Some schools test better; others slip
Michael Miller
Low-performing schools in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District
showed improvement on statewide tests for the second year in a row,
even while the district’s average dipped slightly from last year.
In the 2004 Academic Performance Index scores, released Tuesday,
two of the district’s three lowest-ranked schools, Rea Elementary and
Wilson Elementary, achieved higher base scores than they did in 2003.
In addition, nine other elementary and high schools lifted their
marks from a year ago.
The district’s overall Academic Performance Index score was 729,
down four points from last year and 71 below the state target score.
Administrators, however, were pleased with the improvements in
low-performing schools, which are largely less affluent and feature
greater populations of non-English-speaking students.
“We’re on our way to 800,” said Peggy Anatol, director of K-12
assessment. “We continue to want to improve that district Academic
Performance Index, and the way to do that is to improve student
performance at each school.”
The Academic Performance Index -- based on scores from California
Standards Tests, California Achievement Tests and California High
School Exit Examinations -- rates schools on a scale from 200 to
1,000 and also ranks them in percentiles from one to 10. In 2004,
eight Newport-Mesa elementary schools scored higher than 800, and
five of them ranked at 10, the top percentile.
Among elementary schools in the district, Pomona, Rea and Wilson
ranked in the lowest two percentiles. However, the latter two schools
made gains over last year’s scores, with Rea rising three points and
Wilson adding 28.
While many of the higher-ranking schools in the district lost
points or had little change from last year, public information
officer Jane Garland said the gains on the lower end were more
meaningful.
“The higher you get, the harder it is to get any kind of increase,
because you’re at the top,” Garland stated. “If you’re a
lower-scoring school, you have more wiggle room. For those schools at
the bottom, even 20 points is a big increase.”
Garland praised the poorer schools’ efforts to begin after-school
programs for students, including Project Success, a tutoring and
reading program cosponsored by Houghton Mifflin. Ten of the 11
elementary schools in Costa Mesa now feature the program, with Davis,
Paularino and Killybrooke joining the list this year.
Christine Anderson, the principal of Sonora Elementary, said
extracurricular programs were a key to her school’s 27-point gain
over last year.
“Basically, we have outstanding teachers,” Anderson commented.
“They all go above and beyond. They do a lot of interventions in
their classrooms, pulling kids aside, working with kids in recess and
lunch, anything that might help them do better. They give a lot of
their own time.”
Wilson principal Candy Sperling, whose school contains 80% English
learners, credited her gain to individualized instruction.
“You look at what you have and provide instruction that’s
appropriate for them,” Sperling said. “In our case, we provide what
we call universal access. We’re giving them grade level standards and
also the background knowledge they need to attain those standards.”
Newport-Mesa currently has five schools -- Wilson, Pomona and
Whittier Elementary School, TeWinkle Middle School and Estancia High
School -- listed as program improvement schools under the federal No
Child Left Behind Act. Estancia, which ranked in the third percentile
in 2003, did not receive an Academic Performance Index score this
year due to lack of students taking the tests.
* MICHAEL MILLER covers education and may be reached at (714)
966-4617 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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