District defends results amid criticism
Adams Elementary School is a good school, district officials said Wednesday, and they donât know how the group of parents calling themselves the Mesa Verde Education Committee can argue otherwise.
Newport Mesa Unified School District officials on Wednesday emphasized what they characterized as academic success at Adams after parents complained to school board members at their meeting Tuesday about various issues at Adams.
âI donât have any data that tells me that Adams is not successful,â said Newport Mesa Unified School District spokeswoman Laura Boss. âIâm not sure what theyâre measuring success on. The measurable success at Adams is there. I think thatâs one of the things we need to explore with this group.â
Adams Elementary has increased by nearly 100 points to last yearâs score of 760 since the state launched its Academic Performance Index in 1999. The stateâs goal is to have schools score an 800 or above on a scale of 1,000. By federal standards, white studentsâ proficiency in English and math has grown significantly and Latino proficiency scores in both subjects at Adams have nearly doubled since 2002.
The group does not rely on California standardized test scores because the state changes how it measures success from year to year, according to the Academic Performance Index manual. Instead, they look to Adamsâ annual ranking to similar schools in the state. On a scale of one to 10, Adams was ranked a nine in 1999 compared to similar schools statewide. In 2006, the latest rankings, Adams was ranked fifth.
âWeâre trying to empirically look at the stats and not the people,â said Hope Morgan, whose family lives in Adamsâ enrollment area but instead go to school out of the district. âWhat is the administration doing to increase scores, and why donât they want the local kids to go there?â
Morgan and the parentsâ group claim that the district encourages interdistrict transfers to Adams Elementary, most of whom she said are learning English as a second language. Failing is acceptable there, Morgan said.
âWeâre catering to the immigrants, in a bad way. We have a moral obligation to educate everybody, but letâs raise the standards,â Morgan said. âIn the next 10 to 15 years thereâs going to be a shift [in demographics], and we need to get ready for that.â
âThatâs absolutely inaccurate,â Boss said. According to district numbers, there are only 20 interdistrict transfers at Adams. State law prevents Newport-Mesa from accepting students from other school district because Newport-Mesa receives only modest state funding.
Parents point to Victoria Elementary Schoolâs success as something Adams should model. Adams had 51 more students learning English as a second language tested last year, state records show.
Adams Principal Candy Cloud echoed Supt. Jeff Hubbardâs message Tuesday night to concerned parents: Come see the school before judging.
âWhat we have stated is that the door is always open,â Cloud said. âThe ones that have made a choice to come here have been very happy here.â
Morgan said the district needs to âsellâ the school to parents, and officials say parents need to enroll neighborhood kids to continue the schoolâs improvements.
âWe donât go out and recruit, weâre not a professional football team,â Cloud said, chuckling. âI donât have the budget to wine and dine people. But we do have the budget to put out [annual] brochures and let people know the kinds of programs available at Adams. I would call that selling, wouldnât you?â
JOSEPH SERNA may be reached at (714) 966-4619 or at [email protected].
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