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Whatever It Takes. How Professional Learning Communities Respond When Kids Don’t Learn. Chapter 3 A High School’s Collective Response When Kids Don’t Learn: Adlai Stevenson High School. Teacher concerns: Middle schools are not providing us with enough information on incoming freshmen
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Whatever It Takes How Professional Learning Communities Respond When Kids Don’t Learn
Chapter 3A High School’s Collective Response When Kids Don’t Learn: Adlai Stevenson High School
Teacher concerns: • Middle schools are not providing us with enough information on incoming freshmen • Incoming students lack study skills and good work habits • Consequences for failure are inadequate and there are no incentives for good academic performance.
Parent concerns: • “Stevenson lets students fall through the cracks.” • Not identifying students with difficulty until it was too late • Tendency to seek solution by moving students to lower tracks
Student concerns: • Felt no connection with their school • Classwork was boring • Questioned whether anyone at school really took an interest in them as individuals
Pre-Enrollment Initiatives • Placement by Proficiency Rather than by Caps and Quotas • Counselor Watch • Proactive Student Registration • Summer Study Skills Course • The Good Friend Program • Counselor Check In Program
Assisting All Students With the Transition to High School • Freshman Orientation Day • Freshman Advisory Program • Freshman Mentor Program • Participation in Co-Curricular Programs • Frequent Monitoring of Student Progress
Providing Extra Time and Support for Students Who Experience Difficulty • The Pyramid of Interventions • The Student Support Team • Conferencing and Optional Tutoring • Mandatory Tutoring Program • Guided Study Program • The Mentor Program
The Powerful Benefits of Collective Efforts (Staff &Students) • Moving beyond the question, “Do we believe all kids can learn?” … • To … “What are we prepared to do as a school when they do not learn?”
Virtually all of the various aspects of the Pyramid of Interventions implemented at ASHS presented logistical problems
The Teacher Association • Barriers • More responsibility • Solution • Extra compensation
A New Concept of Supervision • Barrier • Advisory vs supervisory role • Solution • Volunteer Advisors • Reduced time requirements
Providing Staffing • Barrier • Teachers free to do other assignments • Solution • Option to tutor rather than monitor study hall • New teachers allowed flexible schedules
Revising the Grading System • Barrier • Changing from two 9-week semesters to three 6-week periods • Progress report schedule (more frequent) • Limited time • Solution • Consistent with frequent progress monitoring and strong parent partnerships • Use of technology for computerized progress reports
Discipline • Barrier • Increased absences and “cutting” classes by juniors and seniors • Increased suspensions • Solution • “Positive not punitive” approach • Incentives for good performance • Freshman privileges limited; Seniors received many privileges
Working Together to Find Solutions Will we spend our energy explaining why it cannot be done in our setting, or will we work together to do it?