2011 Magna Awards - American School Board Journal
Transcription
2011 Magna Awards - American School Board Journal
magna2011cover:Magnacover 2/26/11 5:47 PM Page 1 2011 Advancing Student Learning Through School Board Best Practices in cooperation with A supplement to 11Magna:Magna 2/28/11 4:10 PM Page C2 GRAND PRIZE WINNER - CATEGORY 3 Pasco County Schools Land O’Lakes, Fla. GRAND PRIZE WINNER - CATEGORY 2 Joplin Schools Joplin, Mo. GRAND PRIZE WINNER - CATEGORY 1 Moreland School District San Jose, Calif. Our recognition of this year’s winners continues our tradition, in partnership with American School Board Journal, of rewarding those who demonstrate highly innovative thinking. We proudly recognize the school districts that have taken bold steps to advance student learning. WINNERS - CATEGORY 3 St. Louis Public Schools St. Louis, Mo. Corpus Christi ISD Corpus Christi, Texas Newport News Public Schools Newport News, Va. Pharr-San Juan-Alamo ISD Pharr, Texas Plano ISD Plano, Texas WINNERS - CATEGORY 2 Sunnyside USD Tucson, Ariz. Missoula County Public Schools Missoula, Mont. Adams County School District 14 Commerce City, Colo. Tuscaloosa City Schools Tuscaloosa, Ala. Columbus County Schools Whiteville, N.C. WINNERS - CATEGORY 1 Carlisle County Public Schools Bardwell, Ky. Greene County Schools Greensboro, Ga. Valley Stream Union Free SD 30 Valley Stream, N.Y. Falls Church City Public Schools Falls Church, Va. Mitchell County School System Camilla, Ga. HONORABLE MENTION Washoe County School District Reno, Nev. Vancouver Public Schools Vancouver, Wash. Humble ISD Humble, Texas Houston ISD Houston, Texas Horry County Schools Conway, S.C. Everett Public Schools Everett, Wash. Orland School District 135 Orland Park, Ill. Cave Creek USD #93 Scottsdale, Ariz. Orange County Schools Hillsborough, N.C. Arlington Heights SD #25 Arlington Heights, Ill. El Dorado Public Schools El Dorado, Ark. Springs Public School East Hampton, N.Y. Francis Tuttle Technology Center Oklahoma City, Okla. Elmsford Union Free SD Elmsford, N.Y. Gladstone School District #115 Gladstone, Ore. 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:42 PM Page 32 OVER 20,000 ENROLLMENT Honorable Mention (Continued) versations with experts at museums, zoos, and observatories around the country. High school students have watched surgeries being performed. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Karen Collier, executive director of public information, at karen.collier@humble. k12.tx.us. The district’s website is at www.humbleisd.net. VANCOUVER PUBLIC SCHOOLS Vancouver, Wash. Edri Geiger, School Board President Steven T. Webb, Superintendent FAMILY-COMMUNITY RESOURCE CENTERS Vancouver’s county has the highest rate of unemployment in the state—nearly 14 percent. Approximately half of its students qualify for subsidized meals. Twenty-seven percent are minority students, and 18 percent have a home language other than English. Many families commonly have acute problems related to basic needs, health care, nutrition, domestic violence, substance abuse, and illiteracy. To help, the district established family-community resource centers (FCRCs) in nine high-poverty schools to provide “wrap-around” support. A coordinator at each site connects families with assistance such as food, clothing, shelter, employment, transportation, medical and dental care, child care, and counseling services. FCRCs have forged alliances with community and business partners. Although core components exist at all sites, each center has special offerings related to local needs. Results include decreases in student mobility and discipline referrals, and increases in student achievement, daily attendance, and readiness for students entering kindergarten. Parent surveys have shown high levels of satisfaction with school performance, and the numbers of partners and volunteers have increased dramatically. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Thomas R. Hagley Jr., executive director of community and government relations, at tom.hagley@vansd.org. The district’s website is at www.vansd.org. 32 Magna Awards 2011 WASHOE COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT, Reno, Nev. Estela Gutierrez, School Board President Heath Morrison, Superintendent DOOR TO DOOR FOR STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT The district’s graduation rate was stagnant for four years, hovering around 56 percent. In 2009, the school board decided to change the status quo and called for immediate action through a major reform process. The Door to Door for Student Achievement program is designed to increase the graduation rate and to keep students engaged in school. Door to Door for Student Achievement reaches out to children who are at risk of dropping out of school through school and community outreach efforts. On a Saturday morning three weeks after school starts, teams of school district and community leaders, including board members, visit the homes of students who are not enrolled in school or who have chronic attendance issues. The teams meet with children and their parents to discuss what it will take to get them back into the classroom. Students can re-enroll that day, and the team develops a personalized education plan. After the fall 2009 program, the graduation rate jumped by seven points to 63 percent. The data showed improvement for every minority subgroup. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Calli Fisher, communicationscopywriter, at cfisher@washoe.k12.nv.us. The district’s website is at www.washoe.k12. nv.us. 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:42 PM Page 31 OVER 20,000 ENROLLMENT Honorable Mention HORRY COUNTY SCHOOLS Conway, S.C. Will Garland, School Board President Cindy Elsberry, Superintendent CONNECT: REACHING HEARTS AND MINDS Increasing dropout rates led the Horry County school board and district staff to research best practice for at-risk students. After reviewing focus group feedback, the board funded a staff position focused on the issues facing the district’s at-risk population, including transience, adult illiteracy rates, and obstacles facing first-generation high school students.The Connect program was designed to implement best practices and site visits, including staff training, compacted curricula, tutorials, small learning communities, individualized instruction, mentors, and career exploration and training. Freshmen attend the program to take part in enriched, accelerated studies leading to participation in career majors and graduation within three years. Connect continues to exceed performance goals. In its first year, the program had a return rate of 87 percent, with 10 percent of the remaining population enrolled in adult education or returning to their high schools. In its fifth year, 93 percent have earned high school diplomas within three years. Performance on the state’s exit examination continues to increase, too. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Carolyn Chestnut, chief officer for instructional support services, at cchestnut@ horrycountyschools.net. The district’s website is at www.horrycountyschools.net. HOUSTON INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT Houston, Texas Greg Meyers, School Board President Terry B. Grier, Superintendent GRAD LAB ONLINE CREDIT RECOVERY PROGRAM Houston has a dropout rate of 15.8 percent and a completion rate of 83 percent. While these figures are an improvement over previous years, the district is not meeting the school board goal of a 95 percent completion rate for all students. In January 2010, the district introduced students who dropped out or were identified as at risk to Grad Labs, a selfpaced digital curriculum. Grad Lab online credit recovery centers serve 46 high schools. Students work at their own pace to complete online assignments at school or at home, focusing on areas where they need more assistance. Graduation coaches monitor progress with quizzes and coursework data. When the computer program and the coach determine students are ready, they take a final during school hours with a coach present. Average course completion takes about 45 hours. Nearly 5,000 high school students at all grade levels took advantage of Grad Labs in the first six months. Of those, 2,053 students received credit or multiple credits for completing courses online. Altogether, these students recovered 3,161 course credits. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Chief of Staff Michele Pola at mpola@houstonisd.org. The district’s website is at www.houstonisd.org and www.houston isd.org/gradlabs. HUMBLE INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT Humble, Texas Keith Lapeze, School Board President Guy M. Sconzo, Superintendent DISTANCE LEARNING Economic changes made a commitment to distance learning both viable and advantageous to Humble. Inexpensive broadband Internet connections could replace expensive telephone communications. Portable audiovisual equipment used in conjunction with computers and the Internet also made videoconferencing an easy-to-use and economical tool for education. The second economic change was a freeze on school funding at 2005 levels by Texas, leaving the district to make difficult choices. Distance learning presented many possibilities to use technology in education and staff development while saving financial resources. The program exposes students to a world outside the classroom that would not be possible otherwise. Students have engaged in conMagna Awards 2011 31 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:42 PM Page 30 5,000-20,000 ENROLLMENT Honorable Mention (Continued) systemic barriers to graduation, effective instruction, intervention, use of data, community resources, curriculum, grade-level course work, and valid credit retrieval options. Seven years later, the On Time Graduation Task Force is still meeting each Tuesday, and the district’s on-time graduation rate now tops 82 percent. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Mary Waggoner, director of communications, at mwaggoner@everettsd.org. The district’s website is at www.everett.k12.wa.us. ORANGE COUNTY SCHOOLS Hillsborough, N.C. Tony McKnight, School Board President G. Patrick Rhodes, Superintendent HANDS FOR HABITAT Orange County Schools has an award-winning construction technology program. Homes were built on campus and auctioned to the highest bidder. A decrease in area home sales required the school board to explore alternatives that would allow the construction technology program to continue to thrive. The district partnered with Habitat for Humanity of Orange County to form a district-wide service-learning project, Hands for Habitat. It is designed to increase awareness of housing and affordability issues through the construction, funding, and implementation of a service-learning curriculum. During high school construction classes, students went to a nearby work site for practical instruction. In May 2010 they completed a green-certified Habitat home. The district was awarded a $5,000 grant to assist teachers with incorporating the curriculum into their classrooms. AP Environmental Science classes learned about green construction while fourth-graders wrote to state legislators about affordable housing. Students studied homelessness and held fundraisers. Hillsborough, a communityminded business, community members, and Orange County Schools together raised over $35,000 to construct the home. 30 Magna Awards 2011 FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Anne Medenblik, school board member, at am.meden@gmail.com. The district’s website is at www.orange.k12.nc.us. ORLAND SCHOOL DISTRICT 135 Orland Park, Ill. Thomas Cunningham, School Board President Paul Howell, Superintendent TUTORING CENTER The purpose of the Tutoring Center is to provide additional academic support to underserved Title I and potentially homeless students. A district analysis of its state assessment scores prompted it to provide additional resources for its low-income, black, and IEP subgroups. The district wanted to reach out to the community. The Tutoring Center is located in a Section 8 apartment complex. Two teachers work with students twice a week for 1.5 hours per session. The students are served pizza to encourage attendance. Students work on homework, and are tutored in weak areas. Dedicated teachers build relationships with the students, and not only teach but come to know more about their lives and families. Often younger siblings attend the center for additional support and a snack. The most significant gains on the state assessment were in mathematics. By providing academic support in the apartment complex, a stronger relationship has been forged between the district and the community. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Principal Pam Hodgson at phodgson@ orland135.org. The district’s website is at www.orland135.org. 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:42 PM Page 29 5,000-20,000 ENROLLMENT Honorable Mention ARLINGTON HEIGHTS SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 25 Arlington Heights, Ill. Susan Preissing, School Board President Sarah Jerome, Superintendent GLOBAL CITIZENSHIP PROGRAM The Arlington Heights School Board and community recognize the urgency of developing global citizens to lead and work in the global community. Communication and diplomatic skills will be needed in ways never before imagined. Students will need cultural sensitivity and peacemaking insights as well as creativity and inventiveness to help lead and live productive lives in the future. All fourthand fifth-grade students take Chinese, and middle school students are enrolled in World Cultures and study one of five world languages. Students and staff reach out to those in need with participation in Heifer International, UNICEF, and UNESCO projects. They study languages, geography, economics, and political situations. School board members have participated in exchange programs with China and Japan and have paved the way for student and staff exchanges in Japan, Italy, China, and South America. Curriculum, instruction, assessment, professional development, hiring practices, and budgetary supports are impacted by this program. Since global citizenship is a priority, what students learn and how they learn are key components. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Superintendent Sarah Jerome at sjerome@sd25.org. The district’s website is at www.sd25.org. CAVE CREEK UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 93 Scottsdale, Ariz. Casey Perkins, School Board President Debbi Burdick, Superintendent SPANISH PARTIAL IMMERSION PROGRAM The Cave Creek School District PK-8 Spanish Partial Immersion program began with a parent asking: Have you heard of school programs that graduate children who are profi- cient both in English and another world language? Research showing that students learned languages more easily before adolescence led to the start of a Spanish Partial Immersion Program at Desert Willow Elementary School. Two first-grade classrooms started with an anticipated rollout of one grade level per year. Today, 386 students participate in the PK-8 Spanish Partial Immersion program. With 50 percent of the instructional day conducted in Spanish and the other 50 percent in English, immersion students not only do extremely well in their English high-stakes testing, but also have achieved proficiency and literacy in a second language. The program also served as a recruiting tool to bring the school to capacity and added an immersion preschool, and it has grown to Sonoran Trails Middle School. The overall results of the program show that immersion students do as well and quite often better than their monolingual counterparts in the district. Additionally, a threeyear longitudinal survey on multicultural awareness shows immersion students as being more accepting and open to different cultures and/or languages. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Cristina Ladas, world language consultant, at cristinaladas@me.com. The district’s website is at www.ccusd93.org. EVERETT PUBLIC SCHOOLS Everett, Wash. Ed Petersen, School Board President Gary Cohn, Superintendent ON TIME GRADUATION TASK FORCE In 2003, only five out of 10 students entering Everett’s three high schools were graduating. This low rate rocked the district and galvanized the board, community, and staff to make changes. Following planning sessions with community leaders, parents, and staff, the board launched policy and oversight systems, resource adjustments, and improvement expectations. A district team of high school principals and administrative curriculum and support staff, with the board’s blessing, began meeting each Tuesday at 7 a.m. to look at graduation data, grading practices, Magna Awards 2011 29 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:41 PM Page 28 UNDER 5,000 ENROLLMENT Honorable Mention (Continued) homa Technical Assistance Center has consistently evaluated Project HOPE as an exemplary model of career-related alternative education services, and rates outcome data as exemplary, indicative of improvement on every outcome measure. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Jeffrey Knapp, communications coordinator, at jknapp@francistuttle.edu. The district’s website is at www.francistuttle.edu. GLADSTONE SCHOOL DISTRICT #115 Gladstone, Ore. Denis Whittet, School Board President Robert Stewart, Superintendent GLADSTONE CENTER FOR CHILDREN & FAMILIES (GCCF) Gladstone (population 12,140) has experienced a significant demographic shift in recent years, with an influx of economically challenged, culturally diverse families. This shift has meant a need to provide education and services targeted at this growing population segment. A gathering place was needed in this small city, where barriers do not exist and where everyone is always welcome. The partnerships of the GCCF (Head Start, Healthy Start, etc.) provide educational programs and social services that promote school readiness and foster confidence in parents. Adult education classes, home visitations, a community garden, and indoor and outdoor play areas (including a covered outdoor play area) are incorporated in the facility. The center has specialized instructional areas that support gross motor skills development, library activities, and music instruction. Services support the needs of first-time, expectant, and teen parents as well as of older adults caring for grandchildren. Other services include community playgroup space, a toy/book lending library, access to technology, and a summer program with meals. It serves more than 400 children and families daily and is the only center of its kind in Oregon. 28 Magna Awards 2011 FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Marilyn Shrum, grant resource specialist, at shrumm@gladstone.k12.or.us. The district’s website is at www.gladstone.k12.or. us. SPRINGS PUBLIC SCHOOL East Hampton, N.Y. Christopher Kelley, School Board President Michael Hartner, Superintendent SPRINGS SCHOOL IN ACTION While Springs Public School is located in the wealthy Hamptons, it is a blue-collar district with just one pre-K-8 school. Money is always tight and the budget is always stretched. In 1996, when the district found itself receiving negative press in the local papers, leaders agreed that the school needed to promote the staff and programs that made Springs special. The school’s academic enrichment teacher met with the local free access cable station and arranged to air a weekly television show that would get out the “good word” about the school. Middle school students were then charged with writing, filming, and producing a live weekly show called ‘Springs School In Action.’ Each week for the last 14 years, Springs School In Action has aired on this station. In addition, student-created short films have been entered in local film festivals, garnering additional exposure for the school; one recent film even received national recognition. Since the program started, the school not only has enjoyed positive publicity but also is truly valued by the community—as witnessed by the fact that school budgets pass by a significant margin each year. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Superintendent Michael Hartner at mhartner@springs.k12.ny.us. The district’s website is at www.springs.k12.ny.us. 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:41 PM Page 27 UNDER 5,000 ENROLLMENT Honorable Mention EL DORADO PUBLIC SCHOOLS BORN TO READ El Dorado, Ark. Vicky Dobson, School Board President Bob Watson, Superintendent A large percentage of Elmsford children were starting school not ready to read. The district set a goal of improving literacy readiness in children under 4. The Born to Read program, using parents, teachers, high school students, community sponsors, adminisrators, and school board members, created a calendar filled with events to promote early literacy. Events such as Story Time and Pajama Party helped distribute board books and crayons to young children and materials to help parents work on literacy at home. Participation at these events ranges from 50 to 80 families. In just two years, Born to Read has instilled in both parents and children the importance of reading. The percent of students entering kindergarten meeting the DIBELS benchmark in 2008 was only 36. This had increased to 47 percent in 2009 and is now at 57 percent in 2010. ACCELERATED ACADEMY El Dorado’s student enrollment is 62 percent economically disadvantaged and 50.7 percent African American. These subgroups represent the same children. The district extensively researched closing the achievement gap, and realized the common threads in the research and experiences. The Accelerated Academy was developed to blend the best of research to focus resources on the neediest students. The academy incorporates several proven strategies to attain the two-year goal of proficiency in literacy and math for second-graders projected to score below basic. The key component is placing the best teachers with the identified students. The teacher loops with students in the third and fourth grades. Class size was reduced from a maximum of 25 to 18. Each class has at least a half-day aide to assist the teacher with instruction. The school day was extended by a couple of hours. In the first year, 31 percent of the students achieved proficiency on their Arkansas Department of Education Benchmark Exams and 66 percent achieved proficiency in mathematics. In the second year, the achievement gap really shrank. White third-graders scored 77.2 percent proficient in math while the African American students scored 72.8 percent proficient. Literacy scores showed similar results with white students scoring 71.7 percent proficient and African American students scoring 67.1 percent proficient. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Bonnie Haynie, director of professional development and special projects, at bhaynie@esd.scsc.k12.ar.us. The district’s website is at www.eldoradopublicschools.com. ELMSFORD UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT Elmsford, N.Y. Betty Funny-Crosby, School Board President Barbara A. Peters, Superintendent FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Superintendent Barbara A. Peters at bpeters@elmsd.org. The district’s website is at www.elmsd.org. FRANCIS TUTTLE TECHNOLOGY CENTER Oklahoma City, Okla. Suzette Northcutt Rhodes, School Board President Tom Friedemann, Superintendent PROJECT HOPE Project HOPE is a dropout prevention/recovery program that helps district high school students obtain their diploma and develop career and critical life skills. It serves students ages 16 to 19 from six local school districts in metropolitan Oklahoma City who have dropped out of school or who are in danger of dropping out due to credit deficiencies. Students are enrolled in three hours each of academic instruction and career training every day. Grades are transcripted and credits are issued by their home school, and all criteria required by the respective districts must be met. Project HOPE has maintained graduation and retention rates, or success measures, of from 82 to 93 percent throughout its 15-year existence. The OklaMagna Awards 2011 27 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:41 PM Page 26 OVER 20,000 ENROLLMENT Newcomers Welcome St. Louis Public Schools, St. Louis, Mo. and Vietnam. A social worker, teachers, and bilingual staff make regular home visits. A postwar trauma therapist works with families to address mental health concerns. The school includes a family literacy center that offers English and parenting classes for parents. During the classes, preschool children particpate in kindergarten-readiness child care classes. THE BOARD’S INVOLVEMENT SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT Richard Sullivan SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS Melanie Adams Richard Gaines SUPERINTENDENT Kelvin Adams IWS helps newcomer students and their parents acclimate to school and to develop students’ English language skills. PROGRAM NAME The International Welcome School (IWS) DISTRICT DILEMMA In 1979, the federal government established the city of St. Louis as a refugee resettlement zone. Consequently, St. Louis Public Schools experiences a steady influx of newcomer students throughout the year—refugees and immigrants from 50 countries, speaking more than 50 languages. Many speak little or no English and have limited formal education. Some are illiterate in their native language, yet state mandates require them to be placed in age-appropriate grades. Many have needs that surpass what English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL) programs can offer. In 2009, St. Louis established the IWS. Its goals include: developing students’ English language skills, helping newcomer students and parents acclimate to school, and creating an awareness of the academic expectations and opportunities for their future success. SOLUTION IWS serves students in kindergarten through eighth grade. It’s a temporary stopover for newcomer students. The average stay is three semesters—time used to prepare students to transfer to their neighborhood schools. A bilingual specialist meets with families, assisting them with paperwork and helping them adjust to the new educational system and to American life. The bilingual team reflects the demographics of the school through representatives from Nepal, Burma, Iraq, Somalia, 26 Magna Awards 2011 St. Louis’ Special Administrative Board and Superintendent Kelvin Adams have made a long-term commitment to newcomers. Board support is evidenced through a realistic budget, appropriate staffing levels, highly qualified staff, support for after-school programs, adequate supplies, and facilities and maintenance needs. After the first year, when the school location was scheduled to move, the superintendent and board priority was providing an appropriate facility, that was readily accessible to newcomer parents. This strategic and visible support highlights the board’s recognition of IWS in addressing newcomers’ needs, poor test scores, adjustment concerns, attendance, and low graduation rates. RESULTS First year data indicates that IWS successfully improves outcomes for newcomer students and their parents. Daily attendance is 94 percent. Students’ English proficiency acquisition was monitored throughout the year. Gains on the Language Assessment Scale showed an 18.6 percent growth in reading and 28 percent increase in writing, with an overall 24 percent gain. Of the 42 newcomers who took the Algebra End of the Course Exam, 30 percent scored “proficient.” Parental involvement and engagement is shown in high attendance on districtwide Parent Conference Days, the number of parent visits to school, attendance at the quarterly parent meetings, and participation in districtwide educational summits and forums. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Nahed Chapman, executive director of the ESOL program, at nahed.chapman@ slps.org. The district’s website is at www. slps.org. 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:40 PM Page 25 OVER 20,000 ENROLLMENT Teach Your Parents Well Plano Independent School District, Plano, Texas PROGRAM NAME Educating the Whole Child: Mobile Learning Lab DISTRICT DILEMMA The Plano Independent School District encompasses a large suburban area near Dallas. With 55,000 students, it is one of the largest school districts in the U.S. In this growing and diverse community, families represent cultures and speak languages from all around world. Yet language is Attending the ribbon-cutting ceremony for the Mobile Learning Lab are but one obstacle for students and parDanny Modisette, deputy superintendent; Lloyd Jenkins, school board ents trying to assimilate into their president; Superintendent Doug Otto; and Cathy Galloway, executive schools. A growing number of families director of student and family services. lack basic needs, transportation, computer skills, and an understanding about school activities like homework assignments. that the Mobile Learning Lab, made possible Plano wanted to find ways not only to teach through federal grant funding, allowed for a these children, but to engage their families, long-term benefit from the short-term federal too. To that end, the school board approved a stimulus investment. Board members saw from program that would create relationships bea parent survey a willingness to participate in tween the schools and the parents. The Mothe mobile learning program, indicating that bile Learning Lab was designed to provide parents truly want to be involved and confamily services and adult education for parents nected. The school board knew that parent inin their neighborhoods. volvement is essential to a child’s success. SOLUTION RESULTS “When we look at a student—we see a family” is the motto that appears on the exterior of the Mobile Learning Lab. The addition of this mobile classroom, outfitted with 13 computer stations for parent use, increases efforts to educate the whole child, the definition of which includes students and families. The specialty vehicle offers adult courses in computer literacy, finance, career exploration, English, and more. It also helps parents connect to community resources and allows them use the district’s Parent Portal and other online tools. Plano also is establishing stronger relationships with parents, which will serve as pathways for parents to become involved partners in their child’s education. With the mobile classroom, the district is delivering assistance and solutions to the doorsteps of its families while strengthening connections between home and school. “My parents’ eyes sparkle when they talk about the computer bus,” reported one principal. The district is initially targeting communities near eight elementary schools, particularly apartment complexes and mobile home communities. These eight schools, with an overall enrollment of 4,500 students, reflect the audience eligible for this service. Parent surveys and onsite visits helped assess needs, allowing parents to assert their course offerings. Participation is high and growing. The mobile classroom alleviates the difficulty of communicating with parents who do not have transportation to school and with those who may experience a language barrier. THE BOARD’S INVOLVEMENT As Plano experienced growth in the number of students at or below the poverty line, the school board saw an opportunity to improve student achievement through community outreach to families. The school board agreed SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT Lloyd Jenkins SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS Missy Bender Marilyn Hinton Nancy Humphrey Carrolyn Moebius Tammy Richards Brad Shanklin SUPERINTENDENT Douglas Otto FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Lesley Range-Stanton, director for communications, at lesley.range-stanton@pisd. edu. The district’s website is at www.pisd.edu. Magna Awards 2011 25 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:39 PM Page 24 OVER 20,000 ENROLLMENT Second Chance Academy Pharr-San Juan-Alamo Independent School District, Pharr, Texas PROGRAM NAME College, Career & Technology Academy DISTRICT DILEMMA SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT Reymundo Gonzalez SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS Ramona Barron Ronaldo Cantu Pete Garcia Ben Garza Jr. Gilbert Herrera Humberto Rodriguez SUPERINTENDENT Daniel P. King The Pharr-San Juan-Alamo school board hired Superintendent Daniel King in 2007, charging him with decreasing the district’s high number of dropouts. A data review revealed the district was seeing 500 dropouts a year. More than 200 seniors did not qualify for a diploma. Their biggest barriers: the state graduation exam and missing credits. The board gave the green light to create a new alternative campus for area residents ages 18 to 26 who have failed to receive their high school diploma. SOLUTION The College, Career & Technology Academy has greatly diminished the district’s dropout problem. The academy, in partnership with South Texas College, allows students to take college coursework while finishing their high school requirements. It opened in September 2007 with 220 students. It operates on a nontraditional schedule to accommodate working students, young parents, and concurrent enrollment. Students have the option of attending morning or afternoon sessions, or enrolling under a flexible attendance waiver. The school mirrors the college calendar, which shortens the fall and spring semesters, and provides daily attendance funding for the summer session. Students take classes to earn their credits and prepare for exit exams while they are enrolled in a course to ease their transition to college. After October exams, many students enroll in at least two college courses in a custom-scheduled mini-mester in various career and technology fields. THE BOARD’S INVOLVEMENT After seeing the project’s potential, the school board authorized the leasing of a building to accommodate the academy, the hiring of principal and staff, and all other expenses involved in operating a new campus. 24 Magna Awards 2011 Math teacher Nelson Carrasquero assists his students with an equation. Board members participated in the recruitment process by walking door to door in the district’s Countdown to Zero Dropout Recovery Walk to persuade dropouts and nongraduates to return to school and enroll at the academy. They also were influential in getting community leaders to join them in the walk and therefore have a bigger impact in the community. The board supported the superintendent’s goal of giving these students another opportunity to work on their requirements and get them started on their college education. RESULTS Since the school opened in the fall of 2007, a total of 657 students have graduated; 116 were between the ages of 21 to 26. Many of the gradutes had earned at least four college credit hours. Every effort is made to ensure that students, once graduated, make a smooth transition from the academy to a college or career of their choice. The district has seen an 80 percent reduction in the total number of dropouts and an increase in the number of graduates by 90 percent. The academy has been a critical component of those successes. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Arianna Vazquez-Hernandez, public information officer, at arianna.hernandez@ psjaisd.us. The district’s website is at http://psja.schoolfusion.us. 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:38 PM Page 23 OVER 20,000 ENROLLMENT Building a Seaworthy Partnership Newport News Public Schools, Newport News, Va. Skills curriculum taught in grades six to eight. Students have become familiar with many professions and trades and have learned that they have the ability to join this industry. This all-out effort to become part of the school has led to significant motivation on the part of students to participate in the Career Pathways initiative and has encouraged students to master the essential skills emphasized in the Northrop Grumman Career Readiness Skills curriculum. THE BOARD’S INVOLVEMENT A member of the Northrop Grumman Shipbuilding Apprentice School works with a Huntington Middle School student during one of the regular Career Readiness Skills workshops. PROGRAM NAME Shipyard Builds Student Success DISTRICT DILEMMA The mission of Newport News Public Schools (NNPS) is to educate all students for college, career, and citizen readiness. Key to fulfilling this mission is the Career Pathways initiative, which includes, among other goals, career exploration in middle school. School leaders knew that connecting middle school students to people doing specific jobs in the community would have the most impact. With the largest shipbuilder in the nation, Northrop Grumman, located just blocks from the school, leaders saw an opportunity to help students explore high-demand careers. At the same time, the shipyard was looking for a way to help meet a huge future demand for qualified employees. SOLUTION The shipyard immediately began building relationships with the students and staff by attending back-to-school nights, open houses, and other school events. Shipyard staff created a Shipbuilders Club, established a mentoring program, and helped to develop a Career Readiness Photo by Tom Stormer The board strongly supports the goal of helping all students become college, career, and citizen ready, and authorized resources for the Career Pathways initiative. Board members participated in meetings and conferences designed to attract major business partners and encouraged them to take a leap of faith to transform the lives of students in NNPS. Part of the board’s effort involved a Business-Education Summit held in October 2009 that drew hundreds of business leaders and made career readiness a major topic of discussion in Newport News. The board also authorized funding for a Career Pathways staff position to build partnerships such as the one between Huntington Middle School and Northrop Grumman. RESULTS SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT Debbie H. Johnston SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS Carlton Ashby Pricillia Burnett William Collins III Betty Dixon Everette Hicks Sr. Jeff Stodghill Lakisha Busby, student representative SUPERINTENDENT Ashby C. Kilgore Students received, through interaction with many professionals, hands-on experiences that triggered their strengths, passion, and curiosity about potential careers. They learned the key components of a successful interview and how to fill out job applications. They had an opportunity to learn a multitude of cognitive and life skills from a dedicated group of professionals— and to just enjoy their company during school dances, basketball games, school rallies, lunch periods, and field trips. Through the Shipbuilders Club, students entered the LEGO competition sponsored by the Virginia Ship Repair Association. Their work won second place in a ship design competition sponsored by the Nauticus museum in Norfolk, Va. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Patrick Finneran, director of corporate and government relations, at patrick.finneran@nn.k12.va.us. The district’s website is at www.nnschools.org. Magna Awards 2011 23 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:37 PM Page 22 OVER 20,000 ENROLLMENT A Walk to Remember Corpus Christi Independent School District, Corpus Christi, Texas PROGRAM NAME Operation K.E.Y.S. (Keeping Every Youth in School) DISTRICT DILEMMA SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT John Longoria SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS Bill Clark Tony C. Diaz Dwayne Hargis Guillermo C. Perez Lucy Rubio Carol A. Scott SUPERINTENDENT D. Scott Elliff The school board in 2007 set goals to increase student achievment and prepare students for success in postsecondary education. Reaching these goals meant increasing completion and graduation rates through prevention, intervention, and dropout recovery. In 2008, Operation K.E.Y.S. was developed to tackle the community-wide dropout problem. The district, the City of Corpus Christi, and the Diocese of Corpus Christi joined forces to reach out-of-school youth and reconnect them to school. On a Saturday morning each September, teams of district and community volunteers participate in the community walk and visit the homes of students who have not enrolled for the current year. It encourages students to continue their education so they can become productive citizens of our community. Students receive information on available district resources, and they have an opportunity to re-enroll on the day of the walk. SOLUTION The program informs youth who have not returned to school because of family, academic, or other obligations of alternative ways to successfully complete high school. It has brought recognition that dropout prevention and recovery requires support from the entire community. Operation K.E.Y.S. allows out-ofschool youth to speak one-on-one with district representatives who can provide alternative education avenues to fit specific educational needs. Tutoring, flexible scheduling, and nontraditional classroom settings are just a few of the resources students may need to be successful. Through Operation K.E.Y.S., the district works to ensure every student is a learner, every learner a graduate, and every graduate a success. School Completion, which coordinates the event each year. In addition, the board approves financial support to ensure the walk is a success. Finally, board members are part of the teams of volunteers who visit the homes of out-of-school youth and encourage them to return to school. RESULTS Each year since Operation K.E.Y.S. has been in place, the dropout rates have decreased. The number of dropouts went from 408 for the 2007-08 school year to 278 in 2008-09. The district measures the success of Operation K.E.Y.S. by seeing the dropout rates decrease and retention rates increase each year. During the 2009 walk, 337 volunteers made 474 home visits to out-of-school youth. More than 230 of those youth returned to school due to the efforts of Operation K.E.Y.S. In addition, 64 continued to be enrolled in school, 25 graduated, 11 earned their GED, and 97 students were enrolled in an educational setting outside the district. Operation K.E.Y.S. maintains a retention rate of 85 percent. The number of dropouts in grades seven to 12 decreased by 130 students. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Communication Specialist Kim Sneed at kim.sneed@ccisd.us. The district’s website is at www.ccisd.us. THE BOARD’S INVOLVEMENT The board laid the foundation for Operation K.E.Y.S. with the setting of goals in 2007. The development of the program was one way to reach those goals. The board approved the creation of the Office of High 22 Magna Awards 2011 Operation K.E.Y.S. has brought recognition that dropout prevention and recovery requires the support of the entire community. 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:36 PM Page 21 5,000-20,000 ENROLLMENT Helping Students Stay in School Tuscaloosa City Schools, Tuscaloosa, Ala. PROGRAM NAME Helping Education/Linking Parents (HELP) DISTRICT DILEMMA Alabama’s dropout rate is the greatest threat to the state’s future economic growth. Tuscaloosa City Schools is addressing this by removing barriers to keeping students in school. Longitudinal attendance data revealed that out-of-school suspensions and expulsions were at an all-time high. Students who are not in the classrooms or in school cannot reach their greatest potential. With the collaboration of Tuscaloosa’s mayor, the chief of police, and the district attorney, the school board, superintendent, and administrative staff developed the HELP program. It is a proactive approach to preventing out-of-school suspensions. It uses existing community and school resources, with no additional funding to support the program. SOLUTION The HELP program addresses in-school behavior and dropout prevention by building relationships among the schools, law enforcement agencies, the district attorney’s office, and the city government. The program provides opportunities for parents and students to receive information regarding school and community services as they work toward improving social skills and recovering academic skills lost due to out-of-school suspensions. Relationships are built with parents and students both in the school and in the community. Follow-up is provided by the district administrative staff and community partners. During the time that the HELP program has been in place, the number of out-of-school suspensions has been reduced by approximately 500, and the number of expulsions has been reduced by 54 percent. THE BOARD’S INVOLVEMENT The school board has been a catalyst in the development of this program. Members visited similar programs throughout the state. Many of the programs carried a large financial burden for the district. Board members worked with the superintendent and central office staff to develop a program unique to the HELP uses existing community and school resources with no additional funding to support the program. needs of the district. Board members have been instrumental in the development of the program, securing community partners to assist with implementation, taking part in student intervention sessions and making presentations about the program at board meetings. RESULTS With the implementation of the HELP program, out-of-school suspensions in the school system have dropped from 4,450 in 2008-09 to 3,991 in 2009-10. More than 1,234 students received notice for the first out-ofschool suspension, but only 321 students were suspended for a third time and had to attend the HELP parent program. The parent program requires students and their parents to meet with superintendent’s staff, the mayor, the chief of police and a representative from the Tuscaloosa County District Attorney’s office. The number of expulsions has dropped from 59 to 32, the lowest number in the school system in five years. The dropout numbers are declining and the graduation rate is improving. Educators and community leaders attend the HELP sessions and meet with parents and students individually to help get children back on track academically and behaviorally. These positive relationships provide students the motivation to improve behavior and the desire to stay in school. SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT Dan Meissner SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS Kelly R. Horwitz Harry C. Lee Marvin L. Lucas James Minyard Erskine Simmons Sena Stewart Earnestine Tucker ACTING SUPERINTENDENT Dorothy Richardson FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Shirley Lollar, archives/public relations specialist, at slollar@tusc.k12.al.us. The district’s website is at www.tuscaloosa cityschools.com. Magna Awards 2011 21 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:35 PM Page 20 5,000-20,000 ENROLLMENT Gaining the Digital Advantage Sunnyside Unified School District, Tucson, Ariz. SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT Louie C. Gonzales SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS Magdalena Barajas Eva Carrillo Dong Eric Giffin Robert Jaramillo SUPERINTENDENT Manuel L. Isquierdo Board President Louie C. Gonzales (and member Eva Carrillo Dong, to his right) at a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the new Community School at Apollo Middle School. PROGRAM NAME Project Graduation: The Digital Advantage THE BOARD’S INVOLVEMENT DISTRICT DILEMMA The board has been actively involved in the development of the program. It provided direction and fully supported Superintendent Manuel Isquierdo and staff in developing the framework and strategies. The board’s decision-making continues to set the course for expansion of the program, which is evolving into a one-to-one computing program for students in grades five through 12. Sunnyside had a graduation rate of 63 percent and was labeled a “dropout factory” by a Johns Hopkins University study in 2007. While 1,036 students entered high school in the Sunnyside District in 2004-05, only 556 were on track to graduate in 2008. An additional 203 of these students had not yet earned enough credits to be classified as seniors. Single-period absences by ninth-graders, as reported for three years, were approximately double the number of absences for 10th-graders, and as much as four times the number for 12thgraders. Almost one-third of freshmen in 2007-08 had at least two Fs at the end of the first semester. Acting with a sense of urgency, the district created a research-based program to focus on the critical freshman year and to give students opportunities, support, and incentives to earn credits for graduation. It sought to bridge the digital divide in a district where 88 percent of the students are Hispanic and 88 percent qualify for free or reducedprice meals. SOLUTION Project Graduation begins with school-based graduation plans including data, challenges, and strategies. Freshman interventions include study skills, reading classes, attendance monitoring, and meetings with parents. A 20 Magna Awards 2011 focus on attendance addresses consistent enforcement, efficiency in attendance-taking, incentives and recognitions, and timely interventions and consequences. All middle and high school students participate in advisory classes to develop ongoing relationships with teachers and learn study skills. Digital Advantage awards netbooks to ninth-graders who achieve the “Four A’s” at the end of the first semester: academics, attendance, extracurricular activity, and attitude (no suspensions). Extensions of Digital Advantage are Digital Scholars for upperclassmen, Digital Parents, Digital Eighth-Grade Scholars, fifth-grade Digital Explorers, and the Teacher Laptop Initiative. RESULTS In two years, 1,500 students earned computers by achieving the Four A’s. Student ownership of a computer provides technology access for the entire family. The number of graduates rose from 505 in 2007, to 598 in 2008, 715 in 2009, and 821 in 2010. The dropout rate decreased from 7 percent in 2003-04 to 4 percent in 2008-09 at Desert View High School. At Sunnyside High School, it went from 6 percent in 2003-04 to 2 percent in 2008-09. Freshman promotion rates increased from 52 percent in 2004-05 to 77 percent in 2009-10 at Desert View. They went from 68 percent in 2004-05 to 80 percent in 2009-10 at Sunnyside. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Monique Soria, director of public relations and organizational development, at moniques@susd12.org. The district’s website is at www.susd12.org. 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:34 PM Page 19 5,000-20,000 ENROLLMENT Making Graduation Matter Missoula County Public Schools, Missoula, Mont. PROGRAM NAME Graduation Matters Missoula DISTRICT DILEMMA Three years ago, the graduation rate for Missoula County Public Schools (MCPS) was only 86 percent. The school board, Superintendent Alex Apostle, and a group of community members introduced five measurable district goals, with an emphasis on bringing graduation rates to 100 percent. District and community leaders realized a collaborative approach to the graduation issue was necessary. Graduation Matters Missoula officially kicked off in January 2010 with a steering committee comprised of district employees, community leaders and members, parents, and students. This approach brings all interested parties under one roof to tackle dropout prevention and awareness. SOLUTION Graduation Matters Missoula particpants identified the role each group could play in dropout prevention. They funneled support and resources to new policies, programs, and awareness campaigns. With all parties working collaboratively, campaigns can be introduced to the community at a variety of levels to magnify the impact. Students are encouraged to grab the reins of their education by tutoring other students, getting involved socially and in extracurricular activities, and celebrating their successes. School faculty and staff are letting students know they care about them, finding more ways to use parent and community volunteers in classrooms to increase relevancy in learning. Parents are encouraged to emphasize attendance and talk to their children about post-graduation goals. The community offers job shadowing and internship opportunities, and supports employees in volunteering in the schools. and enhance staff, student, parent, business, and community involvement.” New policies, initiatives, and programs support the advancement of these goals within the schools. The board chair is a member of the initiative’s steering committee. RESULTS The program has resulted in a measurable impact on dropout rates. Those rates have plummeted through a new emphasis in schools on follow-through with at-risk students and recent dropouts, more detailed record keeping, and increased access to resources for students. From the 2008-09 school year to 2009-10, there was a 47 percent decrease in dropouts. In the space of one year, 100 fewer students left school. The innovative approach of the program spurred the Montana Office of Public Instruction to adopt it statewide, hoping to better document dropouts and duplicate the success of the community approach. Graduation Matters Missoula pulls schools, community businesses, nonprofits, and government together with parents and students to take a stand against the obstacles facing academic achievement. By pooling efforts and resources, the many roadblocks students face on their path to graduation can be identified and addressed at home and at school. SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT Toni Rehbein SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS Scott Bixler Debbie Dupree Adam Duerk Marcia Holland Joseph Knapp Drake Lemm James Sadler Michael Smith Joe Toth Shelly Wills SUPERINTENDENT Alex Apostle FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Bess Pallares, Partners In Education VISTA, at bpallares@mcps.k12.mt.us. The district’s website is at www.mcps.k12.mt.us. THE BOARD’S INVOLVEMENT The MCPS School Board generated and endorsed the district’s five measureable goals, making No. 1: “Achievement and graduation for all students, regardless of their circumstances and abilities,” and ending the list with No. 5: “Cultivate The program pulls together schools, businesses, and nonprofits to help remove the barriers to graduation for high school students. Magna Awards 2011 19 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:33 PM Page 18 5,000-20,000 ENROLLMENT Real Learning in Middle School Columbus County Schools, Whiteville, N.C. PROGRAM NAME R.E.A.L. (Relevant, Engaging, Authentic Learning) DISTRICT DILEMMA SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT Norris Ebron SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS Junior Dew Worley Edwards Monte Herring Barbara Yates SUPERINTENDENT Dan Strickland Many Columbus County Schools students were from low socioeconomic families and did not see the relevance of what they were learning in the classroom to their own life experiences. School leaders knew that students learn more when they are provided with activities that have meaning and significance to them. R.E.A.L. accomplishes this by providing students with activities that have immediate value and whose outcomes have clear meaning. SOLUTION The goal of R.E.A.L. is to bring relevance and value to student learning by only engaging middle school students in projects that have significance to them. Their first project involved the construction of three storage buildings, one for an elementary school and two that were sold at public auction. Students created the design, drew their own blueprints, compiled a materials list, and analyzed costs. The second project, a student-created television station, has expanded to include a radio station. Both are operated and managed entirely by students. Daily school news is broadcast live into classrooms and streamed via the Internet. In both projects, students took charge, used classroom skills, and expanded beyond the textbook to accomplish goals. Additionally, students’ intellectual curiosity has been sparked as they solve problems, evaluate criteria, and propose future projects. The program began with eighth-graders, and it has grown to include sixth and seventh grades as well. THE BOARD’S INVOLVEMENT Since the program’s conception, the board has embraced it, supporting a shared vision for all students. The board supports the program with advice, funds, and manpower. It agreed to the auctioning of the two studentbuilt storage buildings, and it scheduled, advertised, and attended the event. In addition, board members have agreed to serve on an interview committee providing students the opportunity to present their projects. They 18 Magna Awards 2011 Student projects included the construction of three storage buildings, two of which were sold at auction. have encouraged staff to step “out of the box” to implement innovative ways to bring learning into students’ lives. RESULTS R.E.A.L. has been successful in numerous ways. Students have learned organization, cooperation, initiative, and problem-solving skills that will serve them well after they graduate. At-risk students’ attendance has improved, and discipline referrals have been reduced significantly. Most importantly, students have developed self esteem, respect for others, and the ability to work as a team. As one student, who had felony charges filed against him prior to enrolling in this program, said, “I want to be at school now; I want to do well because I know I can do something good. I have to work together with my classmates to get the job done and I understand math better; it makes sense. I am proud of myself. I am going to be a carpenter when I graduate.” Columbus County Schools’ budget is very limited. Yet, in spite of having no available funds, this program is in its second year and is self-sufficient. The materials are donated by local businesses; equipment is loaned or given to the program by community members. This type of creative thinking and commitment ensures the program’s continued success. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Phyllis Williamson Pope, middle school supervisor/ESL supervisor, at phyllispope@columbus.k12.nc.us. The district’s website is at www.columbus.k12.nc.us. 11Magna:Magna 2/28/11 2:46 PM Page 17 11Magna:Magna 2/28/11 2:45 PM Page 16 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:32 PM Page 15 5,000-20,000 ENROLLMENT Health Care for Students in Need Adams County School District 14, Commerce City, Colo. middle schools. Additionally, CHS provides nursing services to all students in Adams 14. The health center programs promote healthy choices, prevent disease, intervene early, and provide integrated services and continuity of care. THE BOARD’S INVOLVEMENT The school board fully supports the school-based health center initiative across the district—in fact, board Access to health care improves students’ lives inside and outside the President Jeannette Lewis also sits on the CHS board of directors. The classroom, which is why the school-based health centers are so important. board annually approves a contract with CHS for nursing services to support the health clerks and school-based PROGRAM NAME health clinics. It also approved the lease of the stand-alone clinic at Kearney Middle Adams 14 School-Based Health Centers School, and the colocation of the new school-based health center as part of the conDISTRICT DILEMMA struction design for the new Adams City High School. Located in Commerce City, Colo., Adams 14 is a high-poverty school district that serves nearly 7,000 students from families with inRESULTS comes 25 percent below the poverty line. About 82 percent of students are eligible for During the 2009-10 school year: 10,194 free or reduced-price lunches. More than 80 health care visits were provided to 4,439 inpercent of students are Hispanic, with 57 fants, children, and youth; 1,751 immunizapercent speaking primarily Spanish. Access to tions were administered to children and adohealth care is limited for these students and lescents; and 1,842 mental health counseling their families because of poverty, lack of visits were provided to children and youth. health insurance, or geographic isolation. Also, 357 health education classes and health The community has few private medical fairs were held, focusing on alcohol and drug practices and none that serves the indigent. abuse, smoking, violence, nutrition, exercise, District leaders know that access to health and the use of seat belts and bike helmets. care improves students’ lives inside and outCurrently, 64 percent of the Adams City side the classroom. High School population is enrolled in its school-based health center, which is up from 52 percent last year. SOLUTION District leaders know keeping kids healthy means keeping them in school. “I truly believe Students perform better when they are school-based health clinics have improved our healthy and ready to learn when they show attendance rate,” said Lewis. “It’s critical that up for class. Adams 14’s school-based health all school districts support school-based clincenters bring the doctor’s office to the ics. They improve the quality of both stuschool, so students avoid health-related abdents’ lives and their education.” sences. The health centers are easily accessed within the schools, where students receive comprehensive preventive and primary FOR MORE INFORMATION health care services. In partnership with Community Health Services (CHS), Adams Contact Breanna Deidel, grants and commu14 students have access to school-based nications specialist, at bdeidel@adams14.org. health centers in two high schools and two The district’s website is at www.adams14.org. SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT Jeannette Lewis SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS Bill Klocker Larry Quintana Adrian Schimpf Robert Vashaw SUPERINTENDENT Susan Chandler Magna Awards 2011 15 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:32 PM Page 14 UNDER 5,000 ENROLLMENT A Stitch in Time Valley Stream Union Free School District 30, Valley Stream, N.Y. support staff member. Classroom and reading teachers meet with building administrators each time data is collected to determine if the current intervention is helping meet that month’s goal. Parents receive instruction in how to support their child’s literacy during both the summer and the school year. SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT Elise Antonelli SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS Kenneth Cummings James Lavery Carolyn Pean Cristobal Stewart SUPERINTENDENT Elaine Kanas 14 Magna Awards 2011 THE BOARD’S INVOLVEMENT The school board asked new Superintendent Elaine Kanas to examine the overall curriculum program. Her Students in the program have made significant gains in letter-sound analysis identified the early-learning fluency and reading comprehension. gap and spurred the development of this program. The board developed a budget with the additional funds necPROGRAM NAME essary to add a prekindergarten program to the summer school. It decreased the teacherEarly Literacy Intervention Program student ratio in the kindergarten and firstgrade summer school classes to ensure more DISTRICT DILEMMA student support. To garner community support, the board has devoted a start-of-theA significant number of Valley Stream 30 school-year work session to a summer school students were entering third grade reading report. It also has scheduled public reports at below grade level. The intensive allocation of two or more meetings during the year reresources needed to remediate older students garding the progress of primary students. meant fewer resources could be spent on The board supported professional developother programs. The district wanted to break ment for classroom and reading teachers so a cycle of putting so much effort into helping they had different strategies to use when a children catch up rather than in helping change of approach was needed. them excel. Also, demographics were changing. An increasing number of new students did not speak English. District leaders knew RESULTS they needed to strategically address these students’ needs early on or else the learning Preliminary results after the second year of gap would be even harder to close. the program look promising. During each of the two years the program has been in operation, 98 percent of the children who attended SOLUTION the summer school program in pre-K through second grade showed improvement Valley Stream 30 put together an early interon assessments. In letter-sound fluency, there vention literacy program that combines idenhas been a 17 percent increase in first-grade tification of students, learning materials, and scores over the two years. Second-graders progress monitoring. A screening adminiswho have been in the program for only one tered to all rising kindergartners in the year have made a 5 percent gain in reading spring identifies those who lack phonemic comprehension. awareness, a key indicator of potential reading difficulty.These students then attend a six-week summer school program that uses a FOR MORE INFORMATION curriculum designed to help distinguish and segment sounds. During the school year, Contact Superintendent Elaine Kanas at summer school students receive a double ekanas@vs30.org. The district’s website is at dose of literacy instruction from a reading www.valleystream30.com. 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:30 PM Page 13 UNDER 5,000 ENROLLMENT A Class of Their Own Mitchell County School System, Camilla, Ga. PROGRAM NAME Freshman Academy DISTRICT DILEMMA The Mitchell County School System is located in Camilla—an area currently ranked No. 8 on the list of Top 101 cities with the most people living below the poverty level, at 60 percent. Its student population is 89 percent African American, 8 percent Caucasian, and 3 percent Hispanic. Ninetyfive percent of students are considered to be economically disadvantaged. In 2005, 73 percent of ninth-graders were being retained each year and the high school graduation rate was 54 percent. At the same time, only 61.5 percent of residents had earned a high school diploma and postsecondary enrollment was only 26 percent. School board members knew that a longterm solution was needed. SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT Joseph White Freshman Academy students worked on a collection of projects focused on African American history—a biography project and a performance poetry project. SOLUTION The Freshman Academy was designed so that students would be better prepared academically, mentally, and socially for the transition from middle to high school. Its goals are to increase the graduation rate, decrease the dropout rate, and promote college awareness. It is located in a separate wing of the high school and has a freshman facilities and administrative support team. Students are provided with instructional support by the academy staff during school breaks, Saturday morning tutoring sessions, and after-school programs. Class sizes are kept low with a teacher-to-student ratio of 1:18. Introducing a “school within a school” for just one grade level of 120 students is an expensive but necessary step to achieving the greater goals. THE BOARD’S INVOLVEMENT The school board provides the resources needed to improve high school achievement and completion rates. It provided money for freshman-only teaching and administrative staff, a computer and science lab, and facility renovations. It encouraged partnerships with colleges, universities, technical schools, businesses, community groups, and civic organizations. Board members’ support also extends to approving changes in promotion/retention requirements and in allowing school personnel time for professional development. RESULTS Academic rigor and achievement have increased. There has been a dramatic improvement in overall student achievement, based on the Georgia High School Graduation Test. In 2004-05, the year before the academy was created, the high school passing percentages for the test were 86 percent in math, 89 percent in English, 48 percent in science, and 72 percent in social studies. In 2007-08, that first class of Freshman Academy students exceeded expectations. The passing percentages for this group of students were 98 percent in math, English, and science and 100 percent in social studies. In 2009-10, 85 percent of freshmen were promoted and the dropout rate decreased significantly, to 1 percent. The high school graduation rate increased to nearly 88 percent and postsecondary enrollment rose to 73 percent. Many graduates who had previously only dreamed of graduating from high school and going on to college are now attending universities all across the country. SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS Tholen Edwards Norma Gilpatrick Robert McDaniel Barbara Reddick Gregg Scott Robert Scott SUPERINTENDENT Beauford Hicks FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Curriculum Director Christy C. Wray at christy_wray@mitchell.k12.ga.us. The district’s website is at http://mitchell.schooldesk.net. Magna Awards 2011 13 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:29 PM Page 12 UNDER 5,000 ENROLLMENT Technology Sparks Student Learning Greene County Schools, Greensboro, Ga. PROGRAM NAME Shuffle Your Teacher Home DISTRICT DILEMMA SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT Arlie Collins SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS John Ray Carver Velicia Cobb Leah Dukes Deborah Smith SUPERINTENDENT Barbara Pulliam Davis 12 Magna Awards 2011 Greene County Schools’ growing population of English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL) students spurred the district’s curriculum and instruction department to collaborate with the technology department in exploring ways to leverage technology to increase student achievement. Greene County needed an intervention program that accelerated student learning through vocabulary and comprehension skills to bring students to grade level in one year. Hand-held learning offered a special and increasingly costeffective way to differentiate instruction for ESOL students that was interactive and engaging. This collaboration yielded Shuffle Your Teacher Home, a program that helps ESOL students with their English language and other skills. This student is learning in his classroom, but through the Shuffle Your Teacher Home program, he can take his iPod Shuffle pouch home and share his instruction with his family. SOLUTION with a keen eye for alignment in order to increase student achievement. It recognizes and supports the need for innovative programs and interventions for every level of learner in the community. RESULTS Using iPod Shuffles (MP3 players) the program extends the learning day by providing additional chances for students to preview new content, and reinforces language arts and math skills. The Shuffle also is an effective way to take instruction home to encourage family connections and literacy. Students receive pouches that include a Shuffle, two sets of earphones (so a parent or sibling can listen), an interactive journal, and learning activities. These activities focus on vocabulary and comprehension. Guided and tailored lessons include audio books, math word problems, math songs, and a Readers Theater script loaded onto the Shuffle every two weeks. These are created to expose the students to upcoming content. The use of Shuffle in the classroom engages students and provides yet another means of teaching and learning. Test score improvements among ESOL third-graders have been significant. Sixty-six percent of the students in this group jumped one tier on the ACCESS ESOL test—from the intermediate to the advanced tier—while 34 percent went from beginner to intermediate. To give some perspective to this accomplishment, this same cohort of students in the previous year only had 10 percent progress to the next tier, while 90 percent moved minimally within the same tier. The increase in student achievement was significant with the ESOL students. Their newly found confidence in the learning environment was evident. The parents are supportive and attend meetings, where interpreters help to ensure understanding and encourage parent involvement. THE BOARD’S INVOLVEMENT FOR MORE INFORMATION The Greene County School Board has a clear vision and understanding of the interrelated components of standards, assessment, accountability, and continuous improvement— Contact Assistant Superintendent Cynthia Brictson at cynthia.brictson@greene.k12. ga.us. The district’s website is at www.greene.k12.ga.us. 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:28 PM Page 11 UNDER 5,000 ENROLLMENT Healthy Meals for All Students Falls Church City Public Schools, Falls Church, Va. PROGRAM NAME Access to Healthy Meals DISTRICT DILEMMA Nationally, nearly one-third of children and youth are overweight or obese. At the same time, one in four children is food insecure. Falls Church City Public Schools reflected those statistics. However, like many districts, its meals were viewed as an ancillary support service and not fundamental to student achievement. Vending sales were unregulated, and the board simply received reports on meal participation and program operations. That changed when the board expanded its understanding, based partially on the National School Boards Association’s School Health Program resources, of the link between nutrition and student achievement. The board studied meal participation data and found that low participation could negatively impact state and federal aid. Bifurcated reduced-price and free meal administration also was cumbersome and costly. Most troubling, students eligible for reduced-price lunch were not fully participating and struggling to pay the 40-cent cost. SOLUTION The board targeted four areas for improvement: meal quality, access, staff empowerment, and community engagement. In 2006, it unanimously banned junk food. Food service took over and managed all vending machines. Two years later, the board sought to improve meal participation by providing free lunches to every student eligible for reduced-price meals. The stigma for participating in the program was reduced by the use of private PIN-coded transactions at the till. The food service department was supported and empowered to initiate a series of creative and easily replicable initiatives to partner and connect with students, teachers, and parents. Using press releases, public meetings, e-mail, and newsletters, the board and staff improved public engagement. THE BOARD’S INVOLVEMENT The board was the catalyst that changed the district’s culture and expectations. At first, it met resistance to the ban on junk food but, through teamwork, the board was able to build support for a shift in policy. A few years later, as the recession accelerated, it initiated and championed an effort to ensure that children had access to healthy, nutritious meals. Working with parents, advisory groups, staff and, later, the City Council, the board sought support for free meals for reduced-price-eligible students. The board also supported and cheered a host of teacher- and staff-led reforms that began during the same time. RESULTS From 2007 to 2010, the number of reducedprice meals served increased by 36 percent and the overall number of breakfast meals served increased by 82 percent. The district eliminated all fried foods from student menus, used whole grains, installed salad bars, and even prepared muffins with vegetables. In elementary schools, 75 percent of meals now are made from scratch and 95 percent of fruits and vegetables are fresh. Partnerships were formed with culinary schools to test foods, demonstrate cooking, and promote wellness. Students formed nutrition clubs, and schools held student “Top Chef” cooking competitions. SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT Joan Wodiska SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS Rosaura Aguerrebere Charlotte Hyland Susan Kearney Greg Rasnake Patrick Riccards Kieran Sharpe SUPERINTENDENT Lois Berlin FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact board President Joan Wodiska at jwodiska@yahoo.com. The district’s website is at www.fccps.org. Falls Church City Public Schools Food Services Director Richard Kane (center) checks the supply of items in George Mason High School’s popular salad bar. Photo credit: John Brett, Falls Church City Public Schools Magna Awards 2011 11 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:27 PM Page 10 UNDER 5,000 ENROLLMENT Connecting Generations Carlisle County Public Schools, Bardwell, Ky. PROGRAM NAME Preschool Assistants to Learning (PALs) DISTRICT DILEMMA SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT Brian Grogan SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS Ruth Diestch Steve Draper John Matt Fourshee Kevin O’Neill William Stermon Tiffany Wildharber SUPERINTENDENT Keith Shoulders 10 Magna Awards 2011 The Carlisle County Public Schools wanted to reach out to potential high school dropouts and find ways to keep them in school. It created the PALs program to prevent truancy and dropouts by targeting students with poor attendence. These students serve as aides in the district’s preschool program. SOLUTION The high school students, under the guidance of the teacher, are required to prepare High school students in PALs work with preschoolers, mentoring them and lessons focused on literacy. These students helping them transition to kindergarten. also serve as mentors as the preschoolers transition to kindergarten. The program, which began in 2005, has the goals of imadditional aides to allow for one-on-one atproving attendence, reducing dropout risk, tention for the preschoolers. During the first and providing mentors to preschool students. year of the program, two PALs students dropped out. The next year, one dropped THE BOARD’S INVOLVEMENT out. No students have dropped out in subsequent years. Along with a financial commitment, the Participants complete a before and after Carlisle County Board of Education fully ensurvey. Survey results have shown several courages and supports the PALs program. things. The program has increased their enBoard members realize the impact that the joyment of school. Students felt their presence PALs program has on preschool students as would be missed if they were absent (from 25 well as high school students. Superintendent percent in the pre-survey to 59 percent in the Keith Shoulders supports the PALs program post-survey). If a scoring meter measured the by attending preschool graduation each year, smiles, hugs, and positive relationships built in when PALs are recognized. PALs particpants the PALS program between the high school have attended board meetings, explaining the students and the preschoolers, it would show impact the program has made on them and success as well. conducting mock lessons. PALs is a cost-effective program. It primarily requires the human resources already RESULTS available to work together—the preschool coordinator, the Family Resource and Youth The program has proven successful in keepServices Center director, and the high school ing high school students interested and inadministration. The program has presented volved in completing school. Students not at and shared at the Graduate Kentucky Summit risk have become involved by taking the and at several regional events. Several school PALs program class as an elective. The focus districts have visited, with the intention of creon early childhood education has encouraged ating their own version of PALs. several seniors to consider teaching as a career. An unexpected by-product has been developing a pool of local future teachers who FOR MORE INFORMATION will want to return to work and live in this rural community. As the district moved the Contact Superintendent Keith Shoulders at preschool program from a half-day to a fullkeith.shoulders@carlisle.kyschools.us. The day program, PALs provided teachers with district’s website is at www.carlisle.k12.ky.us. 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:26 PM Page 9 UNLIKE THEIR WEALTHIER PEERS, POOR STUDENTS ARE RARELY EXPOSED TO EXPERIENCES THAT HELP THEM TO SUCCEED IN SCHOOL. THE BOARD’S INVOLVEMENT School members demonstrated leadership for this program by stating in the district’s strategic plan that closing the achievement gap is a top district priority. By supporting these summer camp programs, the board committed to improving academic outcomes for needy students. The board also provided leadership by convening a cross-departmental team to implement these programs. This included members of the curriculum and instruction, student services, finance, human resources, food and nutrition, instructional media, and information services departments. This buyin from across the district helped ensure the success of these programs. Board members also were instrumental in the grant-writing and approval process that helped to secure the necessary funds to make these programs a reality. It relied on community partnerships to gain access to some of the privately owned environmental sites and to share information with local media outlets. RESULTS Students who participated in the PEACE Camp demonstrated an average gain of 24 percent from pre- to post-assessment. One noteworthy surprise was that students from higher-poverty schools demonstrated even greater average gains (41 percent). Students in the Title I Summer Technology Camp also experienced success, as evidenced by the pre- and post-assessment. During the initial assessment, students scored an average of 38 out of 65 possible points. Post assessment results indicated an average increase of 27 points, for an average score of 55 points. Surveys given to participat- Camp students learn about the pelican and any effects the oil spill may have had on the birds and marine life. ing teachers also indicated a high level of satisfaction with both programs, as well as a high degree of commitment to include more technology into their regular classroom instruction. Also, there are many intangible results in providing the neediest students with these high-quality experiences, such as a growth in hope and confidence. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Elena Garcia, supervisor of Title I, Basic and Migrant, at elgarcia@pasco.k12.fl. us. The district’s website is at www.pasco. k12.fl.us. Three students sharing the final video projects they made during the two-week Technology Camp. Magna Awards 2011 9 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:25 PM Page 8 2011 GRAND PRIZE WINNER: OVER 20,000 ENROLLMENT Camp Opportunity Pasco County Schools, Land O’Lakes, Fla. SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT Joanne Hurley SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS Allen Altman Cynthia Armstrong Alison Crumbley Steve Luikart SUPERINTENDENT Heather Fiorentino Two students learning to hunt and fish at the Energy and Marine Center. PROGRAM NAME Title I Summer Camps DISTRICT DILEMMA Economically disadvantaged students consistantly underperform academically. Research shows that socioeconomic factors such as family income are more significant in explaining differences in educational achievement than traditional factors such as race and ethnicity. One cause is limited exposure to experiences that promote intellectual development. Unlike their wealthier peers, poor students are rarely exposed to experiences that help them to succeed in school. Trips to the zoo, family vacations, and experience with technology give wealthier children advantages beginning in kindergarten. The Pasco County School Board supports the notion that increasing a student’s exposure to quality experiences can greatly influence a child’s potential to succeed. The district developed the Title I Pasco Environmental Adventure Camp Experience (PEACE) and the Title I Technology Camp, both of which provide students with additional experiences needed for their cognitive development. Another goal was to increase teacher capacity for classroom technology use. 8 Magna Awards 2011 SOLUTION The Title I Summer Camps engaged nearly 1,200 students in authentic hands-on experiences connected to state standards. The PEACE Camp was a five-day environmentally themed science enrichment camp that brought 550 of the district’s neediest fourthand fifth-grade students to four different sites. It ended with a culminating activity at the Florida Aquarium. Students participated in three rotations at each site. While there, they studied ecosystems through activities such as fishing and kayaking, and they tracked the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico and its impact on marine and estuarine environments. These programs also complement the district’s emphasis on environmental stewardship. The Title I Technology Camp was a 10-day camp that also served 550 fourth- and fifth-grade students. After being issued a laptop and an i-Pod Nano that they could take home, students were taught how to plan, write, and produce iMovies and podcasts. Their first product was an iMovie about their own lives. The culminating activity was the creation of a public service announcement that was broadcast on the local cable station. 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:25 PM Page 7 y. . board provided leadership in the initiation of a strategic planning effort to engage the school community in the improvement process. As a result, more than 200 individuals in the community were involved in the development of recommended objectives, strategies, and action plans to achieve the district’s mission of “investing in the future today by inspiring our students to pursue excellence.” One of the four objectives included increasing community support by engaging 100 percent of the community in students’ education. The school board wholeheartedly supported these recommendations and has been actively engaged in the implementation process. This includes an accountability structure requiring monthly updates regarding implementation of the strategic plan. In addition to providing financial resources to support this effort, board members have modeled the way for other community members by participating as mentors and tutors to needy students. RESULTS team to engage the community in a dynamic process to bring about lasting change, not only in the schools, but in the community as well. Since the program’s inception, there have been numerous examples of selflessness on the part of others to help those less fortunate. Whether it is providing comfort to homeless students, eating lunch with children of incarcerated parents, tutoring struggling students, or buying a pair of shoes for a child whose family cannot afford it, every single need is being filled as it is identified. Competing businesses, a diverse faith-based community, and multifaceted human services organizations have come to the same table to share ideas and resources as they seek innovative solutions to a complex community problem. The Bright Futures initiative has opened the door for the creation of lasting partnerships, which already has made an impact on the lives of children and the culture of the community. The momentum continues to build, and there seems to be no end in sight in terms of community support for this effort. BOARD MEMBERS HAVE MODELED THE WAY FOR OTHER COMMUNITY MEMBERS BY PARTICIPATING AS MENTORS AND TUTORS TO NEEDY STUDENTS. FOR MORE INFORMATION Since the Bright Futures initiative began, the most notable accomplishments include a 54 Contact Superintendent C.J. Huff at percent reduction in the number of dropchuff@joplin.k12.mo.us. The district’s outs, establishment of 233 community partwebsite is at www.joplinschools.org. nerships, and more than $300,000 in cash and in-kind donations. More than 550 volunteers have contributed over 3,000 hours of service as mentors, tutors, and volunteers. One purpose of the Bright Futures initiative was to create a rapid response system to meet basic needs of students within a 24-hour period. To date, the system has been successful in addressing every identified need. Using a Facebook database, individual community members have the opportunity to support students as needs arise. Consequently, even the most challenging needs are met within minutes rather than hours. Bright Futures inspires hope for the kids who need it the most. The mission of Bright Futures is “partnerships inspiring educational achievement and developing community success.” The program is a one-of-a-kind grassroots Tutor Sherri Cloyd with a student. TREK Tutors is an after- school tutoring effort that was born of the district’s strateprogram designed to help improve student achievement. For one hour a gic planning process. Deliberate and week, a TREK tutor works with a student in one of Joplin's 13 strategic actions were employed by the elementary schools. Board of Education and administrative Magna Awards 2011 7 11Magna:Magna 2/28/11 5:11 PM Page 6 2011 GRAND PRIZE WINNER: 5,000-20,000 ENROLLMENT A Bright Future for All Students Joplin Schools, Joplin, Mo. PROGRAM NAME Bright Futures DISTRICT DILEMMA SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT Randy Steele SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS Jeff Flowers Jim Kimbrough Michael D. Landis Ashley Micklethwaite Anne Sharp Phil Willcoxon SUPERINTENDENT C.J. Huff Joplin, in southwest Missouri, has a rich history as an old mining town. As the jobs created by the mining industry went away, high poverty and low expectations replaced what was once a thriving community. With 56.2 percent of Joplin’s 7,802 students qualifying for free or reduced-price lunch, kids have many basic needs to be met for them to be successful. One out of four freshman entering Joplin High School A local church performing a work day of service at an area school prior to opening day. would not graduate. Almost They "brightened up" the playground equipment and did some landscaping. 200 high school students dropped out in the 2008-09 school year. Realizing the culture of the stepped up to be involved in identifying school community had to change, in 2008 needs and creating solutions. Following inthe Joplin school board started the process of tensive research by this leadership group, six strategic planning to get support from the NOW needs were identified. These incommunity to tackle this challenge. As a recluded, 1) establishment of an Eagle Angel sult, the Bright Futures initiative was born. fund to address immediate individual student needs in the absence of community resources, 2) partnering three businesses and SOLUTION one faith-based group with each school, 3) significantly increasing adult mentors and Following the Bright Futures kick-off tutors who work one-on-one with kids, breakfast, more than 40 community leaders 4) creating opportunities to recognize high academic achievement of individual students, 5) coordinating a massive community school supply drive, and 6) creating a central supply distribution center to serve children in the 19 different schools in the district. As a result of this grassroots community effort, the district has been successful in creating a rapid response system to meet students’ basic needs and provide academic support to ensure they have the tools necessary to be successful in school. A kick-off breakfast was attended by over 150 community leaders, with the sole focus of addressing the graduation rate issue in the community. 6 Magna Awards 2011 THE BOARD’S INVOLVEMENT In the fall of 2008, the school 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:22 PM Page 5 the board agenda and scheduling site visits to see the new methods and talk with teachers. By listening to Anderson teachers, board members heard the need for classroom volunteers. Using their role as community leaders, they reached out and found volunteers to support the small-group instruction in the classroom. The program consists of residents, retirees, church members, and district parents. It provides more than 80 volunteers annually who work up to three hours a week. RESULTS The 2006 and 2010 API figures for the targeted subgroups demonstrate the program’s impact on student achievement. English language learner students moved from 560 to 806. Socioeconomically disadvantaged students moved from 577 to 807. Hispanic students moved from 580 to 790. In three years, the school’s API score went from 604 to 810 in 2009. Anderson sustained the growth and scored 810 on the API again in 2010. The work of administrators and staff evolved over the past four years. The first year of the reform showed growth in student achievement for the first time in six years. The pattern of low achievement was broken. Conversations among staff about best instructional practices began and continued—the teachers took ownership of the program, making it sustainable. In the second year of the program, Anderson started the Enlish and language arts benchmark testing cycles and new math intervention strategies, resulting in an API growth of 36 points to 674. Motivated by success, teachers incorporated strategic supplemental programs to support student achievement. In the third year, Anderson’s API grew 136 points to 810. From 2006-07 to 2008-09, the percentage of all students who are proficient or advanced increased in English and language arts by 26 percent and math by 53 percent—all subgroups improved. Another benefit of the program is the ability to replicate results districtwide as well as in other districts. The board encouraged the Anderson staff to mentor other district schools. Anderson’s principal worked closely with administrators and staff at Payne Elementary, another Moreland school facing a significant achievement gap. At the same time, the Moreland Middle School staff started using the data-driven approach to shape instruction and close the achievement gap. Both schools showed tremendous academic growth as a result. Payne’s API score grew 58 points leaping from 818 in 2009 to 876 in 2010. Moreland Middle’s API grew a staggering 73 points from 770 to 843 in the same time period. Country Lane School, Moreland’s top-performing elementary school, also adopted the program’s strategies and saw double-digit growth in its API last year, moving up 23 points to 941. Other districts and schools have visited Anderson and have begun to replicate parts or all of the successful strategies of the program, with positive results. THE FIRST YEAR OF THE REFORM SHOWED GROWTH IN STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT FOR THE FIRST TIME IN SIX YEARS. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Karen Whipple, school board member, at kwhipple@moreland.org. The district’s website is at www.moreland.org. Fourth-grade teacher Lia White in her classroom. Magna Awards 2011 5 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:20 PM Page 4 2011 GRAND PRIZE WINNER: UNDER 5,000 ENROLLMENT Teaching Closes the Gap Moreland School District, San Jose, Calif. SOLUTION SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT Lori Booroojian SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS Jim Macfarlane Heather Sutton Robert Varich Karen Whipple SUPERINTENDENT Glen Ishiwata 4 Magna Awards 2011 Anderson’s administrators use benchmark assessments to collect data to shape classroom instruction. The principal and assistant principal worked collaboratively with teachers to establish a system to analyze classroom data and identify concepts to address. To support this new system, the board approved the request to purchase an electronic assessment management program. Teachers then created curriculum maps to guide their instruction. This initial work with data and standards provided a focus for all future professional development and decisions about instruction, which is at the core of this program. Developing a testing cycle and feedback loop allowed teachers to get instant feedback about their students’ Second-grade teacher Tyler Ready works with a small group in her classroom. progress before moving on. By using flexible groupings, and small group instruction coupled with tarPROGRAM NAME geted intervention, teachers were able to address the deficiencies highlighted in the testAcademic Excellence for All ing cycles. Using their community contacts, board members reached out to volunteers to DISTRICT DILEMMA support the small-group work. In additional to being a highly effective program for lowFour years ago, Moreland School District’s performing subgroups, it has proven to be Anderson Elementary School was the lowesteffective at raising the academic achievement performing elementary school in Santa Clara of students of all levels. County. The school’s Academic Performance Index (API) score was 604, well below the California goal of 800, and far below the disTHE BOARD’S INVOLVEMENT trict’s highest-achieving school’s score of 915. Anderson’s student population was 81 percent The first goal of the district’s strategic plan is Hispanic, 87 percent socioeconomically disto close the achievement gap while raising advantaged, and 78 percent English language the achievement of all students. After the learners. The school board and Superinten2006 API scores were released, the board dent Glen Ishiwata asked Anderson’s leadermade it clear that an all-hands-on-deck apship to create a new approach to the schools’ proach was necessary to transform student teaching strategies to improve student achievement at Anderson. The first step was achievement. Academic excellence for all stuto make staffing switches to support the agdents was the aim. With support from the gressive goal, including hiring a new princiboard, administrators, and the community, pal and assistant principal. Next, the board Anderson’s leaders embraced the challenge. directed resources to support new methods, They developed an approach that uses current including additional professional developdata to make decisions and trains teachers to ment time and the purchase of targeted inuse a standards-based method for instruction. structional programs. The board backed up its directive by frequently putting updates on 11Magna:Magna 2/28/11 5:11 PM Page 3 This year’s Magna Awards judges are (from left) Linda J. Trimberger, Lori Garvey, Sandi Barry, Jacquelyn Sneed, Joan Brandvold Schmidt, and Nell Rose In Search of Excellence A school district in Bardwell, Ky., pairs preschoolers with teens at risk of dropping out of high school to the benefit of both the older and younger children. In Tucson, a district motivates its ninth-graders to earn good grades and to stay in school by loaning them netbooks if they meet certain standards. Teams of school and community volunteers in Corpus Christi, Texas, visit the houses of high school dropouts each September to encourage them to come back to school. These are some of the programs that earned the top prizes in the 2011 Magna Awards. For 17 years, since American School Board Journal established the Magna Awards program, our panel of independent judges has continued to marvel at the diversity of the entries from school boards nationwide. This year is no exception: More than 350 programs were nominated from school districts across the U.S. Each program was exceptional in some way, but our judges looked for those that stood out in terms of the criteria listed on this page. Of particular importance were, first, evidence that the school board was appropriately involved in initiating and supporting the program, and second, evidence that the program accomplished what it set out to do. The judges spent many hours studying the submissions, and the result of their deliberations is this array of winning programs. MAGNA 2011 JUDGES American School Board Journal thanks the members of this year’s judging panel: • Panel chairwoman Joan Brandvold Schmidt, director of music ministry at the First Presbyterian Church in Great Falls, Mont., and past president of the National School Boards Association. • Sandi Barry, publications specialist of the Maryland Association of Boards of Education in Annapolis, Md. • Lori Garvey, assistant superintendent of administrative services for the Madison School District in Phoenix. • Nell Rose, chair of the Rockingham County School Board in Reidsville, N.C. • Jacquelyn Sneed, member of the St. Anne Community High School Board in St. Anne, Ill. • Linda J. Trimberger, president of the Greeley-Evans Weld County School District in Greeley, Colo. The 2011 Magna Awards winners will be honored Saturday, April 9, at the American School Board Journal’s annual Best Practices for School Leaders luncheon, held in conjunction with the National School Boards Association’s annual conference in San Francisco. If you cannot congratulate the Magna winners in person, you can still appreciate their good work by reading about their programs in this special supplement, which honors best practices in school governance. You might even find an award-winning program that can meet the particular needs of your school system—or be inspired to create a future Magna Award winner for your own district. CRITERIA To determine the winners of the Magna Awards 2011, the judges looked for programs that are: • Developed or actively supported by the school board. • The result of appropriate school board leadership. • Successful in view of the program’s primary objectives. • Important in promoting the district’s mission and advancing student learning. • Capable of being replicated by other school boards with similar conditions and resources. • The result of collaboration between the school board and others. Magna Awards 2011 3 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:18 PM Page 2 Contents 3 In Search of Excellence The Magna Awards Criteria and Judging Panel 18 Real Learning in Middle School Columbus County Schools, Whiteville, N.C. 4 Grand Prize Winner Teaching Closes the Gap Moreland School District, San Jose, Calif. 19 Making Graduation Matter Missoula County Public Schools, Missoula, Mont. 20 6 Grand Prize Winner A Bright Future for All Students Joplin Schools, Joplin, Mo. Gaining the Digital Advantage Sunnyside Unified School District, Tucson, Ariz. 21 8 Grand Prize Winner Camp Opportunity Pasco County Schools, Land O’Lakes, Fla. Helping Students Stay in School Tuscaloosa City Schools, Tuscaloosa, Ala. 22 Connecting Generations Carlisle County Public Schools, Bardwell, Ky. A Walk to Remember Corpus Christi Independent School District, Corpus Christi, Texas 23 Healthy Meals for All Students Falls Church City Public Schools, Falls Church, Va. Building a Seaworthy Partnership Newport News Public Schools, Newport News, Va. 24 Second Chance Academy Pharr-San Juan-Alamo Independent School District, Pharr, Texas 25 Teach Your Parents Well Plano Independent School District, Plano, Texas 26 Newcomers Welcome St. Louis Public Schools, St. Louis, Mo. 27 Honorable Mentions 10 11 2 Magna Awards 2011 12 Technology Sparks Student Learning Greene County Schools, Greensboro, Ga. 13 A Class of Their Own Mitchell County School System, Camilla, Ga. 14 A Stitch in Time Valley Stream Union Free School District 30, Valley Stream, N.Y. 15 Health Care for Students in Need Adams County School District 14, Commerce City, Colo. 11Magna:Magna 2/28/11 12:12 PM Page 1 Introduction W elcome to American School Board Journal’s Magna Awards. Over the past 17 years, we’ve featured many excellent examples of school district leadership, and this year is no exception. High school retention and dropout prevention are clear trends this year. Nine of the 18 winning programs contained elements of dropout prevention, credit recovery, and college and career readiness. Other entries feature community and parental involvement and engagement, closing the achievement gap, helping children from disadvantaged families learn, and early literacy. The Magna winning entries are full of practical advice on how districts solved pressing problems—problems that will sound very familiar to school board members and administrators: bringing students who have already dropped out back to the classroom; making sure all children come to kindergarten with the same skill levels, no matter their family background; giving ESOL students the tools they need to become fluent and literate in English; and providing mentors for troubled students at risk of dropping out. As in the past, this year’s entries are divided into three categories based on enrollment: under 5,000; 5,000 to 20,000; and over 20,000. Each category has one grand prize winner and five additional winners. We also have 15 districts that earned honorable mentions. Our Grand Prize winner in the under 5,000 enrollment category, the Moreland School District in San Jose, Calif., is closing the achievement gap by using current test data to make decisions and training teachers to use a standards-based method for instruction. In four years, Moreland’s Hispanic students have seen significant gains in their English, language arts, and math scores. The Grand Prize winner in the 5,000 to 20,000 enrollment category, Missouri’s Joplin Schools, brought together its business, faithbased, and human services communities to help disadvantaged students who are struggling to stay in school or who already have dropped out. More than 550 volunteers have contributed more than 3,000 hours of service as mentors, tutors, and traditional volunteers. One result has been a 54-percent reduction in dropouts in one year. Also, the district has received more than $300,000 in cash and inkind donations. Pasco County Schools in Land O’Lakes, ABOUT MAGNA AWARDS 2011 www.asbj.com/magna PUBLISHER Anne L. Bryant EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Glenn Cook MANAGING EDITOR Fla., the Grand Prize winner in the over 20,000 enrollment category, helps give its neediest children some of the advantages of their wealthier peers through two summer camps for fourth- and fifth-graders. Students in the technology camp received a laptop and an i-Pod Nano that they could take home, and they made iMovies about their lives. At an environmentally themed camp, they studied ecosystems through activities such as fishing and kayaking, and they tracked the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico and its impact on marine and estuarine environments. Camp students showed 24 percent gains from preto post-assessment. We are pleased to have the opportunity to showcase these award-winning projects, along with the other outstanding programs on the following pages, as examples of innovation and excellence in school governance. American School Board Journal also is fortunate to have the ongoing support of our corporate partner, Sodexo School Services, whose generous financial support continues to make the Magna Awards program possible. As we honor this year’s winners, we also look ahead to the Magna Awards 2012. Please let us know about programs you believe might bring distinction to your district and might translate into similar success elsewhere. The nomination form is available online at www. asbj.com/magna. Perhaps we will have the pleasure of recognizing your school district as a Magna Award winner in 2012. Kathleen Vail MAGNA COORDINATOR Margaret Suslick PROJECT PRODUCTION Donna J. Stubler ART DIRECTOR AND PRODUCTION MANAGER Carrie E. Carroll COVER ART Paul Zwolak Magna Awards is a supplement to American School Board Journal and is published at 1680 Duke St., Alexandria, VA 22314 by the National School Boards Association. Anne L. Bryant Publisher Magna Awards 2011 1 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:47 PM Page C4 Healthy, Well-Balanced Meals Fuel Student Achievement 11Magna:Magna 2/26/11 1:43 PM Page C3