ON CAMPUS
Last week we talked with elementary school students about big issues
facing them in the 1990s. They talked about helping the environment,
removing nicotine from cigarettes and Y2K-related computer problems.
This week we asked Ensign Intermediate students in Newport Beach what big
issues concern them.Here’s what they had to say:
“Grades. Because I’ll get in trouble if I don’t do well. For example, my
parents won’t let me go to Edwards Big Newport movie theater with my
friends. I pretty much get Cs right now but I know that I can get A’s. I
get C’s because I’m usually watching MTV instead of studying.”
-- Blake Prested, 13, eighth-grader, Newport Beach
“Friends. Because your parents don’t always understand who you are
hanging out with. My parents are supportive of my friends. My parents
want me to have a variety of friends, so that not everyone is from the
same group. On a scale of one to 10, their opinion means about a seven to
me.”
-- Terin Cottam, 14, eighth-grader, Costa Mesa
“The people you hang out with is a big deal. Some groups do different
things. Some kids are dirty, like they smoke and do drugs. There are some
kids who are even having sex. The majority of people at this school look
down on that kind of behavior, though.”
-- Garrett Guiney, 14, eighth-grader, Newport Beach
“Grades. I worry about doing well in school. I want to go to UCSB. I want
to be a therapist or psychiatrist. I already help my friends if they are
having problems with other friends. My parents are also very interactive
in my education.”
-- Hannah Lindquist, 13, eighth-grader, Newport Beach
“Grades. I get A’s and Bs. I want to go to college and be a teacher. It’s
really important to my parents and I don’t want to let them down. It’s
important to them that I get a good career. My parents started pressuring
me in academics in sixth grade. I feel that they should wait until I am
at least a sophomore in high school. I think that eighth grade is the
last year that you can do what you want. But I think their efforts will
probably help me in the long run.”
-- Sarah Mutt, 13, eighth-grader, Costa Mesa
“Race is a big issue. Last year all of the white kids hung out together
and all of the Latinos hung out together. There were a lot of fights
between them. But the main groups graduated last year and went to Newport
Harbor High School. I think it’s sad that people act like that. It’s sad
to think how they will grow up.”-- Kyle Garnier, 14, eighth-grader, Costa
Mesa
“Popularity. People change a lot from sixth grade to seventh grade. A lot
of people change their personality and the way they look in order to fit
in. I want to fit in and be popular. But I worry when I go to school that
someone is going to make fun of what I am wearing or how I did my hair.
Sometimes people say mean things to me. It makes me feel really bad. You
have to be mean to be popular. Also, if people ask to look at your
homework and cheat you have to let them. That makes you popular. You also
have to get new clothes every month.”-- Rhiannon Duncan, 12,
seventh-grader, Newport Beach
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