Careful beginnings
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Lolita Harper
NEWPORT-MESA -- School district officials were planning to work
through the Labor Day weekend in anticipation of the first day of school
today.
School Board President David Brooks said school officials have been
working around the clock to try and make sure district schools are
correctly staffed according to the number of students enrolled.
“We are getting daily counts of how many register packets have been
sent out, how many have been returned, how many students are new and how
many are returning, “ Brooks said. “It’s a combination of art and science
to make sure we have the right number of children, teachers and
classrooms on opening day.”
After last year’s fiasco, which included reconfiguring classes after
school began, district officials were demanding principals be meticulous
in reporting enrollment numbers, said Mike Fine, assistant superintendent
of business services.
They, too, were being very careful, he said. Instead of hiring all the
new teachers they thought would be needed, many were initially hired as
substitutes, until there were enough students.
The last thing the district wants to do is over-staff and then have to
collapse a classroom because of a lack of students, Brooks said.
Budgeting also plays a huge role in the process, he said.
Having too many teachers on the payroll is extremely expensive, Fine
added.
Substitutes will be used until enrollment numbers are finalized, at
which point, full-time teachers will have priority on classrooms, then
the new hires will be made.
“All of our substitutes are fully credentialed and more than capable
teachers,” Brooks said.
At the beginning of last week, there were nine elementary school
classrooms scheduled to start with these substitutes, Fine said.
By Friday, that number was down to five.
“Come Tuesday, I don’t think we’ll have any problem,” Fine said
Friday. “By the time we get through that first week and into the second,
we’ll be at or above our projected numbers.
Katherine Ellis, a 23-year-old Costa Mesa resident, is one of the
substitute teachers who will start the year at Newport Coast Elementary
School.
Ellis, who substituted for the school last year, found out a year ago
she was invited to return.
For the last five days, Ellis has been on campus attending planning
meetings, putting up bulletin boards and positioning the desks for her
third-grade classroom.
She is looking forward to what she hopes will be her first full-time
teaching position this year.
Although her position is not guaranteed, she is treating her job as if
she will be there all year.
“There’s a big possibility they won’t need me, but I really want to be
in the Newport-Mesa district and I’m really excited to teach this class,”
she said. “I thought it would be an awesome opportunity to stay in this
environment.”
* Lolita Harper covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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