Anything but uniform
- Share via
Alex Coolman
The cake was cut in neat rectangles. Each piece had its own paper serving
basket and was skewered, dead center, with a single plastic fork.
But if dessert at the Back Bay and Monte Vista High School graduation
looked uniform Wednesday, the people munching on it were anything but.
The schools (both are under one roof) and the students who attend them
are unconventional. Back Bay is considered a continuation program for
students whose experiences in ordinary high schools haven’t always been
the best, and Monte Vista features independent study for kids whose lives
are complex enough to require a flexible approach to education.
And in the brief, spirited ceremony that marked their graduation, the
students’ enthusiasm for the idiosyncratic and unconventional was
evident.
In front of an overflowing crowd of parents, friends and supporters, a
few students were recognized for their extraordinary achievements.
But one of them, Monte Vista’s Stephanie Skidmore, used her time on stage
to raise a philosophical question.”What is success?” Skidmore asked the
audience. “Is success to make the most money?”
She thought differently.
“Success is to win the respect of intelligent people and to win the
laughter of children,” she determined. “It’s to leave the world a bit
better.”
Many of Skidmore’s classmates -- judging by the skateboarding shoes that
poked out from beneath red graduation gowns and the spiky haircuts
peeking out from under mortar boards -- had their own, somewhat inventive
philosophies of life.
The willingness of the schools to tolerate and even encourage the
diversity of students’ approaches to learning, parents suggested, was
essential to their success.
Teri Layman, mother of Back Bay grad Stephanie Womack, came outside the
crowded auditorium toward the end of the graduation ceremonies. Sitting
at a table covered in red construction paper and fringed with Mylar
balloons, Womack discussed the changes Back Bay had made in her
daughter’s feelings about education. The school’s flexibility, she
thought, had made a big difference.
“It really gives young people a lot of hope,” she said. “The teachers
here really try to meet the needs of the individual students.”
Erick Maldonado, who cruised through Monte Vista in only three years
while taking computer courses at Orange Coast College, said the small
class sizes and personal attention he received from teachers had made it
easier to get where he wanted to go.
“I plan to transfer to UC Berkeley for engineering,” he said. “And then,
if I’ve got anything left over afterward, I’m thinking about MIT.”
As for Jesseca Mendoza, who had been home-schooled through one of Monte
Vista’s programs, she was just happy to be done.
“I’ve been waiting for this for four years,” she said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.