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Галерея 3138515

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Principal steps into cold waters at Mission
Venise Wagner , OF THE EXAMINER STAFF

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Principal steps into cold waters at Mission
More stories to check out before you go
1996-06-24 04:00:00 PDT SAN FRANCISCO -- One of Ted Alfaro's early lessons in adversity came as a high school sophomore in Michigan. Following the example of his migrant activist father, he started a student campaign to remove a "racist" history book.
Alfaro said that "Far Western Frontier," by Ray A. Billington , depicted Mexican women as strong supporters of white military expeditions in the West in the 1800s.
The administration and some teachers at East Lansing High came down hard, branding Alfaro a troublemaker.
But he stirred up enough dust to get the textbook out of history classes and into the library for reference use only.
As the new principal at Mission High School , the 41-year-old Alfaro might have to draw from this experience to get through to a staff and student body that opposed his hiring.
The San Francisco school board hired Alfaro earlier this month, despite protest from students and teachers who campaigned to keep three beloved administrators.
Former Principal Lupe Arabalos and assistant principals Jan Hudson and Peter Long were told in March that their one-year contracts would not be renewed.
Starting in April, students filed into school board meetings demanding proof from Superintendent Bill Rojas that the dismissals were warranted.
They marched to City Hall, winning Mayor Brown's support. They held press conferences asking the district to release test scores that would show the school had improved academically under the Arabalos team.
When students and teachers heard of Alfaro's appointment, they grumbled at his rumored inability to speak Spanish. About 40 percent of the school's 1,200 students are Latino and about 41 percent are limited English speakers.
Alfaro says that while he speaks hardly any Spanish, he understands it and is willing to learn from students and use language tapes. Language, he said, hasn't been a barrier before and isn't likely to be one now.
"That's not an issue for me," he said. "The issue for me is making sure that everyone is involved, regardless of whether they speak Spanish, Hmong or Mien. It's not going to deter me from working with these students and these communities."
Alfaro, who met with the staff for the first time June 14, said he's not worried about immersing himself in a tough situation.
Of average height and with a football player's physique, Alfaro speaks fast, as if his tongue is barely able to keep up with his thoughts.
"Any time you have change, people are scared, people are afraid," Alfaro said recently. "I haven't really felt the resistance. There's some concern and they've voiced it. But I don't feel it's resistance in terms of what we're going to do next year.
"The politics and reassignment of administrators is not part of my job or their (the teachers') job. We have the students, we have the community. What are we going to do? That's our job, that's what we get paid for."
The son of migrant workers who moved from Texas to Michigan as children, Alfaro said he brings to Mission High a history of community activism that taught him lessons about justice, compassion and conviction.
When they moved to Michigan, Alfaro said, his parents were ridiculed and sometimes punished for speaking Spanish in school.
As they raised their own children, they made sure English was the first and only language spoken among family. Any discussions in Spanish were solely in private between his parents.
Young Alfaro and his three sisters watched their father, Ruben, leave field work to become an auto worker, construction worker, then barber. They also watched him go through night school.
Never one to forget where he came from, his father became active in the farmworker boycotts led by Cesar Chavez, worked for the regional Catholic Bishops Committee for Spanish Speakers and served as state president of La Raza Unida party.
"My dad's thing was he had such strong conviction. He had such commitment and passion for people," said Alfaro, who remembers his father advising him: "No matter how successful you get, how much money you make, always remember, keep the door open and help other people. Never shut that door because you've made it."
A visit by Cesar Chavez, who stayed with the family, reinforced this message, said Alfaro, a sixth-grader at the time.
"We were having chorizo and eggs," he said. "It was early in the morning. Six o'clock we got up. He was just saying that "the thing that drives me is my compassion for my people.' And I remember that word. He was just compassionate."
Alfaro followed in his father's path of activism. At 14, his father decided that he needed to experience the life of a migrant worker. So, Alfaro traveled the migrant route from Michigan to Texas during the summer.
After getting his B.A. in social science from Michigan State, he moved to Sacramento, seeking a more diverse community than East Lansing.
He spent his first five teaching years at three Sacramento high schools, then progressed into district offices - from liaison to the Latino community to the coordinator for dropout and gang prevention programs. He's served as vice principal of Albert Einstein Middle School and principal of Fruit Ridge Elementary School , both in Sacramento.
Two years ago he started in the Urban Superintendents Program at Harvard University , a doctoral program that trains young administrators to work as superintendents.
He completed his internship with Superintendent Stan Paz , from the El Paso School District, and is working on a dissertation that examines why some gang youth attend college and others don't.
He said his vision for Mission High is threefold: Create a curriculum that boosts performance among mainstream students, brings in marginal students who tend to drop out and prepares kids for college; increase parent involvement; attract additional dedicated teachers.
But after meeting Alfaro, Mission High teachers were skeptical about how much change could occur when continuity was lost by bringing in a new administrator. They see Alfaro's appointment as a sign that Mission is about to be put on the list of schools to be reconstituted.<

Большие натуральные титьки молодой блондинки
Тренировка после тренировки
Блондинка Кармен берет в рот дилдо

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