Archive for the 'Core Knowledge School' Category

A Great School Gets a New Leader

We’ve blogged before about Ridgeview Classical School, a top Colorado school that combines the Core Knowledge curriculum in grades K-8 with a classical education in high school to powerful effect. The school in Ft. Collins has been consistently ranked at or near the top of the state’s schools every year since opening in 2001.

Comes word that Florian Hild, a high school German and literature teacher, and a friend of Core Knowledge will replace T.O. Moore as principal at Ridgeview. Read all about it in an article about Hild and Ridgeview in the Coloradoan.

“Families move across the country to send their children to Ridgeview,” Hild said. “Teachers take a 50 percent pay cut to be here. I don’t know of any other school that is doing what we’re doing.” Hild will officially become principal July 1.

Congratulations to Florian. And Ridgeview.

Teaching Content IS Teaching Reading

Want to increase test scores?  Stop focusing on the test.  At least that’s the lesson from a pair of Core Knowledge charter schools in Florida.

A School Where Content is King

Education Week’s Kathleen Kennedy Manzo has been working on an article about Core Knowledge for several weeks and it’s up today in the free content area of EdWeek’s website. Much of the piece is built around her visit to New Holland Core Knowledge Academy in Gainesville, Georgia.

While many schools have narrowed the curriculum since Congress passed the No Child Left Behind Act in 2001, doubling up on reading and math instruction to prepare students for crucial tests in those subjects, this school has embraced a far broader course of study. Each day, its students tackle a rich and rigorous sequence of lessons in history, science, and the arts, as well as mathematics and reading/language arts.

New Holland is a Core Knowledge “visitation school,” which means officials from the Core Knowledge Foundation have visited the school to ensure that the curriculum is being fully implemented; it serves as a demonstration school for educators interested in adopting the Core Knowledge curriculum. Manzo writes:

Principal [Jill] Goforth and other educators at New Holland say the curriculum is a key reason why the school has made adequate yearly progress—a central NCLB hurdle—each year, with some 85 percent of students meeting benchmarks on state tests in math and reading. No small feat, they say, for this K-5 public school of 640 students—two-thirds of them Hispanic, and 24 percent African-American. Nine in 10 of the students are considered poor, and 27 percent are English-language learners.

Any comment I make about the piece would be colored by obvious self-interest, so just go read it. Here’s the link, available to subscribers, only. We plan to make the full story available to our readers soon.

A Warm Welcome to a New Core Knowledge School

Faced with shrinking enrollments and consolidation pressure, the principal of a small Vermont central school has opted to become that state’s first public Core Knowledge school.  Barnard Central School Principal Anne Koop has won approval for a plan to turn her school into a magnet that she hopes will attract tuition-paying students from outside her district, in addition to local kids.  She’s also adding a Pre-K program, a rarity in Vermont.

“It will be like a private school education, but at an equal-access, public school price,” she tells her local paper.  Koop, who noted that the Core Knowledge program has been “close to my heart for years,” has only one question for herself: “Why didn’t I think of this before?”

Good luck and keep in touch.

A Visit to Cherokee Elementary School

My visit to Cherokee Elementary School, a Core Knowledge school in Americus, Georgia last week provided an interesting and inspiring experience. Here in this small, rural community (population 17,000) I found a delightful and well-maintained mid-sized school, under the leadership of Dr. Wanda Jackson. Cherokee is clearly committed to excellence and fairness in early education and has fully embraced the ideas set forth by E.D. Hirsch, Jr. and the Core Knowledge Foundation.

Cherokee Elementary School

I first met Dr. Jackson at our Leadership Institute a couple of years ago. She was so excited about implementing Core Knowledge and invited me to please pay them a visit. If you recall, Americus was hit with a terrible hurricane last year. I spoke to Dr. Jackson in the aftermath of the hurricane and she indicated that no matter what had occurred with respect to the hurricane, Cherokee Elementary was dedicated to Core Knowledge now more than ever. She indicated that they were planning a Core Knowledge Day for the community and that someone from the Foundation had to come. When I considered all that had happened to this community and their commitment to Core Knowledge, I had to go.

Cherokee’s commitment to Core Knowledge is further evidenced in how the school has engaged its entire community. My visit included a breakfast meeting with the Superintendent of Schools, various principals, central office staff, school board members, city councilors, and other interested citizens. Never before have I had the opportunity to speak to such an array of interested individuals who were so receptive to the work of the Foundation, in general, and the progress of a school in particular. Prior to my presentation, we were all entertained by a choral group and students from the art club who, under the direction of the art and music teachers demonstrated how music and art can be integrated into Core Knowledge history and geography. It was an exciting and educational experience.

After a day of classroom visits, came the grand finale of my visit. That evening I was treated to a spaghetti dinner along with over 200 parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, and anyone else who saw the sign welcoming me to Cherokee Elementary. Again the students entertained the audience with songs and recitals. The teachers, who I really enjoyed meeting and visiting their classrooms, served dinner to the parents and students. I made a short presentation and spent the rest of the time talking to parents.

In 12 years of traveling the country to visit Core Knowledge schools, this visit stands out as one of my best.

Gerald Terrell is the Executive Vice President, K-8 Schools, of the Core Knowledge Foundation

A Remarkable School

Grand Junction SentinelThe Ridgeview Classical School in Fort Collins has been rated among the top three schools in Colorado since it was founded in 2001. Its success stands as a sharp rebuke to the dominant anti-intellectual pedagogy of most American schools. The secret of its success? The Core Knowledge curriculum in Kindergarten through 8th grade, and a traditional, Classical-Liberal curriculum in high school. An article in the Grand Junction Sentinel highlights the school and its remarkable achievements.

“They have phenomenal success,” Denise Mund, senior consultant with Schools of Choice at the Colorado Department of Education. “Their school for years was the No. 1 school in the state. This year, they were third, but repeatedly, they have had phenomenal success. I attended their graduation ceremony last May. I was very impressed.”

Read the article, but also spend some time with the school’s journal, The Conversation. To read these reflections on teaching and learning, is to see what a school can be—or more accurately should be. An essay in the journal by Tara Mertens, a student with learning disabilities who graduated from the school in May contrasts the emptiness of her “high achievement” at her previous school with the rigorous curriculum and legitimately high expectations she found at Ridgeview.

Continue reading ‘A Remarkable School’

Praise for Core Knowledge from USA Today

USA TodayToday’s USA Today editorial page says that Core Knowledge is good for what ails our schools.

Referring to test-driven reading strategy instruction as “about as useful as teaching a child how to throw a football without giving him an understanding of the game,” the editorial cites New Holland Core Knowledge Academy in Gainesville, Georgia as a heavily minority and low-income school where Core Knowledge is making a difference. “Just before Christmas, Arlena Greene’s fifth-grade students were studying animal and plant cells in science,” the paper notes. “In social studies, they were studying World War I. Far from hurting the school’s performance on tests, the curriculum appears to be paying off, especially for those still learning English. Last year, 87% of the students at the academy met or exceeded state standards in math and English.”

Read the complete editorial

What is Core Knowledge?

Liberty Common SchoolWhen people ask me what I do for a living, I tell them that I am the headmaster of the best school in Colorado. The next question that comes my way is, “What makes your school so great?” My reply is, “We have awesome teachers, awesome students, awesome parental support and an awesome Core Knowledge curriculum.” “What exactly is Core Knowledge?” is often the question that follows.

Most people think that Core Knowledge is just an approach to learning and not an actual curriculum. They often say that it is a back to basics approach to education. While this is partially true, it is not entirely true. The purpose of this blog posting is to provide assistance in answering the question of “what is Core Knowledge?” I am including a description of the Core Knowledge program that is found in our Liberty Common School Student/Parent handbook. I hope this helps and I encourage anyone who is considering attending a Core Knowledge school or starting a Core Knowledge school to do it. The curriculum is outstanding.

Liberty has selected the Core Knowledge Foundation’s Curriculum Sequence as the framework of its curriculum. The Core Knowledge Sequence is distinguished by planned progression of specific knowledge in history, geography, mathematics, science, language arts, and fine arts.

Children learn by building on what they already know. Thus, it is important for them to begin building foundations of knowledge in the early grades when they are most receptive to attaining an organized body of knowledge. Children are by instinct driven to construct a contextual view of the world. Thus, it is important to provide them an educational framework that assists them in developing the constructs upon which their viewpoints will be based. Academic deficiencies in these areas in the first nine grades can permanently impair the quality of later schooling.

By specifying the knowledge that all children should share, all students can achieve equal access to that knowledge. At-risk children especially suffer from low expectations, which often translate into watered-down curricula. In schools using the Core Knowledge Sequence, however, all children are exposed to a coherent core of challenging, interesting, interwoven knowledge. This knowledge not only provides a foundation for later learning but also defines a common heritage and establishes a common ground for communication and cooperation in a diverse society.

In addition to its specificity, the Core Knowledge curriculum is characterized by knowledge that is solid, sequenced, specific, and shared. Literacy in every subject requires a set of mechanical skills and a shared background. The shared, many-cultured knowledge that promotes effective classroom learning also promotes cooperation and respect among students, both in the classroom and in society. Liberty’s teachers are able to rely on shared background knowledge about the students, which enables them to build sequentially on that knowledge year by year. The ninth grade classical honors curriculum continues the goals of the Core Knowledge curriculum with solid knowledge and skills that build on the previous knowledge and prepares students for further high school study.

As used above we define knowledge not in the simplistic sense of mere facts but in the broader sense of the word, as follows: Knowledge consists of the facts, the relations between them, the thinking about them, and the effort to understand and connect them. It is not out of ignorance that we discover understanding. It is exactly because of what we already know that we can know more, that we can discern organizing principles make and test hypotheses, and act rationally.

Liberty Common School teaches 100% of the Core Knowledge curriculum and is a certified Core Knowledge Visitation Site. Our credential was established the hard way by digging in years ago and selecting a thorough, meaningful curriculum — one that is certainly solid, sequenced, specific and shared.