administration decided to reward the students anyway. “It’s a lot for
the students and testing is no fun, so we’ve tried to reward them a
little bit,” said Kennedy.
According to Kennedy, each April, ninth-, 10th- and 11th-grade
students must participate in the State Standardized Testing and
Reporting program that tests how the students are progressing in
learning basic academic skills.
Kennedy said the school established ian incentive program, which
included the rooftop administrator camp out, to help students meet
and surpass the state goal. The state goal was for the school to
reach a score of 742. The school earned a score 30 points higher than
that.
“The state average increase was 10 points, and the local area
increase was 18 points,” Kennedy said. “We went up 30.”
Roderick was equally impressed.
“We thought we would improve, but we didn’t believe how much we
improved,” Roderick said.
The principal credits the increase to the students and the support
of their parents and teachers.
Roderick said students at school on Wednesday did not believe the
administration was going to make good on their promise.
“They thought it was pretty funny,” Kennedy said. “Some of the
[students] are mad that we have tents. They wanted us to sleep out in
sleeping bags.”
Now that the administration has delivered the students’ reward, it
is already beginning a new incentive program for this year’s testing
in April.
“We’re going to try and increase the incentive,” Kennedy said.
Kennedy said they will have a new target goal for this year’s
testing scores.
But the spring testing dates were far away on Wednesday night. For
now, the students were enjoying their reward.
Janee Ortiz, of Westminster, is a 17-year-old senior at Marina
High School who said she is on the yearbook staff. Ortiz said she
came to the school on Wednesday night to make sure the administrators
had followed through on their promise.
“We need evidence,” Janee said. “This is hilarious, they said it
last year, but we didn’t think they’d come around to it.”
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