Now thats what I'm talking about

Posted on 9:30 PM by Isaac | 0 comments

A Colorado school district does away with grade levels
source


Westminster, Colo. – School districts across the US are trying to improve student performance and low test scores. But few have taken as radical an approach as Adams 50.

For starters, when the elementary and middle-school students come back next fall, there won't be any grade levels – or traditional grades, for that matter. And those are only the most visible changes in a district that, striving to reverse dismal test scores and a soaring dropout rate, is opting for a wholesale reinvention of itself, rather than the incremental reforms usually favored by administrators.

The 10,000-student district in the metropolitan Denver area is at the forefront of a new "standards-based" educational approach that has achieved success in individual schools and in some small districts in Alaska, but has yet to be put to the test on such a large scale in an urban district.

"There was a sense of urgency to attend to what wasn't happening for kids here," says Roberta Selleck, district superintendent, explaining why she decided to go with a drastic approach. "When you see the stats for the whole school district over time, we realized we are disconnecting [from] our kids."

The change that's getting by far the most attention is the decision to do away with traditional grade levels – for kids younger than eighth grade, this first year, though the district plans to phase in the reform through high school a year at a time. Ultimately, there will be 10 multiage levels, rather than 12 grades, and students might be in different levels depending on the subject. They'll move up only as they demonstrate mastery of the material.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

See now this is what i call education reform. Material mastery is much better than meeting just the minimum standards in order to go on to the next level...Way to go. Raise the standards of what is deemed acceptable and make sure they actually learn something. I can't wait to see the numbers that come out of this district i can see alot of schools implementing this. but i wonder how this will work out with the varying ages. how will dicipline, class size, curriculum, and evaluation be handled, not to mention studens who are struggling. Definately some steps in the right direction.

0 comments: