Kids get a head start
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Danette Goulet
COSTA MESA -- More than 200 children in various colored smocks with
the words “Head Start” across the front and back flocked to the Lions
Park playground Thursday morning.
Music blasted from speakers as they played on the huge yellow
airplane, had their faces painted by clowns, made arts and crafts, and
enjoyed various other games.
And they were not alone.
Discernible only by their lack of a smock and the presence of a scarf
tied around their necks, were the preschoolers’ elders -- kindergarten
students from several Costa Mesa elementary schools.
To the children, this was just a day of fun. But there was an
important purpose behind bringing the children together.
“It is meshing the kindergarten and preschoolers together and kind of
a fun day for both, as well as a learning experience,” said Rose Alvarez,
the director of the Matt Kline Head Start in Costa Mesa. “It starts the
collaboration and the socializing.”
The purpose of the annual Head Start picnic is just an extension of
the program, which is to prepare students for kindergarten, Alvarez said.
Edgar Guerrero, 5, is in Head Start this year. Next year, he will be
enrolled at Wilson Elementary School, where his older sister attends.
His father, Edgar Guerrero Sr., said the program has definitely given
his son a jump-start that his daughter did not have going straight into
kindergarten.
“He is more outgoing, more open-minded to get stuff faster,” Guerrero
said. “I think he’s kind of more ready than when she started.”
Most of what they do in Head Start -- teaching students social and
listening skills, teaching shapes, colors and the alphabet -- are things
that used to be addressed in kindergarten.
“It helped my daughter tremendously,” said George Martinez, who still
volunteers with the program although his daughter is now in the
fourth-grade at Pomona Elementary School. “This is just a great, great
program. I wish other kids could use it.”
The program, which has a waiting list, serves only low-income families
or those with disabilities. But they do not just work with students.
The program involves the entire family, offering parents English,
literacy and parenting classes.
So, while the preschoolers played with the “big kids,” their parents
went from booth to booth learning about many community organizations,
from the library to health care providers, that their children have
access to.
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