District secure with standards
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Deirdre Newman
School district officials say they are not daunted by the state’s
decision to maintain demanding proficiency standards for all students
in the face of projections that most schools will not be able to meet
these standards by the federal deadline of 2014.
Failure to meet the standards could lead to sanctions and the loss
of millions of dollars in federal funding.
On Thursday, officials in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District
commended the state for sticking with more rigorous standards instead
of lowering them to increase the prospects of complying with the
federal law.
State officials announced those plans Wednesday, on the one-year
anniversary of the federal No Child Left Behind law.
The state’s standards were implemented before the No Child Left
Behind law took effect. They describe proficiency for students as the
ability to attend a four-year university by high school graduation,
which experts have maintained is a lofty, if nearly unreachable,
goal.
The No Child Left Behind law requires testing third- through
eighth-graders annually in English and math, with schools making
progress toward the goal of 100% student proficiency.
Schools with a high percentage of English language learners,
students whose first language is not English, are expected to have
the hardest time gaining proficiency in English.
School officials also they say they have already embarked on the
path to meeting those standards.
“I feel good because our systems are in place now and we are
moving forward with a clear, consistent curriculum with our English
learners,” said Karen Kendall, district director of English Learner
Programs. “That which you put a lot of time and attention on,
generally improves.”
The state adopted its standards in 1997 and has been busy aligning
the curriculum to reflect them since. Last year, Kendall created a
master plan for the district’s English language learners and now has
a full-fledged department to monitor and support the plan.
Candy Sperling, principal of Wilson Elementary School in Costa
Mesa, said she is also confident that her students can rise to the
challenge set by the state standards.
“These are the things that we are aspiring to now, and I don’t see
that part changing,” Wilson said.
One of the effects of No Child Left Behind will be state sanctions
against schools that continually fail to meet 100% proficiency.
Schools that serve a high proportion of low-income students could
lose federal funding.
These harsh penalties are a contrast to the state’s own ranking
system, the Academic Performance Index, which is based on rewards,
and intervention for low-performing schools. Trustee Serene Stokes
said the district will redouble its efforts to help every student
meet the standards.
“We need to address the schools that need help to meet the
standards,” Stokes said. “First, you identify the students that need
help, then you develop programs that will assist those students.
That’s our responsibility.”
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers education. Reach her at (949) 574-4221 or
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