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Henry W. Grady High School. “Individually We Are Different… Together We Are Grady”. Excellence and Achievement. Home to APS Communications Magnet Ranked One of the Premier GA High School “Distinguished School” 3 Years in a Row. Grady High School Demographics. Students -67% African American
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Henry W. Grady High School “Individually We Are Different… Together We Are Grady”
Excellence and Achievement • Home to APS Communications Magnet • Ranked One of the Premier GA High School • “Distinguished School” 3 Years in a Row
Grady High School Demographics • Students -67% African American -27% Caucasian -6% Other • Faculty -46% African American -41% Caucasian -13% Other
Grady High School Demographics • 1997-1998: 721 • 1998-1999: 706 • 1999-2000: 699 • 2000-2001: 740 • 2001-2002: 870 • 2002-2003: 892 • 2003-2004: 933 • 2004-2005: 1,010 • 2005-2006: 1,216
Grady High School Demographics • Increase of 476 students over 6 years • 46% Overall increase
Students Eligible to Receive Free/Reduced Lunches • 2003-2004: 383, 41% of students • 2004-2005: 465, 46% of students • 2005-2006: 528, 43% of students
Number of Grady Seniors Who Took the SAT • 1999-2000: 91 • 2000-2001: 108 • 2001-2002: 111 • 2002-2003: 138 • 2003-2004: 140 • 2004-2005: 148
Dropout Rates • 1997-98: 13% • 1998-99: 10% • 1999-00: 8% • 2000-01: 7.7%
Overall Retention Rate • 1997-98: 18% • 1998-99: 10% • 1999-00: 8% • 2000-01: 5% • 2001-02: 4.99%
Overall Promotion Rate • 1997-98: 82% • 1998-99: 90% • 1999-00: 92% • 2000-01: 95% • 2001-02: 95.01%
Average Student Attendance • 1997-98: 87% • 1998-99: 90.6% • 1999-00: 92.9% • 2000-01: 95% • 2001-02: 95.01%
Ninth Grade Focus • Data 1995 – 2005 9th Grade Retention Rate 1995 - 35% 2004 – 11% • Increased Core Requirements • Removed Lower Level Classes
Ninth Grade Summer Transition Program • Began in 1998 • Three weeks • 80 students • All homeroom students met with their advisors the Friday before school started and completed activities and a ropes course • Currently 100 students can volunteer to participate • Two weeks • Overview of math and language skills • Introduction to study skills • Getting acquainted with high school: ATL • All 9th grade students are invited to come to school on the Friday before school starts for an orientation activity
Ninth Grade Instructors • Teachers committed to teach ninth grade students • Teachers are given support and training • New Educational Methods • Single gender algebra I classes • Summer Math Academy
Advisement Program Revision • 9th grade students are placed in smaller homerooms (32 students-15 students) with an advisor who has volunteered to be a 9th grade specialist • Advisement is held bi-monthly • Advisement is grade level specific • Advisors are trained for specific needs • Advisement includes study skill and test prep
“Let’s Do It Again” • Academic Recovery • Purpose- Keep students on track for graduation. • Available to Students who have failed a course which has an EOCT. • Meets on Saturdays for 9 weeks. • Students who succeed get course credit.
Extra Help • Project Success • AVID • Inclusion/ RVI
Extra Help (continued) • Tutoring SAT End of Course Test Tabernacle Partnership Community Based Program • Mentoring Programs Grady Men of Distinction Georgia Department of Labor Lunch and Learn WISE (Women Inspiring Self Enrichment) Made Men Principal’s Mentoring Program
Career Academies • Communication Magnet Program • Health Careers Academy • Arts Academy • Travel and Tourism* 2007
Biology Calculus AB Chemistry U.S. History English Literature Environmental Science French Language U.S Government World History French Literature Latin Music Theory Physics B Psychology Spanish Language Statistics Art Spanish Literature Academic Rigor through Advanced Placement
360 Degrees Aramark Atlanta Job Corp Atlanta Medical Hospital Bobby Dodd Criminal Records Georgia Department of Labor Georgia Tech Georgia Youth Apprenticeship American Tech & Logistics Atlanta College of Arts The Atlanta Journal Constitution Atlanta Technical College Cold Stone Environmental Protection Agency Georgia Power Georgia Tech Arts Education Program Heritage Production Relevance Through Community Outreach
Job Corp CEO Kennesaw Mountain Writing Margaret Mitchell House Morehouse School Of Medicine Pen/ Faulkner Writers in School Publix CEO Savannah College of Art & Design Turner Broadcasting Johnson & Wales Le Cordon Bleu Marriott Foundation Newcomb & Boyd Consulting Engineers Phillips Arena Renaissance Hotel Target U.S. Small Business Administration Youth Radio More Business Partners
Support from HSTW Reform Model • Technical Assistance Visit • School Leadership Retreat • HSTW Reform Model • California Partnership/Academies • Curriculum Revision
More Support from HSTW HSTW has helped by providing: • A school improvement framework • Professional development resources • An assessment system • District and school leaders opportunities to participate in HSTW’s urban initiative • Technical assistance from an external team that includes useful recommendations from objective experts
Professional Development • HSTW Sponsored Staff Development • End of Year Faculty Staff Development • Continued Refinement of School Improvement Plans
HSTW Focus/Challenges • Provide more interdisciplinary instruction. • Providing common planning time for teachers is a major barrier in the development of interdisciplinary instruction
How the State has Helped Georgia provides: • State content standards in all areas (through Georgia’s Quality Core Curriculum) that give teachers and school leaders clear ideas of what they need to get students to learn; • Mandatory state graduation tests (GHSGT) in English/language arts, mathematics, science, social studies and writing that send the message to all students that they need to master challenging content, regardless of their ethnicity or socioeconomic backgrounds; and • An accountability system (Georgia Public Education Report Card) that measures school performance and gives schools a way to measure themselves.