Students get a home
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Deirdre Newman
OCC CAMPUS -- For the past six years, Newport-Mesa high school
students attending classes at Orange Coast College had to trek back and
forth across campus.
Now they have a home of their own.
Today, the school celebrates the official opening of two new Middle
College High School buildings. The new additions include four classrooms,
a computer lab and a career center.
“It gives us more of a feeling that we belong,” senior Whitney Crowell
said. “Before it was more intimidating. Now everyone knows where we are.”
The new buildings will provide much-needed room, said Joe Fox,
principal of Middle College High School.
There has been a tight squeeze on available space with the recent
shortening of the school semesters and the retrofitting of existing
facilities, Fox added.
The addition to the campus also will help OCC students, because the
buildings are used for college classes in the afternoon.
The high school program on campus that is run in conjunction with the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District originated six years ago to
accommodate two types of students -- those whose low grades belie their
academic potential and those whose insatiable academic appetites exceed
the offerings at their high school.
There are 96 students in the program, who are divided into four
classes. The smaller class size provides an intimacy that is not usually
possible in large high schools.
Many students say the new facilities give them a sense of ownership
that was lacking as they moved from classroom to classroom in a game like
musical chairs.
“We have more independence to operate, and we can do our own projects
and not worry about getting the classrooms dirty,” senior Louis Nguyen
said.
The students will still be intermingling with the older students
because they are required to take at least one college class each
semester.
Construction started on the new buildings in April and was finished in
August in time for the first day of school. Some of the technological
features still need to be completed, Fox said.
Math teacher Juan Pommier is looking forward to getting the computers
linked up so he can have his students create and present projects
digitally, he said.
Pommier said getting wired will enable him to spend more quality time
with students.
“Because then I can have everything laid out” before class, he said.
“Math is so much about how you organize your work.”
One of Fox’s long-term goals for the new facilities is to beef-up the
career center with a plethora of information about colleges because most
Middle College High School students go on to obtain college degrees.
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