Grant to finance special school
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The Newport-Mesa Unified School District and Coastline Community
College have received a $400,000 grant through the Bill and Melinda
Gates Foundation to create an early college high school in Costa
Mesa.
In June, the college and the district applied for the funding from
the Foundation for California Community Colleges, a partner in the
nationwide Early College High School Initiative, sponsored by the
Gates Foundation. The new school, set to open in fall 2006, will
offer both high school and college classes and permit students to
graduate with a diploma and two years of college credit.
The school, one of more than 100 such institutions that the Gates
Foundation hopes to establish nationwide by 2008, will combine high
school and college curriculum and allow students to earn dual credit
for some classes. The program is intended for students who are just
entering high school and who have struggled academically.
The Gates grant allows for a project that, otherwise, might have
had to wait for funding.
“We’re absolutely delighted, of course,” said Edward Decker, dean
of instruction for Coastline Community College. “There would be no
way, under the current funding levels, both in Newport-Mesa and
Coastline, that we would be starting a venture like this without
funds.
“It’s not what one would typically call a huge grant, but by the
same token, it will provide us with essential moneys to hire some
critical staff and do some of the things necessary to launch a
special school like this.”
Decker and Mike Murphy, student services director for the
Newport-Mesa district, said the district expected to house the
program at the site that also includes Monte Vista and Back Bay high
schools. The district would likely set up portable classrooms around
the campus to accommodate the new courses, Murphy said.
Two years ago, the college and district applied to the Foundation
for California Community Colleges for a grant for the early college
high school. Though the foundation turned down the request, it did
give Coastline a $10,000 grant for planning. After working with the
foundation for two years to refine the plan, the college and district
applied again successfully.
The award to Coastline makes it one of eight California community
colleges to receive a grant.
“We look for a demonstrated commitment from all of the educational
partners,” said Jeff Tschudi, assistant director of the foundation’s
Early College High School Initiative. “In this case, that would be
the leadership at Newport-Mesa and Coastline. We had to see a
demonstrated capacity in both those organizations to fulfill that
work, and a sound education plan.”
The foundation, Tschudi said, would remain an ally of the college
and district during the formative years of the school.
“We intend to provide some professional development support for
our schools, or at least assist them in building the capacity to
develop a network to sustain themselves,” he explained.
The Gates grant will extend over five years. According to
estimates made by the college and district, the Gates grant would
cover $93,000 of the project expenditures for the upcoming year,
which is set aside for planning the school. Newport-Mesa would foot
$163,598 of the cost, with Coastline contributing $41,691.
The planning year, Murphy believes, will save administrators grief
later on.
“Everybody we’ve talked to in the early college high school ranks
said, ‘Don’t do what ... [we] did,’” Murphy said. “They got the grant
in May or June and tried to open by September. It just doesn’t work.”
Over the next year, the district’s task force plans to appoint a
principal and advertise for teaching positions. The early college
high school will grow in increments after classes first open. For
2006-07, the school will begin with 100 ninth-graders, then take
another 100 freshmen each of the next three years. The maximum
enrollment at an early college high school, as mandated by the Gates
Foundation, is 400 students.
For the first year, with an all-freshmen student body, the school
will offer little in the way of college courses. Murphy said the
faculty would expand in following years as students moved up to
higher grades. For the first year, the school may make do with three
teachers and a counselor.
To enlist students in the early college high school, Decker said,
the district would likely rely on eighth-grade counselors and staff
to make recommendations. He didn’t imagine that Newport-Mesa would
lack candidates.
“I think the line is going to be long immediately,” Decker said.
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