Mission Statement
The mission of Fana Global Charter School is to provide education through a transformation in a public school setting. Fana Global Charter School is committed to nurturing self-expressed leaders by cultivating the human potential in every learner, instilling world-class academic and life skills, and providing a cultural and physical environment for children to create and fulfill an exciting and empowering future in which to live, thrive and contribute.
Students We Serve
In basically affluent Orange County, the majority of the children living in impoverished conditions reside in specific, well-defined areas of the county. These children will make up the prevailing population of Fana Global Charter School. It has been well documented that poverty rates, and the attendant resignation and lack of upward mobility, are predominant among people from particular ethnic backgrounds. In a recent study entitled -"Just the Facts, Child Poverty in California", this becomes very clear. The results of the study are as follows:
"Latinos and African Americans have higher poverty rates than other groups. Child poverty rates among Latinos and African Americans (23.6% and 28.5% respectively) are substantially higher than child poverty rates among Asians (10.9%) and more than three times higher than among whites (7.5%). Poverty is also high among Native Americans (24.6%) and among children of immigrant families from the Southeast Asian countries of Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos (18.4%). More than one - half of the poor children of California are US-born Latinos." (http://www.ppic.org/content/pubs/jtf_ChildPovertyJTF.pdf)
"Latinos and African Americans have higher poverty rates than other groups. Child poverty rates among Latinos and African Americans (23.6% and 28.5% respectively) are substantially higher than child poverty rates among Asians (10.9%) and more than three times higher than among whites (7.5%). Poverty is also high among Native Americans (24.6%) and among children of immigrant families from the Southeast Asian countries of Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos (18.4%). More than one - half of the poor children of California are US-born Latinos." (http://www.ppic.org/content/pubs/jtf_ChildPovertyJTF.pdf)