Meeting Yearly Progress
Different Ways of Knowing schools report increased student
achievement in core subject areas. These achievement gains
helped many schools meet their annual state performance accountability
targets. Many Different Ways of Knowing schools received
special recognition from the U.S. Department of Education,
state education agencies and assessments, and education improvement
organizations.
- In 2004, fifth graders at Martha Thomas Elementary, Mobile County
School District, Alabama, acheived a 32-point gain, from 18-50 points,
in writing scores, exceeding yearly target goals by 30 points.
- Two Kentucky middle grades schools were selected
by the National Forum to Accelerate Middle-Grades Reform
as Schools to Watch for increasing their state rankings:
Auburn School (2003) and Barren County Middle School (1999).
Adairville K-8 School in Kentucky was selected as a National
Blue Ribbon School of Excellence (2001).
- In Southern California, 82 percent of elementary schools
implementing Different Ways of Knowing met state performance
targets in 2002 compared to 60 percent of elementary schools
statewide.
- In Louisville, Kentucky, middle schools implementing
Different Ways of Knowing increased their state accountability
index an average of 6.5 percent compared to the statewide
increase of 1.3 percent.
- Halsey Middle School 296 in New York City and Clark Elementary
School in Michigan were recognized by state and local achievement
programs (2002).
- Atwater Elementary School in California and Jason Lee
Elementary School in Oregon were singled out by the Education
Trust as high-performing, high-poverty schools (2001).
- Jason Lee Elementary School in Portland, Oregon, improved
its reading performance from 54 percent of third grade
students meeting and exceeding standards to 76 percent
(2001–2002).
- A Michigan school was selected a 2002–2003
Michigan Blue Ribbon Exemplary School.
- Minadeo Elementary
School in Pennsylvania was recognized as surpassing
its district goal in reading (85 percent at grade level)
in 2002 by moving a cohort of students in grade 2 from
66 percent proficient to 87 percent proficient in grade
3.
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