District shows how it’s done
Michael Miller
Four Newport-Mesa elementary schools received a visit Tuesday from
state Department of Education officials, who came to observe the
schools’ English Language Development programs in action.
A team of three state administrators visited Wilson, Whittier,
Sonora and Davis Elementary schools, all of which have a lot of
English-learner students. The state has visited Newport-Mesa schools
in the past to run compliance reviews on the English language
programs, but Tuesday’s trip was an honor more than an evaluation.
“The reason we went to Newport-Mesa is that the Department of
Education administrative staff had expressed interest in seeing ELD
effectively done, and Newport-Mesa is one of the districts we’ve been
working with,” said Lauri Burnham, manager of the state English
Learner Accountability Unit. “I knew from my staff’s knowledge that
that’s one of the places where they were doing a really good job.”
Burnham, along with school and district accountability division
director Camille Maben and general counsel Marsha Bedwell, visited
the four campuses and observed teachers conducting English lessons
with students in different grade levels. At Sonora, the team watched
Susie Farnsworth lead a science lesson on animal habitats in her
combined second- and third-grade class.
“It was a wonderful feeling to see them so pleased at what we’re
doing,” said Sonora Principal Christine Anderson.
English Language Development programs in California service
non-English speaking students on five different levels, from
beginning to advanced. The earliest units involve basic exercises
such as greetings and days of the week. By the end of the program,
students do sophisticated reading, writing and paper comprehension
exercises.
Each English-learner student takes the California English Language
Development test every year to determine his or her progress. When
students score high enough, the school graduates or “reclassifies”
them out of the program. This year, according to English-learner
programs director Karen Kendall, Newport-Mesa reclassified 369
students, 60% more than the previous year.
“This was an opportunity for everyone to shine, so we were happy
to have them here,” Kendall said of the state visit.
She noted that while 88% of Newport-Mesa’s English-learner
students were Latino, the district also served natives of Turkey,
Russia, Vietnam, Korea, China, the Philippines and other countries.
“We’re getting more and more language groups as the world becomes
smaller,” she said.
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