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Improvements on a statewide math test show students are heading in the
right direction, Huntington Beach City School District officials say.
Ninety-four students from Sowers Middle School and 80 from Dwyer
Middle School completed the rigorous 2001 Algebra Golden State
Examination exam last May, an increase of 50 students districtwide from
2000, said Lynn Bogart, the district’s director or curriculum and
instruction.
The Golden State Examination was established in 1983 for
eighth-graders in first-year algebra classes. Students who demonstrate
outstanding levels of achievement on six Golden State Exams are eligible
to receive a Golden State Seal Merit Diploma.
There are 13 passable merit exams a student can take, and to qualify
for a merit diploma a student must pass six of those exams, Bogart said.
“We are exceptionally pleased with how our students performed on the
algebra 1 test, both in terms of the number of students who took the
test, and in their actual test scores,” Bogart said.
Below is a chart listing the performance of district students as
compared to statewide achievement results:
DISTRICT (174 participants) STATEWIDE (204,887 participants)
NUMBER PERCENT PERCENT
2001 2002 2001 2002 2001 2002
Level 6 High Honors 50 81 40.3 46.6 7.1 6.6
Level 5 Honors 34 43 27.4 24.7 9.9 10.5
Level 4 Recognition 19 32 15.3 18.4 11.0 12.3
Level 3 19 17 15.3 9.8 23.4 27.9
Level 2 2 1 1.6 0.5 34.4 33.1
Level 1 0 0 0.0 0.0 14.2 9.7
Middle schools looking for performing arts grant
Vista View and Spring View middle schools are applying for a $25,000
visual and performing arts education grant for the 2002-03 school year.
The grant will be used to start more theater classes.
The Ocean View School District Board of trustees approved at its
recent board meeting the schools’ intent to apply for the grant. The
application will be written by officials from both schools before it is
presented to the California Department of Education in early 2002, said
Karen Colby, the district’s director of curriculum and instruction.
“The plan is that the two schools will be working together -- teacher
and principal leaders -- in writing this grant. This money received from
this grant would give our schools state standard space instruction in
visual and performing arts,” Colby said.
The two primary writers for the grant are Charlene Gould and Rob
Hemingway.
Gould teaches digital art at Vista View and Hemingway is a music
instructor and band director at both schools.
“We’re just getting started and want to be open as to what the grant
actually will be,” Gould said. “There are a variety of directions that we
can go but we want it to be a natural progression in relationship to our
curriculum.”
Edison applying for visual design grant
Edison High has been given the green light by the Huntington Beach
Union High School board of trustees to apply for a grant to help students
prepare for careers in visual design and communication.
The $35,000 grant would come from the California Department of
Education for a Specialized Secondary Program. The board approved the
application for the 2002-03 school year unanimously.
Bob Stolte, assistant principal of curriculum at Edison, is the chief
author of the grant. He said the grant application was submitted earlier
this week and that if awarded, funds will be used to develop a three-year
interdisciplinary program that will help prepare students for careers in
those fields.
The grants will not be reviewed until after the first of the year,
Stolte said, adding that he expects a decision sometime in February.
The total amount asked for in the grant, which would be awarded over a
several years, is close to $400,000, he said.
“This planning grant would give us the opportunity to provide advanced
work for our students,” he said.
Stolte said that a core of 12 teachers have given input on the grant,
whose original concept was inspired by social studies teacher Gary
Rhoades.
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