Access to college courses broadened

Cuyamaca College is ex­panding a six-year partner­ship with the Mountain Em­pire Unified School District to offer English language and child development classes to residents of East County’s backcountry community. Be­ginning in April, college-lev­el child development classes will be offered in Campo that are open to all backcountry residents. The school and col­lege districts are planning to offer ESL and child develop­ment classes this fall in Cam­po and in Potrero.

Since 2018, students at Mountain Empire High School in Campo have been able to take college-level English as a Second Lan­guage classes taught by high school teachers who are hired on as adjunct professors at Cuyamaca College.

“We’re not just looking at educating a student who just graduated from high school,” said Jessica Robinson, presi­dent of Cuyamaca College in a press release. “We are look­ing at educating families.”

The ESL classes offered at Mountain Empire High School allow students to earn high school and college credit at the same time. More than 29% of the students at the school are English learn­ers. Instead of textbooks, students in the classes read texts such as non-fiction arti­cles or classic literature such as “Fahrenheit 451.”

Patrick Keeley, superinten­dent of the Mountain Empire Unified School District, said the college classes provide access to education to resi­dents who otherwise would be unable to travel 40 miles or more to attend Cuyamaca College.

“The more opportunities you create for the entire com­munity helps raise the oppor­tunities for the kids in the community,” Keeley stated.

ESL classes give students confidence in their other studies, leading to high graduation rates. About 72% of English learners at Moun­tain Empire who took an English language proficiency test increased at least one level from 2021-2022 to 2022- 2023 compared to 47.5% statewide. All the students in the ESL classes graduated in 2018, and 95.8% graduated in 2019.

The eight-week child devel­opment course being offered in April will be held at the Camp Lockett Learning Lab in Campo and online. Keeley said the school district now runs four preschools and is planning to open two more toddler preschools, so the need for child development workers is great.

Manuel Mancillas-Gomez, a Cuyamaca College ESL in­structor and Academic Sen­ate president who lives in Potrero, is an enthusiastic supporter of the classes be­ing offered for backcountry residents. He will be taking a sabbatical in the fall to re­search the feasibility of cre­ating a backcountry satellite site for Cuyamaca College that could offer a wide range of college courses.

“It’s a community with huge needs,” Mancillas-Go­mez said. “They are totally underserved.”

Robinson said Cuyamaca College is exploring what programs could be offered at a backcountry site and how to best offer the classes to the community.

“We are just in the be­ginning stages of what this could look like,” she said. “We care about them and we want them to be our students.”

For more information and to register for classes, visit the Cuyamaca Classes at Mountain Empire web page at https://cuyamaca.edu/the-mountain/.

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