Sandy Garrett’s Column

Little boxes on the hillside,
Little boxes made of ticky-tacky,
Little boxes, little boxes,
Little boxes, all the same.
– “Little Boxes,” by Malvina Reynolds, © 1962

Many will remember the song “Little Boxes,” a social commentary on the cookie-cutter pursuit of the American dream that became popular in the 1960s. “Little Boxes” is now the theme song to a popular cable television series. It came to mind recently when preparing for my annual “State of Education Address” this summer.
Most are familiar with the typical school “box”—with four walls, a chalkboard and a teacher at the front. Each was the same, regardless of grade or school. Nothing else in the world is the same now as it was then.
To harness the power of our present and the opportunities of our future, we must look beyond that box. So, when school leaders gathered for our annual Leadership Conference July 15, I told them about the “perfect storm” that is brewing. This is the global, national, state and local forces impacting Oklahoma schools and their ability to successfully educate every child.
These forces are:
· The worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.
· The concern that not all in the workforce today have the skills needed
to be successful.
· The ongoing demographic changes resulting in more Oklahoma children
living in poverty, and more students who are homeless.
This converging of forces into a perfect storm makes it imperative that schools focus on the future and be willing to change quickly. It’s time to transform schools to better prepare every student to compete in the global economy now and to adapt to the job market of their future.
The president has offered a crisis plan to help chart a course through the storm. His recent initiatives include:
1. Promoting innovation and excellence in schools. In Oklahoma this can
mean increasing the quality and quantity of learning time; adding to the number of places for learning from which parents can choose (traditional public or private, charter schools, online, etc.), and engaging students with the tools of technology they will use in the workplace.
2. Encouraging higher academic standards and better assessments by
continuing to raise the bar on tests and advocating for common standards among states.
3. Recruiting and rewarding teachers in ways that help retain the current
teaching force and assist new teachers in being effective with students at that particular school.
4. Developing partnerships with CareerTechs and colleges, and continuing
our work aligning postsecondary standards with Pre-K through 12th grade.
5. Ongoing efforts to improve the quality of early learning programs –
even in Oklahoma where our Pre-Kindergarten programs are considered the national model.
Urgency is needed locally to rethink Oklahoma’s outdated school calendar, embrace new technologies, and tailor teaching to each child’s educational needs with a goal of 100 percent of students graduating from high school.
Schools can break free of the “little box” mentality of the past, and
focus our schools on the future. Because every child deserves a bright
future, I urged school leaders to do whatever it takes to “leave no future behind.”

Read to a child – the benefits last a lifetime!


Making music

clarinetDespite playing the clarinet during my years in school, I never knew what went into keeping an instrument in playing condition, but I recently got a little lesson from some Oklahoma City band directors.

The band directors are working this summer to repair and catalog all of the more than 2,000 band instruments in the district’s middle and high schools. Chris Lehew, assistant band director at Northwest Classen, was kind enough to let me tinker with a clarinet when I visited one of their repair sessions. He showed me how to cut and glue down the cork on the joints of the clarinet and then sand it so that the instrument’s pieces fit snugly together. I tried my hand at a little sanding and felt a little sentimental for my clarinet-playing days.

Lehew and other band members replaced pads, fixed bent keys and replaced screws on instruments that day. They said they hope that their efforts will make for sweeter music after school starts.

- Staff Writer Dawn Marks


Sandy Garrett’s Column

Learning is no longer confined to four walls and a chalkboard. In today’s classrooms, laptops, PDAs and other technologies have broken down the walls for teachers and students; literally bringing the world to their classrooms.

Technology is making a positive difference in schools and revolutionizing the way educators teach and children learn. Just this week the U.S.

Department of Education released a study indicating online education

Today, 98 percent of Oklahoma school districts use computers for curriculum, assessment and administration. In the last eight years, the number of computer in schools has more than doubled.

This is impressive considering the funding for hardware, software, and connectivity has come primarily through local bond issues and federal funds, grants or Education Rate (E-rate) discounts.

According to the State Department of Education’s annual “School Technology Survey” released at the regular June State Board of Education meeting, in Oklahoma:

along with traditional face-to-face teaching is an effective strategy for 21st century education.

school year;

Schools spent more than $105 million on technology during the 2007-2008

One-third use interactive whiteboards and PDAs;

50 percent of schools subscribe to digital streaming;

In addition, several districts are pursuing goals with 1:1 learning, which provides students with their own laptop computers to use each day.

A growing number of schools are also issuing iPods to students to enhance learning.

One innovative district that is integrating multiple digital technologies into classrooms is Howe Public Schools in LeFlore County. Under the direction of Superintendent Scott Parks, broadcast journalism students have created distance learning virtual field trips that enable other students to experience historical locations without leaving their classroom. Students broadcast a weekly news podcast and teachers are able to post homework and lessons online through computer programs.

Oklahoma’s core curriculum for Grades Pre-K through 12, the Priority Academic Student Skills (PASS), has standards that define basic skills of technology, including learning the operation of a computer, problem solving and telecommunications skills, and ethical and legal issues related to students using technology.

Our ever-growing global society makes the world available to every desktop. As such, the integration of digital tools into classrooms is a must for students to have the knowledge and skills needed to be competitive and successful as adults.

62 percent employ student blogs and 32 percent use instant messaging.


Educare Opens

I had the chance to visit the Oklahoma City Educare site on its first day Monday. It looks like such a fun place for children. Organizers say the center will provide high quality child care where lower-income children can learn and receive services they need. Throughout the building, I found touches especially for children like spinning wood blocks on the walls for when they stand in line and on the playground recycled tanks made into drums. Children practice family-style eating in their rooms with their teachers. When it’s lunch time, children learn to serve themselves, eat and talk with each other and then clean  up and brush their teeth. Many organizations and people throughout Oklahoma City worked to raise the $9.3 million to build and equip the building at 500 SE Grand. Now they’re raising money for an endowment and organizations also have committed to give annually to the $3 million operating budget. Here are some pictures from the first day.

educare1educare3educare2


Sandy Garrett’s Column

From Will Rogers and Marjorie Tallchief to Carrie Underwood and Kristen Chenoweth, many famous artists have called Oklahoma home.

Oklahoma’s talent is home grown and our classrooms are full of budding young artists waiting to shine in the spotlight of success.

Talented students in the fields of acting, creative writing, ballet, modern dance, orchestra, chorus, photography, drawing/painting, and film/video attend the Oklahoma Summer Arts Institute at Quartz Mountain near Lone Grove each summer.

An intensive, two-week residential program gives young Oklahomans the opportunity to study with nationally renowned artists including winners of the Pulitzer Prize and of the Academy, Emmy, Grammy and Tony Awards.

One of the first students to attend the Summer Institute is also one of its most famous alumni, Megan Mullally, known for her recent starring role in the award winning TV show, Will & Grace.

Participants aged 14-18, and a few graduating seniors aged 19, are selected through competitive, statewide auditions. Nearly 1,300 students applied this year, and 268 were accepted. Each receives a full scholarship to the institute worth more than $2,000.

Scholarships are provided by the State Department of Education with funding from the Legislature and matched by private donations secured by the Oklahoma Arts Instituteheaded by a dynamic president, Julie Cohen.The summer institute also receives support from the Oklahoma Arts Council.

These scholarships are an important way to support student artists who have high ambitions.

At the 19th annual State Superintendent’s Awards for Arts Excellence, I had the privilege of honoring recent high school seniors who attended the summer institute.

We honored 109 talented high school seniors from 40 Oklahoma communities in a ceremony at the Scottish Rite Temple in Guthrie. We also recognized school leaders and fine arts teachers.

The State Department of Education, along with the Masonic Fraternity of Oklahoma and the Oklahoma Alliance for Arts Education

an affiliate of the Kennedy Center Alliance for Arts Education Network, are sponsors of the event.Every year I am inspired by the creativity, passion and talent of the young artists we have in our classrooms. They give me hope for the future, but make me wonder what would happen if there were no arts programs in our schools.

It would be difficult for many of these young people to find creative outlets and to realize the academic benefits. Thankfully, the arts are a key component of Oklahoma’s core curriculum, the Priority Academic Student Skills.

Students of all ages and backgrounds benefit from exposure to the arts. A direct connection between arts participation, higher test scores and student success has been well documented. This has been especially evident in the studies of SAT scores.

We believe the arts are an integral part of a well-rounded education and I urge you to support youth arts in your community!

For information about the State Superintendent’s Awards for Arts Excellence, visit the SDE’s Web site

 

www.sde.state.ok.us. For details concerning the Summer Arts Institute, visit the Oklahoma Arts Institute’s Web site www.oaiquartz.org or call (405) 321-9000.


Lunch Program Continues through July 29

lunch3Oklahoma City children can still get school lunch most of this month although school is out. The district is paricipating in the free summer meal program and several sites are offering lunch and breakfast. The program will continue through July 24 at all participating schools, and until July 29 at some schools. Breakfast is from 7:30 to 8:30 a.m. and lunch will be from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. For more information, call 587-1032.

 

Sites are:

 

› Britton Elementary School, 1215 NW 95

› Columbus Enterprise, 2402 N Pennsylvania Ave.

› Hawthorne Elementary School, 2300 NW 15

› Hayes Elementary School, 6900 S Byers

› Hillcrest Elementary School, 6421 S Miller

› Heronville Elementary School, 1240 SW 29

› Lee Elementary School, 424 SW 29

› Madison Elementary School, 3117 N Independence

› Martin Luther King Elementary School, 1201 NE 48

› Prairie Queen Elementary School, 6609 S Blackwelder

› Rockwood Elementary School, 3101 SW 24

› Telstar Elementary School, 9521 NE 16

› Wheeler Elementary School, 501 SE 25

› Capital Hill High School, 500 SW 36

› Douglass High School, 900 Martin Luther King Ave.

› Northwest Classen High School, 2801 NW 27

› Star Spencer High School, 3001 N Spencer Road

› U.S. Grant High School, 5016 S Pennsylvania Ave.

 

Sites open until July 29:

 

› Rancho Village Elementary School, 1401 Johnston Drive

› Ridgeview Elementary School, 10010 Ridgeview Drive

› John Marshall High School, 12201 N Portland Ave.

› Southeast High School, 5401 Shields


Sandy Garrett’s Column

Summer break is in full swing and students likely have indulged in sleeping in and spending hours playing with friends.

That is wonderful. Summer vacations should be full of fun. However, they don’t have to mean a break from learning. In fact, they shouldn’t mean a break from learning.

Countless studies continue to show that children experience learning loss during the summer months, particularly students in low-income homes.

On average, all students lose about two months in math skills over the summer months. While upper and middle income students gain in reading skills during this time, lower income students experience a loss according to a study by Dr. Harris Cooper, professor of psychology at the University of Missouri-Columbia.

A recent report from the Nellie Mae Education Foundation, “The Learning

Season: The Untapped Power of Summer to Advance Student Achievement” shows that nonacademic experiences during the summer can support success during the school year, including higher grades and test scores.

Families can prevent a “summer brain drain” and help children enrich their learning skills during the summer by heeding a few low-cost suggestions adapted from the Center for Summer Learning:

 

Take family educational trips. These can be visits to parks, historicalor children’s museums, zoos and nature centers.

 

Practice math daily by measuring items around the house or yard.Children can add and subtract items at the grocery store and cooking (with adult supervision) is a good way to learn fractions.

 

Do good deeds together. Children learn better and “act out” less whenthey engage in activities that aid in their social emotional development, such as community service, maybe planting trees or cleaning up a park.

 

Enroll children in summer programs offered by local schools, recreationcenters, universities or community-based organizations.

 

Keep a schedule. Continuing daily routines will provide structure andlimits. This will provide a balance and keep young minds engaged.

 

Get outside and play. Intense physical activity and exercise contributeto healthy development and release pent up energy.

Also, providing plenty of reading material in the home and finding quality educational activities online are helpful to preventing summer brain drain.

Whatever you have planned, don’t forget to make the most out of the time you have together as a family. Here’s to plenty of fun and learning this summer!


Sandy Garrett’s Column

Oklahoma soon will raise the bar on state-mandated tests for elementary reading and mathematics.

The State Board of Education a constitutional body of seven members chaired by the State Superintendent has directed Oklahoma’s student testing company for Grades 3-8 to lead an effort resulting in higher expectations of students.This month, Data Recognition Corporation (DRC) of Minneapolis, Minn., will convene panels of reading and math educators, business and civic leaders, and representatives from higher education. DRC will facilitate committee work to raise the bar on what students must do to be proficient on the Oklahoma Core Curriculum Tests.

The original development of Grade 3-8 tests was both in state law and in the federal No Child Left Behind Act, however the tests were phased in between 2001 and 2006. Proficiency rates for some tests were set years before other tests were even required, such as the 6th and 7th grade tests. We have begun to see an “outlier” effect on some of the tests, especially with the 4th and 5th grades.

Thus,it is critical that we now align the test benchmarks, or cut scores, to provide consistency across the board on what it means to be “proficient” at each grade level on state tests. Committees also will consider how to better align Oklahoma tests with the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP).

Including open-ended questions on Oklahoma tests, to make them more like NAEP is costly and we have not received an appropriation for this to date.

In recent years, the Board has focused on directing the development of rigorous, high-stakes, end-of-instruction (EOI) exams in Algebra I, Algebra II, Geometry, Biology, U.S. History, English II and English III, as required by the Achieving Classroom Excellence Act (ACE).

The EOI tests are part of the state’s new graduation requirements, established in the ACE Act. Beginning with the freshmen class of this past school year (2008-09), students must pass four of the seven EOI tests to earn a high school diploma.

Now that the EOI tests are operational and it appears proficiency benchmarks are sufficiently high, it is time to redirect our efforts to making certain that math and reading exams in Grades 3-8 have equal rigor to our high school exams and are appropriately aligned.

Setting higher math and reading expectations is critical to Oklahoma students being nationally and internationally competitive.

Recommendations for raising the bar on these tests will likely come to the State Board of Education for consideration in July.

We welcome this important opportunity to move Oklahoma forward.


Board Member Calls for Reform

After executive session at Monday night’s Oklahoma City School Board meeting, member Steve Shafer read a prepared statement urging board members to commit themselves to making Oklahoma City a better district. Shafer said that to do that, board members must vote on issues put before them and pursue answers to questions from the board clerk or Superintendent Karl Springer. Shafer said that board members often ask for too much information on small topics rather than concentrating on a larger vision and trusting the leadership they have put into place. The actions of the board are unpredictable and do not convey confidence to leaders on decisions regarding management of the district and hiring and firing of employees, he said.

Shafer said that the relevance of his statement was again demonstrated that night when board members voted not to hire Lanette Lowe as principal for Wheeler Elementary School going against Springer’s recommendation. Board member Thelma Parks abstained while Chairman Angela Monson and members Wilfredo Santos Rivera and David Castillo voted no. Though the remaining four members voted yes, the board needed five votes to hire Lowe.

Several board members voiced their disapproval of Shafer’s statement, but Shafer said he will no longer stay quiet about the issues and the honeymoon is over for the board.

I guess the people of Oklahoma City will be watching.

- Staff Writer Dawn Marks


John Marshall High School meeting

Parents, teachers and students can give their input in the search for the next principal of John Marshall High School.

The Foundation for Oklahoma City Public Schools and the school district will host a community meeting at 6 tonight at the school, 12201 N Portland, to discuss the qualities people want in the next principal.

Corey Harris, who has served as principal for the last two years, is leaving the district for a job in another state at the end of the school year.