Editorial
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When the statewide Academic Performance Index rankings were issued in
January, local school leaders had reason to both rejoice and reflect.
The rejoicing came with the news that Andersen Elementary School scored a
county high of 933, also 14th in the state.
The reflection came later for Newport-Mesa school district officials, who
unfortunately also had to note that just a few miles away in Costa Mesa,
Wilson Elementary School students posted a bottom 10% score of 443--a
500-point gulf compared to their Andersen counterparts.
School officials cried that to compare the two was apples and oranges.
It’s wrong to expect Wilson students, who are largely new to the English
language, to the more proficient native English language speakers at
Andersen, school leaders explained. Aside from language, there is another
factor that is key to Andersen’s ability to churn out top-notch students:
parental involvement.
And school officials may have found a way to spread that idea
districtwide.
A program called Families and Schools Together just completed its
inaugaral year on the Wilson campus, with the graduation of 10 local
families. If the program’s early reviews prove correct, this could be one
way to emulate Andersen’s nurturing parental environment.
Students are guided through the program by teachers who lead families in
games and activities. Children read to their parents for a half-hour a
day, serve them food and, in turn, parents learn to listen to their
child’s academic concerns.
The program has shown results, school leaders say, and that’s exactly
what we need for schools like Wilson.
Instead of repeating the argument that language is the barrier to higher
test scores, school officials need to look for and implement creative
solutions, such as Families and Schools Together.
And maybe, as more of these programs come to fruition, we will see both
the end of contrasting test scores in Newport-Mesa, as well as the
excuses that perpetuate the same results year after year.
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