Westside center to help kids
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Lolita Harper
Another academic school year is looming for Westside children -- a
thought few students want to entertain as they frolic in the warm
Southern California sun. But this fall will offer an additional tool
for academic success, as community partners will open a new learning
center.
Think Together, an organization that operates educational centers
in low-income areas, and Harbor Christian Church on Costa Mesa’s
Westside have joined forces to offer a new after-school learning
center to the children of Wilson Street. The center is designed to
supplement students’ formal academic curriculum and provide them with
tools to get ahead at school.
The Wilson Street Center will operate out of two church classrooms
and serve predominantly Wilson Elementary School students, said Bill
Gartner, the pastor of Harbor Christian Church. Officials hope to
open the center doors by mid-September, just in time to get children
on the right track for the school year, Gartner said.
“It’s been proven time and time again that after-school centers
help kids succeed,” Gartner said. “We’ve done enough long-term
studies; now it’s time to make it happen.”
Think Together officials launched the Wilson Street center by
following the footsteps of the successful Shalimar and Pomona
learning center models. Laura Johnson, the executive director of the
Shalimar Learning Center, said she hopes the new center will
similarly embrace not only the neighborhood students but the entire
families, as her center does.
“We get to know the families and engage with the kids in the hopes
that the families will make more of an impact in the learning process
also,” Johnson said. “We are hoping the center on Wilson will do the
same.”
Gartner said the family aspect is already present for him, as he
had two children at Wilson Elementary, has lived in the area for more
than a decade and is the leader of a close-knit congregation.
“I’ve got a really vested interest in this area, and I’m
anticipating some exciting changes,” Gartner said.
Another vested group, which also has an outreach office at the
church, is the UC Irvine Outreach Center. While the outreach center
is not a contractual partner, its leaders feel they hold an integral
role in the center’s success. Administrators for both the UCI
Outreach Center and the Wilson Street Learning Center will share
office space, while the actual tutoring will be done in the separate
classrooms.
UCI officials have committed to helping the learning center retain
tutors by offering connections to university students looking to
volunteer time, said Victor Becerra, executive director of the
university outreach program. Becerra said he is excited about the
effect the collaboration will bring the community.
“Think Together has an established track record, and I think this
center will be very successful right from the very start,” Becerra
said.
The mission of Think Together is to assist educationally at-risk
youth and provide them with learning tools and a study venue to be
successful in an academic environment. Officials said the students on
Wilson Street fit the prototype perfectly, as a large majority of the
students come from immigrant families and have language barriers to
overcome before they can even tackle the content of their schoolwork.
Becerra said the center will arm immigrant children with the tools
they need to tackle the rigors of elementary education. Any
additional help with schoolwork helps, he said.
Westside resident Janice Davidson worries, however, that the
center will be too focused on immigrant children and will alienate
students of other ethnicities who also need help. She said the
community should look for facilities that encourage the interaction
of different races and ethnicities, not venues that cater to one
ethnic background.
“The other center [seems to be] for Latinos only, and it’s really
not quite fair,” Davidson said. “They have all of these extra
homework schools for the Latino kids, but nobody is looking out for
the [other] children in the city.”
Gartner admitted the center will most likely serve Latino
children, but that is just a fact of life, he said. Sheer statistics
of the ethnic breakdown of the neighborhood and the elementary school
that will feed the center show that, primarily, Latino students will
attend the center, he said.
“That is just how things are because this is where we are,”
Gartner said. “But if the implication is that we will not open our
doors and assist Anglo students -- or anyone else for that matter --
that is completely false.”
Davidson also questioned the proliferation of learning centers on
the Westside, saying there are various locations in the city that
could benefit from extra tutorial services.
“There are other kids in the city who need the same type of help,
and I don’t see anyone helping them,” Davidson said.
Gartner did not disagree with her sentiment but said he was doing
his part for his specific neighborhood.
“We could use a center like this in every Costa Mesa neighborhood,
and I applaud the schools who have already facilitated something like
this,” he said.
* LOLITA HARPER covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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