Title: Northwestern University Settlement Association
1OPENING DOORS OF OPPORTUNITY
- Ron Manderschied, President
2Rowe Elementary School
- The mission of Rowe Elementary School is to
prepare all of our K-8 scholars to succeed in and
graduate from college. We will do so by
cultivating the expectation that all scholars can
and will go to college and by delivering an
academically rigorous curriculum infused with
unique social and emotional programming led by
the Northwestern Settlement.
3Rowe Elementary School
- Opened September 8, 2009
- Prepare all K-8 scholars to succeed in and
graduate from college - Deliver an academically rigorous education
- Provide social and emotional support with
Settlement wrap-around services
4Rowes Vision
- Cultivate the desire and expectation to go to
college - Create college-like experiences from day one
- Deliver an academically rigorous education
- Focus on literacy and math during an extended
school day and year - Provide social and emotional support
- Meet scholars basic needs so they can focus on
academics in a safe and supportive learning
environment
5Rowes Academic Goals
- At Rowe, we set ambitious and feasible goals for
all scholars - We expect all scholars will make 4 levels of STEP
growth (equivalent to approximately 1.5 years of
reading growth) and will demonstrate 80 mastery
on the end of year English Language Arts and
Mathematics TerraNova - Our current results demonstrate
- 92 of K-2 scholars started below grade level
benchmarks in September 2010 - Nearly 100 of K scholars are now on track to
meet/exceed grade level benchmarks - Over 50 of 1st and 2nd graders have demonstrated
more than 1 year worth of academic reading growth
in only 5 months of instruction
6Distinguishing Rowe Features
- Longer school day (800am-400pm)
- Longer school year (184 instructional days)
- Dedicated teachers recruited from across the
country - A safe, supportive environment
- A focus on literacy (2.5 hours a day) and math
(1.5 hours a day) skills - College preparation beginning in grammar school
- Rowes unique culture
- Instruction based on students assessment
progress - Daily enrichment both during school and after
school - Social and emotional learning program
- All programs of Northwestern Settlement are
available to provide services to families
7Rowe Culture
Classroom Management Culture
Professional Development and Instructional
Programming
- School-wide mindset and approach embellished with
teacher individuality - Consistency with common language
- Integrated college expectation
- Culture artifacts and displays
- Discipline College with dignity
- Routine based
- Logical consequences
- Teacher leadership Lead grade-level teachers and
mentor - Formal and informal observations
- Strategic lesson planning
- Scope/ sequence and assessment development
Literacy blocks consistency, leadership
involvement, group rotations
Community Involvement
- Integrated parent involvement
- Family Learning Communities
- Monthly Coffee with the Principal
8K-12 Education and Youth Development as Economic
Drivers.Â
- Context for examining and establishing relevance
for the work of settlement houses and
neighborhood centers in the 21st Century. - Understand concerns and recommendations from
private industry and education that may be a
catalyst for bridge building across sectors. - Deliberate skills training and identify the
appropriate future orientated skills should be
taught. Education .. Education .. Education - A quality, world class education, is a
fundamental pre-qualifier for anyone to
participate in the current or new economies and
be able to reap economic rewards for themselves,
their families and communities - Our public education system is failing too many
of our children and we need to step up and
participate - Demand school reforms not just more money
- Participate with charters, vouchers and other new
ventures to make our schools provide a real
education for our children
9Income By Education Level
10There is a very strong positive correlation
between income and test scores
Source College Board
11National assessment of educational progress US
Dept of Education
- Many urban school districts are in crisis, often
failing to graduate even half of their students.
In Detroit the graduation rate is just 42
percent. In Cleveland it is 45 percent. In
Sacramento it is 48 percent. - Minority children consistently score much lower
on tests of student achievement than white
children do, and the differences are huge. On the
2004 National Assessment of Educational Progress,
for example, African American 17-year-olds scored
at about the same level as White 13-year-olds in
both math and reading. - For the nations students generally, NAEP scores
indicate that achievement growth during the past
30 yearsa very long timehas been modest, and
that most of our children simply do not know what
they need to know. - Compared to students in other developed (OECD)
countries, American students score well above
average in the early grades, but they lose ground
by the middle school years, and by high school
they are near the bottom of the rankings.
12THANK YOU
The failing public school system is not only in
financial disarray, but is the moral and civil
rights issue of our times and we as community
based organizations, are positioned to play a key
role in addressing the challenges head on.