蜜桃影视

Explore

Reinventing America鈥檚 Schools: 9 Inspiring Case Studies of Cities and Educators Rethinking Classrooms for the 21st Century

This summer, 蜜桃影视 launched a special series of articles, profiles, and videos 鈥 as well as 鈥 based on the new book Reinventing America’s Schools: Creating a 21st Century Education System by the Progressive Policy Institute鈥檚 David Osborne. In it, Osborne spotlights some of the country鈥檚 most innovative cities in rethinking their school systems, and lays out a road map for improving the nation鈥檚 education system. He explains the project in greater depth here:

DAVID OSBORNE ON RETHINKING EDUCATION FOR THE 21ST CENTURY:

Four cities stand apart in Osborne鈥檚 analysis: Denver, Indianapolis, New Orleans, and Washington, D.C. In four exclusive excerpts, he goes deeper into what makes each district unique 鈥 read more about , an , New Orleans鈥檚 , and

Over the past year, 蜜桃影视 has been visiting these cities to meet the educators, school leaders, and elected officials steering reforms in their communities. (You can watch and listen to all our interviews at ). Here are 9 of the most memorable case studies we found:

1 Andrew Wilson Charter School: When parents refuse to settle

Upon learning two years ago that Andrew Wilson Charter School, a persistent fixture on Louisiana鈥檚 list of failing schools, was getting new management, a group of Wilson parents revolted. At that time, families weren鈥檛 consulted when a troubled public charter school was handed to new leaders. The parents wanted a charter network that was operating successful schools that wouldn鈥檛 worry about Wilson鈥檚 鈥淔鈥 rating dragging them down.

Jamar McKneely, CEO of InspireNOLA Charter Schools, at the Alice M. Harte Charter School. Inspirational quotes like the one pictured here by Martin Luther King Jr. line the school’s walls. (Photo credit: Emmeline Zhao)

As it happened, InspireNOLA Charter Schools, which operated two popular 鈥淎鈥 schools, wanted an engaged, active parent base. The ink was barely dry on news that the network, headed by New Orleans native Jamar McKneely, had moved Wilson to a 鈥淐鈥 rating in a single year when parents at another 鈥淔鈥 school named InspireNOLA as their first choice to take over their school, now known as Inspire 42. Beth Hawkins talks to the parents and grandparents who refused to settle.

2 Denver鈥檚 DSST: 10 years of 100% college acceptance

The Denver School of Science and Technology 鈥 better known by its acronym, DSST 鈥 celebrated its 10th year of senior classes this spring in which every student has been accepted into a four-year college.

(Photo courtesy of DSST)

That鈥檚 no small feat for a network in which nearly three-quarters of students are eligible for free or reduced-price lunch, a proxy for poverty, and 56 percent of students are Hispanic, numbers that largely mirror the district writ large. DSST also enrolls more black students and fewer white students than Denver broadly. The network鈥檚 schools rank competitively both across the state and nationally. A recent study from the Center for Research on Education Outcomes at Stanford University found that DSST schools posted some of the biggest gains in reading and math of all the charters studied. But as the school focuses on its expansion, it鈥檚 taking a hard look at how it can improve. Although leaders have achieved that 100 percent college acceptance benchmark for 10 years, and 96 percent of students enroll, the network is hoping to focus efforts on boosting an already-impressive 43 percent college graduation rate. Carolyn Phenicie takes a closer look at the DSST success story.

3 Indianapolis鈥檚 Innovation Schools: Doubling test scores

It bothered Principal Mariama Carson to watch her students say goodbye to their parents in Spanish as they headed into class and then never speak their native language for the rest of the day. So she opened a new 鈥淚nnovation School鈥 in Indianapolis, to include a dual-language immersion program as well as a culture of love, where staff and parents call each other familia.

鈥淚 never see my kids here deny their language or their culture, ever,鈥 Carson told Kate Stringer. Here鈥檚 how her new model is doubling student scores and turning around a school where more than 90 percent of students failed state tests.

4 Monument Academy: Where school = love

Students in the foster care system move one and a half to two times a year, tearing up relationships with friends and teachers. They鈥檙e twice as likely to drop out of high school, and only 2 percent earn a four-year college degree. So at Monument Academy, a charter school in its third year serving mostly students who have been in contact with D.C.鈥檚 foster care system, social-emotional learning is key.

(Photo courtesy: Monument Academy)

The students live on campus from Sunday evening through Friday afternoon with house parents, a setup that provides essential life skills and helps them form the bonds with caring adults that are key to long-term success. Teachers at Monument set high expectations for their students, emphasizing they believe they can do the work 鈥 something many haven鈥檛 experienced. 鈥淲hat they’ve heard is they’re failures, they’re bad, they’re not worthy, and they carry so much of that anyway from their own personal experience, loss, and rejection, that school can become this other pile-on factor of loss and rejection that builds the narrative,鈥 said Emily Bloomfield, the school鈥檚 CEO and co-founder. Carolyn Phenicie goes inside Monument Academy.

5 Bricolage: Moving New Orleans from a 鈥楥鈥 to an 鈥楢鈥

How, Beth Hawkins asks, do New Orleans leaders move the system from a 鈥淐鈥 to an 鈥淎,鈥 something educators there say will likely be harder than the initial recovery? The system must attract a sizable number of the 25 percent of the city鈥檚 students who now attend private schools 鈥 most of them white 鈥 if the entire community is to be brought into supporting the schools for the long term. And all schools, regardless of the race or poverty level of their students, need to reconsider traditional notions of what school is and experiment with out-of-the-box approaches.

Bricolage Academy has adopted the Responsive Classroom model that ties social-emotional learning to academic achievement. (Photo credit: Bricolage Academy)

Beth Hawkins visits Bricolage, one school that is at work on both strategies. It鈥檚 intentionally integrated, it has an innovate approach to personalizing learning, and, in the first year, its students are old enough to take state assessments. It鈥檚 the highest-performing open-enrollment school in New Orleans.

6 University Prep: 鈥楶overty Is Not Destiny鈥

University Prep鈥揝teele Street in Denver marked two milestones this year: on the statewide exam, the school鈥檚 growth in math was the highest in Colorado for the 2016鈥17 school year, and its growth in reading was the highest in the city.

Students at University Prep鈥揝teele Street. (Photo: Emmeline Zhao)

This particular achievement was even more impressive because last year was the public charter school鈥檚 first as a turnaround 鈥 a school under new management because its old leaders had failed to serve students adequately. In the year before turnaround, just 7 percent of students at what was then called Pioneer Charter School met or exceeded expectations on the state tests in math and 6.4 percent did in reading. Last spring, proficiency rose to 42.5 percent in math and 37 percent in English. Beth Hawkins takes us behind the data to tell the story of how University Prep made it all happen. 鈥淭here is a definitive proof point that poverty is not destiny,鈥 University Prep Executive Director David Singer said.

7聽A third way in Indianapolis: Looking beyond district versus charter

In many cities and towns, school choice comes down to two options: district or charter. But what if there were a third way? In Indianapolis 鈥 as well as cities like Los Angeles, Tulsa, and Atlanta 鈥 districts are partnering with charter school networks and other nonprofit organizations to serve particular neighborhoods or turn around struggling schools.

In Indianapolis, writes Sean Gill of the Center for Reinventing Public Education, nearly every one of the city’s 15 Innovation Network Schools saw increased passing rates on the most recent state achievement tests 鈥 in some buildings, by 8 percentage points or more.

8 74 Interview: Former mayor Gray on the rising tide of D.C. schools

While chair of the City Council, Vincent Gray sponsored legislation guaranteeing free preschool to 3- and 4-year-olds in the District of Columbia. The city now has the highest proportion of young children in state-funded early learning in the country.

Gray鈥檚 tenure as mayor was not without controversy, as several of his aides pleaded guilty in connection with a wide-ranging investigation into campaign finance improprieties, a scandal that overshadowed much of his tenure. Gray spoke with 蜜桃影视 about his education record as mayor, the state of education in the nation鈥檚 capital, and what he sees for the future.

9 Innovation Schools: The 鈥楤est of Both Worlds鈥 in Denver

Denver, nationally known for its portfolio school model, offers a spectrum of oversight models for its schools, including 47 innovation schools that land somewhere in between traditional district-run schools and charters freed from most district regulations.

Students at Green Valley Elementary, an innovation school, display their artwork. (Courtesy of Denver Public Schools)

The innovation setup, which McAuliffe International Middle School Principal Kurt Dennis called the 鈥渂est of both worlds,鈥 lets him use the support services a big district like Denver offers for the things he would rather not spend time worrying about, like transportation, legal assistance, HR, and food services. But for 鈥渢hings that really matter,鈥 like staffing, curriculum, calendars, and now budget, he makes the call. But getting to that point isn鈥檛 easy: It requires embracing change and breaking down a bureaucracy.

Read more about the education innovation now underway in Denver, Indianapolis, New Orleans, and Washington, D.C., at

Did you use this article in your work?

We鈥檇 love to hear how 蜜桃影视鈥檚 reporting is helping educators, researchers, and policymakers.

Republish This Article

We want our stories to be shared as widely as possible 鈥 for free.

Please view 蜜桃影视's republishing terms.





On 蜜桃影视 Today