Sportsmanship program progresses
- Share via
Christine Carrillo
With sports comes trustworthiness, respect, responsibility, fairness,
caring and citizenship -- at least in the case of sports in the
school district.
Along with hours of practice, endless reviews of game tapes and
crafting of new plays, coaches in the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District must now emphasize sportsmanship, ethics and character
building in accordance with the Victory With Honor program.
The program “focuses on strengthening the moral fiber of the next
generation,” said Mike Murphy, director of alternative programs and
student services for the district. “We’ve seen lots of progress ...
and we hope for great things for this program.”
Coming to the end of its trial run, the program, only partially
implemented at the beginning of the 2002-03 school year, has reached
its final developmental stage -- certifying a training staff at each
school.
Newport-Mesa trustees agreed Tuesday to fully adopt the program
and move ahead with the final training stages.
While most of the coaches have been trained, the rest are
scheduled to finish by late May. The final series of training,
through the Josephson Institute of Ethics, will not exceed $20,000,
the board’s vote dictates.
Trying to emphasize that all high school sports are “all sport and
game and not life and death,” Tom Antal, Estancia High’s principal,
told the school board the Victory With Honor program has already
played a major role in keeping the peace without tampering with the
competition in high school sports.
“Victory with Honor is a work in progress. ... We’re trying to
implement the philosophy,” said David Peterson, assistant principal
at Newport Harbor High. “It’s another standard to live up to, and I
think it’s a very positive and achievable goal as far as bringing in
... all those things that should be part of an athletic program.”
The school board, which listened to positive and negative
critiques of the program, asked that each of the schools present
progress reports regarding the implementation of their respective
plans.
Although some school officials said they felt they could come up
with ways for the program to better suit their own site, the overall
review of Victory With Honor was one of success.
“I think one of the important things is finding out that we’re all
in this together and we all have the same goal,” said Dave Perkins,
Costa Mesa High’s boys’ athletic director, who even used the
program’s code of ethics to evaluate his coaching staff. “We’re all
in it for the kids.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.