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Woodley Hills Elementary and West Potomac High School. Schools of Change. Building high performing schools of character. Presented by Rima Vesilind, Principal. Locked out of Success. Woodley Hills Elementary School (transition 1998-2001) West Potomac High School (transition 2004-present).
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Woodley Hills Elementary and West Potomac High School Schools of Change
Building high performing schools of character Presented by Rima Vesilind, Principal
Locked out of Success Woodley Hills Elementary School (transition 1998-2001) West Potomac High School (transition 2004-present)
Where Are We? • Northern Virginia, just south of Alexandria in Fairfax County. • Located between Route 1 and the Potomac River – between the Pentagon and Mt. Vernon. • South of the beltway that circles Washington, D.C. • Our neighboring school is T.C.Williams, made famous by the movie Remember the Titans.
Two schools in crisis --This is what we saw in each Angry staff/community members Disrespectful school climate Many discipline problems Apathy/Tardiness/Truancy Low test scores Staff/administration turnover Lack of trust Lack of community involvement
Steps of change • Assess the instructional program – Pull from the top and push from the bottom to raise the achievement bar. • Staff the most difficult children – No child wants to be a failure. What can you do to give each child success and a sense of responsibility? • Build trust in the nay-sayers – Every building has resistant staff and parents. Don’t take it personally – Work to help them make change – Highlight successes
Working with Staff • Focus on the children – Continually remind teachers they’re teaching children, not just the way to read and add, but the way to live and be successful. • Help staff understand the Kohlberg steps to an ethical foundation and work with their students as complete people. • Roll up your sleeves and work with them – Get to know them – Develop understanding of the school and the community – Keep your door and your mind open for good ideas….
Woodley Hills Elementary Math and Science Focus School School of Smiles Rima Vesilind, Principal 1998-2003 Sharon Aldredge, Principal 2003-present
77% of Woodley Hills students come from minority backgrounds. • We have a 20% mobility rate. • Students come from more than 40 different countries and speak more than 20 languages. • 61% qualify for free/reduced meals • 41% are LEP (language minority) students.
Community town meetings empowered our community to get involved.
High School or Elementary? • High Schools need more than character education alone • Achievement • Appreciation as young adults • Responsibility • High school students have to have meaningful involvement. • High School teachers have to realize that they are teaching students, not subjects • Citizenship training
Who Are We? • Approximately 3,000 students and 250 staff members who come to West Potomac daily. 2100 local students. • We have two magnet programs in our school – the Academy (500 students) and Pulley (90 students). • More than 300 courses are offered, including 23 AP courses. • 90% Graduation rate – 92% of those students pursue postsecondary education.
We are Diverse in every way. Culture Religion Language Ability Special Needs Socio-economic status Urban/suburban
56% of West Potomac students come from minority backgrounds. • We have a 31% mobility rate. • Our students come from more than 60 different countries and speak more than 40 languages. • 35% qualify for free/reduced meals • 196 students are full-time participants in the program for English Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL)
What do we want our School to be like? • Responsible, Respectful, Caring • High academic achievement • Appreciative of differences. • Few discipline problems • Cohesive, supportive learning community • Community welcomed and involved • Attractive facilities
West Potomac High School Responsibility On-Time Achievement Respect We have a responsibility to be on time and prepared, to achieve at a high level and to be respectful of all.
How could we change the climate? • Empower teachers and staff – FAC/LT/ROAR/PELCs • Establish ROAR/Character Education Committee - Responsibility, On-Time, Achievement and Respect. • Building meaningful relationships between students and faculty. • Implement Professional Ethical Learning Communities • Develop school service learning program.
Tertiary Prevention: Specialized Individualized Systems for Students with High-Risk Behavior CONTINUUM OF SCHOOL-WIDE INSTRUCTIONAL & POSITIVE BEHAVIOR SUPPORT ~5% Secondary Prevention: Specialized Group Systems for Students with At-Risk Behavior ~15% Primary Prevention: School-/Classroom- Wide Systems for All Students, Staff, & Settings ~80% of Students
West Potomac’s Service Learning Project: A change of culture and opportunities for growth
Community Service vs Service Learning Community Service is: • Unpaid labor benefiting organizations in the community. • A variety of work and services that target a need. Service-learning is a teaching and learning strategy that integrates : • Meaningful community service with instruction in civic responsibility • Reflection to enrich the learning experience • Students growing personally and as leaders Both strengthen communities
Service Learning and Community Service Differences • Service Learning differs from community service in so many ways: • Service learning maintains education as its primary focus and is integrated into a curriculum. • Students individually research and choose on what they wish to actively work. • Service learning facilitates higher-ordered thinking – “How am I making an impact in my community?”
The Senior Project: Overview • Our service learning project is a year-long service learning experience. • Students engage in meaningful school and community-based problem-solving activities. • It is integrated into government classes and makes that curriculum more real and relevant by linking learning in the classroom and activity in the community.
Goals of the Senior Project • To help students identify and study a social, political or governmental issue that interests them. • To develop students’ individual research and communication skills. • To integrate classroom and real-world experiences for students, forming democratic citizenship and the habits of civic engagement. • To contribute to the well-being of the West Potomac community at large.
Components of the project • Researching a social/political/government issue. • Writing a research paper on the topic. • Performing 30 hours of service in relation to the students chosen topic. • Reflecting on student experience through three journal entries and a culminating presentation of research and experience.
Essential Elements • Planning • Collaboration • Communication • Community Involvement • Vertical Articulation • Horizontal Articulation • Site Level Opportunities
Examples of essential elements in our service learning project • Planning during our PELCs and assessing progress of the project. • Working within our curriculum team to create all the components of the project. • Working with other departments to collaborate on assignments and get professional feedback.
More examples of essential elements in our service learning project • Keeping all members of the WPHS staff informed on what the project is about and what is currently going on. • Working with local organizations to develop codependent relationships. • Developing programs with middle and elementary schools in our area. • Providing opportunities for students at WPHS to work with various student groups.
West Potomac Mentoring Initiatives • The Bucknell-West Potomac Mentoring Partnership • BAM (Brothers Achieving More) • MESOL (Mentoring ESOL Students) • SPC (Students for a Positive Community) • Best Buddies (Pulley Center) • Peer Mediation
Spotlight: Bucknell-West Potomac Mentoring Partnership Mission: To develop positive, caring relationships between high school and elementary students. Goal: To promote academic success and instill a greater sense of responsibility, compassion, and self-confidence in all students. Results: 34 high school students served as mentors. 41% male- 59% female, 44% African American, 35% Caucasian, 21% Hispanic. All loved it!!!
Mentoring Survey Results • Being a mentor helped me:
Analysis of the Senior Project goals • The students were introduced to numerous lessons and resources to investigate various social, political or government issues. • Tasks and activities were integrated into each quarter’s curriculum. • 95% of the 460 Seniors completed all components of the project. • Through this project West Potomac developed a stronger relationship with its surrounding community of individuals and organizations.
Academic skills developed by students • Researching • Source analysis • Paraphrasing • Deciphering fact from opinion • Networking with organizations • Research-based writing • Presenting
Paradigm Shifts We saw a gradual change in focus from: • Aggressive disrespect to an appreciation of manners, respect and excellence • “Us against them” to shared, thoughtful collaborative relationships. • An emphasis on teachingto an emphasis on learning. • “Do what I say” to “Understand why it is important to do this.” • “It’s always someone else’s fault” to assumption of responsibility.
Fairfax County School Board Goals: adopted in 2006. • Academics: All students will obtain, understand, analyze, communicate, and apply knowledge and skills to achieve success in school and in life. • Essential Life Skills: All students will demonstrate the aptitude, attitude, and skills to lead responsible, fulfilling, and respectful lives. • Responsibility to the Community: All students will understand and model the important attributes that people must have to contribute to an effective and productive community and the common good of all.
Principal skills necessary to making change • Vision • Good Character • Put the students first • People Skills • Diagnostic capability • Strong work ethic You need to work tirelessly and get to know everybody!
“Change will not come if we wait for some other person or some other time. We are the ones we’ve been waiting for.”….Barack Obama