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About Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 27, 1981)
anaanB aM B M I Ockley Green opens Ockley Green w ill become P ortlan d 's 12th m iddle school when it reopens this fall with a new, broadened program fo r N o rth P o rtla n d students. D elays in remodeling, however, will cause classes to open initially at the Washington-Monroe high school building. Don S tarr, Ockley Green principal, said the delays will put the school into the W ashington-Monroe build ing for four to eight weeks. (The high school was closed by the school board in July and its students transferred to neighboring high schools.( The inner-N orth Portland school, which has served kindergarten through eighth grade students since 1890, now w ill serve sixth, seventh and eighth graders from Applegate, Beach, C h ie f Joseph and Kenton prim ary schools (Prior to 1910, the school was known as Albina- Multnom ah School.) The 1926-vintage building has been renovated with funds from the 1976 special levy for major maintenance and renovation. That eight-year serial levy has funded the remodeling of several schools. Starr said the tem porary facilities at W ashington- Monroe will allow the new middle school to open with the same classes and same schedules as w ill be used in the Ockley Green building. H e anticipates a smooth transition back to Ockley Green. U n til the move to the permanent building, students will receive bus transportation to W ashington-Monroe from their neighborhood p rim ary schools. A fte r the move, those students meeting the school district’s trans portation criteria will continue to receive bus transpor tation. L etters have been sent to O ckley G reen parents explaining the temporary location and transportation. Starr reported a full range o f classes will be available for the Ockley Green M iddle School students. Twenty computer terminals will be installed in the schoo*. C om puterized programs for remedial reading and math will be available, along with advanced classes in computer use and application. The school will offer advanced placement in algebra, French, Spanish and typing, allowing middle school stu dents to earn high school credit. A cooperative program with Jefferson High School, to which Ockley Green stu dents graduate, w ill provide dance, dram a and televi sion production instruction. In addition, Ockley Green will have a full music pro gram, offering strings, instrumental and vocal music. Wood shops, home economics, art and science also are offered. The physical education and athletic program will be a ffilia te d w ith the P o rtla n d P a rk B u reau ’ s m idd le school league for boys and girls. Starr said more than 700 students are expected to en roll at Ockley Green. The student body will be approxi mately 28 per cent m inority. Approxim ately 30 South east Asian students w ill take part in the English as A Second Language (E S L ) program . O ckley Green w ill have a fu ll-tim e ESL teacher and a com m unity agent. M o re than 40 teachers will be assigned to the school. S ta ffin g , however, w ill not be completed until a fu ll count o f the students can be made. Starr and staff from the Area I administrative office worked extensively with parents from the Ockley Green community to plan new school boundaries and develop a curriculum reflecting the concerns o f the parents and the needs o f the students. Principals and parents from advisory committees at the primary feeder schools have met at the W ash in g to n-M o nroe building to receive a firs t-h a n d b rie fin g on the tra n s itio n and the new program. Ockley Green is also a community school, offering a wide-ranging program o f recreational and educational programs to adults and students in the area. W hile reno vatio n has been o ccu rrin g at O c k lty G re e n , the community school program has been held at Beach E l ementary School. The program will continue at Beach for the fall term. For the winter term, which begins in Jan uary, the co m m u n ity school program w ill move back home to Ockley Green. Katie Bretsch is commun ity school coordinator. Renovation has changed the school's address to 6031 N . Montana Ave. The front door is now on the east side o f the school. P»B« 2 Section II Portland Observer. August 2 7 .1M1 H U R R A Y III It'a tim e for school to start. Head Start has vacancies The A M A Head Start program is accepting applica tions for 3-, 4- and 5-year old children in their full-day child care program . The service is free to low-income families who are working, in training or in school. Centers are located at: Hughes Mem orial, N E Failing and Rodney; Iris C o u rt, 400 N Sum ner; L e xin g to n C o u rt, 7858 SE 72nd; S ellw o o d , 1422 SE T acom a; Southeast Center, 2800 SE H arrison; Sunnyside, 3520 SE Yamhill; University Park, 9009 N Foss; Woodlawn, 1425 NE Dckum; and Bethel, 5828 N E 8th Avenue. The centers follow Head Start guidelines in providing an educational, cu ltu ral and social development p ro gram. Parents participate in all phases o f the program. To apply, contact Karen G orton, 1425 N E Dekum , 283-1267. butch more ol $cH° 00 T° e c i« 1 SP H a ir D e s ig n f o r M e n & W o m e n H O T C U T S S P E C IA L S IS . Reg. $20 Haircuts............ $5 Shampoo, Condition, cut & style Curl.. ■ Reg. $ 6 5 . . . . ............. N ow $25 (With this Ad) 1406 NE Broadway • 284-1897