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Elementary

Success Stories

Incorporating the Arts and Closing the Gap

Jacquelyn Zeigler, Mary B. Austin Elementary, Alabama

Story posted Jaunary, 2008

austinproject1web.jpg Results:
• Rapidly closing the gap separating black and economically disadvantaged students from their peers

Mary B. Austin Elementary's reputation precedes it. More than 80 percent of its students transfer into the Mobile, Alabama, school from outside its boundaries, in part because of a curriculum that fuses the arts with student achievement and a focus on making sure every student gets the help he or she needs.

The school's reputation stands on the academic performance of its students, just over half of whom are African American and nearly half of whom are economically disadvantaged. But while Austin Elementary students fare better on state standardized tests than their counterparts elsewhere in the city and state, closer examination of test results revealed that black male students needed additional help.

Budget cuts had also reduced the amount of music instruction at the elementary levels. "They did not have the manpower to offer what they realized was a balanced education," says Sarah Wright, the Mobile Symphony's education director. ...

In Burlington, Sustainability Drives School Success

Paula Bowen, Lawrence Barnes Elementary, Vermont

Story posted January, 2008

Barnes Elementary.jpgResults:
• Engages students as spokespersons for sustainability efforts
• Builds self-confidence in a low-income community where students often feel they have little control over their lives

The Somali Bantu first-graders at Lawrence Barnes Elementary in Burlington were often silent in class. But that was before the students, who came to Vermont by way of a refugee camp in Kenya, met Speedy the Chicken.

Burlington is a haven for refugee resettlement, and nowhere is that seen more than at Barnes, where the school's 160 students speak 28 different languages. Virtually all come from economically disadvantaged backgrounds, and a district report found that Barnes has lower parental involvement and student achievement than its more affluent schools. With large numbers of English language learners and students with special needs, Barnes teachers recognized the need to connect the classroom with the outside world. "Our kids need hands-on learning experiences," says first-grade teacher Julie Brown. "When students are interested in and connected to the content, they're more likely to want to know more." ...

Innovative Character Education Leads to Safe, Supportive, and Successful School

Sharon Collins, St. Stephens Elementary, North Carolina

Story posted January, 2008

ststephens1web.jpgResults:
• 74% drop in disciplinary referrals since the 2001 school year
• Met academic goals for all 29 student subgroups in 2005

A low-income community might seem an unlikely setting for an award winning public school. But St. Stephens Elementary is just such a school, thanks in large part to the safe, supportive learning environment school staff have worked hard to create.

St. Stephens Elementary enrolls 750 children, over half of whom participate in the free/reduced-lunch program, and more than half of whom are students of color.

Faced with such an economically, socially and ethnically diverse student population, the school has created a strong sense of family through an innovative character education program and a challenging academic curriculum. Children at St. Stephens know they are safe and loved. The school accepts and in fact celebrates their diversity. ...

Arts Integrated Curriculum Helps Students Overcome Challenges of Poverty

Ronald Treanor, Woodrow Wilson Elementary School, New Jersey

Story posted January, 2008
Results updated December, 2011

Wilsonboysforweb.jpgResults:
• In 2010, the school outperformed the state in every test at every grade level, despite serving a significantly higher percentage of students in poverty overall (74% compared to 30%)
• 100% of fourth grade students met proficiency scores in science and math in 2010

Woodrow Wilson is a pre-kindergarten to eighth grade school located in Union City, New Jersey. One of the most densely populated cities in the United States, Union City has a large immigrant population-90 percent of the students are Hispanic-and high rates of poverty. In fact, the city has the lowest median family income in the state, and 84 percent of the school's population is eligible for a free or reduced-price lunch. ...

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