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A New View for Rebuilt Lincoln

By Tom Shanahan



Tuesday, May 22, 2007 | The San Diego-Coronado Bridge, downtown skyline and vast Pacific Ocean form a panoramic view as I stand in the football stadium of a new San Diego high school campus.

What an inviting setting. Wondering what San Diego campus offers such a beautiful view? It's the new Lincoln High, a rebuilt school that opens in the fall after the deteriorating inner-city campus was bulldozed three years ago.

Tom Shanahan

A school needs to be a second home for kids, and the new Lincoln has been reincarnated as a suburban-like campus plopped down in the middle of Southeast San Diego's Lincoln Park.

The buildings are painted in optimistic shades of green and white, Lincoln's school colors. Palm trees line the central plaza with a village concept. The rounded roofs of the four main classrooms, which can be spotted from the freeway, artistically fan out over the walls.

Joe Martinez, the architect from San Diego's Martinez and Cutri Corporation, is a Lincoln alumnus. Martinez led workshops with former Lincoln principal Wendell Bass through the Lincoln-Gompers Redevelopment Committee to seek input from the community.

"What I've told people involved in the planning is, take away the excuses for not teaching children," Bass said. "The students and teachers now have everything they could have dreamed of. If the students don't achieve, we know the reason."

What I like about the new Lincoln is recognition that there is more to a successful school than student achievement. A total school approach includes athletics and extra-curricular activities.

Sports Illustrated, in a recent lengthy story examining the value of high school athletics in education, ranked Long Beach Poly as the No. 1 high school sports program in America. The ranking was based on athletic tradition, the overall athletic program and emphasis on academics.

The old Lincoln was a school with an athletic tradition as rich as any in the nation. Lincoln's 24 NFL alumni, which include Marcus Allen and Terrell Davis, ranks second in the nation only to Poly. But Poly can't boast of a Heisman Trophy winner (Allen) and two of only 10 NFL players named an NFL MVP and Super Bowl MVP (Allen and Davis).

Lincoln's new principal, Mel Collins, comes to Lincoln with a Long Beach Poly background. Bass has been working in the district office on projects to improve campuses through funding from Prop. MM.

The rebuilt Lincoln High School is set to open next fall. Photo: Vladimir Kogan

"Sports create school spirit," Bass said. "A strong football program sends spirit throughout the campus. It permeates good feelings on campus. Kids have something to rally around."

Enlightened educators know that schools with strong athletic programs have fewer campus discipline problems. And the school year starts in the fall with the football team setting the tone.

But the San Diego Unified School District squandered Lincoln's rich athletic tradition by not providing a learning environment and maintaining the campus.

In the 1990s up until Lincoln closed, the district used Lincoln as a dumping ground for problem students throughout the district. At the same time, the district promoted busing out of Lincoln to attend University City, Mission Bay, Madison and other schools north of I-8.

There were still exceptional athletes at Lincoln, sure, such as Derrick Goodwin, a West Point graduate and star on the Army football team, and Dwayne Wright, fourth-round draft pick by the Buffalo Bills and Fresno State graduate who hopes to become Lincoln's 25th NFL player in 2007.

But in Bass' final years at Lincoln, he said some years he had more teaching positions than applicants. The new Lincoln is interviewing and turning away applicants for teaching positions.

A new band director working out of comfortable performing arts center with ample space for band and choir rooms has been hired.

Bass took me through the performing arts center with a 790-seat auditorium. The performing arts center and adjoining administration building tower over Imperial Ave., where new homes have been built in recent years.

"This community needed a performing arts center for events and concerts," Bass said. "There is no nicer performing arts center south of I-8."

He also takes me through the new library.

"It has more square footage than the old gym," Bass says. "The library and classrooms have the latest technology."

The old gym, with its redwood ceiling, is the only building that wasn't knocked down. It stands next to the gleaming 2,500-seat new gym.

The new 4,000-seat lighted football and track stadium, with all-weather surfaces and brightly painted Lincoln Hornet logos, sits on ground that was cleared when old homes next to campus were torn down.

Ron Hamamoto, one of San Diego's finest football coaches the past two decades at Rancho Bernardo and University, has been hired to take the reigns of the Hornets' proud football tradition.

San Diego Unified may have finally gotten it right. The district has built a campus learning environment worthy of the Hornets' proud past. Instead of busing kids out, it is bringing a suburban setting to an urban school.

Tom Shanahan is voiceofsandiego.org's sports columnist. He is the media coordinator for the San Diego Hall of Champions. You can e-mail him at toms@sdhoc.com. Or send a letter to the editor.




6 Comments so far on this story...

So a campus with a strong athletic program has fewer discipline problems? As so few students make the team, this belief is improbable on the face of it. Teach respect in way that involves all students directly.

Posted by Mark | reply to this comment
May 22, 2007 12:02 am

Tom, Right on the mark!! As a 60 year veteran player,coach and now retired FB/Wrestling coach (I am in 3 Hall of Fames) this articile needs to be read by every administrator in High School athletics. I recommended this very thing as a member of a Blue Ribbon Committee at a East County HS District as a method of raising attendance and lowering drop out rates. Higher more 9th grade on campus coaches, create more teams etc. I hope this helps Lincoln HS as it would help any school district.

Posted by coach88 | reply to this comment
May 22, 2007 12:35 am

Former principal Bass's implication that a new facility means that teachers would be to blame if future Lincoln students don't succeed is a gross oversimplification. Teachers have no control over the economic and social conditions of the neighborhoods, nor over the home lives of students. If future Lincoln students fail, it will be for the same reasons as before, and if they succeed, it will be because those factors have been addressed. To be consistent, Bass's argument would have to hold that only teachers would deserve credit if if students were to succeed, which is equally grossly oversimplified.

Posted by Poppa | reply to this comment
May 22, 2007 2:05 am

Let's not pretend LHS didn't have success stories off the field of play. Lincoln high has been much more than a football factory. Many of those children dumped on Lincoln's campus know now that tough love and a lot of caring got them a high school diploma. And that would have only happened at LINCOLN HIGH. Lincoln high will flourish only if these new teachers that are banging down the doors to teach in a brand new 100 million dollar facility have the guts and determination to pull the best out of these young people. It's not going to be easy, it wasn't 4, 14, 24 or 34 years ago. The teachers have to believe and in turn make the students believe in themselves. Good Luck!

Posted by Lincoln Supporter | reply to this comment
May 23, 2007 2:02 am

I appreciate Tom's article and its information, however, I also agree with Lincoln Supporter, Poppa and Mark! Sports are great but should not overshadow academics and blaming teachers is not the answer. Lincoln is going to be an excellent place to learn and grow because it will be multi-faceted with varied opportunities for all the young adults who attend. The people there and in the surrounding community will all have a vested interest in sustaining a caring, nurturing environment with high expectations for all.

Posted by Future Lincoln Teacher | reply to this comment
June 16, 2007 12:26 am

i am a junior at lincoln and its a great school even though people might think wrong it is really not a bad school i love it there its new and improved go lincoln hornets! !

Posted by karen hernandez | reply to this comment
November 6, 2008 6:03 pm


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