Schools to embrace arts
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Jeff Benson
The Newport-Mesa school board expected to place a greater emphasis on
the visual and performing arts when its members drafted its five-year
strategic plan in November.
But at least one of its schools doesn’t have to wait five years to
ensure that’s a reality.
Costa Mesa’s Sonora Elementary School and St. John the Baptist
Catholic School are among five Orange County schools chosen earlier
this month for the Orange County Performing Arts Center’s five-year
ArtsConnect program.
The initiative is designed to incorporate the arts into the core
curriculum, officials said.
ArtsConnect’s orientation and first teacher-training session is
Jan. 12.
“We’re just very excited, because we feel like we’re all sort of
lacking in the fine arts area, especially with all of the budget
cuts,” Sonora Principal Christine Anderson said.
“It’s very exciting to us to know we have this partnership with
the Orange County Performing Arts Center.
“All of us, as educators, want to integrate the arts into the
curriculum, but we don’t know how.
“This will provide the training.”
The program will provide teachers with training and instructional
materials, so they can find more creative ways to teach their
students.
It’ll also employ artists who will present free student assemblies
and classroom demonstrations, said Nancy Warzer-Brady, the center’s
associate director of education.
“With the Strategic Plan of the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District, [the center’s ArtsConnect selection committee was] actually
making the selections and decisions, and the day after our site
visit, it was a major factor in our decision to select that school.
“From all aspects and levels, we see strong support at the
district level.”
Only the first-grade teachers will receive training when the
program kicks off Jan. 12, but second-grade teachers will be trained
in the fall of 2005, third-grade teachers in the fall of 2006 and so
on.
Each grade will implement its techniques the following year,
Warzer-Brady said. Sonora has students enrolled through only third
grade.
The schools are responsible for covering the cost of busing
students to the Orange County Performing Arts Center for various
performances, as well as paying for substitutes to cover classes the
four days each year that teachers will be trained, Warzer-Brady said.
The district will cover the cost of Sonora’s substitutes, and the
school’s PTA will likely pay for the students’ busing, Anderson said.
Other schools participating include Taft Elementary School in
Santa Ana, Santiago Elementary School in Lake Forest and Stanford
Elementary School in Garden Grove, Warzer-Brady said.
Each of the schools was selected through an application and
interview process.
The ArtsConnect selection committee met Nov. 23 with Costa Mesa
City Councilwoman Katrina Foley, who has a 6-year-old son attending
Sonora; Newport-Mesa school board member Martha Fluor; first-grade
teachers; and a group of parents.
Foley said the group persuaded the committee to recognize the
school district’s commitment to its five-year strategic plan, which
places a great emphasis on the establishment of more arts programs in
the curriculum and to consider Costa Mesa because it is known as the
City of the Arts.
* JEFF BENSON covers education and may be reached at (714)
966-4617 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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