Rebuilding Place in the Urban Space

"A community’s physical form, rather than its land uses, is its most intrinsic and enduring characteristic." [Katz, EPA] This blog focuses on place and placemaking and all that makes it work--historic preservation, urban design, transportation, asset-based community development, arts & cultural development, commercial district revitalization, tourism & destination development, and quality of life advocacy--along with doses of civic engagement and good governance watchdogging.

Sunday, September 10, 2006

A school worth studying

is a column in today's Seattle Times by Danny Westneat. From the piece:

Van Asselt Elementary in Southeast Seattle would seem a dubious place to send your kids. Four of five students are poor enough to get free lunch. There's no parental involvement to speak of, no aggressive PTA hosting fundraising auctions. It's one of those aging urban schools that's long been abandoned by the middle class and by whites. This year, in a school of 460 kids, only one is white. Nobody was too surprised when, five years ago, Van Asselt was put on the federal list of failing schools.

Today, there's some kind of magic happening inside. Test scores released last week show Van Asselt now ranks in the top 20 of Seattle's 67 elementary and K-8 schools. More kids there passed all three parts of the Washington Assessment of Student Learning, the WASL, than at some of the city's most sought-after primary schools...

Two things jumped out at me — things that ought to be clarion calls for any school struggling to make it in this era of high-stakes standardized tests. One, the Van Asselt staff has a brilliant, counterintuitive strategy when it comes to the WASL. Which is that they mostly ignores it.

They don't teach to the test. The test doesn't dictate the curriculum, nor does it hang like a sword over the school day. Van Asselt kids still get three recesses. And though it's no alternative school, there remains a major focus on in-school art, gym and especially music — all programs that are being shunted aside at some schools in slavish pursuit of the three R's.

Wong says he doesn't do anything specifically WASL-related in his class until a few weeks before the test date. And then it's mostly advice on how to take the test. "Class has got to be engaging and creative or they won't learn," he said. "If I teach to the test I won't even get their attention."

The second thing is truly inspiring. Five years ago the staff of Van Asselt took a leap of faith and began aiming the classroom instruction at the most gifted and talented kids. They call it "teach to the highest." It's accompanied by a tutoring program designed to prevent anyone from falling too far behind.

"The point is, don't dummify your instruction," says Thereza Przekota, who teaches English as a second language. "It doesn't work to aim for the bottom or the middle. If you do, that's where you'll end up. If you go for the top it's amazing how an entire class can be lifted."

This is a school where 82 percent of kids are from homes where English is not the first language. Yet three-fourths of fourth-graders passed the reading WASL, and 69 percent passed writing. Sixty-three percent passed math. All these marks are quadruple or more what the school regularly scored six to 10 years ago. The success is resonating across all major racial groups at the school — Asians, blacks, and, to a lesser extent, Hispanics.

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