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Focus on Literacy. Ken Donohue , Ed.D. Principal Merriweather High School. Where we began: Our students were among the lowest performing in the district. April, 2001 “Merriweather is a failing school.” The Tribune. Merriweather High School Demographics. 80+ countries 60+ languages
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Ken Donohue, Ed.D. Principal Merriweather High School
Where we began: Our students were among the lowest performing in the district. April, 2001 “Merriweather is a failing school.” The Tribune
Merriweather High School Demographics • 80+ countries • 60+ languages • 2/3 second language learners • 70% born outside the U.S. • 54% on free/reduced lunch • 27% mobility rate
Merriweather has no ethnic majorityA diverse student body… • 38% Hispanic • 22% Asian • 14% Middle Easter • 12% White • 11% Black • 3% Other
Risk Factors Merriweather Faces • Language • Ethnicity • Cultural Diversity • Mobility of students and staff • Poverty • Socioeconomic Stratification • Five-Year Building Renovation • Gangs • Feeder Schools
National Dropout Prevention Center Effective Strategies Implemented at Merriweather • School-Community Collaboration • Safe Learning Environments • Family Engagement • Literacy Development • Mentoring/Tutoring • Service-Learning • Alternative Schooling • After-School and Summer Opportunities • Professional Development • Contextualized and Active and Individualized Learning • Source: National Dropout Prevention Center. Retrieved October 24, 2006 from http://www.dropoutprevention.org/effstrat/effstrat.htm
Merriweather High School 2001-2006 State Testing Results
Our students were among the lowest performing in our school system • 89 % attendance • system average was 95% • 76% or 3 of 4 students read below grade level • We passed only 1 of 11 state assessments in 2001 • Our SAT’s were the lowest in the district
The change process began with a simple question. • What do we need to do in order to improve student achievement? • Teachers responded… • Attendance • Reading
Use of data. We measured everything, but… • We didn’t focus on percentages. • We always sought to be the best for our students—one student at a time.
What makes our school special? • We do the right things, the right way, for the right reasons.
What made the difference? Our school-wide focus became literacy. • Teachers developed a repertoire of content area reading strategies. • We supported teachers through in-services provided by a reading coach. • We kept our focus on literacy—and content test scores rose.
State Test Results In 2001 our students passed one exit exam. In 2002 our students passed four exit exams. In 2003 our students passed eight exit exams. In 2004 our students passed ten exit exams. In 2005 and 2006 our students passed all eleven exit exams.
State test results happened even though: • Demographics remained unchanged. • There was no infusion of talent. • Gang activity rose dramatically. • A full-scale building renovation occurred. • There was a lack of continuity in middle school leadership.
State Assessment Results 8th Grade v. High School Percent Passing State AssessmentsThe same students three years later!
International Baccalaureate • 44% of our students are enrolled in IB courses. • The average IB student takes 3 IB courses. • Total number of exams taken has increased 248%. • Over 80% earned a 4 or above. District average is 67% • We never report mean scores. Adapted from Minnesota Department of Education, Drop-Out Prevention Presentation by Dr. Mel Riddile. Retrieved October 24, 2006 from http://www.granatagroup.com/
At Merriweather, we’re now proud to say: Our students read and succeed!