It’s not all about the gridiron
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I disagree with Roger Carlson’s conclusions in Sunday’s Pilot that
the Newport-Mesa Unified School District needs to appreciate the
“values of athletics, which is at the heart of the morale on any
campus” [“Chaos(ta) Mesa requires real house cleaning”]. My children
attended Costa Mesa High School for nine years total and participated
in many sports programs at the junior high, junior varsity and
varsity level. They also participated in choir, drama, band, academic
decathlon, newspaper, mock trial, student government, service clubs,
Advocates for Student Rights, Youth in Government and other
activities.
We do a disservice to students to make them believe their ticket
to college or the future is through athletics. Their status after
graduation will not depend on being on the high school football team.
Most will never play football again once they graduate. High schools
need to tell students the truth and work at promoting the scholarship
and activities that are most important to most students’ futures.
Some Costa Mesa High School graduates from the Class of 2000 just
obtained their degrees from colleges such as Stanford, Yale, Brown,
UCLA, UC Berkeley, UC Irvine, University of Redlands, Marymount
Manhattan and more. None were football or basketball players. Most
were in choir. Most obtained financial help from the college because
of their artistic talents, not their athletic talents. The common
denominator for students who were accepted to the best colleges from
Costa Mesa High School’s Class of 2003 was choir, academic decathlon,
mock trial and good grades.
I like high school athletics. But schools should remember that
there are more than three sports and divide resources accordingly.
Taxpayers get a lot more bang for their buck from the tennis and golf
program than the football program. Taxpayers get even more bang for
their buck from arts programs, which are always underfunded.
As taxpayers, we all own the schools and the city parks and
buildings. If high schools stop sharing the fields, does that mean
school pools, theaters and classrooms are off-limits to all but those
led by that coach or teacher? Would we deny small children swim
lessons so they won’t drown, just so water polo players can practice
at their convenience? I say, work out the kinks of the joint-use
agreement. Then, start paying all teachers who put in extra time for
their efforts to help students.
* GAY GEISER SANDOVAL is a former Daily Pilot columnist and a
resident of Costa Mesa.
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