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San Marcos school board tours High Tech High
SAN MARCOS --- San Marcos Unified trustees got a glimpse
into the inner workings of High Tech High on Monday, in an
effort to learn more about the organization before deciding
whether to grant it a K-8 charter.
Four of the five
school board members took part in a three-hour tour of the
organization's Point Loma campus, where High Tech High
operates six public charter schools inside a former Naval
Training Center.
Point Loma-based High Tech High formed in 2000 as a single charter high school launched by a coalition of San Diego business leaders and educators.
Monday's tour included an in-depth look at classroom
structures, curriculum and teachers.
"It was very
interesting," said board member Pam Bancells. "They gave us a
lot of information to process."
The tour was given at
the request of trustees who are deciding whether or not they
will grant the organization a charter to open a K-8 charter
school in the city.
District officials are expected to
discuss the issue at the monthly board meeting on Monday,
which will be held at the North County Regional Education
Center, 255 Pico Avenue at 6:30 p.m.
The organization
is slated to open a charter high school on a vacant 5.2-acre
lot adjacent to 1370 San Marcos Boulevard near Discovery
Street. It does not need the board's approval for that charter
because the high school will open under a state charter
granted the organization by the state Board of Education in
January.
The San Marcos campus, which would offer a
liberal arts college prep program, would initially open for
150 ninth-graders and add a grade each year until the school
has a total of 500 students. Plans call for opening a middle
school at the site as early as 2009.
Board President
Mary Borevitz said the tour helped trustees get a lot of their
questions answered about the school's infrastructure and
taught them about the alternative ways of teaching that the
school uses.
"They are doing many imaginative, creative
things," said Borevitz.
Borevitz said there were many
things that stood out during the tour such as the fact that
teachers at the school are hired on a year-to-year basis, the
lack of sports teams and a playground as well and the
socio-economic make-up of the students.
"It was kind of
how schools looked in the 1950s," said Borevitz. "Most of the
kids who go to the school come from upper-income homes.
Schools don't look like that anymore."
Others, such as
board member David Horacek, said he was "very impressed" with
the school's "seemingly charged environment" as well as the
small class sizes and programs.
"It would be good for
our district to come up with similar competitive programs,
that way we can offer alternatives rather than let others fill
that void," said Horacek.
The San Marcos High Tech High
School is expected to offer small classrooms and the focus
will be on teaching students through project-based learning,
which requires students to create and design hands-on projects
as class assignments, according to High Tech High
officials.
It will be one of two charter schools in San
Diego County that will open under High Tech High's statewide
charter. The other campus will be in Chula Vista.
The
state charter allows High Tech High to eventually open 10
campuses statewide that will operate under state jurisdiction
and independently of local school districts.
However,
because the organization wants to be able to offer an
elementary and middle school in the future, they will have to
be granted a separate charter from San Marcos
officials.
Borevitz said she would not comment on
whether the tour affected her vote on the charter.
"I
think there could be some synergies between us, it would also
give parents more choices," Borevitz said. "But, at this point
we have to keep looking at it and continue to ask more
questions."
Contact staff writer Brenda Duran at (760)
761-4408 or bduran@nctimes.com.
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