Growing numbers and excitement
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Lolita Harper
NEWPORT COAST -- The good thing is there will be a lot more kids to
play with.
The bad thing is there will be longer lines for lunch.
At least that is how 9-year-old Newport Coast Elementary School
student Sami Zaret envisions her upcoming school year.
This fall, nearly 100 new students have enrolled at Newport Coast,
which will start its first full school year on its new campus Tuesday.
The number of students isn’t the only thing growing at Newport-Mesa’s
newest school. Teacher and parent excitement and anticipation is hardly
containable, said Principal Monique Van Zeebroeck.
“Everybody was so relieved when summer came, especially after the year
we had,” PTA President Denise Molnar said. “But now that it’s time to go
back to school, the enthusiasm mounts again.”
Parents and students at Newport Coast -- who were originally scheduled
to start at their new campus last fall -- had to endure numerous
construction postponements, delaying their move-in date to Feb. 26. The
first half of the year, Newport Coast students were housed at Lincoln
Elementary School in Corona del Mar.
“It was hard on the kids to have to pack up all their stuff and say
goodbye to old friends at their other school. But now it’s going to be so
nice that the kids have a school to identify with and call home,” Molnar
said.
Sami said she thinks it is “cool” that she will be a part of the
school’s history.
“I might want to be a teacher there, and when I go back to teach I
will look at my pictures and know that I was one of the first people
there,” Sami said.
Although the school year will begin on more stable footing, there is
still a lot of adjusting to be done on campus, Van Zeebroeck said.
Aside from ensuring all the basic school supplies are available to
students, teachers will be forging ahead with new school goals, she
added.
Meanwhile, staff will focus on deepening and enriching school
programs, such as character education and campus safety.
Unfortunately, with the first day of school only two days away, school
staffing is still an issue.
Long-term substitute teachers will start in a few of the classrooms
because of enrollment issues in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District
as a whole, Van Zeebroeck said.
“The subs are still setting up their classrooms as if they were
theirs,” the principal said.
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