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SD magazine Top Schools Making the Grade Sept-2007    SD Magazine July06 POWAY UNIFIEDs TOP HIGH SCHOOLS
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS
"MAKING THE GRADE"

Adobe Bluffs Elementary
Chaparral Elementary
Creekside Elementary
Deer Canyon Elementary
Los Peñasquitos Elementary
Painted Rock Elementary
Park Village Elementary
Rolling Hills Elementary
Shoal Creek Elementary
Turtleback Elementary

MIDDLE SCHOOLS "MAKING THE GRADE"
Mesa Verde Middle School

"TOP HIGH SCHOOLS"
Mt. Carmel High School
Poway High School
Rancho Bernardo High School
Westview High School

Making the Grade

Child on Computer

Ranking our top elementary and middle school districts can be a subjective call. But there are guideposts. Using state and federal standards, here are Poway Unified schools that measure up.








Superintendent Carl A. Cohn knows of a place where there is “no child left behind,” where all children achieve grade-level proficiency and where there is no achievement gap.

“It’s called heaven,” says the head of the San Diego Unified School District.

Cohn cringes at the expression “No child left behind,” the slogan for the standards-based education reform act signed into law by President Bush in 2002. The law aims to bring all children, including limited-English, special-education and disadvantaged students, up to the proficient level on state tests by 2014. Like many educators, Cohn considers the legislation unfair, underfunded and too focused on one-size-fits-all testing. The idealistic goals of the law, he says, would require divine intervention to succeed.

Despite those challenges, we are happy to report that 45 elementary and middle schools in 10 local districts have achieved what Cohn would consider heaven on Earth by surpassing both state and federal benchmarks.

It’s a tricky accomplishment, because although federal and state systems look at the same student test scores, they do so in different ways. A school can exceed state standards, but if low-performing students only move up, say, one grade instead of two, the school can be penalized, often through reduced funding. Some of the districts in San Diego County have schools with Academic Performance Index (API) scores that have soared, yet they have failed to meet federal standards.

If one had to name a single outstanding trait, it’s that teachers demonstrate proficiency in differentiation——a big buzz word in education. Simply put, practicing differentiation begins with having awareness of learning disparities among students and individualizing instruction.

Our highest six performers include three elementary schools in the Del Mar Union School District: Ashley Falls, Sage Canyon and Torrey Hills. Poway Unified School District’s Creekside Elementary, and Carmel Creek and Solana Pacific in the Solana Beach School District, complete our list.

Beyond the Acronyms: What are API and AYP?

The motto of the Poway Unified School District is “Every child can learn.” But when a teacher discovers students lagging as many as four grade levels behind, a lot of support and planning is needed.

Creekside Elementary teachers level the learning field with two techniques: “purposeful grouping” and “looping grade levels.” Students at different stages of ability are grouped together so high achievers can impact others. Parents also have the option to enroll students in a looping class—one that integrates a lower grade with an upper grade. The advantage is that it helps students and teachers ease their way into the next level of learning.

There can be a creative aspect to differentiation, too. Teachers Jessica Dusek and Christina Gonzalez loop fourth- and fifth-grade classes and together came up with an idea that energized a reading circle. Students were asked to read three books on a required reading list, a standard type of lesson one would find in any school. But then the children were asked to come up with ways to sell that book. They were encouraged to create a persuasive advertisement, and they searched for songs from pop culture that emphasized the book’s theme so that music, art and decision-making were integrated into the curriculum in a way that made learning fun.

“It’s not about getting to the end of the textbook,” says Gonzalez, who worked at two charter schools and a public school in Florida before moving to Poway. “As much as we consider standards and curriculum, we are given the freedom to do what’s best for kids. Once, I thought I had lost that spark of creativity. Here, I feel my teaching has come to life.”

Identified here are 45 schools in 10 districts that have exceeded state requirements (by earning at least a 900 API score) as well as federal AYP goals established by the No Child Left Behind Act. The districts and the schools have met federal annual progress goals. Within that group, six schools in three of the districts scored a base API of 950 or higher. Charter, alternative and small schools were not included. Unless otherwise specified, elementary schools include kindergarten through grade 5.

Poway Unified Elementary Schools

Superintendent: Donald A. Phillips, Ed.D.
Number of schools: 23 elementary, 6 middle, 4 high schools, 1 continuation
Top schools:

Adobe Bluffs Elementary, enrollment 711, API base score 911;
Chaparral Elementary, enrollment 802, API base score 923;
Creekside Elementary, enrollment 785, API base score 959;
Deer Canyon Elementary, enrollment 580, API base score 945;
Los Peñasquitos Elementary, enrollment 574, API base score 905;
Painted Rock Elementary, enrollment 607, API base score 920;
Park Village Elementary, enrollment 805; API base score 938;
Rolling Hills Elementary, enrollment 390; API base score 913;
Shoal Creek Elementary, enrollment 653, API base score 903;
Turtleback Elementary, enrollment 549, API base score 904

The third-largest school district in the county, Poway Unified serves more than 32,000 students. All-time highs in API and AYP were achieved in 2006. Monterey Ridge Elementary, the newest school in the district, opened in August 2006. Two more elementary schools and a high school are planned to open by 2010.

Poway Unified Middle Schools

Mesa Verde Middle School (grades 6-8), enrollment 1,390, API base score 901

 

 

 

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This page last updated: September 19, 2007