Green Dot: Helping Schools Make the Grade
A very nice article about Green Dot and the early success its having turning around Locke High School, one of the most notorious schools in America:
That's where Steve Barr comes in. Barr founded Green Dot Public Schools in 1999 with the mission of transforming secondary education in Los Angeles. He comes from a long background of service, cofounding Rock the Vote in 1990 and hosting President Bill Clinton's national service inaugural event that led to the creation of Americorps, a national, federally funded volunteer organization. Barr taught Minix and his colleagues to think differently about Locke's potential.
"Teach them all." A little-known California law allows a public school to become a privately operated, publicly funded charter school if more than 50 percent of the tenured teachers vote in favor of the switch. Convincing Minix and scores of other skeptical teachers that such a radical change was a good idea, in 2008 Barr took control of Locke and its millions of dollars in federal Title I funding, which goes to schools with high percentages of low-income children. What was once a poorly run school for thousands of students with a graduation rate of just 5 percent is now the Locke Family of Schools, made up of eight small college-prep academies and one technical school. In the brief time since the Green Dot takeover, graduation rates and state test scores have already improved, and student suspensions and expulsions are down. "We didn't get rid of the knuckleheads and the gangbangers—we figured out a way to teach them all," says Minix, who now serves as the Locke Family of Schools' athletic director.
Proving that students who have failed in overcrowded, low-performing public schools can achieve in the more intimate environment of charter schools has become Barr's mission. And through Green Dot schools, Barr has begun to change the way these kids learn. Because of small classes and excellent teachers who give students as much personal attention as they need, Green Dot students' scores on state assessments are nearly 19 percent greater than their local public school peers. The average graduation rate at Green Dot schools is 81 percent, compared with less than 50 percent at regular L.A. public schools.
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Green Dot: Helping Schools Make the Grade
Green Dot is turning troubled public institutions into successful charter schools.
Posted December 9, 2009
When Stephen Minix decided to become an inner-city high school teacher, he enrolled in Pepperdine University's Graduate School of Education and Psychology to learn the skills of the trade. But not even the best teacher-training program could have prepared him to work in a school in as much disarray as Los Angeles's Alain Leroy Locke Senior High School, Minix says. Opened in the late 1960s a few years after the Watts riots and named after the first black Rhodes scholar, Locke was once a source of pride for its community. But by 2006, the school had devolved into a dumping ground for the Los Angeles Unified School District's most emotionally troubled and academically challenged students.
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