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Autor/inn/enLegters, Nettie; Parise, Leigh; Rappaport, Shelley
InstitutionMDRC
TitelImplementing Ninth Grade Academies in Broward County, Florida
Quelle(2013), (114 Seiten)
PDF als Volltext kostenfreie Datei Verfügbarkeit 
ZusatzinformationWeitere Informationen
Spracheenglisch
Dokumenttypgedruckt; online; Monographie
SchlagwörterCareer Academies; Grade 9; Program Implementation; High Schools; School Districts; Leadership; Faculty Development; Interdisciplinary Approach; Educational Change; Accountability; Teacher Collaboration; Comparative Analysis; Interviews; Observation; Qualitative Research; Institutional Characteristics; Florida; ACT Assessment; Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test; SAT (College Admission Test)
AbstractResearchers from MDRC and Johns Hopkins University partnered with Florida's Broward County Public Schools (BCPS) in 2009 to launch an independent evaluation of the district's initiative to implement Ninth Grade Academies (NGAs) in every district high school. An NGA is a self-contained learning community for ninth-graders that operates as a school within a school. With its own administrative leadership, space, faculty, and teacher teams, it is designed to offer ninth-graders a more personalized, engaging, and responsive learning environment. The study found strong district leadership at the outset and widespread uptake of core NGA components across the 18 high schools in the sample. The investigation also uncovered substantial variation in the overall quality and duration of NGA implementation across schools, however, with strong and sustained implementation of multiple components occurring in just three schools, even though many more had access to models of strong NGAs nearby. These implementation experiences in BCPS suggest that many schools will need more specific guidelines, on-site support, training for teachers, secure resources, and tools to guide practice and facilitate scheduling if they are to implement fully fledged, continuously improving, and self-sustaining NGAs. The following are the key findings from the study: (1) District leadership for the initiative was strong at the outset, but not sustained as district priorities changed; (2) While schools received some support through a cross-school professional learning community for NGA administrators, they did not receive any other technical or financial support for pro-gram implementation; (3) The district's definition of NGAs focused on structural components in each school--ninth-grade administrative leadership, dedicated ninth-grade space, dedicated ninth-grade faculty, and interdisciplinary teacher teams. Improving ninth-grade curriculum, instruction, and student supports were not a direct focus of the initiative. In fact, other reforms in these areas aimed at improving student outcomes competed with NGA implementation; (4) It was more feasible for schools to implement and sustain the administrative leadership and space components of NGAs than the dedicated ninth-grade faculty and interdisciplinary teaming components; and (5) Only three high schools achieved strong implementation. Ten achieved a threshold level of implementation, and five fell below threshold. Most schools did not improve from the first to the second or third year. The following are appended: (1) Sample Selection; and (2) Scoring Rubrics for Core NGA Components. [This report was written with Emma Alterman, Joanne Fennessey, and Janell Smith. A list of earlier MDRC publications related to high school reform, smaller learning communities, and the ninth-grade transition is included.] (ERIC).
AnmerkungenMDRC. 16 East 34th Street 19th Floor, New York, NY 10016-4326. Tel: 212-532-3200; Fax: 212-684-0832; e-mail: publications@mdrc.org; Web site: http://www.mdrc.org
Erfasst vonERIC (Education Resources Information Center), Washington, DC
Update2017/4/10
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