Application to Establish a New Performance School Proposal for a New Denver Center for International Studies Model School

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Application to Establish a New Performance School Proposal for a New Denver Center for International Studies Model School"

Transcription

1 Application to Establish a New Performance School Proposal for a New Denver Center for International Studies Model School Submitted by Daniel P. Lutz, Principal, Denver Center for International Studies Stephen Parce, Assistant Principal, Denver Center for International Studies Theresa Harrold, Teacher, Denver Center for International Studies Jennifer Portillo, Teacher, Denver Center for International Studies April 16, 2010

2 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY (4 pages) 1. Mission and Vision. State the mission and vision of the proposed school. Present the school s core values about teaching and learning, and highlight the innovative and researchdriven elements of your school. The world presents unfathomable opportunities for our young adults if they are prepared with the knowledge, skills, awareness, and attitudes to address global challenges. We need young citizens trained and capable of making this world a better place, both internationally and in our communities, as our very neighborhoods are increasingly touched by global realities and influences. The replication of the highly successful Denver Center for International Studies (DCIS model) will address this need for high performing options in DPS for parents and students in grades kindergarten through twelve. As a world-class school affiliated with the International Studies Schools Network (ISSN) and in partnership with Asia Society, a nationally-recognized organization focused on international and intercultural affairs, it will prepare students in the fields of world languages, the study of cultures and cross-cultural communication, international issues and conflict resolution, and the connection between community issues and the larger global challenges. The ISSN will support the development of the Denver Center for International Studies 2 (DCIS2) as a new network school based on the essential design framework and principles that guide the development of all ISSN schools. Funding through the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation will contribute to the development of DCIS2 for up to a four-year period through a grant that is matched at 50% by the school district up to $50,000 per year, pending a proposal approved by Asia Society. Certain fee-based services are included in the grant, including professional development opportunities for the school leadership and faculty, and provision of a school coach. The mission The mission of the DCIS2 is to prepare students for college by developing multilingual, inter-culturally competent citizens who are actively involved in our rapidly changing world. Learning philosophy and unique school characteristics DCIS2 will extend the success of the current school in promoting student achievement. To create a unique and outstanding educational experience the new school will combine best practices from its own history with proven educational practices from outstanding models of public education, historically such as Philadelphia s Bodine School of International Affairs and New York s Central Park East, and, of course, established ISSN schools. These are schools that manifest an understanding of learning that defies low expectations of students. Like these schools, DCIS2 will offer a rich and interesting curriculum full of powerful ideas and experiences aimed at inspiring its students with the desire to know more, a curriculum that sustains students natural drive to make sense of the world and trusts in their capacity to have an impact upon it. 1 Using the international focus both for content and as a tool for student engagement and learning, DCIS2 will personalize student learning to ensure that every child succeeds. Ascribing to principles essential and fundamental to the school s character, the school will expect its students to: be lifelong learners be passionate be ready to take risks be able to problem-solve and think critically 1 Deborah Meier, The Power of Their Ideas (Boston: Beacon Press, 1995), 16.

3 be able to view things from multiple perspectives be able to work independently and with others be creative care and want to give back to their community persevere have integrity and self-respect have moral courage be able to use the world around them well speak well, write well, read well, and work well with numbers truly enjoy their life and their work. 2 DCIS2 and its approach to international education will include the following: At least four world languages offered in grades K-12. Students will have the opportunity to become functionally fluent, to take content classes in their chosen world language in the eleventh or twelfth grades, and to develop specific translation skills. A strong emphasis on cross-cultural immersion, including international travel and exchanges. A diverse enrollment economically, ethnically, racially, and internationally as a reflection of the world s diverse cultures. Admission will be open to students with a broad range of academic backgrounds, but will require motivation to excel. A strong personalalized advising process will ensure each student makes the most of the educational opportunities available. Personal, active learning in which students learn to relate global issues to the challenges of our own communities and to the concerns and interests of the students and their families. Service learning and involvement in community organizations to connect the classroom to the real world. Leadership and articulation skills developed through major projects and graduation portfolios that require students to demonstrate initiative, organization, time management, presentation skills and documentation. Critical thinking, problem-solving, and creative perspectives fostered in the students work and honored in their achievements. Opportunities to study and practice international arts as a cultural entry to understanding people around the world. 2. Target Population The school s enrollment will emphasize three primary areas of diversity: ethnic, economic, and geographic diversity. Inclusiveness that reflects each of these aspects of diversity is essential in having a truly international school. All enrolled students should have their comfort zones challenged as they learn to interact productively with people from diverse backgrounds, and specific strategies will be in place to facilitate student learning in the area of personal communication. Achieving enrollment diversity in these three areas will require intensive promotion and recruitment activities that will reach and appeal to the diverse populations. The enrollment targets for ethnic balance will reflect the district s ethnic distribution but exceed its diversity balance with the following ranges: American Indian African- American Asian Hispanic Other 2 Dennis Littky, The Big Picture (Alexandria, Virginia: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, 2004), 1.

4 District (2003) 1.1% 16.2% 3.5% 54.1% 25.2% DCIS target range 1% 30% 10% 40% 19% The school s economic diversity will be measured by the number of students participating in the free and reduced lunch program; we intend that at least 45% of the students enrolled will qualify for this benefit. The school will seek geographic diversity by enrolling students from every high school attendance area in the district. Transportation benefits for students coming from distances greater than three miles are proposed below to ensure this goal can be facilitated without appealing only to families that can afford the time and expense to bring their children to the school. Students in the current DCIS represent economic and geographic diversity, and demonstrate high achievement. In DCIS2, high achievement will not be acquired by enrolling only students who have already achieved and demonstrated high levels of achievement. This will be a school for all students who demonstrate the desire for the focus and learning approaches of the school, and whose parents commit to active involvement and support of the school s goals for their children. The vision of inclusiveness extends to students whose first language is not English, whose country of origin is not the United States, and who may have special needs. Classes will be conducted in English, but ESL strategies will support the non-native English speakers. The curriculum and teaching methodology, expertise, and certification will be capable of embracing each individual student as an essential asset of the school's instructional community and all students in community together as a hologram of the diverse world they are studying. 3. Education Plan DCIS2 will have a vital, active international curriculum that results in high achievement for a diverse K- 12 enrollment. The curriculum will be extended from the model already established by DCIS. The school will provide developmentally appropriate approaches to learning experiences in each division through teaching methodologies that address "multiple intelligences" 3 in the following areas: World language skills World cultures Intercultural understanding and communication. World issues Conflict and conflict resolution Geography Comparative history Current events International arts The instructional character of the school will be significantly strengthened by elements such as: Literacy and core content material for all grades that is blended with the school s international focus. Integration of the curriculum, both across disciplines and throughout all grades. This includes integration with English, math, and science courses so that both the core skill areas in these disciplines and the international focus of the school are constantly reinforced. 3 Howard Gardner, Multiple Intelligences: New Horizons (New York: Basic Books, 2006.

5 International options in physical education and art such as tai chi, Tai Kwan Do, international team sports, and international visual/spatial and performance arts integrated into the academic curriculum and also available in extended day offerings. A strong advisement program as a tool for teachers and students to nourish a positive school culture that reflects the school s international intent, and to focus on students individual achievement, completion of school requirements, career aspirations, and college articulation. Application of knowledge, challenging students to think globally and act locally through community involvement. A college preparatory curriculum that expects high achievement from all students and provides the necessary support to reach those expectations. Intercultural experiences and world travel One particularly potent feature of the DCIS curriculum has been the opportunities for intercultural experiences and international travel that have been made available to its students. These experiences, grounded in the DCIS curriculum, have had a profound effect on the program s students. Those who travel develop a maturity beyond their years, sensitivity to others, a dramatically increased ability to be flexible and adaptable, and most notably a self-knowledge that comes with a greater sense of connection to others. These opportunities will be enhanced at the new DCIS school in several ways. These opportunities will continue at DCIS2 through fundraising, particularly through the efforts of the DCIS Foundation (see the Parent and Community Involvement section), and through continued joint efforts such as DCIS s existing partnership with a variety of non-profits linked to international education including but not limited to, Asia Society, Americans Promoting Study Abroad, Rotary International, Denver Sister Cities, and Arts Street. A growing relationship with the US State Department through previous exchange programs sponsored for our students assures our continued attention to appropriate security with these exchanges. Additionally the school will develop and promote domestic intercultural experiences for students not ready or able to participate in international exchanges and travel. Like the international travel experiences, domestic travel will also be connected to the curriculum through the study of historical events, experiences in inter-cultural contexts, and/or skill development in areas such as archeology. The larger staff that will be available when the program expands to a full school makes faculty sponsorship possible for such activities. Integrated activities One of the hallmarks of DCIS has been key activities in which students expand and deepen both their understanding of international affairs and their developing leadership and citizenship skills. While the program has had many extracurricular activities, some of them are considered co-curricular because of their reinforcement of the learning in the base program. At DCIS2, co-curricular activities will link with specific courses at each grade level, with objectives of the activities directly connected to course learning objectives. Extracurricular activities will be linked to the program more generally, giving all students a greater sense of real-world relevance for their academic focus in the school, as well as addressing the diversity of students learning styles. Faculty sponsorship of these activities will be strengthened in the expansion to a second DCIS school because of the increased number of faculty available, all of whom will be dedicated to the school s focus. DCIS Diploma of International Studies Students completing specific elements of the thirteen-year sequence will be awarded milestone certificates. Students completing all requirements of the middle school level will be presented with a special continuation certificate. Students completing all requirements of the school at the end of high school will be awarded the Diploma of International Studies, already established at the current DCIS. A

6 DPS high school diploma will be issued to all students satisfying the high school graduation requirements for Denver Public Schools. 4. Leadership and Management DCIS2 will be established by the strong team of educators and administrators who have created and built the existing DCIS 6-12 Model. DCIS schools will be led by Dr. Dan Lutz, Founding Principal and leader of the Denver Center for International Studies. His leadership and management team includes: Stephen Parce, Assistant Principal of DCIS, Jennifer Portillo and Theresa Harrold, lead teachers at DCIS, and Kate Farmer, Community Relations Director. LEADERSHIP STATEMENT The leadership team of DCIS2 will consist of a principal, a business manager, three designated lead teachers, and a community relations director. Each member of the leadership team will fulfill DPS qualification requirements; in addition they must fulfill DCIS2/ISSN requirements for leadership that include international education leadership experiences, cross-cultural experiences and intercultural communication skills, fluency in a second language, and deep knowledge about the ISSN school design matrix (see Appendix 1) and other guiding documents for the school. The principal will be the chief academic leader of the school and will have oversight over all school operations. The leadership style of the principal will be responsive and collaborative with all teachers through both formal and informal processes, structures, and committees. Formal collaboration will be developed with the teacher leaders, School Leadership Team (SLT), Collaborative School Committee, the DCIS community relations director, the business manager, and the various instructional/data teams. The business manager will handle all financial and logistic issues of the school and the teacher leaders will be full-time teachers but will receive stipends for their additional responsibilities. A teacher leader will be appointed for each of the instructional levels (elementary, middle, and high school). At least one of the teacher leaders will be appointed from the design team and/or from the design team that assisted in the development of the current DCIS. The community relations director will have an intimate knowledge of the ISSN/DCIS2 school design matrix and other guiding documents, international/intercultural experiences, be fluent in at least one other language (preferably Spanish) in addition to English, experience in establishing community partnerships with schools and student groups, event organizational skills, fundraising skills, excellent basic and intercultural communication skills, experience in public relations, fundamental knowledge of the curriculum framework of the school in order to relate community connections to students learning, and must have an initial network of contacts relevant to the school at the time of appointment. Leadership succession will be supported by ISSN and Asia Society. The potential for future leadership through this national network of schools, each of which have a vision, mission, and design framework in common with both DCIS schools, presents outstanding promise for sustainability of the DCIS vision and achievement. See Appendix 2 for an organizational chart of the leadership structure. Dr. Dan Lutz, current principal of DCIS and director of the design team, will remain as director of the DCIS schools for three years to insure development of DCIS2 according to the vision expressed in this

7 document, provide coordination and synergy with the current DCIS, and facilitate and support the professional development of the leadership team and faculty. Design Team Members Daniel P. Lutz, Ph.D., Principal, DCIS Dr. Lutz began his education career in a unique program that combined the Teacher Corps in New York with the Peace Corps in Afghanistan. This experience gave him his start as a high school teacher, a Masters degree in Cross-Cultural Education and a passion for international education. After working as a trainer for new Peace Corps Volunteers in Iran, he returned to the U.S. to teach in the Denver Public Schools. He became the Director of the CIS Magnet Program at Denver West High School in 1985, and has enjoyed the creativity of international and cross-cultural program development for high school students. In 1992 he completed his Ph.D. in Curriculum Leadership from the University of Denver. He has taught graduate classes in global education for the University of Denver and the University of Colorado at Denver. One of the founders of the Korean Heritage Camp for families with adopted children from that country, he later served on the Board of Directors for Colorado Heritage Camps, an organization that expanded the concept of the original camp to six others. He was the creator, chief proposal writer and editor for the school board-approved proposal for the current DCIS. He has been the writer of numerous grants awarded to CIS/West and DCIS, and was the facilitator for the development of the DCIS Foundation. Jennifer Portillo, Social Studies teacher, CIS/West and DCIS As a student at Manual High School Ms. Portillo participated in a trip to China in Their group was one of the first American high school groups to travel to China, and it inspired her to study Chinese in college and to return to China for a longer stay. She earned a B.A. in History from Tufts University in One of her classes at Tufts was a summer program in France, where she lived with a French family and traveled weekly to Geneva, Switzerland to visit UN organizations such as the World Health Organization and UNICEF. While in college, she also studied Hebrew and spent two weeks in Israel. In 1986 she was an exchange student at Beijing Normal University and then spent two years directing the exchange program in China, teaching English to the faculty of the university, and working as a part-time researcher for Newsweek magazine. Returning to the U.S. after the Tian An Men Square incident in 1989, she attended the University of California at Los Angeles, where she received a Masters Degree in East Asian Languages and Cultures and completed the coursework for a Ph.D. She speaks, reads, and writes Mandarin Chinese. She was attracted to DCIS because it was the only school in Denver teaching Chinese, she served on the Board of Directors of the DCIS Foundation before joining the faculty. She started as a teacher with CIS/West High and was one of the original teachers for DCIS when it opened in She is a pilot teacher for the development of the DCIS Graduate Portfolio System (GPS). Theresa Harrold, Mild/Moderate teacher, DCIS Theresa Harrold, DCIS's Intervention Specialist, has been with Denver Public Schools for five years. As an Intervention Specialist she has worked with students, teachers, and parents to support students in achieving their academic goals. She received a B.A. in English Literature from Fort Lewis College and her MA in Special Education from the University of Colorado at Denver. Prior to joining DPS she taught English as a Second Language in Asuncion, Paraguay. While living in South America she traveled through Chile, Brazil and Argentina. Stephen Parce, Assistant Principal, DCIS Mr. Parce is a Colorado native and the fourth generation in his family to teach in DPS, Mr. Parce received his first degree at Concordia College in Moorhead, MN with a triple major in Business Administration, German and Psychology. He earned his second degree and teaching license at the Metropolitan State College of Denver with a major in History and a minor in Sociology. He earned his principal's license and

8 his Master's degree in Administration, Supervision and Policy Studies at the University of Colorado, and began his studies for a Ph.D. in Administration, Supervision & Policy Studies at the University of Denver in Prior to coming to DCIS, Mr. Parce was an assistant principal at the Contemporary Learning Academy, DPS Night School and the GED Program for five years. He has taught Computers & Technology classes at Morey Middle School to both students and teachers, and also taught a variety of subjects at Skinner Middle School that included Social Studies, English as a Second Language, World Languages, and Computers and Technology. Mr. Parce has studied French, Spanish, German, Japanese, Esperanto, and some Chinese, and has had the opportunities to travel to over 30 countries in North America, Europe, Africa, and Asia. He is working towards the goal and experience of continuing his travels and studies around the world as a life-long student. He has been with DCIS since it opened and has been instrumental in establishing many of the school s infrastructure. Shari Albright, Executive Director, International Studies Schools Network, Asia Society Ms. Albright serves as the Chief Executive Officer of the Asia Society International Studies Schools Network, a national network of small, internationally-themed secondary schools dedicated to preparing college ready, globally competent citizens for the 21st century. Prior to joining the Asia Society, she served as the principal of a public, magnet school in the North East Independent School District in San Antonio, Texas, the International School of the Americas, which was the recipient of the Goldman Sachs Prize in International Education. With this proposal she serves as the key representative of Asia Society in supporting the efforts to establish DCIS2. Explain the circumstances and motivations that brought the Design Team together to propose this school: The Design Team decided to replicate the DCIS and to create DCIS2 based on its first school s academic current success, long waitlist, and strong community interest. After only three years DCIS has met its overall admission targets, its enrollment diversity goals, and has achieved green school status with its School Performance Framework (SPF). With the last SPF, DCIS was in the upper right quadrant of schools, reflecting both high achievement and high growth. In the last two years the demand for admissions has grown to several hundred, with many potential applicants turned away because of the existing waiting list. (See Appendix 3, Quick Facts). DCIS experiences minimal student attrition from year to year. We believe one of the components for this high interest in the school is the faculty s passion for its students, the school, and its mission. Everyone is mission-driven to prepare students for college with unique and advanced global competencies for our rapidly changing world. There is great interest from several communities in the DCIS model which has encouraged the school to replicate and open in their area, particularly in Green Valley Ranch, Montbello, and Parkfield. Investigations of interest and need were explored through many conversations with members of communities in which DCIS2 might be established. Community meetings were held with community and school leaders when DCIS was first exploring the possibility of expansion in the fall of On March 5 and 23, 2010, community meetings were held with representatives of the far northeast area of Denver as interest in the possibility of a second DCIS grew, and we were encouraged to pursue this proposal. Key far northeast community leaders have included State Senator Michael Johnston; Pat Hamill, CEO of Oakwood Homes; Charles Robertson, Community Advocate; Landry Taylor of Urban League; and Kristen Sharp of Padres y Jovenes Unidos. DCIS is a member of the International Studies Schools Network (ISSN), which provides professional development for the staff and teachers to support the instructional model. ISSN hopes to create a cluster

9 of schools in the metro Denver area to support a network of schools. Such networks already exist in regions centered in Los Angeles, Houston, Chicago, New York City, and Charlotte. Leadership Philosophy Leadership Statement for Denver Center for International Studies 2 DCIS2 will extend the success of the current DCIS school in promoting student achievement. To create a unique and outstanding educational experience, the new school will combine proven education practices from DCIS and best practices from successful educational models of public education mentioned earlier, and from established ISSN schools such as the Houston Academy of International Studies and Henry Street School in New York. These are schools that manifest an understanding of learning which defies low expectations of students. Educational philosophy for DCIS2 Learning is an active process, and every step in a student s education should be a product of scaffolded learning that leads to: higher order thinking and ever-sophisticated problem-solving skills; the ability to incorporate and benefit from perspectives other than his/her own; the ability to articulate that learning; the ability to apply the learning to real situations; and the ability to adapt that learning and application to ever-changing realities. Curriculum views The framework for curriculum and its development must have the following characteristics: Curriculum for any unit or course must never be conceived and applied in a vacuum. It must be planned and developed backwards from the desired outcomes, both in the macro view of a K-12 school, and in the view of each level of learning in which students participate. o Graduation outcomes are the beginning point of curriculum development, with state standards forming the incremental criteria for those outcomes. In addition to DPS graduation requirements and outcomes, however, DCIS2 will also have a Graduate Profile that specifies qualities and skills a graduate from the school must achieve. These incorporate a set of global competencies that have been developed through the collaborative work of ISSN schools and Asia Society. (See Appendix 5, DCIS Graduate Profile). Clarity of alignment between state standards and the Graduate Profile criteria will be developed at the beginning of the development year prior to the new school s opening. o Within each discipline each level must have articulated outcomes skills, knowledge, understandings, sensitivities, awareness, and attitudes that prepare the student for the next level that ultimately lead to the cumulative graduate outcomes. Curriculum must facilitate an active learning process that engages the students interests, personal realities, and active thinking processes. o Relevance to students lives and understanding must be created and facilitated by the o curriculum and its delivery. It must involve inquiry, not just in the framework of teachers questions, but must stimulate and develop students ability to frame and initiate pertinent questions of their own that will create investment and receptivity to the intended learning. Curriculum must both challenge students limits from their prior knowledge and life experiences, and create the appropriate bridge to higher knowledge and abilities.

10 Curriculum must engage student learning in differentiated ways that employ as many native learning intelligences (Gardner) as possible, and challenges them to develop other avenues of learning not as natural to them, in order to develop flexibility and adaptability for applying and extending the learning. Curriculum must utilize interdisciplinary consistency and reinforcement. Curriculum must build knowledge and skills in large contexts; students must be able to synthesize skills and knowledge gained from curriculum into larger projects. Curriculum must have collaborative elements to its design that require: o Working out problems and developing learning in the context of different perspectives; o Developing articulation skills that clarify learning, first of all in the students own minds, as well as in the minds of teachers for assessment purposes; and o Extending benefits of learning to others through presentations of learning. Curriculum must have a service learning aspect to help students see the relevance of the learning, to give them the opportunity for significant and meaningful application, and to develop their own connection to a better world through their learning. How do we believe adults and children learn best? DCIS2 believes adults and students learn best through: Active learning strategies (see above section) Relevant learning (see above section) Application of the learning to problems and the creation of substantive products or outcomes Collaborative processes with other learners Appropriate scaffolding from the knowledge base at the start of the learning process One aspect that should be emphasized is that in today s world (vs. previous generations), children learn best (meaning best quality, best character-building context and framework) with many facilitated interactions with adults outside the traditional insular nature of schools. School partnerships, mentorships, internships, shadowing experiences, service, and interviews connect students to the real world outside the classroom and the school, and prepare them with the view of what the world they are preparing for is really like. 4 Course activities such as the Oral Histories project in the Introduction to Cultures connect students with the humanity of history by interviewing senior citizens who have lived history, and whose family stories reflect the impact of history and the dynamics of cultures as they have been personally experienced. (See Instructional Strategies in the Education Plan below.) Most important responsibilities of the school principal The principal must: Maintain and nurture the school s vision and keep it perpetually alive and fresh in the minds and motivations of the entire learning community teachers, students, parents, volunteers and school partners. Develop and maintain a collaborative sense of community-building. 4 Two of many examples: Denver Commission on Secondary Reform, Not a Moment to Lose: A Call to Action for Transforming Denver s High Schools. (Denver Public Schools, 2005) Lisa M. Bouillion, and Louis M. Gomez, Connecting School and Community with Science Learning: Real World Problems and School- Community Partnerships as Contextual Scaffolds, Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 38:8.

11 Develop and maintain mutual commitment and enthusiasm among the school community so that each individual is responsible both to the integrity of his/her own work and also to the collective health and highest achievement of the school. Develop clear expectations of a consistent collaborative work ethic. Maintain a strong culture of open communication that facilitates authentic collaborative work. Develop and nurture investment of faculty in the decisions of the school. Maintain a clear understanding of collective skills needed for school success throughout the faculty and staff, and lead the community in appropriate professional development and targeted staffing to meet those needs. Maintain clear performance expectations of teachers and staff in terms of the school vision, design, and commitment to students learning and achievement. Provide clear support for the faculty and staff to meet those expectations, and work collaboratively with the faculty and staff to provide relevant and appropriately supportive professional development. Work collaboratively with the school district to provide all possible support for the school, its faculty and staff, its students, parents, and entire community to consistently move towards the school vision and meet its mission. Most important responsibilities of the leadership team As a team, the individuals leading the school must work together to accomplish the following chief objectives: Have a clear and articulated passion for the unique mission of the school, for the direct relationship between the mission and the school s students, and for the students themselves. Lead and inspire with a vision of what the school culture should be and how it should be manifested. Ensure that all the talents of the entire faculty and staff are integrated to move both the school as a whole and individual students to their highest achievement within the framework of the school s international vision and all guiding documents, and in terms of state standard and the school s Graduate Portfolio System (see Appendix 8). Manage the talent, efforts, and continuous improvement of the faculty and staff to that end. Have clear reference points to maintain guidance of the work; guiding documents include a mission statement, design framework, core values, and an understanding of an assessment and evaluation framework. Support the school leader in developing and maintaining a collaborative community. Make sure all aspects of school leadership are facilitated, on both the operational side and the teaching and learning side. Support the school leader in bringing additional resources to the school that will support and enhance the students learning. Develop and nurture a clear, positive school culture in the context of the school vision, mission, and core values in such a way that students learning environment is safe and supports the effectiveness of their education. Be flexible with their roles as the dynamics of the school s circumstances change so that the quality of the school continues to improve, and be proactive and positive problem solvers Support each other to maintain enthusiasm for the school, every member of its community, and for the work that is involved with all challenges; lead the school community in celebrations of success as the most powerful base from which to build. Be collaborative to achieve investment in the work among all personnel involved in the enterprise; collaboration must have a clearly understood process in the faculty/staff culture that

12 includes but goes beyond the purviews of the School Leadership Team and the Collaborative School Committee. Develop teacher leaders for defined areas of school development and improvement. Work towards a collaborative model throughout the staff and faculty to support the development of instructional and cultural practices that drive continuous improvement. Have a clear understanding of district curriculum, how the modifications and extensions of curriculum for the school s mission can and should be embedded into the curriculum, and how the curriculum throughout the school should be integrated and coordinated both vertically and horizontally. Have a clear vision of pedagogy that furthers the school s mission and connection with students; specifically, the leadership team must promote active student-centered learning that can include problem-based, project-based, and experiential-based learning modes that cross intelligences (Gardner). Facilitate regular monitoring and evaluation of school performance including teachers, staff, students, and all other support activities. Develop a mutual understanding of shared responsibility and accountability based on both district requirements and the specific mission and design of the school. Have a vision for assessment of student achievement that is based on both short-term and longterm desired outcomes, both aligned with district and state goals as well as the unique goals and mission of the school. Have a vision for and an ability to promote student articulation of their learning in a variety of settings with a variety of audiences, both student and adult, with expectations of increasing levels of sophistication and skill commensurate with the increased depth and maturity of learning levels. Have a vision for and promote student voice in the school culture and decision-making, including policies, recommendations for faculty selections, and practices that build positive school culture. Curriculum and Instruction EDUCATION PLAN The mission of DCIS2 is to prepare students for college by developing multilingual, inter-culturally competent citizens who are actively involved in our rapidly changing world. The substance of DCIS2 in curriculum, instruction, and supporting practices are steered by a set of guiding documents. These include the school s mission statement, school design framework, Graduate Profile, global competencies, core values (see Appendices 1 and 4-7), and this proposal pending approval by the School Board. 1. Instructional Design: DCIS2 will be a K-12 school, different from the current DCIS which only serves students in grades There are instructional design differences between the elementary and secondary levels. At the elementary level, one teacher primarily directs student learning across subjects, while instruction tends to be separated by discipline for students at the secondary level. The interdisciplinary opportunities at the elementary level will be a focal point in the new school, and will serve as a base from which to expand at the school s secondary levels. All DCIS2 students will be members of an advisement group that will support individual participation and building of the school culture, self-monitoring of achievement and growth, and the consolidation, reflection, and presentation of learning. Cross-grade combinations of advisement groups will develop

13 school culture, leadership, and student-to-student mentoring. Mentoring and tutoring from secondary students for elementary students will be organized through the Advisement program. The basic learning environment that will be common across all grades is a combination of classroom based instruction, service learning, interdisciplinary learning projects, writing labs, world language labs, small group and large group presentations of learning. Integration of the adult community involved in the international arena -- non-profit organizations, public, and corporate enterprises will connect instruction to the DCIS Graduate Profile (Appendix 4). The design and approach will be differentiated according to developmental levels, but it should be noted that even the youngest of the DCIS2 students will have these broad learning experiences. It is in the early exposure to this dynamic learning environment and its consistent and increasingly sophisticated nature up through the grades that will prepare students for the highest level of skills, knowledge and international competencies by the time they graduate from the school. The learning environment will certainly challenge students more as they move towards and through secondary levels. DCIS2 students will participate in many local and international learning activities modeled after the current DCIS that. Intercultural learning experiences off campus are related to and integrated into course curricula and Graduate Profile criteria. These experiences include day field trips and longer-term domestic and international student travel programs and exchanges, and video/digital connections to students and adults around the world. Upper level secondary students have many post-secondary education options, including CU Succeed opportunities, Confucious Institute opportunities, and other partnership arrangements with local universities. In addition, International Passages, which are projects focused in international or intercultural issues or competency-building, scaffolded in scope and sophistication from early grades up through the senior year, that involve both on campus and off campus development. Upper level secondary students intern office campus in the context of International Passages. Class Size and Structure Classes will average 24 at the elementary level and 28 students at the secondary level. Each classroom will be led by a teacher, and support will be provided periodically by paraprofessionals, parent volunteers, upper-level student mentors, community and non-profit partners, and specialized mild/moderate teachers as necessary. Class structure will vary when teachers team in order to implement interdisciplinary teaching, or to support differentiated instruction strategies. ISSN Model Since 2003, the Asia Society has worked in partnership with school districts and charter authorities to create the International Studies Schools Network (ISSN). ISSN is a national network of design-driven public schools that are achieving success in attaining their core mission: to develop college-ready and globally-competent high school graduates. The network currently includes 20 grade 6-12 or 9-12 schools in urban and rural communities across the United States. 85% of all ISSN students are minorities, and 74% are from low-income families. The ISSN responds to two intertwined imperatives facing American education. The first is the chronic problem of persistently poor academic performance among low-income and minority students. The second is preparing students for work and civic roles in a globalized environment, where success increasingly requires the ability to compete, connect, and cooperate on an international scale. The ISSN school design and learning system helps schools develop:

14 An intellectual mission focused on international studies that targets educational excellence for every student. A curriculum that meets state standards and integrates international content throughout all subject areas. Engaging, inquiry-based instruction and multiple forms of assessment that promote learning with real understanding. The opportunity for students to study one or more world languages, including an Asian language. Innovative uses of technology that support instruction and linkages to schools around the world. A school culture that promotes a sense of belonging for every student and supports students' personal growth. Opportunities for student international travel and exchanges. Internships and community service opportunities at internationally-oriented businesses, cultural institutions, and universities. Engagement of faculty in continuous high-quality professional development including international travel and exchange. Results to Date Research shows that Asia Society's ISSN schools are beating the odds--by a long shot. Our students are doing better academically and graduating at far greater numbers than their peers. The Consortium for Policy Research in Education and Hopothesi, Inc. analyzed ISSN data from , comparing results from these schools to out-of-network schools with similar demographic profiles within the same school districts. Across grade levels and core subject areas of English, math, science and social studies, ISSN schools showed greater academic achievement in 85% of all cases. In June 2008, students in the first two ISSN graduating classes at the Academy of International Studies (Charlotte, NC) and Henry Street School (New York, NY) proudly received their diplomas. At the Academy, students consistently and substantially outpaced other students in their district on standardized tests over the course of four years, with 100% of our students at the Academy graduating. Henry Street School, which serves a 100% low-income and minority student population, and twice the district average of special education students, graduated 80% of its students in four years, compared to the New York City graduation rate average of 50%. These schools are proving that high academic achievement and global competence can go hand in hand. 2. Instructional Strategies: Intercultural Education A key to the school will be the diversity and inclusiveness of its enrollment, for diverse enrollment is not only an admissions goal, but an instructional tool in and of itself. Learning about other cultures, characteristic of the post-civil rights era s multicultural education, is not adequate for developing global and intercultural competencies, which well-prepared productive citizens need to have for our current and emerging societal realities and needs. Students must have a reason to learn intercultural skills, and common outcomes required of diverse students provides that reason. Project-based cooperative learning experiences require students to learn how to work with others that have different cultures, habits, and perspectives in order to successfully produce the intended outcome together. This strategy requires teachers to facilitate intercultural protocols and communication among students in the process of the project, which includes structured and intentional debriefing, reflection, and reorientation to the project and its participants. Student-Centered Teaching

15 A hallmark of DCIS and precollegiate international studies education is the active learning approach that characterizes instruction and student participation in it. This approach invests the students in what they are learning, so that it becomes much less imposed from the external curriculum and more driven by strategies that empower the student. The following attributes define what this means for DCIS2: Clear modeling of proficient and advanced levels of performance manifested in a variety of ways for students in preparation for every classroom assessment. Clear articulation and sustained presence of lesson, unit, and course objectives and benchmark skills and knowledge expected. Student self-goal setting, both in terms of the standards and scaffolded criteria for the Graduate Profile. Structured and student self-monitoring of progress, reflection, and reorienting to goals; this will happen both in individual classes/courses and consolidated across courses through the Advisement program. Collaborative learning: students will have clear models of how to articulate learning, how to communicate questions and issues among each other, and to develop skills with each others help. The role of individual learning will always be connected to its applications and its collaborative use, so the role of cooperative learning supports individual learning. Project-based learning. Experiential learning; service learning. Emphasis on students making their learning and the evaluation of learning public through presentations of learning. Teacher identification of individual students learning styles to tailor instructional strategies, both to meet those styles and to push students expansion of their personal access to learning into other styles. Menu-driven activities for students to reach required proficiencies in alternate ways with specified support for each alternative. Community and School Partnerships As emphasized above another essential component of the DCIS2 s instructional strategies is the community and school partners involvement in classroom and project-based instruction. It is imperative that DCIS2 students have relevant and facilitated contact in their learning with adults in addition to their teachers that model multilingual, interculturally competent citizens who are actively involved in our rapidly changing world. This aspect of instruction is discussed at length below in the Parent and Community Involvement section below. Early Success and College Readiness Early success (elementary) and college readiness strategies are incorporated in overall instruction and school design. Factors that will increasingly support students college readiness in DCIS2 include: an integrated K-12 curriculum which will cycle in its development in yo-yo fashion. The development starts with the end in mind, which is the DCIS2 Graduate Profile and Global competencies in concert with DPS graduation requirements, and college entrance and retention skills. A continuous work in progress will be the backwards planning and vertical alignment of skill and knowledge development that go all the way back to kindergarten. As the school continues to improve this thirteen-year scaffolding for what is expected by the twelfth grade, those expectations can become more sophisticated as students become more capable from their early preparation. an elimination of the 5 th to 6 th grade and 8 th to 9 th grade transitions, two points often very difficult for students both socially and academically. While some students and their parents will inevitably choose to transfer to different schools for various reasons over the thirteen year period, those students that stay will have the opportunity to grow in a stable community, adjust to new

16 expectations that are constantly visible and articulated, and move towards increasingly rich opportunities afforded by increasing skills and knowledge promoted by the school s mission. a support and mentoring relationship built into the school culture and practices that bring the youngest students into contact with the older students, and expectations of role modeling for the older students. a range of additional interventions and support for students across the academic spectrum, including Advisement (see below); tutoring and mentoring from parents, teachers, community organizations and both Junior and Senior National Honor Society student groups; intense college counseling activities; partnerships with local universities; and unit and credit recovery options. 3. Curriculum Overview The curriculum will be conceptualized and organized according to strands of international knowledge and competencies, and scaffolded throughout the levels of the school. Strands coincide with the DCIS Graduate Profile and disciplines relate to the strands as exemplified and simplified in the following chart: Strand Graduate Profile Element Discipline(s) Geography and Cultures Effective Users of Language Social studies Culturally Aware and Sensitive Language arts / literacy Aware of World Events and Global Dynamics Math Science Conflict and Conflict Effective Users of Language Resolution Proficient in the Use of Technology Proficient Thinkers and Problem Solvers Culturally Aware and Sensitive Aware of World Events and Global Dynamics Collaborative Team Members Healthy Lifestyle Global Dynamics and Effective Users of Language Personal Responsibility Academically Prepared Proficient Thinkers and Problem Solvers Aware of World Events and Global Dynamics Collaborative Team Members Healthy Lifestyle Communication Effective Users of Language Proficient in the Use of Technology Academically Prepared Culturally Aware and Sensitive Collaborative Team Members Healthy Lifestyle Intercultural Effectiveness Effective Users of Language Academically Prepared Proficient Thinkers and Problem Solvers Culturally Aware and Sensitive Aware of World Events and Global Dynamics Collaborative Team Members World Languages Social studies Language arts / literacy World Languages Social studies Language arts / literacy Science World Languages Social studies Language arts / literacy Math Science World Languages Social studies Language arts / literacy World Languages

17 Tools / Technology Effective Users of Language Proficient in the Use of Technology Proficient Thinkers and Problem Solvers Aware of World Events and Global Dynamics Collaborative Team Members Social studies Language arts / literacy Math Science World Languages As DPS curriculum will be used (with the possible exception of language arts for secondary levels), internationalized applications of curriculum will be embedded into the presentation of the curriculum, and students evidence of their internationalized learning will be presented through a rubric-based performance assessment system, Graduate Performance System (GPS), that contributes to the students overall portfolios of learning that are built through Advisement. (See Assessment section below.). In addition to the DPS curriculum, special social studies curriculum and world language study will be required of all students. At the elementary school level, social studies content in DPS curriculum will be modified following the strands above in the development year by the initial elementary DCIS2 team of teachers anchored by a DCIS elementary specialist, and working in concert with other developing ISSN K-12 schools through Asia Society support and vast resources. ISSN/Asia Society is currently working on the framework for these modifications in alignment with common performance standards in the states where ISSN school clusters are located, including Colorado. At the secondary level all students will take two social studies courses, the sequence of which includes the required DPS social studies courses. The additional courses already in place at DCIS include World Service Learning, Introduction to International Studies, Introduction to Cultures, Cross-cultural Communication, Model United Nations, Introduction to International Business, DCIS Internship, World History, Comparative Governments (embedded in US Government), Connections and Portfolio. The latter two are culminating courses that will guide students to consolidate their international studies learning and to create personal connections between the learning in DCIS2 and their next steps after DCIS2. Part of this process is to prepare for their Senior Portfolio Presentation in the Spring semester of students senior year. Other Courses and Structured Learning Experiences World Languages All students will be required to take world language instruction at every level. Instruction would be age appropriate, but would also take advantage in the earliest grades of the different, more intuitive modalities younger children have for language learning. K-3 language instruction would establish rituals, rhythms, and sounds by drawing on culturalbased language games and songs. Such strategies for these early grades would develop a comfort level among the students to try what is unfamiliar, and to vocalize in ways that will support much higher expectations of articulation in later grades. The instruction would follow a structured and scheduled plan among all the classes at these grades that provides for language teachers to work with every class approximately fifteen minutes in the morning. Instruction will be supported by upper level secondary students who will rotate from their own language classes, reinforcing those students investment in their language learning. Students in grades 4 and 5 would have a scheduled time for world language instruction in halfhour blocks, scheduled into language teacher s secondary block schedule and organized in collaboration with the 4 th and 5 th grade teachers. At the secondary level each students will be enrolled in a world language class every semester. The goal for every student would be to remain with one language the throughout their DCIS2 secondary experience and to become fluent in that language; however, options would allow a

18 student to apply to switch languages once in grades 6-8 and once in grades A switch would be allowed based on the student s circumstances and on whether or not there is room in a class for the new language. Content classes at the junior and senior levels will be offered in the target world languages to be developed in partnership with area universities and colleges as a way to support college readiness, articulation with college world language programs, and college enrollment in languages they offer. Current efforts are underway at DCIS to develop this initiative with the University of Colorado at Denver. Languages to be offered in the new school will be Spanish, Chinese, and Arabic. Depending on staffing and community input, two additional languages will be considered, including Swahili and an additional European language. (Cf. the current DCIS menu of languages, which includes Spanish, French, Italian, Chinese, and Japanese). International Passages An overlay of International Passages throughout course-based curriculum will complement and intensify learning experiences from the classroom environment. Leveled guidelines for International Passages (see Appendix 9) will be developed for every level of the school. These yearly interdisciplinary projects will be directed at developing global competencies (Appendix 6) according to the Graduate Profile, and application skills expected of standards-based courses. Each project at the elementary levels will be facilitated within each student s classroom. At the secondary level the project will focus in one discipline as a part of one class, but the student must incorporate skills from each discipline. Grade level teacher teams will determine the ways students can choose the class, but by a method the team devises to spread the load out across all classes. The grade for the project will go to the Advisement class in the secondary level. Students presentations of the projects at the secondary level will occur both in Advisement (see Advisement Program below) to stimulate the academic aspect of Advisement and in the class to which the project is attached. By a student s senior year, the level of sophistication of the projects will reflect the systematic learning over the years for planning internationalized learning objectives, organizing a project, asking good questions to inform the project, creating a solid focus for a project, excellent use of resources and collaborative synergy, and strong skills for presenting the completed project. A student s committee for each Passage in the junior and senior year will require one member to be a community mentor that has a connection to the focus of the Passage (see Appendix 10 for a pacing guide for the first Passage, the product of which is a major research paper in which students practice the project development process for later experiential learning Passages). Presentations of students International Passages will be set on specific days in both semesters with a special schedule for the day so that other students, parents and community members can attend. Advisement Program An Advisement program will be a central feature in DCIS2 s curriculum (see Appendix 11 and 12). Advisement groups will be established by grade level, but each advisement group will have a partner group at another grade level Students at all levels will meet daily for the following purposes: Discussions, learning activities, reflection, and voice to Advisement Council regarding the development and improvement of the school s culture and students individual responsibilities and roles in it. Understanding assessment data from current classes as well as Benchmark and CSAP tests. Setting goals for achievement in coming assessments. Developing self-monitoring processes that will help in achieving those goals. Development of a personal learning portfolio with artifacts from all classes that characterize learning; discussion and written reflection on those artifacts to explain their significance in the learning for the class from which the artifact came; relating the artifacts to the graduate profile.

19 At elementary levels, the development of service learning projects that connect to both content curriculum and community needs, using DCIS s Earth Force partnership to teach students project development. This learning will support students understanding of project development for their International Passages. Cross-level meetings with partner Advisement groups to develop relationships across grade levels, support younger students awareness of expectations in later grades, and develop leadership, mentorship, and articulation skills in older students as they work with younger students. Consolidation of advisement strategies into specific college readiness activities, including: college searches and scheduling of college visits; preparation for ACT and other college admission exams; and college entrance applications, essays, and scholarship applications Physical Education (PE) and Art The instructional delivery of Physical Education and Art will require some waivers from the form in which DPS traditionally gives credit. Both are important aspects of DCIS2 s design, but due to budget limitations resulting from staffing the new school s required additional social studies and world language classes, the alternative delivery form will be necessary. Students will meet the requirements of these disciplines in the following ways: At all levels both PE and art will be infused into content curriculum. School partners (e.g., Harmony Project and Arts Street) will facilitate the infusion by teaming with teachers at every grade level. After-school programs in art and PE will be available on an extended day basis, offered by school partners. Focus of art and PE activities will relate to the various elements of the school s international focus as related in the Graduate Profile. Activities will be standards-based to ensure students are meeting expectations in these areas. At ninth grade and above the school will request a waiver from the PE and art requirements as a specified transcript course. DCIS2 will arrange record-keeping of standards-based activities and assessment of those activities so that students transcripts can show that the graduation requirements have been satisfied, just as students PE requirement can be fulfilled by participation in interscholastic sports. Activities that would apply toward fulfillment of the graduation requirement include classroom infusion activities, participation in DCIS after-school programs, and verification of outside classes and club sports. Alternatives to this plan to satisfy PE and art graduation requirements include the school s intention to apply for Perkins funding for Career and Technology Education (CTE) classes for the first three years of the school s development with the intention to retain them under district Student Based Budgeting thereafter. This would be an alternate for the art requirement. students option to participate in their home or nearest comprehensive high school s interscholastic sports programs or marching band. Advanced Placement Classes Advanced placement options for students will be included in secondary offerings. Scheduling strategies to increase the access to students in the limited scheduling framework of the new school s small size will include alternate year offerings. For example, in science every other year AP Physics would be offered to juniors and seniors, and in alternate years AP Chemistry would be offered. This insures that classes are full, making efficient use of teacher time and cost, while still giving students full access to the upper level AP classes.

20 Post-Secondary Education Post-Secondary Education Options (PSEO) will enhance secondary options for students in the upper grades. Because of the small school format of DCIS2 these opportunities will help to complement the school with additional rigorous options for students and increase college readiness experiences for them. Students will be provided with these PSEO options for a variety of reasons, including filling for classes they can t take at school because of schedule conflicts, wanting the challenge of higher level classes not available at DCIS2, particularly in math and science, and taking advantage of specialized learning experiences that would serve as a part of an International Passage. 4. Special Populations Special Needs Students DCIS2 will continue DCIS s strong commitment to serving students with special needs by giving them the opportunities to explore their individual interests, take an active role in school leadership, gain confidence and self-advocacy skills through an advisement program that focuses on relationship building and increasing academic skills, and to explore post-secondary school and career options in order to meet transition goals. DCIS2 will be committed to meeting the requirements, as well as the spirit, of the federal government's Response to Intervention mandate, while expecting students with special needs the opportunity to access as fully as possible the general education curriculum. Students are fully supported through a comprehensive consultation program between the special education teachers and the general education teachers. This focus on consultation allows teachers to foresee difficulties that may be encountered by specific students, curriculums to be modified when necessary in order to meet a student at his/her instruction level, and models the collaborative culture that is an integral part of the school by providing many opportunities for co-teaching and support. This model has worked well for the students with special needs at DCIS. A commitment to rigor and high expectations, as well as a focus on individual student needs has resulted in increases in students with special needs reaching proficiency on the CSAP. From 2008 to 2009, the number of middle school students with special needs scoring in the proficient range increased 22% in reading, 29% in math and 12% in writing. The number of high school students with special needs increased proficient scores by 8% in reading, 23% in math and 11% in writing during the same period. DCIS2 will operate with a three-tiered intervention model that is unique to the school (see Appendix 13). The interventions specified in this model will allow students with special needs to participate as fully as possible in the general education curriculum, while also providing support and options that allow them to achieve success. The K-12 model will provide additional opportunities for students with special needs to learn the necessary skills and habits that will lead to success. By realizing what the expectations and end result will be, the elementary and middle school Mild/Moderate teachers, intervention teachers and general education teachers will work collaboratively to focus on early intervention, early identification and careful monitoring of all student skills in order to adequately prepare them for the academic rigor and self-directed learning expected at the high school level. With the Graduate Profile as the guiding document, students at all levels will be given the skills and the intervention necessary to allow them to meet the expectations of a graduating senior. In order to provide this level of support for our students, certain systems must be put in place to assure adequate information and monitoring of skill levels at all grades. In the elementary school, reading progress will be monitored using a combination of DIEBELS, AIMSWEB and DRA for benchmark data and progress monitoring. AIMSWEB will also be used to assess the skill level of middle school students.

21 Ninth graders will enter high school with AIMSWEB information from their 8th grade year, and will be monitored using district benchmark criteria, curriculum based measurements and CSAP data. Staffing will also play an important role in assuring that students with special needs are fully supported. With expected projections for DCIS2, two mild/moderate special education teachers will be needed to staff the elementary school. This will allow one teacher to work with students from K-2, as well as consult and co-teach with the general education teachers in those grades, and another M/M teacher will work with students in grades 3-5. These teachers can also support each other in developing and maintaining access to the interventions in the model. If M/M budget allows, a separate intervention teacher would provide a powerful support at the elementary level, providing both short- and long-term intervention classes targeting specific skill deficits. At the elementary school this might be Foundations, with Wilson and/or Language! for the upper elementary students. Step Up to Writing techniques will be used as well. This latter teacher, or paraprofessional if the separate teacher could not be afforded, would also collaborate with the gifted/talented teacher for accelerated and twice gifted students. At the secondary level at full school enrollment there will be one M/M teacher responsible for consultation, advisement, and case management. There will also be an intervention teacher, or paraprofessional, to support specific interventions, and transition activities such as job shadowing, campus visits, etc. At Risk Students At risk students will be well served in a small environment that emphasizes individual students. 504 plans will be implemented and monitored by grade level teacher teams with oversight by administration at the elementary school level and counselors at the middle/high school level. Students will also benefit from the advisement program by having a key teacher that is invested in their success. A schoolwide strategy of monitoring at-risk students will include teachers monitoring of specific students identified at the beginning of the school year with data and reflection binders that include tools such as the DCIS Response to Intervention Plan (see Appendix 14 and the RtI section below). Gifted and Talented (GT) Gifted and Talented plans will be overseen by the gifted and talented teacher. Based on current middle school enrollment of 100+ GT students a full time GT teacher should be allocated to the school to serve the entire population. This teacher will support students in creating and monitoring their Advanced Learning Plans, International Passages, portfolio development, and their participation in special opportunities unique to the school. These include projects in which DCIS gifted students have participated, including Mathletics, Science Fair, History Day, World Affairs Challenge at the University of Denver, and Shakespeare Festival. English Language Learners (ELL) ELL students will benefit from strong differentiated teaching that is based on best practices for each discipline and incorporates sheltered techniques to support. Modeled for ELLs, similar to Special education, students in elementary school will be pulled out of classes in collaborative planning with classroom teachers for extra support/curriculum to build their language skills with the goal of getting them ready for the rigor of the high school curriculum. Intervention teachers would be vital in serving the ELL population as well. A limited but targeted range of strategies will be developed to serve this population. It will be clear to potential applications to DCIS2, however, that DCIS will not be a formal ELA school.

22 Teacher Teaming Collaboration is one of the core values of DCIS2, modeled by teachers. This collaborative model among special education, gifted and talented, support staff and general education staff creates the ideal and proven model to serve not only special populations, but all student populations. Teacher teaming provides opportunities for grade level teams to discuss specific students and to generate cross-curricular projects developed by grade level teams. Teachers work in groups to work on priorities as defined by staff. Sufficient shared planning time and professional development is incorporated into the schedule for staff to meet in a variety of configurations. Special professional development days will be set aside for these various team configurations to meet. 5. Response to Intervention (see Appendices 13 and 14) Intervention for the new school will be an annual cycle. In the fall the Data Leadership Team will work with grade level Advisement teacher teams to identify students with data carried forward from the previous year that suggest special instructional strategy needs: students retained who were on an academic contract the previous year but showed effort and improvement by the end of the year; students with low achievement scores from the previous year (see data sources discussed above); and students at the high end of achievement scores that showed no growth from the previous years. A confidential Googledoc grid will be developed that lists all of these identified students, with spaces for any teachers to add comments about the student s progress through the first quarter. Teachers that may not be a classroom teacher for a student but have academic contact with the student may contribute comments. The grid will be populated with key carry-over data from the previous year for each student. The Data Leadership Team will organize how this task is completed in a timely manner. By the fourth week of the first semester each teacher will select four to six students of concern in their academic classes for whom to develop to develop a data portfolio. Forms provided will assist teachers in developing intervention strategies for each specific student, monitoring these students going forward, reflecting on the success of the interventions, and revising interventions. Teacher-student conferences will be scheduled to work with students to provide targeted help to facilitate students self-goal setting, selfmonitoring, celebrating successes, and revising goals. Teachers must have positive reinforcement strategies in place throughout the year to celebrate these students successes. The Data Leadership Team will be responsible for seeing how completely the list of students in the Googledoc grid is covered by those students selected by teachers for their data portfolios and devise a strategy for making sure any students that are left out are assigned as necessary to teacher portfolios. In both grade level teacher Advisement teams and grade level academic teams (staffing will attempt to make these the same to the extent possible) teachers will share student work, strategies for classroom interventions, and interventions made available beyond the classroom. Parent-teacher conferences will be scheduled in the twelfth week (end of October). Advisement teachers will schedule conferences with parents of each of advisee, and conferences will be student-led. Students will use their developing portfolio as the key tool to guide their conversations around performance. Students will prepare for conducting these conferences in the three weeks prior to the conferences in their Advisement sessions, facilitated by their advisement teachers. By weeks 14-15, teachers will know which students on their initial list that are not responding to interventions, and may have additional students they have added to their data portfolios that are not doing well. Using the Response to Intervention Plan form (Appendix 14), teachers will set up a plan for all students in their data portfolios to prevent those students from going on an academic contract.

23 In the first week of the second semester students that have fallen below a 2.0 GPA from the first semester will be put on an academic contract (Appendix 15) by their Advisement teachers. Once again, the Data Leadership Teams will be responsible for mapping the level of congruence between the students placed on academic contract and students in the teachers data portfolios, and developing strategies to deal with students in the gap between the two. Throughout the first five weeks of the second semester teachers will continue to monitor and meet with students in their portfolios. Parent-teacher conferences will be scheduled throughout the month of February by content teachers for students of concern in their data portfolios, including both students with low achievement and high performing students showing no identifiable growth. Again, conferences will be student-led, using their student portfolios as the guiding tool for the conferences. The conference outcomes will be that each student will identify his/her successes and achievements to celebrate and be proud of; will identify problems, classroom issues, weaknesses or learning gaps in the class, or lack of adequate challenge from the instruction; and will request specific support needed to succeed in the class. The articulation and selfmonitoring skills required for a student to lead such a conference are learned; as mentioned above advisement teachers will need to guide students in their preparation for these conferences. It will be important for students to reflect on their progress in these conference skills from one year to the next and include those reflections in their portfolios. Throughout the semester teachers will continue to add comments on the Googledoc grid about students listed there regarding their progress and response to interventions. By mid-february (this can happen any time during the year with substantiating evidence) students can be referred to the School Intervention Team and the second and third tiers of interventions. (Appendix 13). Teachers will continue to implement positive reinforcement strategies to celebrate these students successes. After the third quarter grades are posted, content and Advisement teachers discuss with students on academic contract about their progress, celebrating successes, clarifying any concerns about the students improvement, and explaining possible implications/consequences if the terms of the academic contracts are not met. Teachers meet after finals to evaluate the overall success of the year s intervention process and the disposition of students on academic contracts. Assessment and Performance Management 1. Performance Goals School Assessment: ISSN School Performance Goals As a member school of the International Studies Schools Network, DCIS2 will be assessed in its development according to the rubric of the ISSN school design framework (see Appendix 16). The assessment will be conducted by ISSN site visits in the Spring of the first year and the Spring of the third year. The framework will be used in a school self-evaluation every other year thereafter with the support of ISSN. Summary reports will be submitted to the Instructional Superintendent for DCIS2 and will contribute to revisions of the DCIS2 School Improvement Plan and the focuses of professional development for both school administration and faculty. The goal for DCIS2 is to achieve proficiency in all 39 areas of the six categories of the school design. Expected challenges for DCIS2 s development in meeting these goals don t relate to any one area, but reside more in the understanding, planning, appropriate sequencing, and pacing of school development, and in the engagement of all of the teachers in this process so that they can sustain their work collaboratively as a school as well as individually to their specific areas of instruction. Expectations of

24 early strengths in the school for the sustaining level include emphasis on world languages and cultures, formal opportunity to deepen global knowledge, portfolio capstone projects (senior portfolio presentations), service learning, sustaining a small school, collaborative governance and decision making, student and family engagement, and external partnerships. Energy and momentum from these expected strengths will drive the push for proficiency in all other areas of the rubric. Emerging research and work through ISSN/Asia Society and Stanford on a Global Competencies Framework (Appendix 6) and rubric for it will be integrated into the design framework and rubric in the first year to reinforce the assessment of DCIS2 s strength as an international studies school. School Assessment: Denver Public Schools School Performance Framework (SPF) The goal for DCIS2 is that its SPF scores place the school in the upper right quadrant for elementary, middle and high school grades, showing both high achievement and high growth and to have a green stoplight for every element of the SPF framework, with early targets for blue. Because the intentional diversity of school enrollment includes academic diversity (see the Outreach and Enrollment section in Parent and Community Involvement), the challenge will be to bring the lower-performing students to grade level and stimulate growth for the higher performing students that the school will attract. It is expected that in two to three years, during which the development of school culture and academic processes are consolidated and integrated, the school will achieve the stoplight goals. Key in achieving these goals is both training of teachers in the unique approaches embedded in the school design, and developing expectations and strong habits among the students that will be fostered in the school culture. Expected challenges in the SPF goals that need to be targeted from the current DCIS school s experience relate to students math achievement and to achievement gaps (see Instructional Strategies and RtI sections above). Early target areas expected for blue stoplights, from which efforts will grow to expand those areas, are in literacy, graduation rate, college readiness, student engagement, school demand, and parent and community engagement. Individual performance goals for students: International Competencies Key units in each discipline at each grade will have ISSN GPS Performance Frameworks adapted to the units with a rubric to guide proficiency assessment. Sample units for each discipline will assist with the development of these frameworks at every grade level (see GPS overview, sample frameworks and units, Appendix 8 and 17). A library of exemplars will be built to assist both teachers and students to move students towards the College Ready / Advanced level of the assessments. The ISSN GPS Performance Frameworks as applied to DCIS will be aligned with the Graduate Profile in terms of the ISSN/Asia Society Global Competencies Framework so that coursework evidence of learning students produce contributes to the students fulfilling the profile. With teachers help, students will be guided by the GPS Performance Frameworks to produce evidence of learning that will go into their portfolios. In Advisement, students will build their portfolios with these artifacts, reflect on the significance of each artifact in terms of their personal and intellectual growth and international competencies, monitor their progress towards the Graduate Profile, and develop articulation skills around their international learning. In the Portfolios class in their senior year students will edit their portfolios to create a Graduation Portfolio that is their best evidence for graduating with the DCIS Diploma of International Studies. Individual performance goals for students: CSAP and Benchmarks Because of the intentional academic diversity that will be recruited for DCIS2, it is difficult to state achievement and growth goals in specific numeric terms because the school won t know what

25 performance achievement the students will bring to the school upon admission. However, the following goals are particularly essential to have as a foundation for the school: 1. The first and most important performance goal is that every student will show at least a year s growth from one year to the next as measured by the CSAPs. This goal should be met annually beginning with the school s first year. Every student to be at least proficient in all areas measured by CSAP and Benchmark assessments. Each student who shows unsatisfactory or partially proficient achievement in any area will develop an individual learning plan in Advisement with his/her Advisement teacher that will include a catch-up time frame so this expectation is clear to the student and parents. A goal is for every student that is proficient in any standard to move to Advanced, and for every student Advanced in any area to remain and grow in the Advanced level of achievement. 2. All students will have constant clear models for what constitute Proficient and Advanced levels of performance in every subject for every standard (see Instructional Strategies above). 2. Data-Driven Instruction (See the RtI section above) Data Leadership Teams DCIS2 will have two data leadership teams; one for elementary and one for middle/high schools. The teams will consist of the members from the administration, support staff (special education and psychologist/social worker), and a representative from each content area (for middle/high school) and each grade level (for elementary). The teams will look at school data that includes CSAP scores (annual), benchmark scores (3X per year), Scholastic Reading Inventory (annual), whole class screenings at 6th and 9th grade from AIMSWEB (3X per year), and Acuity assessments and analysis. Teachers will also be responsible for tracking individual student progress through Infinite Campus, and monitoring students of concern through a portfolio system. Data used will include formal/informal observation, curriculum assessments, conversation, class participation and any other method of data collection used regularly in their class. The grade level teams will have regular (monthly) meetings to discuss student achievement, share interventions and teaching methods, and develop strategies to improve achievement as a whole grade and with students not making adequate academic progress. Grade level teams will report out to the Data Leadership Teams who will be responsible for collating data for grade levels/content areas in a usable format. Grade level teams decide if/when students need to be presented to the School Intervention Team (SIT) for further analysis and intervention plan. School Intervention Team The SIT meets monthly and consists of support staff and general education staff. During these meetings the SIT recommends whether a student needs a more intense intervention then the current strategy used. Evaluation for more intense interventions are based on data supplied from the general education grade level team. Support staff and intervention teachers are charged with monitoring how well a student is progressing with the new intervention, and they present follow-up data on student progress in subsequent meetings. Other data used to inform instruction and school evaluation Site visit information provided by ISSN, a site assessment based on different areas of school development and what stage the school is in, is conducted every other year. In addition, the school uses portfolio

26 assessments, senior presentations, and the Graduate Profile System assessment, a rubric-based assessment of the existing curriculum, to measure how well students are developing international competencies (see Performance Goals above and the introduction to the DCIS2 GPS, Appendix 8). 3. Describe the actions the school will take if it falls short of student academic achievement expectations or goals at the school-wide, classroom, or individual student level. To keep DCIS2 on track towards its achievement goals, the School Leadership Team (SLT) will meet with the school administrative team in the week before school each year to look at available school performance data to review the previous year s performance. This will be compared with the faculty s previous end-of-year evaluation of the school s intervention and academic contract results, and adjustments will be proposed to the faculty for response and input. Depending on when district support can provide necessary disaggregated data, these recommendations to the faculty will be presented as early in the year as possible. In the event the school does fall short of expected student achievement, the school administrative team will meet with the Instructional Superintendent as soon as such deficiency becomes apparent, which should be at the beginning of the year. A protocol for developing an improvement plan will be devised at that time. The effectiveness and success of the school s collaborative model will be tested to the utmost in such a situation, but must be utilized to stimulate maximum investment of the faculty in any developed improvement plan. Following this meeting the administrative team will work with the SLT to devise a remediation plan that follows the protocol established with the Instructional Superintendent. The plan is then shared for input with the rest of the faculty, and then submitted for approval to the Instructional Superintendent. Improvement benchmarks will be defined in the plan along with a reporting and conference schedule to the Instructional Superintendent and/or his/her designee. A school coach for the period of improvement will be retained at the recommendation of the Instructional Superintendent to assist the school through the improvement while helping the school to retain and improve its unique international focus as integral to the improvement plan. School Culture 1. Rules, Incentives,and Consequences: Initially rules and policies for the school will be those that currently exist for DCIS. In the development year they will be reviewed by focus groups that include parents, students, teachers, and administrators of the new school before the orientation for new students in May, Each of these constituencies will have been identified by then, so they will be stakeholders in the policies they will review and for which they may recommend changes. These changes will be ratified by the Collaborative School Committee, which will be put in place before the school opens. The Positive Behavior System (PBS) will be modified to suit the K-12 developmental spread of the students, and a key focus on positive feedback will be emphasized; a committee of teachers and service staff will provide leadership and sustainability to this program. Consequences for infractions will follow the DPS discipline ladder and general rules. Rules and consequences will be aligned and based on the five DCIS core values of Integrity, Diversity, High Expectations, Collaboration, and Reflection. Nonnegotiables would pertain to student safety, with an emphasis on mutual respect at all levels (administration, staff, students, and parents). The dress code will be developed by collaborative committee of students, staff, and parents. In general this will be based on a professional atmosphere with international highlights and allowances.

27 Consequences Consequences will emphasize students making amends to the community. A restorative justice program will be in place and students who commit violations of the school community s expectations must address the student body at community meetings. Expectations Expectations will be communicated to students throughout the school year during Advisement class, community meetings, and through banners that remind students of the 5 core values. Expectations will be introduced to parents and students beginning with the application process and new student orientation in the spring - before students begin attending. Parents and students will be provided with a handbook outlining key expectations at registration, if not before. 2. Supplemental Programming The character of DCIS2 as an international studies school will be manifested by students, teachers and other constituencies in the DCIS2 community in a variety of ways: The substance of the deep school culture will flow out of the academic emphases on international learning and competencies, and applications of these through service. The unique aspect of the international school culture will be reinforced by the international and intercultural experiential learning experiences students have, both through teacher-led activities and through opportunities made possible through school partners; these include short field experiences, domestic intercultural experiences, and international travel and student exchanges. The Advisement program will be central in guiding students to internalize, articulate, and express the international nature of the school mission, academics, and service through action and presentations of learning. Presentations of international learning will be a key feature of the All- School Community Meetings held twice weekly as a part of the Advisement program. Key physical features of the school will portray the focus of DCIS2 both inside and outside, such as international flags, large hall signs and maps, areas of the school named for countries or continents or other reflections of geography, international photography installations, regularlyrotated displays of international issues and service projects, student-designed and painted murals with international themes that incorporate and reflect aspects of the school, and large flat-screen TV monitors that show the International Channel and CNN in the lunchroom and student commons. Specific function rooms will highlight the school s purposes; e.g., the key presentation room will be called the United Nations Hall, and will be outfitted to serve the school s Model United Nations program, classes, and club; another room will serve as the International Travel Center. Key events throughout the year will highlight the character of the school, such as DCIS s World Café Night, International Festival, Celebration of Cultures, World Affairs Conference, the DCIS Science Department s Night of International Pestillence, Peace Jam, and many other special international events; these events will be sponsored by specific departments, advisement groups, International Passages students, or contributing school partners. In addition, clubs and organizations can be initiated by students and supported by school partners. Clubs and organizations with an international component will be encouraged (Interact, UNICEF, Peace Jam, etc.). Sports will be offered for Middle School students through the Denver Prep League, and High School students will be encouraged and supported when playing sports for area high schools or home high schools.

28 After school tutoring, credit/unit recovery targeted ELL intervention at middle and high school level (all will need to happen outside of the school day) are additional programs offered to students at DCIS2. Funding for extended-day programming will be pursued (e.g., Lights On After School Grants and Tutoring Grants through the Denver Public Schools Foundation, city funding for Safe Schools, etc.). The Kaleidoscope program for childcare for elementary students in the school s extended day provides service opportunities for high school student. LEADERSHIP & STAFFING 1. Leadership: Describe the leadership model for the proposed school. Please see leadership section above, in which the leadership philosophy and model is discussed for DCIS2. The leadership staffing as a collaborative process is reflected in the organizational chart in Appendix 18. The development of a collaborative spirit is dependent initially on expectations and clarity in the staffing process (next section) and maintained and nourished as an essential part of the school culture through habits of facilitated collaboration. This facilitation will be provided by an experienced international studies school coach through matching funds from ISSN/Asia Society for the school s first three years, during which the coach and leadership team will work on structures and protocols that become a part of the school culture itself in a way that can be sustained in later years. 2. Staffing See Appendix 18 for an organizational chart of DCIS2, Appendix 19 for a job description for a teacher in the school and the criteria that a fully qualified candidate should meet, and Appendix 20 for a letter to new teachers that will frame the professional learning community of the new school. 3. Describe your school s plans for recruiting and retaining a diverse staff of talented educators who can excel in a multicultural environment, demonstrate cultural proficiency, and meet the needs of Denver s diverse student population. Staffing for the new school s first year will happen early in the spring semester prior to the opening of the school in In order for the school to start on a firm basis it will be essential that DCIS2 not have any direct placements. All new teachers to the school must be qualified by the criteria in the posting, and, perhaps more importantly, must be motivated by the vision and mission of the school. With the ability to hire from within or outside the school district DCIS2 can attracts excellent matches both locally from DCIS s reputation, through other local and regional internationally related educational institutions, and from throughout the country through DCIS s own network as well as the ISSN network. The success of the current DCIS is due largely to its initial hiring; an outstanding core of excellent, highly motivated teachers who were passionate about the DCIS mission and had all been touched by profound international experiences lay the groundwork for the school culture and the enthusiasm for the school s purposes for its students. The nature of DCIS2 and its intercultural/international mission will assist in attracting a diverse staff. The school s very mission addresses the virtues of a multicultural environment,

29 intercultural proficiencies, and a diverse student population as a hologram of the world about which the students are learning. However, concerted efforts to use the networks described above must be made to attract a diverse staff that is highly qualified, both by NCLB standards as well as those of DCIS2 and ISSN. Key to using the school s networks is gaining assistance in targeting institutions where the ethnic and international diversity might actually be found. Examples of these sources include urban teacher preparation programs, graduates of Teach for America and former Vista volunteers who have gone into teaching, Returned Peace Corps Volunteer organization, and Fulbright teacher exchange connections. Already DCIS has on file a large bank of resumes of teachers representing a very diverse range of ethnic and national backgrounds who have sought to teach at DCIS. One growing source of possible teachers that represents a wonderfully diverse range of backgrounds is the growing number of DCIS (i.e. CIS/West) alumni who have gone into teaching. The selection process from applicants that are determined qualified by Human Resources is extremely important for staffing. The procedure used for DCIS will be put in place for DCIS2 because it has been very successful in selecting the diverse faculty uniquely needed for DCIS with the skills, experience, rigor, and enthusiasm needed for this school. The process follows these steps: Once the school has an approved list of candidates, the resumes and application letters of all the candidates are printed out and made available to all existing faculty. In the case of DCIS2 for its first year these materials will be distributed to the design team. The materials are screened for the best fit according to the posting(s) (Appendix 19), and 3-5 candidates are selected as finalists. Interviews of the finalists are scheduled. Candidates are instructed to bring a key instructional sample to discuss in the interview. An interview team for each posted position is formed by the Personnel Committee. As large a committee as possible that represents the school is formed. Members may include administrators, teachers, students, parents, and community members. Committee members meet prior to the interviews and are oriented to the interview process. Key questions which will be asked of the candidates are assigned to a variety of people on the committee. Candidates arrive thirty minutes early for their interviews. When they arrive they are given a packet that includes the DCIS mission statement, a list of pre-interview questions to answer in writing, and a list of the questions that will be discussed in the interview (see Appendix 21). The interview for the committee includes all interactions with the candidates from the moment they are greeted by the secretaries in the main office to the time the candidates leave the building and interact with students on the way out. Sometimes the interactions outside the formal conversations of the interview are the most important in selecting candidates. For each candidate, every interview team member completes a scoring guide that lists desired qualifications the questions attempt to elicit from the candidate (see Appendix 22). After the interviews for each posted position the committee works towards consensus in selecting the teachers for the posted positions. Every team member expresses an opinion and supports it based on his/her observations recorded on the scoring guide. Student

30 voice is a key part of the process, because often the adults are looking at candidates through their own perspective of how well the candidates interact with them. Students can respond not only to how well the candidates seemed prepared with the unique desired qualifications, but also how well the candidates interacted with and focused on the students. DCIS has had a remarkably stable faculty, so has had a great experience in retaining its diverse faculty and staff. This experience points to a set of essential characteristics of the work environment for teachers and staff members: collaborative investment in school development and decisions that are directed by the school vision and guiding documents intense and consistent development of teamwork across grades and disciplines care to clarify, renew, and nourish the same core values and norms of practice and interactions among the faculty as those desired of the school s students celebration of both individual teacher and collective faculty successes on a regular basis continual focus on the unique vision and mission of the school and everyone s part in fulfilling them inclusiveness in providing both local, national, and international leadership opportunities related to professional development and connections identification of the faculty with the larger enterprise of precollegiate international education nationally and throughout the world through our school partners, ISSN, exchange organizations, and international school partners supportive administration that knows the faculty is capable of the work, and is responsive to faculty concerns and feedback. One of the most important elements of staffing is the selection, retention, and appropriate succession of a highly qualified principal who is a superior fit for DCIS2, and who can also contribute to the diversity of DCIS2. The above strategies for targeted recruiting are important for principal placement. Particularly the potential for selecting future leadership through the association with ISSN schools, each of which has a vision, mission, and design framework in common with the DCIS schools, presents outstanding promise for sustainability of the DCIS vision and achievement. 4. Professional Development Plans Initial Structures During Development Year Professional development for the school's leadership specific to the international studies focus will receive strong initial support as well as ongoing support from ISSN and the Asia Society as a direct benefit of the association DCIS2 will have with that network. In the school s development year this will include the facilitated sharing of start-up professional development plans that have been successfully used by other ISSN schools in their development years; coaching for the principal and design team; three school leaders seminars held at existing ISSN schools, and a summer institute for the selected faculty to meet with other ISSN faculties in Washington, DC. In these seminars and the institute the new leaders and faculty learn from their counterparts at other ISSN schools about strategies, practices, and effective approaches to develop and improve their schools, especially in terms of embedding the international studies focus in to academic achievement.

31 In addition, the new school design team will meet on a regular basis during the development year to prioritize and plan professional development of new staff to be selected in Spring, The selected faculty members for the new school will meet for a retreat in April prior to opening the school for teambuilding, initial orientation to the guiding documents, and directions for preparing for the summer faculty workshop prior to opening the school. This will be followed by a week-long retreat in June and another just before the opening of school in August to provide time and guidance for the faculty in coordinating their personal preparation for their assigned classes with the school design. See Appendix 24 for sample professional development plans for the faculty prior to the school s opening. Ongoing Structures and Opportunities The following structures and opportunities will be in place in an ongoing basis after the school opens: International Studies Schools Network (ISSN): Through the school s membership in this national network faculty and administrators will be involved in a variety of professional development activities, including additional national seminars and institutes and subject-based workshops. Also as a member school of ISSN, DCIS2 will benefit from having a school coach as a part of the start-up agreement. This coach will work with the SLT, lead teachers, and principal to create these opportunities for teachers to complement the school's professional and school development plan. These opportunities will include Learning and Teaching Labs and individual professional development to support school development. These opportunities can be designed and Professional Development Units for ProComp. Designated school professional development times: The schedule and leadership for these sessions in the first year of operation will be planned and facilitated by teacher leaders and the principal, based on the outcomes of the first summer retreat. The plan will be adjusted as necessary in the course of the first year as teacher adjustment, initiative, and participation in the school's development is assessed throughout the year. The emphases, two or three at the most, and a year-long schedule of sessions, will be developed by the end of the first summer retreat. Examples include internationalizing curriculum and instruction, advisement development and facilitation, teacher RtI portfolios (see section on data-driven instruction) and scaffolding for International Passages (see Curriculum Section; see also Appendix 23 for a sample year-long professional development schedule created in this way). CU Denver partnership: As a Professional Development School (PDS) in partnership with the University of Colorado at Denver, DCIS2 will be able to intensify its professional development through opportunities for teacher release and accountable talk among teachers and teacher candidates. The work with DCIS2's teacher candidates is woven into the school's professional development plan. A DCIS2 serves as a Site Coordinator for this program in collaboration with a CU-Denver Site Professor. These two will work with the school's leadership team to develop plans integrated with the year-long faculty developed foci. This program is currently in place at DCIS, and the results of this program are very strong. Teacher investment in learning what they teach to teacher candidates assigned to them is powerful. The arrangement is very different from a traditional student teacher model, because the Clinical Teachers (DCIS cooperating teachers) have a very clear responsibility to nurture the teacher candidates, and are guided in doing so by the Site Coordinator and Site Professor. Retreats: The faculty will determine the focus and design of the second summer retreat based on needs and awareness of their own learning and skill development related to the school design during the first year of the school's implementation. The faculty will make these decisions in April and May of 2012, and teacher leaders will be responsible for facilitating the retreat. Teacher leaders from DCIS will play a key role in facilitating and implementing the first retreat. Faculties from both DCIS schools will participate in parts of each retreat. Implementation Plan

32 Faculty will be selected with clear reference to the guiding documents and the candidates' related experience, skills and commitment to them. With a common belief and motivation, they will be engaged in a collaborative process to plan the implementation of the guiding documents through collaborative identification of needs, complemented by observations and consultation by the DCIS schools director, school principal and design team. Initial faculty workshops in the development year will focus on teambuilding around the school's mission and vision, and then charging the faculty to create the definitions and structures at both school and individual classroom level consistent with the guiding documents. 5. Teacher Teams: Describe the types of teacher collaborations and teacher teams that will be established in the first year of the school and will be present when the school is at capacity. Describe the work of the proposed teacher teams or collaboration. Another means by which we anticipate the teachers will be able to improve their teaching is through a similar process of collaborative analysis of student work in relation to aligned assessment rubrics done as part of ISSN-wide professional development activities. That is, we anticipate convening teachers from across the network in each academic discipline at least once during the school year to collaboratively review student work in the manner similar to that used in individual schools. Online sharing through blogs and wikis that connect teachers across the region or network who are from the same content areas will be used to enrich content-specific discussions related to scoring and analysis of student work. In the first year of operation the school will form several configurations of evidence teams (data teams) that will continue as an ongoing structure for professional development and improving student achievement. These include grade level teams at all grade levels, department/content teams for vertical integration and planning, grade level Advisement teams (for elementary levels this will be the same as grade level teams). PARENT & COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT 1. Outreach and Enrollment Targeted recruitment will be absolutely pivotal in establishing the diverse enrollment for DCIS2 indicated above. Recruitment strategies will include the following, all of which are currently in place and being improved at DCIS: Presentations at meetings of organizations that reflect or have access to the diversity goals of DCIS2, including neighborhood association meetings, church groups, minority alliance organizations, certain service clubs, and cultural clubs and organizations Grant-based recruitment projects with refugee organizations. Currently DCIS is working under a grant from DCIS school partner Western Union to develop connections with refugee organizations for targeted recruitment, and DCIS2 will seek to extend that program to its own recruitment. Networking with key people in city government, particularly those working in the Denver Office of Cultural Affairs Networking with the Denver Consular Corps members; presentations at the meetings of this group Networking through local partner organizations that focus on cultural and international issues, such as

33 Networking through and presentations at meetings of parents and counselors at schools and other educational organizations, such as Colorado United Nations Association, UNICEF, and Denver Sister Cities, all of whom have office space on location at DCIS; Denver Kids, Boys and Girls Clubs, and neighborhood recreation centers Meetings with the DPS special education leaders to inform them of the services, support, and unique opportunities students in their care might have at DCIS2 Presentations at meetings with school counselors in DPS Booth presentations at school fairs, such as the DPS school options fair usually held in November Networking through current DCIS parents whose children currently attend DCIS and who live in the neighborhoods where DCIS2 will be located Recruitment through art-based workshops at Title I elementary schools, a program currently being devised for DCIS in cooperation with DCIS school partner Arts Street. Fundraising and community events that expose the successes of DCIS2 to community leaders. Initially these events would use successes and student speakers from the current DCIS until DCIS2 has become established. An example of this is the recent breakfast event DCIS event in April that attracted over 400 educators, parents, non-profit, business, and government representatives, and featured the DCIS Chinese Choir and speakers that included a DCIS (CIS/West) alumna that has become an immigration lawyer, a DCIS senior and Denver Kids mentee, Superintendent Tom Boasberg, and a keynote guest speaker flown in from the American University in Kuwait. Open house meetings at the DCIS2 site in the fall of 2010 at which prospective parents and students can attend to hear about the opportunities for enrollment and engagement at the new school Special promotional materials will be distributed at each of these events and meetings. See Appendix 25 for a sample of a DCIS promotional brochure that will be modified for initial promotion of DCIS2, and a sample of a DCIS Foundation Board report that also has been used in promoting DCIS. In addition, a website for DCIS2 will be created similar to that of DCIS, which can be viewed at The website includes information about admissions and an online application during the application window, students and student participation in the school s wide-ranging educational opportunities related to it international focus, student international travel, the school curriculum, parent information, the faculty, alumni connections, announcements, and the DCIS Foundation. The address for the website will be on all promotional materials for the new school. The admissions process, which will be similar to that used at DCIS, will follow these steps: Prospective students/families are encouraged to attend an open house event or options night to learn about the school. Prospective students/families submit an application by the first Friday in December for the following year. The application will include the district s free/reduced lunch application. A workshop for applicants and their parents will be held in January to clarify and raise the bar of expectations of parents and students enrolled in the school. The Admissions Agreement to which parents (and secondary students) will be required to sign if offered admission will be presented, and parents will have the opportunity to ask clarifying questions. (See Appendix 26 for the DCIS Admissions Agreement which will be modified for DCIS2.) Interviews will be held at the end of January and the beginning of February to qualify students for an admissions lottery. To qualify students and their families must demonstrate that they understand the goals of the school and expectations of the students, and must demonstrate motivation to be full participants in these goals and expectations. Interviews for elementary student admissions will be with the parents with their child in attendance. The first part of

34 interviews for secondary student admissions will be with the student applicants themselves, and then at the end parents will have the opportunity for input and questions. A two tiered lottery will be held for qualified student candidates. One will be for students eligible for the free / reduced lunch program, and the other will be for all other students. This will be a way to insure that DCIS meets its economic diversity targets. Student applicants / families will be notified of admission in March by mail and . See Appendix 27 for a sample admissions letter that will be modified for each level (elementary/secondary) of students admitted. These families will be required to return an acceptance of admission form to secure admission. 2. Parent and Student Engagement: Describe how you will engage parents in the life of the school. How will the school build family-school partnerships to strengthen support for learning and encourage parental involvement? Describe any commitments or volunteer activities the school will seek or offer to parents. Parents will be required to volunteer in a variety of ways to support the school. This will be promoted during the recruitment and admissions activities above to plant the seed of expectations for this in the minds of prospective parents right from their first exposure to the school. A parent coordinator will be recruited to facilitate and manage this volunteer work. As a part of the offer for admission parents must indicate their choice of ways to involve or contribute (see Appendix 29 for a DCIS sample that will be modified for DCIS2). Parent involvement will continually be promoted and celebrated at a variety of special events (see Supplemental Programming above for examples). Awards for parent involvement will be given at an End-of-Year Dinner to be held at the school in May, 2012 and every year thereafter. An active PTSA organization will be formed that will take primary responsibility for this. The current DCIS PTSA exemplifies this. 3. Advisory Bodies The DCIS2 Collaborative School Committee will be formed in May and June of 2011, and will serve immediately as a body representative of all DCIS2 stakeholder groups that will have input on developing policies, practices, and decisions for the developing school The current DCIS Foundation, a registered 501(c)3 organization, is both an advisory body and a source of support for DCIS programming. Its board of directors and committees consists of former DCIS/CIS teachers and alumni, parents, community and business representatives and leaders, and other educational entities. In line with 501(c)3 stipulations, no DCIS personnel are voting members, but the DCIS principal, a DCIS teacher, and the DCIS Community Relations Director serve as liaisons to this board. This board will be expanded with membership from DCIS2, and the foundation will serve both schools. The breakfast event mentioned above was a DCIS Foundation event intended to raise funds for the DCIS Community Relations Department. The Foundation also raises funds and provides minigrants for students international travel and International Passage projects. 4. Partnerships with Community Based Organizations

35 Our educational philosophy is founded in the belief that community-based learning is a critical component to student achievement. Establishing partnerships with community organizations, businesses, and institutions of higher education will be a priority in DCIS2 s development as it was with the opening of DCIS. With the input of a Community Relations committee comprised of key stakeholder group representatives, an asset mapping activity will inform strategies for engaging local organizations to meet student and family needs. The goal will be to ensure students learning takes place in a seamless classroom stretching beyond traditional classroom walls, involving internships, travel, health and wellness programs, service-learning, community lectures, and other activities that reinforce academic rigor, college and career readiness, and global competence. With a diverse student population, there will also be a focus on developing partnerships that support programs to recognize and incorporate families rich cultural backgrounds as assets to the school community. It is particularly important to this proposal that partnerships pursued are ones that can support the DCIS2 mission to serve an academically-diverse student population, preparing all students for college regardless of background. Therefore, strategic relationships will be formed with both local and national organizations that can assist students with travel, study abroad, and scholarship opportunities. We are fortunate to already have partners involved with DCIS who are excited to be involved with the development of this new school. Potential partnerships which are currently in place at DCIS include: Foundation for Educational Excellence, Padres Unidos, Urban League of Denver, Pro Logis, Denver International Airport, YMCA, Denver Kids Inc., Institute of International Education, Critical Mass Leadership Education s Bold Leaders program, World Leadership School, Rotary, University of Colorado Denver, U.S. State Department, and the Orbis Institute. The Coalition for Community Schools, the Search Institute, the Business/Education Partnership Forum and other resource organizations listed below offer excellent general resources that would be used to help develop sound vision, structures, guidelines, policies, and processes. Business/Education Partnership Forum: Coalition for Community Schools Resources: Daniels Fund School-Business Partnerships: Denver Public Schools Partners Program: Search Institute (Developmental Assets resources): Texas Associations of Partners in Education (TAPE): BUDGET See Appendix B for the budget draft. Pending agreement with ISSN this budget will change, but the basic staffing plan is represented in the incremental budget development for the 5-year plan. This plan will show the focus on staffing for world languages, social studies in the secondary level, and community connections -- all as discussed in the narrative above. The contingency for a 15% cut in available funds would reduce the number of languages offered and funding for the Community Relations Director. FACILITY NEEDS

36 1. In which Denver community(ies) do you hope to locate your school? (Please refer to the regions outlined in the RFP). Why? The far northeast area of Denver that includes Green Valley Ranch, Montbello, and Parkfield based on community need and surveys conducted in the area What particular needs do you have in terms of facility space? Please provide reasons for each. INNOVATION SCHOOL STATUS 1. Our school intends to apply for Innovation Status. X Yes No 2. If you intend to apply for Innovation Status, please briefly describe the types of waivers you will seek in the areas of staffing, scheduling, budgeting and other areas. (more information on Innovation Schools and potential waivers will be provided during the New Schools Creation Workshops). DCIS2 seeks the following waivers: Composition of the Collaborative School Committee to include a few additional stakeholder groups, including representation from the DCIS Foundation and DCIS2 School Partners School year calendar variations for planning and professional development The current DCIS has a weekly late start on Wednesdays for professional development sessions and common planning to follow up those sessions. DCIS2 requests that instead of the late start schedule it be allowed to vary from the district schedule and have one full day each month for professional development and follow-up team/common planning. The district has five approved half-days for professional development. DCIS2 requests that these be consolidated into two full days. The experience of DCIS is that student attendance is weaker on the half days, and the faculty cannot gain the momentum and intensity it needs in separate half days. Flexibility to require all teacher to have five classes plus Advisement as a sixth class Designated lead teachers to assist with evaluations as the principal s designees, in addition to professional development facilitation and coaching, and support of a peer observation program Waive PE and Art credit requirements, but with options for satisfaction of graduation requirements as specified above in the curriculum section Prohibit direct placement of teachers at the school 3. Please briefly describe how seeking Innovation Status would support the implementation of your proposed school model and what changes, if any, you would need to make to your proposed design if you were not granted Innovation Status.

37

38 Appendix A: Facility Planning Scope Questionnaire Directions: Please complete the following questions related to your proposed facility educational needs. OSRI staff will assist you should you have questions in completing aspects of the questionnaire. General Information: School Name: Denver Center of International Studies 2 Primary Contact for Facility Planning: Dan Lutz Phone Number: _ daniel_lutz@dpsk12.org Proposed Opening Year: x_ School Type: x_ Performance School Charter School Contract School Other Proposed Grade Configuration: _K-12 Total Number of Students Served at Enrollment Build out: Core Classroom Requirements Years 1-3: Baseline assumption for # of students per classroom Year 1 - # of rooms Year 2 - # of rooms Year 3 - # of rooms Facility Planning Scope Questionnaire Specialty classroom needs: Please note that specialty rooms may be shared if your program is placed on a shared campus. Special Education Room # of rooms 2 Science lab(s) # of labs 2 Art Room (with or without kiln) # of rooms 1 Computer lab(s) # of computer labs prefer laptop carts Library Media Center (LMC) x_yes No Performance/Dance Room x_yes No # of rooms 2 Auditorium _x Yes big enough to hold the entire population of either elementary or secondary enrollment

39 Cafeteria - yes Other (please list room type and number) Room Type:Model United Nations / Presentation _ # of rooms 1 Room Type:_Student Commons # of rooms 1 Room Type: Counseling Center # of rooms 1 Administrative/Support Spaces: Please note that specialty rooms may be shared if your program is placed on a shared campus. Main Office x_yes No o If Yes, please list approximate # of private offices needed (i.e. principal, AP, etc.) 4 Satellite Office _x YES No Work Room/Copy Room x_yes No Supplies Storage _x Yes No Teacher Work Room(s) _x Yes No o If Yes, # of teacher work/planning rooms needed 1 Physical Education/Athletic Requirements: Please note that physical education/athletic facilities may be shared if your program is placed on a shared campus. Gymnasium x_yes No Locker Rooms _x Yes No Weight Room Yes No Field(s) soccer/football/multipurpose _x Yes No Baseball Field Yes No Softball Field Yes No Other (please list) Type: Type: Type:

40 Other needs: Playground(s) x_yes No Large meeting space for class/school assembles (i.e. morning meeting) _x Yes No Spaces not address and/or special considerations

41 APPENDIX C - ALTERNATE TEXTBOOK REQUEST/APPROVAL FORM Not needed at this point. School Name: Requestor s Phone Number: Requestor: Department: Title: Author: ISBN Number: Subject Area: Grade(s): Copyright: Format (click correct box) Hardback Paperback Textbook Non-Adopted Supplementary Text Don t Know For Supplemental/Elective courses: Briefly explain the reason for ordering this non-adopted supplementary text. For Alternative Core Programs: -What need in student proficiencies does this alternative program address that is not currently addressed in DPS Core materials? -What data support the requested alternative core program? -What funding source will be used to support initial purchase and ongoing material needs? -What is the professional development plan, both initial and ongoing, to support successful implementation of the alternative core program? -How will mobility of students be accommodated into/out of this alternative core program to the DPS core program? -How will mobility of teachers be accommodated into/out of this alternative core program to the DPS core program? -How does this curriculum support your performance school s mission and vision?

42 Vendor: Vendor Contact Name: Contact Phone Number: Contact Fax Number: Vendor Street Address: City: State: Zip Code: Price Each: Quantity: Subtotal: Account Number: Order Number: Approved by: (Principal or Assistant Principal) Date: Approved by: (Chief Academic Officer or designee) Date:

43 Appendix D: Scope and Sequence Chart To be submitted.

44 Denver Center for International Studies DPS Magnet School for Grades W. Sixth Avenue Denver, Colorado Phone: DCIS International Passages Description Passage... a journey from one place to another. A passage implies a route, perhaps some transportation connections along the way, and a destination. This image is evoked for a unique feature of Denver Center for International Studies (DCIS) program. Using an outcome-based approach, students develop specific individualized learning goals, and design three "itineraries," or Passages, for achieving those goals. These major projects, which focus on international or intercultural affairs, are developed and carried out primarily in the students' junior and senior years in DCIS. Preparation and skill development needed to complete Passages, however, are embedded in grades Passage a rite or experience that challenges a person to move to a new level in life. DCIS International Passages provide that challenge at the upper levels of the school that return the ownership, responsibility, and rewards of learning to the student. This essential step in the journey towards the DCIS Diploma of International Studies moves a student beyond the external requirements of school and state; it calls on his/her personal interests, experiences, and knowledge and emerging awareness from earlier DCIS classes to create an individual path that has intrinsic meaning for the student. Under the guidance of a faculty proposal committee, a DCIS teacher-advisor, and a community mentor, each student develops and implements a detailed plan for each Passage. That plan must specify how the learning outcome will be manifested. Within the student-developed time line, he or she develops skills, conducts research, studies materials and information, and engages in practical experience required for the fulfillment of the Passage. In addition to teacher, library, and community resources at DCIS, students are guided in the use of the following additional DCIS facilities: computers, networks, telecommunications, resource rooms, audio-visual equipment, and the world language laboratory. To provide direction and focus for each International Passage a student must relate the project to the DCIS Graduate Profile. The proposal must specify to which element(s) of the Graduate Profile the Passage is targeted, and must explain the relevance of the project to that element. Each of the student s three Passages must be directed at separate Profile elements to encourage breadth in the student s learning. - [dcis ]

Master of Science (MS) in Education with a specialization in. Leadership in Educational Administration

Master of Science (MS) in Education with a specialization in. Leadership in Educational Administration Master of Science (MS) in Education with a specialization in Leadership in Educational Administration Effective October 9, 2017 Master of Science (MS) in Education with a specialization in Leadership in

More information

Student Experience Strategy

Student Experience Strategy 2020 1 Contents Student Experience Strategy Introduction 3 Approach 5 Section 1: Valuing Our Students - our ambitions 6 Section 2: Opportunities - the catalyst for transformational change 9 Section 3:

More information

Lincoln School Kathmandu, Nepal

Lincoln School Kathmandu, Nepal ISS Administrative Searches is pleased to announce Lincoln School Kathmandu, Nepal Seeks Elementary Principal Application Deadline: October 30, 2017 Visit the ISS Administrative Searches webpage to view

More information

STUDENT EXPERIENCE a focus group guide

STUDENT EXPERIENCE a focus group guide STUDENT EXPERIENCE a focus group guide September 16, 2016 Overview Participation Thank you for agreeing to participate in an Energizing Eyes High focus group session. We have received research ethics approval

More information

10/6/2017 UNDERGRADUATE SUCCESS SCHOLARS PROGRAM. Founded in 1969 as a graduate institution.

10/6/2017 UNDERGRADUATE SUCCESS SCHOLARS PROGRAM. Founded in 1969 as a graduate institution. UNDERGRADUATE SUCCESS SCHOLARS PROGRAM THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT DALLAS Founded in 1969 as a graduate institution. Began admitting upperclassmen in 1975 and began admitting underclassmen in 1990. 1 A

More information

International School of Kigali, Rwanda

International School of Kigali, Rwanda International School of Kigali, Rwanda Engaging Individuals Encouraging Success Enriching Global Citizens Parent Guide to the Grade 3 Curriculum International School of Kigali, Rwanda Guiding Statements

More information

Denver Public Schools

Denver Public Schools 2017 Candidate Surveys Denver Public Schools Denver School Board District 4: Northeast DPS District 4 - Introduction School board elections offer community members the opportunity to reflect on the state

More information

Executive Summary. DoDEA Virtual High School

Executive Summary. DoDEA Virtual High School New York/Virginia/Puerto Rico District Dr. Terri L. Marshall, Principal 3308 John Quick Rd Quantico, VA 22134-1752 Document Generated On February 25, 2015 TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction 1 Description of

More information

ELIZABETH L. HAMEL, MSW BILINGUAL ENGLISH/SPANISH

ELIZABETH L. HAMEL, MSW BILINGUAL ENGLISH/SPANISH ELIZABETH L. HAMEL, MSW BILINGUAL ENGLISH/SPANISH liz.hamel@du.edu elizhamel@gmail.com EDUCATION Master of Social Work University of Denver Graduate School of Social Work (GSSW), Denver, CO Leadership

More information

Politics and Society Curriculum Specification

Politics and Society Curriculum Specification Leaving Certificate Politics and Society Curriculum Specification Ordinary and Higher Level 1 September 2015 2 Contents Senior cycle 5 The experience of senior cycle 6 Politics and Society 9 Introduction

More information

An Introduction to LEAP

An Introduction to LEAP An Introduction to LEAP Liberal Education America s Promise Excellence for Everyone as a Nation Goes to College An Introduction to LEAP About LEAP Liberal Education and America s Promise (LEAP) is a national

More information

SECTION I: Strategic Planning Background and Approach

SECTION I: Strategic Planning Background and Approach JOHNS CREEK HIGH SCHOOL STRATEGIC PLAN SY 2014/15 SY 2016/17 APPROVED AUGUST 2014 SECTION I: Strategic Planning Background and Approach In May 2012, the Georgia Board of Education voted to make Fulton

More information

EDUCATING TEACHERS FOR CULTURAL AND LINGUISTIC DIVERSITY: A MODEL FOR ALL TEACHERS

EDUCATING TEACHERS FOR CULTURAL AND LINGUISTIC DIVERSITY: A MODEL FOR ALL TEACHERS New York State Association for Bilingual Education Journal v9 p1-6, Summer 1994 EDUCATING TEACHERS FOR CULTURAL AND LINGUISTIC DIVERSITY: A MODEL FOR ALL TEACHERS JoAnn Parla Abstract: Given changing demographics,

More information

Loyalist College Applied Degree Proposal. Name of Institution: Loyalist College of Applied Arts and Technology

Loyalist College Applied Degree Proposal. Name of Institution: Loyalist College of Applied Arts and Technology College and Program Information 1.0 Submission Cover 1.1 College Information Name of Institution: Loyalist College of Applied Arts and Technology Title of Program: Bachelor of Applied Arts (Human Services

More information

ADDENDUM 2016 Template - Turnaround Option Plan (TOP) - Phases 1 and 2 St. Lucie Public Schools

ADDENDUM 2016 Template - Turnaround Option Plan (TOP) - Phases 1 and 2 St. Lucie Public Schools ADDENDUM 2016 Template - Turnaround Option Plan (TOP) - Phases 1 and 2 St. Lucie Public Schools The district requests an additional year to implement the previously approved turnaround option. Evidence

More information

Chart 5: Overview of standard C

Chart 5: Overview of standard C Chart 5: Overview of standard C Overview of levels of achievement of the standards in section C Indicate with X the levels of achievement for the standards as identified by each subject group in the table

More information

Post-Master s Certificate in. Leadership for Higher Education

Post-Master s Certificate in. Leadership for Higher Education Post-Master s Certificate in Leadership for Higher Education Effective July 10, 2017 Post-Master s Certificate in Leadership for Higher Education This post-master s certificate program is offered in the

More information

Priorities for CBHS Draft 8/22/17

Priorities for CBHS Draft 8/22/17 Priorities for CBHS 2017-18 - Draft 8/22/17 Preserve, Deepen and Grow Mission for Faculty Cultivate and sustain excellent, Expeditionary Learning teachers. Educate each student to meet rigorous, vital

More information

International Baccalaureate (IB) Primary Years Programme (PYP) at Northeast Elementary

International Baccalaureate (IB) Primary Years Programme (PYP) at Northeast Elementary International Baccalaureate (IB) Primary Years Programme (PYP) at Northeast Elementary Michael Clow, Principal Bill Parker, IB Coordinator Northeast Elementary School was designated an International Baccalaureate

More information

Your Guide to. Whole-School REFORM PIVOT PLAN. Strengthening Schools, Families & Communities

Your Guide to. Whole-School REFORM PIVOT PLAN. Strengthening Schools, Families & Communities Your Guide to Whole-School REFORM PIVOT PLAN Strengthening Schools, Families & Communities Why a Pivot Plan? In order to tailor our model of Whole-School Reform to recent changes seen at the federal level

More information

State Parental Involvement Plan

State Parental Involvement Plan A Toolkit for Title I Parental Involvement Section 3 Tools Page 41 Tool 3.1: State Parental Involvement Plan Description This tool serves as an example of one SEA s plan for supporting LEAs and schools

More information

California Professional Standards for Education Leaders (CPSELs)

California Professional Standards for Education Leaders (CPSELs) Standard 1 STANDARD 1: DEVELOPMENT AND IMPLEMENTATION OF A SHARED VISION Education leaders facilitate the development and implementation of a shared vision of learning and growth of all students. Element

More information

University of Toronto Mississauga Degree Level Expectations. Preamble

University of Toronto Mississauga Degree Level Expectations. Preamble University of Toronto Mississauga Degree Level Expectations Preamble In December, 2005, the Council of Ontario Universities issued a set of degree level expectations (drafted by the Ontario Council of

More information

MSW POLICY, PLANNING & ADMINISTRATION (PP&A) CONCENTRATION

MSW POLICY, PLANNING & ADMINISTRATION (PP&A) CONCENTRATION MSW POLICY, PLANNING & ADMINISTRATION (PP&A) CONCENTRATION Overview of the Policy, Planning, and Administration Concentration Policy, Planning, and Administration Concentration Goals and Objectives Policy,

More information

Social Emotional Learning in High School: How Three Urban High Schools Engage, Educate, and Empower Youth

Social Emotional Learning in High School: How Three Urban High Schools Engage, Educate, and Empower Youth SCOPE ~ Executive Summary Social Emotional Learning in High School: How Three Urban High Schools Engage, Educate, and Empower Youth By MarYam G. Hamedani and Linda Darling-Hammond About This Series Findings

More information

Innovating Toward a Vibrant Learning Ecosystem:

Innovating Toward a Vibrant Learning Ecosystem: KnowledgeWorks Forecast 3.0 Innovating Toward a Vibrant Learning Ecosystem: Ten Pathways for Transforming Learning Katherine Prince Senior Director, Strategic Foresight, KnowledgeWorks KnowledgeWorks Forecast

More information

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS SUPERINTENDENT SEARCH CONSULTANT

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS SUPERINTENDENT SEARCH CONSULTANT REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS SUPERINTENDENT SEARCH CONSULTANT Saint Paul Public Schools Independent School District # 625 360 Colborne Street Saint Paul MN 55102-3299 RFP Superintendent Search Consultant, St.

More information

Developing an Assessment Plan to Learn About Student Learning

Developing an Assessment Plan to Learn About Student Learning Developing an Assessment Plan to Learn About Student Learning By Peggy L. Maki, Senior Scholar, Assessing for Learning American Association for Higher Education (pre-publication version of article that

More information

Freshman On-Track Toolkit

Freshman On-Track Toolkit The Network for College Success Freshman On-Track Toolkit 2nd Edition: July 2017 I Table of Contents About the Network for College Success NCS Core Values and Beliefs About the Toolkit Toolkit Organization

More information

Public School Choice DRAFT

Public School Choice DRAFT Public School Choice DRAFT Why Public School Choice? The educational ecosystem continues to see different types of schools and instructional choices being offered by private schools, charter organizations,

More information

School Balanced Scorecard 2.0 (Single Plan for Student Achievement)

School Balanced Scorecard 2.0 (Single Plan for Student Achievement) School Balanced Scorecard 2.0 (Single Plan for Student Achievement) School Name: A. P. Giannini Middle School 1: Access and Equity- Make Social Justice a Reality What does this goal mean at your school?

More information

KENTUCKY FRAMEWORK FOR TEACHING

KENTUCKY FRAMEWORK FOR TEACHING KENTUCKY FRAMEWORK FOR TEACHING With Specialist Frameworks for Other Professionals To be used for the pilot of the Other Professional Growth and Effectiveness System ONLY! School Library Media Specialists

More information

EUROPEAN UNIVERSITIES LOOKING FORWARD WITH CONFIDENCE PRAGUE DECLARATION 2009

EUROPEAN UNIVERSITIES LOOKING FORWARD WITH CONFIDENCE PRAGUE DECLARATION 2009 EUROPEAN UNIVERSITIES LOOKING FORWARD WITH CONFIDENCE PRAGUE DECLARATION 2009 Copyright 2009 by the European University Association All rights reserved. This information may be freely used and copied for

More information

Testimony to the U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions. John White, Louisiana State Superintendent of Education

Testimony to the U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions. John White, Louisiana State Superintendent of Education Testimony to the U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions John White, Louisiana State Superintendent of Education October 3, 2017 Chairman Alexander, Senator Murray, members of the

More information

ACCREDITATION STANDARDS

ACCREDITATION STANDARDS ACCREDITATION STANDARDS Description of the Profession Interpretation is the art and science of receiving a message from one language and rendering it into another. It involves the appropriate transfer

More information

NC Global-Ready Schools

NC Global-Ready Schools NC Global-Ready Schools Implementation Rubric August 2017 North Carolina Department of Public Instruction Global-Ready Schools Designation NC Global-Ready School Implementation Rubric K-12 Global competency

More information

Cultivating an Enriched Campus Community

Cultivating an Enriched Campus Community Cultivating an Enriched Campus Community The Goal: Create and support a dynamic inclusive campus community that provides high-quality, student-centered outof-class learning experiences to prepare students

More information

Self Assessment. InTech Collegiate High School. Jason Stanger, Director 1787 Research Park Way North Logan, UT

Self Assessment. InTech Collegiate High School. Jason Stanger, Director 1787 Research Park Way North Logan, UT Jason Stanger, Director 1787 Research Park Way North Logan, UT 84341-5600 Document Generated On June 13, 2016 TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction 1 Standard 1: Purpose and Direction 2 Standard 2: Governance

More information

Running Head GAPSS PART A 1

Running Head GAPSS PART A 1 Running Head GAPSS PART A 1 Current Reality and GAPSS Assignment Carole Bevis PL & Technology Innovation (ITEC 7460) Kennesaw State University Ed.S. Instructional Technology, Spring 2014 GAPSS PART A 2

More information

Core Strategy #1: Prepare professionals for a technology-based, multicultural, complex world

Core Strategy #1: Prepare professionals for a technology-based, multicultural, complex world Wright State University College of Education and Human Services Strategic Plan, 2008-2013 The College of Education and Human Services (CEHS) worked with a 25-member cross representative committee of faculty

More information

Building a Vibrant Alumni Network

Building a Vibrant Alumni Network Building a Vibrant Alumni Network Initiatives in support of the Elon Commitment strategic plan theme #6: Developing innovative alumni programs to advance and support the Elon graduate Background To meet

More information

Practices Worthy of Attention Step Up to High School Chicago Public Schools Chicago, Illinois

Practices Worthy of Attention Step Up to High School Chicago Public Schools Chicago, Illinois Step Up to High School Chicago Public Schools Chicago, Illinois Summary of the Practice. Step Up to High School is a four-week transitional summer program for incoming ninth-graders in Chicago Public Schools.

More information

TEACHING QUALITY: SKILLS. Directive Teaching Quality Standard Applicable to the Provision of Basic Education in Alberta

TEACHING QUALITY: SKILLS. Directive Teaching Quality Standard Applicable to the Provision of Basic Education in Alberta Standards of Teaching Practice TEACHING QUALITY: SKILLS BASED ON: Policy, Regulations and Forms Manual Section 4 Ministerial Orders and Directives Directive 4.2.1 - Teaching Quality Standard Applicable

More information

Davidson College Library Strategic Plan

Davidson College Library Strategic Plan Davidson College Library Strategic Plan 2016-2020 1 Introduction The Davidson College Library s Statement of Purpose (Appendix A) identifies three broad categories by which the library - the staff, the

More information

Teach For America alumni 37,000+ Alumni working full-time in education or with low-income communities 86%

Teach For America alumni 37,000+ Alumni working full-time in education or with low-income communities 86% About Teach For America Teach For America recruits, trains, and supports top college graduates and professionals who make an initial commitment to teach for two years in urban and rural public schools

More information

VOL VISION 2020 STRATEGIC PLAN IMPLEMENTATION

VOL VISION 2020 STRATEGIC PLAN IMPLEMENTATION VOL VISION 2020 STRATEGIC PLAN IMPLEMENTATION CONTENTS Vol Vision 2020 Summary Overview Approach Plan Phase 1 Key Initiatives, Timelines, Accountability Strategy Dashboard Phase 1 Metrics and Indicators

More information

Cuero Independent School District

Cuero Independent School District Cuero Independent School District Texas Superintendent: Henry Lind Primary contact: Debra Baros, assistant superintendent* 1,985 students, prek-12, rural District Description Cuero Independent School District

More information

STRATEGIC GROWTH FROM THE BASE OF THE PYRAMID

STRATEGIC GROWTH FROM THE BASE OF THE PYRAMID Executive Education STRATEGIC GROWTH FROM THE BASE OF THE PYRAMID This innovative, new five-day program shares key strategies, frameworks and processes that helps companies build sustainable, scalable businesses

More information

Strategic Planning for Retaining Women in Undergraduate Computing

Strategic Planning for Retaining Women in Undergraduate Computing for Retaining Women Workbook An NCWIT Extension Services for Undergraduate Programs Resource Go to /work.extension.html or contact us at es@ncwit.org for more information. 303.735.6671 info@ncwit.org Strategic

More information

NORTH CAROLINA STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION Policy Manual

NORTH CAROLINA STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION Policy Manual NORTH CAROLINA STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION Policy Manual Policy Identification Priority: Twenty-first Century Professionals Category: Qualifications and Evaluations Policy ID Number: TCP-C-006 Policy Title:

More information

Communities in Schools of Virginia

Communities in Schools of Virginia Communities in Schools of Virginia General Information Contact Information Nonprofit Communities in Schools of Virginia Address 413 Stuart Circle, Unit 303 Richmond, VA 23220 Phone 804 237-8909 Fax 804

More information

Delaware Performance Appraisal System Building greater skills and knowledge for educators

Delaware Performance Appraisal System Building greater skills and knowledge for educators Delaware Performance Appraisal System Building greater skills and knowledge for educators DPAS-II Guide for Administrators (Assistant Principals) Guide for Evaluating Assistant Principals Revised August

More information

Delaware Performance Appraisal System Building greater skills and knowledge for educators

Delaware Performance Appraisal System Building greater skills and knowledge for educators Delaware Performance Appraisal System Building greater skills and knowledge for educators DPAS-II Guide (Revised) for Teachers Updated August 2017 Table of Contents I. Introduction to DPAS II Purpose of

More information

ÉCOLE MANACHABAN MIDDLE SCHOOL School Education Plan May, 2017 Year Three

ÉCOLE MANACHABAN MIDDLE SCHOOL School Education Plan May, 2017 Year Three ÉCOLE MANACHABAN MIDDLE SCHOOL 2015-2019 School Education Plan May, 2017 Year Three MESSAGE FROM SCHOOL PRINCIPAL In support of Rocky View Schools vision to ensure students are literate and numerate and

More information

Curriculum Vitae JOHANNA A. SOLOMON, PhD

Curriculum Vitae JOHANNA A. SOLOMON, PhD Curriculum Vitae JOHANNA A. SOLOMON, PhD Grinnell College Mellon Post-Doctoral Fellow Peace and Conflict Studies Department of Political Science Goodnow Hall 1118 Park St solomonj@grinnell.edu Grinnell,

More information

The International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme at Carey

The International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme at Carey The International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme at Carey Contents ONNECT What is the IB? 2 How is the IB course structured? 3 The IB Learner Profile 4-5 What subjects does Carey offer? 6 The IB Diploma

More information

Hokulani Elementary School

Hokulani Elementary School Hokulani Elementary Code: 109 Status and Improvement Report Year -11 Contents Focus On Standards Grades K-5 This Status and Improvement Report has been prepared as part of the Department's education accountability

More information

Appendix K: Survey Instrument

Appendix K: Survey Instrument Journal of Southeast Asian American Education and Advancement Volume Article 12 2011 Appendix K: Survey Instrument Wayne E. Wright University of Texas, San Antonio, wewright@purdue.edu Sovicheth Boun The

More information

Scoring Guide for Candidates For retake candidates who began the Certification process in and earlier.

Scoring Guide for Candidates For retake candidates who began the Certification process in and earlier. Adolescence and Young Adulthood SOCIAL STUDIES HISTORY For retake candidates who began the Certification process in 2013-14 and earlier. Part 1 provides you with the tools to understand and interpret your

More information

eportfolio Guide Missouri State University

eportfolio Guide Missouri State University Social Studies eportfolio Guide Missouri State University Updated February 2014 Missouri State Portfolio Guide MoSPE & Conceptual Framework Standards QUALITY INDICATORS MoSPE 1: Content Knowledge Aligned

More information

Title Columbus State Community College's Master Planning Project (Phases III and IV) Status COMPLETED

Title Columbus State Community College's Master Planning Project (Phases III and IV) Status COMPLETED The Higher Learning Commission Action Project Directory Columbus State Community College Project Details Title Columbus State Community College's Master Planning Project (Phases III and IV) Status COMPLETED

More information

Executive Summary. Walker County Board of Education. Dr. Jason Adkins, Superintendent 1710 Alabama Avenue Jasper, AL 35501

Executive Summary. Walker County Board of Education. Dr. Jason Adkins, Superintendent 1710 Alabama Avenue Jasper, AL 35501 Dr. Jason Adkins, Superintendent 1710 Alabama Avenue Jasper, AL 35501 Document Generated On November 3, 2016 TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction 1 Description of the School System 2 System's Purpose 4 Notable

More information

IB Diploma Program Language Policy San Jose High School

IB Diploma Program Language Policy San Jose High School IB Diploma Program Language Policy San Jose High School Mission Statement San Jose High School (SJHS) is a diverse academic community of learners where we take pride and ownership of the international

More information

Bachelor of Arts in Gender, Sexuality, and Women's Studies

Bachelor of Arts in Gender, Sexuality, and Women's Studies Bachelor of Arts in Gender, Sexuality, and Women's Studies 1 Bachelor of Arts in Gender, Sexuality, and Women's Studies Summary of Degree Requirements University Requirements: MATH 0701 (4 s.h.) and/or

More information

University of the Arts London (UAL) Diploma in Professional Studies Art and Design Date of production/revision May 2015

University of the Arts London (UAL) Diploma in Professional Studies Art and Design Date of production/revision May 2015 Programme Specification Every taught course of study leading to a UAL award is required to have a Programme Specification. This summarises the course aims, learning outcomes, teaching, learning and assessment

More information

DIOCESE OF PLYMOUTH VICARIATE FOR EVANGELISATION CATECHESIS AND SCHOOLS

DIOCESE OF PLYMOUTH VICARIATE FOR EVANGELISATION CATECHESIS AND SCHOOLS DIOCESE OF PLYMOUTH VICARIATE FOR EVANGELISATION CATECHESIS AND SCHOOLS St. Boniface Catholic College Boniface Lane Plymouth Devon PL5 3AG URN 113558 Head Teacher: Mr Frank Ashcroft Chair of Governors:

More information

GRADUATE CURRICULUM REVIEW REPORT

GRADUATE CURRICULUM REVIEW REPORT UATE CURRICULUM REVIEW REPORT OCTOBER 2014 Graduate Review Committee: Beverly J. Irby, Chair; Luis Ponjuan, Associate Professor, and Lisa Baumgartner, Associate Professor (First Draft Submission- June,

More information

Volunteer State Community College Strategic Plan,

Volunteer State Community College Strategic Plan, Volunteer State Community College Strategic Plan, 2005-2010 Mission: Volunteer State Community College is a public, comprehensive community college offering associate degrees, certificates, continuing

More information

LEN HIGHTOWER, Ph.D.

LEN HIGHTOWER, Ph.D. Page 1 LEN HIGHTOWER, Ph.D. 350 South Merelet Lane Orange, CA 92869 E-Mail: WLHightower@hotmail.com 714-602-6573 Home 503-341-2672 Cell CAREER HIGHLIGHTS HighTower Consulting Assisted Concordia University

More information

A Study of Successful Practices in the IB Program Continuum

A Study of Successful Practices in the IB Program Continuum FINAL REPORT Time period covered by: September 15 th 009 to March 31 st 010 Location of the project: Thailand, Hong Kong, China & Vietnam Report submitted to IB: April 5 th 010 A Study of Successful Practices

More information

Building Bridges Globally

Building Bridges Globally Building Bridges Globally New Faculty Brown Bag April 2015 Global Affairs Organization Mission: The office of Global Affairs advances UC Davis internationalization strategy to enhance its global impact

More information

AGENDA Symposium on the Recruitment and Retention of Diverse Populations

AGENDA Symposium on the Recruitment and Retention of Diverse Populations AGENDA Symposium on the Recruitment and Retention of Diverse Populations Tuesday, April 25, 2017 7:30-8:30 a.m. Symposium Check-in and Continental Breakfast Foyer 8:30-9:30 a.m. Opening Keynote Session

More information

Final Teach For America Interim Certification Program

Final Teach For America Interim Certification Program Teach For America Interim Certification Program Program Rubric Overview The Teach For America (TFA) Interim Certification Program Rubric was designed to provide formative and summative feedback to TFA

More information

A Systems Approach to Principal and Teacher Effectiveness From Pivot Learning Partners

A Systems Approach to Principal and Teacher Effectiveness From Pivot Learning Partners A Systems Approach to Principal and Teacher Effectiveness From Pivot Learning Partners About Our Approach At Pivot Learning Partners (PLP), we help school districts build the systems, structures, and processes

More information

Focus on. Learning THE ACCREDITATION MANUAL 2013 WASC EDITION

Focus on. Learning THE ACCREDITATION MANUAL 2013 WASC EDITION Focus on Learning THE ACCREDITATION MANUAL ACCREDITING COMMISSION FOR SCHOOLS, WESTERN ASSOCIATION OF SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES www.acswasc.org 10/10/12 2013 WASC EDITION Focus on Learning THE ACCREDITATION

More information

TACOMA HOUSING AUTHORITY

TACOMA HOUSING AUTHORITY TACOMA HOUSING AUTHORITY CHILDREN s SAVINGS ACCOUNT for the CHILDREN of NEW SALISHAN, Tacoma, WA last revised July 10, 2014 1. SUMMARY The Tacoma Housing Authority (THA) plans to offer individual development

More information

Indiana Collaborative for Project Based Learning. PBL Certification Process

Indiana Collaborative for Project Based Learning. PBL Certification Process Indiana Collaborative for Project Based Learning ICPBL Certification mission is to PBL Certification Process ICPBL Processing Center c/o CELL 1400 East Hanna Avenue Indianapolis, IN 46227 (317) 791-5702

More information

What Is a Chief Diversity Officer? By. Dr. Damon A. Williams & Dr. Katrina C. Wade-Golden

What Is a Chief Diversity Officer? By. Dr. Damon A. Williams & Dr. Katrina C. Wade-Golden What Is a Chief Diversity Officer? By Dr. Damon A. Williams & Dr. Katrina C. Wade-Golden To meet the needs of increasingly diverse campuses, many institutions have developed executive positions to guide

More information

SEARCH PROSPECTUS: Dean of the College of Law

SEARCH PROSPECTUS: Dean of the College of Law SEARCH PROSPECTUS: Dean of the College of Law TABLE OF CONTENTS 3 The College of Law 4 Mission of the College of Law Academics and Curriculum at the College of Law 5 History, Accreditation and Enrollment

More information

International School of Kigali, Rwanda

International School of Kigali, Rwanda International School of Kigali, Rwanda Engaging Individuals Encouraging Success Enriching Global Citizens 2013-2014 Curriculum Plan Dear Teachers, The 2013-2014 academic year at ISKR marks the first year

More information

Division of Student Affairs Annual Report. Office of Multicultural Affairs

Division of Student Affairs Annual Report. Office of Multicultural Affairs Department Mission/Vision Statement Division of Student Affairs 2009-2010 Annual Report Office of Multicultural Affairs The Office of Multicultural Affairs provides comprehensive academic, personal, social,

More information

Swinburne University of Technology 2020 Plan

Swinburne University of Technology 2020 Plan Swinburne University of Technology 2020 Plan science technology innovation Swinburne University of Technology 2020 Plan Embracing change This is an exciting time for Swinburne. Tertiary education is undergoing

More information

Understanding Co operatives Through Research

Understanding Co operatives Through Research Understanding Co operatives Through Research Dr. Lou Hammond Ketilson Chair, Committee on Co operative Research International Co operative Alliance Presented to the United Nations Expert Group Meeting

More information

Executive Summary. Marian Catholic High School. Mr. Steven Tortorello, Principal 700 Ashland Avenue Chicago Heights, IL

Executive Summary. Marian Catholic High School. Mr. Steven Tortorello, Principal 700 Ashland Avenue Chicago Heights, IL Mr. Steven Tortorello, Principal 700 Ashland Avenue Chicago Heights, IL 60411-1699 Document Generated On February 17, 2016 TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction 1 Description of the School 2 School's Purpose

More information

National Survey of Student Engagement The College Student Report

National Survey of Student Engagement The College Student Report The College Student Report This is a facsimile of the NSSE survey (available at nsse.iub.edu/links/surveys). The survey itself is administered online. 1. During the current school year, about how often

More information

Colorado s Unified Improvement Plan for Schools for Online UIP Report

Colorado s Unified Improvement Plan for Schools for Online UIP Report Colorado s Unified Improvement Plan for Schools for 2015-16 Online UIP Report Organization Code: 2690 District Name: PUEBLO CITY 60 Official 2014 SPF: 1-Year Executive Summary How are students performing?

More information

Bold resourcefulness: redefining employability and entrepreneurial learning

Bold resourcefulness: redefining employability and entrepreneurial learning Title Type URL Bold resourcefulness: redefining employability and entrepreneurial learning Report Date 2008 Citation Creators http://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/671/ Ball, Linda (2008) Bold resourcefulness:

More information

Indicators Teacher understands the active nature of student learning and attains information about levels of development for groups of students.

Indicators Teacher understands the active nature of student learning and attains information about levels of development for groups of students. Domain 1- The Learner and Learning 1a: Learner Development The teacher understands how learners grow and develop, recognizing that patterns of learning and development vary individually within and across

More information

ABET Criteria for Accrediting Computer Science Programs

ABET Criteria for Accrediting Computer Science Programs ABET Criteria for Accrediting Computer Science Programs Mapped to 2008 NSSE Survey Questions First Edition, June 2008 Introduction and Rationale for Using NSSE in ABET Accreditation One of the most common

More information

Mathematics Program Assessment Plan

Mathematics Program Assessment Plan Mathematics Program Assessment Plan Introduction This assessment plan is tentative and will continue to be refined as needed to best fit the requirements of the Board of Regent s and UAS Program Review

More information

UK Institutional Research Brief: Results of the 2012 National Survey of Student Engagement: A Comparison with Carnegie Peer Institutions

UK Institutional Research Brief: Results of the 2012 National Survey of Student Engagement: A Comparison with Carnegie Peer Institutions UK Institutional Research Brief: Results of the 2012 National Survey of Student Engagement: A Comparison with Carnegie Peer Institutions November 2012 The National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE) has

More information

Effectiveness and Successful Program Elements of SOAR s Afterschool Programs

Effectiveness and Successful Program Elements of SOAR s Afterschool Programs Effectiveness and Successful Program Elements of SOAR s Afterschool Programs Janet L. Johnson, President Philip Van Vleck Jennifer S. Peach Rita G. Lewis Raleigh, NC rglewis@edstar.org Volume 1, Number

More information

A Diverse Student Body

A Diverse Student Body A Diverse Student Body No two diversity plans are alike, even when expressing the importance of having students from diverse backgrounds. A top-tier school that attracts outstanding students uses this

More information

FACULTY OF PSYCHOLOGY

FACULTY OF PSYCHOLOGY FACULTY OF PSYCHOLOGY STRATEGY 2016 2022 // UNIVERSITY OF BERGEN STRATEGY 2016 2022 FACULTY OF PSYCHOLOGY 3 STRATEGY 2016 2022 (Adopted by the Faculty Board on 15 June 2016) The Faculty of Psychology has

More information

Improving the impact of development projects in Sub-Saharan Africa through increased UK/Brazil cooperation and partnerships Held in Brasilia

Improving the impact of development projects in Sub-Saharan Africa through increased UK/Brazil cooperation and partnerships Held in Brasilia Image: Brett Jordan Report Improving the impact of development projects in Sub-Saharan Africa through increased UK/Brazil cooperation and partnerships Thursday 17 Friday 18 November 2016 WP1492 Held in

More information

Position Statements. Index of Association Position Statements

Position Statements. Index of Association Position Statements ts Association position statements address key issues for Pre-K-12 education and describe the shared beliefs that direct united action by boards of education/conseil scolaire fransaskois and their Association.

More information

New Jersey Department of Education World Languages Model Program Application Guidance Document

New Jersey Department of Education World Languages Model Program Application Guidance Document New Jersey Department of Education 2018-2020 World Languages Model Program Application Guidance Document Please use this guidance document to help you prepare for your district s application submission

More information

AAC/BOT Page 1 of 9

AAC/BOT Page 1 of 9 Page 1 of 9 Page 2 of 9 Page 3 of 9 1-PAGE EXECUTIVE SUMMARY TEMPLATE: INTRA-AGENCY ADVISORY AND DELIBERATIVE MATERIAL MEMORANDUM Executive Summary of Upcoming Board Review or Action Item DATE: 2/16/17

More information

Common Core Exemplar for English Language Arts and Social Studies: GRADE 1

Common Core Exemplar for English Language Arts and Social Studies: GRADE 1 The Common Core State Standards and the Social Studies: Preparing Young Students for College, Career, and Citizenship Common Core Exemplar for English Language Arts and Social Studies: Why We Need Rules

More information

FRANKLIN D. CHAMBERS,

FRANKLIN D. CHAMBERS, CURRICULUM VITAE FRANKLIN D. CHAMBERS, Ph.D. EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND Doctor of Philosophy: Organizational Communications Howard University, Washington, D.C. Masters Degree: Educational Administration Howard

More information