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St. Paul Pioneer Press Fri, Jun. 23, 2006
Schools picking up where grants left off - They seek ways to sustain improvements
BY DOUG BELDEN
Pioneer Press
As
Kay Arndt and her staff used nearly $800,000 in grant money from Bill
Gates to gradually reshape Johnson High School into small learning
communities over the past six years, the principal knew the day was
coming when the money would run out.
"Now that day has come," she said.
Johnson, Highland Park and Harding high schools in St. Paul have
received more than $2.5 million since 2000 through a relationship with
the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation that ended this school year.
The money has been used to carve up the high schools into smaller
interest areas intended to focus students' post-secondary plans and
connect them more closely with peers and staff.
All of the city's
seven high schools have restructured in a similar way the past few
years, but Johnson, Highland Park and Harding have received the most
intensive support for that process because of the Gates money, said
Micheal Thompson, director of secondary education in the district's
professional development center.
The three schools' principals
say the investment has paid off ó their sophomores, for example, have
improved as fast or faster than district 10th-graders overall since
2002 on the Basic Skills Test for writing.
"We're very
encouraged by what's happened in St. Paul," said Joe Nathan, director
of the University of Minnesota's Center for School Change, which
administered the grant for the Gates Foundation. The results show urban
schools can make progress in academic achievement and graduation rates
with all types of students, he said.
Now the challenge is to sustain the improvements without the extra money.
One helpful factor is that, for the most part, the Gates money didn't
pay for new staff that would go away when the grant ended.
At
Highland, much of the Gates money was invested in training teachers to
expose more students to rigorous curriculum through International
Baccalaureate and other programs, said Principal Efe Agbamu.
That commitment will remain, as will a focus on connecting
individually with students to spur higher achievement. "We use
relationships," Agbamu said. "It's become the language" across the
building, she said, from teachers to office staff to custodians.
Harding Principal Todd Hochman said the restructuring brought about "a
huge cultural transformation" that will remain after the grant expires.
At Johnson, losing the Gates money will mean figuring out how to
continue the work without the benefit of as much professional
development or material support, Arndt said. "We see this as a very,
very long-term project at Johnson High School."
Doug Belden can be reached at
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
or 651-228-5136.
grants
Here's the distribution of Gates Foundation money to St. Paul high schools since 2000:
- Harding $999,280
- Johnson $787,809
- Highland Park $754,509
For more information on the program and data on academic results at the three schools, visit www.centerforschoolchange.org.
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