Spring bonus for schools
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Danette Goulet
NEWPORT-MESA -- They’re in the money.
By spring, schools in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District can
expect $870,009 in state funds in the mail.
Gov. Gray Davis’ office decided Wednesday to dole out the dough to
schools that met their target scores on the Academic Performance Index.
On the list of beneficiaries were 19 of the district’s 29 schools.
The checks, which schools can expect to receive in late March or early
April, are from the Governor’s Performance Awards Program.
It is a competitive program established in the state budget last year
with an allotment of $227 million: $207 million, which was divided among
schools, and $20 million that will go to employees of those schools in
the spring.
The program is based on the Academic Performance Index, the ranking
system mandated by Davis’ Public Schools Accountability Act of 1999,
which lists each public school according to student performance.
Statewide, schools received a score between 200 and 1,000, based on
the Stanford 9 test results. The state has set a target score of 800 for
every school. Each school that ranks below 800 is required to improve its
score by 5% each year until it reaches 800. Schools that receive an 800
or higher are expected to maintain or improve that score each year.
To be eligible for the governor’s award program, schools that have a
rank of 800 or higher must improve by at least one point.
That criteria left some of Newport-Mesa’s higher achieving schools off
the list.
Andersen Elementary School in Newport Beach, for instance, dropped two
points this year from its position as No. 1 in the county.
So despite the school’s score of 931, it will receive no money.
The incentive program awards schools that score below 800 if they
increased their scores between 1999 and 2000 by the target 5%.
Schools serving students in kindergarten through eighth grade needed
95% of their students to have taken the Stanford 9 exams to be eligible,
and 90% of high school students were required to take the test.
And there is one more crucial piece, said Peggy Anatol, the district’s
director of curriculum and assessment for Newport-Mesa: Schools also
needed to show student improvement across the board.
“All subgroups had to make their targets too,” she said.
Ethnic and socioeconomic subgroups monitored by the state needed to
account for 80% of the school’s improvement.
“They can’t pour all the gas on the GATE kids,” she said, referring to
the Gifted And Talented Education program. “They can’t lose the, say,
Asian population because they don’t understand.”
The money, while welcome, won’t be as much as originally expected.
When the state Department of Education calculated how many of
California’s nearly 7,000 schools had earned the awards, the reward per
student dropped from an estimated $150 per pupil to $63.
The money will be spent for “school-wide improvement.” While how those
funds will be used is still undecided, the decisions will be made by each
school’s site council, not district officials.
At Rea Elementary School, where a check for $42,234 is anxiously
awaited, Principal Ken Killian said he is planning to give everyone an
opportunity to suggest how the bonus should be spent.
“What we’ll probably do is start with all the teachers getting
involved at each grade level,” he said.
After he gets the teachers’ brainstorming, Killian said, he will ask
the school leadership team and PTA board to do the same.
All those recommendations will then be presented to the site council,
he said, adding that although he doesn’t know where or how the money will
be used, he does have an idea.
“I know there is one thing that seems to be of interest to staff and
parents,” he said. “We’re all finding the computers we purchased . . . to
be slow. So one consideration may be to try to replace the older
computers.”
All 19 schools that made the cut had a sneaking suspicion they would
be on the list for funds but couldn’t be sure until it was announced.
“We knew from preliminary reports that we probably would be involved,
but you never know until you receive official notice,” Killian said.
BOX
WHO’S GETTING WHAT
Here’s a list of the Newport-Mesa schools that will receive state
money for meeting target scores:
Adams Elementary, $33,623
California Elementary, $25,011
Corona del Mar High, $105,997
Davis Elementary, $56,291
Ensign Intermediate, $72,564
Estancia High, $68,828
Harbor View Elementary, $33,053
Kaiser Elementary, $46,603
Lincoln Elementary, $47,173
Mariners Elementary, $46,096
Newport Elementary, $34,509
Paularino Elementary, $29,000
Pomona Elementary, $37,612
Rea Elementary, $42,234
Sonora Elementary, $23,555
TeWinkle Middle, $63,889
Victoria Elementary, $27,481
Whittier Elementary, $38,625
Wilson Elementary, $37,865
District Total: $870,009
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