Steve Newvine Steve Newvine

Grateful for my Gateway

photo by steve newvine

photo by steve newvine

This column is the last one to be typed on my trusty old pre-millennium computer. Our Gateway brand system was purchased in the mid-1990s. It’s time for a change. We put it off for a long time.

The old computer is still working, but it is painfully slow. The new model promises to be faster, take up less space, and have far fewer wires than the old one. The new model combines the computer and flat screen into one compact unit. It will have just one cable going from it to the wall outlet. 

The new system replaces the cube-like monitor, spare tire sized tower, and what seems like seven-hundred and fifty-three feet of wires that run from behind the old computer to various add-ons such as a printer, speakers, wireless router, and modem.

If the local salesperson’s assertions are correct, that can-of-worms cable mess behind our computer desk will disappear.

My fingers are crossed.

We had a few Apple computer products before purchasing the Gateway. We were given advice at the time that “Apple is nice, but we live in a PC world.”

I will miss that good old Gateway computer. So many things happened for me on that antique. My family’s first internet hook-up ran through that system back in the AOL (You’ve got mail.) era. I started my book-writing career on that keyboard; seven books were written and edited on that computer. My latest book project started on the Gateway, and will hopefully be finished later this year on the new system.

All of my opinion and editorial (op/ed) columns, beginning with a 2003 tribute to newsman David Brinkley, came out of that computer. My twice- monthly columns here on MercedCountyEvents.com pass through the darkness inside the Gateway microprocessor before seeing the daylight of the on-line world.

Our new computer promises a lot of things. I’m sure I’ll adapt as I have adapted to so many changes in my fifty-plus years. I remember someone in college referring to an electric typewriter as a “sort of computer” back in the 1970s.

I also remember when cell phones looked like a quart carton of milk. I remember when new cars were sold with a full-sized spare tire in the trunk.

A lot has changed in our lives.

I’ll get by with our new computer. But just in case, the old Gateway with the block-style monitor and all those wires, will stay in my closet. Just in case.

Steve Newvine lives in Merced



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Steve Newvine Steve Newvine

A Report Card from the School

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As it happens many times in life, we learn so much more from our children who speak about their challenges, their survival skills, and their life lessons.  That was the case in Merced in late February when the educational community presented a status report on schools.

About two-hundred local people from all over Merced County were invited to lunch to receive a report on kindergarten through twelfth (K-12) grade student achievement.  The lunch was sponsored by the Merced County Office of Education (MCOE).  Program materials listed over seventy sponsors to the MCOE Foundation.

As most annual report events go, this one had all the elements that one would expect.  There were the post lunch introductions of the local political and community leaders who were in attendance; although thankfully, the Superintendent grouped many of these so-called officials into sections such as “elected office holders” and “school board members”.  

The assistant superintendent for Instructional Services, Kathy Pon did a presentation on California’s Common Core Standards that are being implemented into classrooms right now.  The Standards are intended to help students be better prepared for college and/or the workforce by building on a pyramid of skills that begin with remembering and go up to the top where creativity comes into play.

The County School Superintendent Steve Gomes narrated over power point slides that touched on the statewide measurement system for a school’s academic performance and how it measures up to schools of similar sizes. 

This system is known as the Academic Performance Rate (API), and according to the data in the printed version of the report, about forty percent of the County’s eighty schools are at or above the recommended target.  

But the most memorable parts of the program came before the reports from the school officials started.  Organizers invited two students to give presentations on how their lives have been positively impacted by their school experiences.  Koata Moua is a student in the Career Technical program better known as ROP (Regional Occupancy Program) .  

Delainie Inman is a student at UC Merced who shared her experience as a high school student initially seeking to go to college away from the Central Valley, but who later changed her mind and chose to remain in the Valley by attending UC Merced.

The decision to use students as presenters was a good one.  The audience response to their stories drove home the point about why so many people remain focused on how our children are doing at school.  We could all relate to their stories of overcoming obstacles, changing their minds when convinced that there may be alternative solutions to traditional thinking, and achieving success at all levels. 

It was refreshing to see their enthusiasm, their brevity, and their poise.  Speaking in front of two-hundred people is no easy task.  When you are a teenager, the challenge is even more imposing.  Both did a great job.  We could all learn a thing or two from their life lessons.

The state of schools in Merced County is promising.  There are always challenges.  Even in a flourishing economy, schools come under the microscope.  Times are tough now, but no one is ready to give up.  There’s too much at stake to stop trying.

Certainly Delainie and Koata are not giving up.  We can all learn lessons from them.

Steve Newvine lives in Merced.  He serves on the MCOE P-16 Council, the Business Education Alliance of Merced, and the Merced County Workforce Investment Board.

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