EDITORIAL
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There was continued good news from our schools last week in the not
always easy to understand form of the Academic Performance Index, the
statewide measuring stick that also compares California campuses along
socioeconomic demographics:
* Harbor View Elementary School in Corona del Mar once again was the
highest-scoring school in the county;
* Newport Coast Elementary School more than beat the state target of
800 on the 200- to 1,000-point scale and also received a highest ranking
of 10 when compared with similar schools;
* Seven Newport-Mesa schools received that top comparative ranking,
one more than last year;
* California Elementary School became the first Costa Mesa school to
crack the 800 benchmark with an 808 score, as well as a high 9 ranking
compared with like campuses.
That is a quartet to celebrate. But with this good news should come
the same caution typically raised when API scores aren’t so rosy. Numbers
are both easy to manipulate and rather limited representations of how
students, let alone schools, are performing.
High schools, for instance, have a roughly 25% change in student body
each year as seniors graduate and freshmen take their place. While that
means scores can certainly go up, it also means they can drop. And
numbers did drop at four schools: Woodland, Paularino, Pomona and Ensign
schools. All saw their statewide ranks decline.
Are the results at those four schools the equivalent of a four-alarm
fire? No. But they do suggest there may be a bit of smoke to put out on
our campuses -- before there are any flames.
Newport-Mesa is a desirable place to live in large part because our
schools are so good. Parents, school officials and, most of all, teachers
all spend much time and effort to make sure they stay strong, to stoke a
flame we do want to burn brightly: the fire of our children’s education.
These latest results seem to show that fire is hot.
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