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Mountain View School provides a special education program for boys, who are
residents of Trinity-Apple Valley. Mountain View School is a nonpublic
school certified by the California Department of Education Nonpublic Schools and
Agencies Unit. Mountain View School is under contract with the Desert
Mountain SELPA and works closely with Apply Valley Unified School District.
The ratio for adults who work directly with children is 1 adult for every 4
students. Average class size is 11. All of the Mountain View School teachers are
credentialed by the State of California Commission on Teacher Credentialing.
Mountain View School serves 44 students, ages 5 through 18 years, who have
demonstrated their inability to function successfully in a regular public school
classroom and are living at Trinity Children and Family Services, Apple Valley.
Most children exhibit inappropriate behaviors, which make success in traditional
school settings impossible, thereby requiring removal to a more structures and
supportive environment such as that provided at our school.
The mission of Mountain View School is to support services for its students.
Through upgraded and individually planned educational programs, students are
provided a supportive environment in which all can strive to reach their fullest
potential.
The goal of the Mountain View School is to;
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Alter students’ negative responses towards school.
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Learn through experience of academic success.
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Develop specific academic, social, and vocational skills which will
improve each student’s self-esteem and enable them to be productive
members of society.
A small and structured adult-to-student ratio of not more than 1:5 assures that
each student can receive the necessary support to achieve school success.
To reach our goal, at every level of the student’s educational attainment
and aspirations, we must:
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ACCEPT
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LISTEN
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RESPECT
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VALUES
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SELF-CONFIDENCE
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FOSTER RESPONSIBILITY
Student responsibility is as much connected to effort as it is to
ability. To encourage responsibility may mean using cooperative
learning; however, we may spend more effort on behavior than learning
and then feel we have not accomplished anything. We are fostering
responsibility – an important goal. We must encourage openness and
discussions of what students understand and feel about situations. In
our student population, social problems may override academic
problems. Some of the roadblocks to remove:
Fear of taking risks.
Lack of skills – problem solving/communication.
Insufficient knowledge – don’t have or understand their goals.
Lack of social support or too much social support from family/friends.
Mountain View School Accountability
Report Card
Updated 08/06
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