Score one for the schools
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The release of statewide test scores has not always been cause for
cheer in Newport-Mesa. At times, the results would show signs of
improvement and promise, only to be followed by troubling declines
and setbacks, often at campuses on the Westside and at the four
Newport-Mesa Unified School District high schools.
This week, however, it was time to cheer again as 22 of the
district’s 29 schools improved on the Academic Performance Index,
which is scored on a scale of 200 to 1,000. It is based on individual
student performance in a variety of standardized tests, including the
California Standards Test and California Achievement Test.
The improvements included strong showings by the district’s four
poorest-performing schools -- Whittier, Wilson and Pomona elementary
schools and Estancia High School. Extra training for teachers, added
after-school programs and other focused attention at these campuses
are clearly having the desired results.
Among those schools that dropped, only three were by percentages
greater than 2% that raise alarms, and three of the minuscule
decreases were at campuses that still meet the state’s target score
of 800.
All in all, an encouraging report for teachers, parents and
students.
But even more encouraging is the attitude from district officials,
nicely summed up by district spokeswoman Jane Garland: “Those
improvements are good. Those scores aren’t where we want them to be
yet, but their growth is great.”
District officials, in other words, are not resting on a good
showing and are intent on providing our children with the best
education possible. Improvement is always possible -- no schools, for
instance, rank at the top of the “similar school ranking” that
compares campuses with like demographics.
Victoria Elementary, which has a seven on the statewide rankings,
is the only campus with as high as a nine on the similar schools
comparison. Other top schools in the district -- Anderson, Eastbluff,
Harbor View, Mariners and Newport Coast elementary schools and Corona
del Mar High School -- should be climbing the ladder as compared to
similarly well-off campuses.
Does anyone doubt such goals are attainable?
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