Teachers hired, shifted to accommodate class sizes
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Deirdre Newman
NEWPORT-MESA -- As the first week of school came to an end,
Newport-Mesa Unified School District principals were busy shuffling
students and teachers around to accommodate the shifting number of
students.
Some schools have hired additional teachers because many students
showed up who hadn’t registered, and others have reassigned teachers to
compensate for a lower enrollment than projected.
The enrollment numbers are reviewed every day for the first month of
the academic year and adjustments are made accordingly, said Mike Fine,
the district’s assistant superintendent of business services. The numbers
are looking good at both the elementary and secondary levels, he added.
At Kaiser Elementary School, Principal Daryle Palmer hired two
teachers this week -- one for an additional fourth-grade class and
another for an extra fifth-grade class.
Kaiser parent Nancy Jackson said she was relieved more teachers had
been added.
“There are some kids that had to switch classes, but this is only the
first week of school so it’s OK,” Jackson said. “If it had gone into two
to three weeks, it would have been a real problem.”
But Palmer said she was still concerned about the third-grade level
because there are three classes with 21 students -- more than the maximum
allowed under reduced class-size requirements.
Palmer said she would wait to see if more students enroll next week
before making any more changes.
Rea Elementary School also added another teacher, even though the
enrollment is lower than the initial projection. Principal Ken Killian
said school officials anticipated an increase in students in the
projection numbers but wanted to ensure they actually showed up before
hiring an additional teacher.
The new teacher will be assigned to the fourth grade, where the
classes are the most crowded, Killian added.
At Victoria Elementary School, enrollment was also lower than
projected, reducing the need for one classroom teacher. That teacher
became a reading teacher instead, Principal Judy Laakso said.
For the elementary schools in the district, the enrollment is 11,582,
while the projection was for 11,793. Fine said the bulk of that
discrepancy stems from lower numbers for the kindergartners because
projecting for that grade is “like a shot in the dark.”
At the high school level, enrollment is 66 students off the projected
number, but that could change because the district has not received the
final count on the students who have registered but haven’t shown up yet,
Fine said.
* Deirdre Newman covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail ato7 [email protected] .
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