Our struggling schools
o7This week we asked our parent panelists: Should parents be worried
that three Newport-Mesa Unified School District schools were added to
a federal list of at-risk schools because of their poor performances
as part of the No Child Left Behind Act? Eight Newport-Mesa schools
now are on the list.
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Yes, I think that parents of kids in the eight schools in the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District that are currently on the list
should be concerned. Those eight schools are more than a quarter of
the total in the district. Parents have a right to expect better.
Last week’s upbeat press release from the district touted how many
highly qualified and credentialed teachers we have working with our
kids. Those were nice statistics, but these poor results show how
that was just so much window dressing.
These latest numbers are once again attributed to the large
proportion of students with limited English proficiency, as they
always are. I believe that’s now an old and increasingly tired story.
Did we just find out last year that we have lots of students whose
first language is not English? Does educating that demographic group
require some new techniques that have yet to be developed? Do all
other schools with similar demographics also fail to make the grade?
The answer to those questions is obviously “no,” so one can only
conclude that the district still isn’t doing enough or is not doing
things correctly.
The No Child Left Behind Act is mostly a lame cover for the Bush
administration’s woefully inadequate education efforts. It’s riddled
with holes and poorly conceived policies and, as usual, it dumps the
real responsibilities into someone else’s lap without backing up
policies with funding. I’m not a fan, but it is the law and it does
set standards that must be met. Standards such as the ability to
speak, read and write English and the ability to do basic math are
reasonable. They need to be met, and the district needs to stop
making excuses and start dealing with the reality at hand.
* MARK GLEASON is a Costa Mesa resident and parent.
In 2002 the president and a bipartisan Congress approved the No
Child Left Behind Act, much to the consternation of the liberal
teachers’ unions that liked the status quo because it meant job
security and control of methods, content and ideology.
Under the act’s scrutiny, students in all Newport-Mesa schools
will be affected because the parents of students in the eight
underperforming schools with poor and minority students have the
option to receive free tutoring or transfer to other schools,
including a public charter school. The district has to provide free
transportation.
Yes, the No Child Left Behind Act does expand the role of the
federal government. But it would not have been necessary for federal
officials to step in had there not been years of stubbornness among
educational elites who failed to plan for the educational success of
all children.
Although there are naysayers, recent test results prove the act is
working to raise the achievement of all students regardless of race
or family background. “The achievement gap that has persisted for
decades in the younger years between minorities and whites has shrunk
to its smallest size in history,” according to the website.
The act encourages local solutions for local problems, yet low
scores persist in eight Costa Mesa schools. Intense local
intervention is needed. Newport-Mesa is not the only district with
underperforming schools.
California education needs an extreme makeover. Closing the border
to immigrants and passing Propositions 74, 75, 76 and 77 on Nov. 8,
in combination with the No Child Left Behind Act, could bring about a
revolution and desperately needed reform so that no child anywhere is
left behind.
* WENDY LEECE is a Costa Mesa parent, former school board member
and member of the city’s parks and recreation commission.
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