STEM Schools in State Receive Funding

STEM schools in West Virginia are set to receive $1 million in funding.STEM Network schools will receive resources, including a $30,000 grant over three…

STEM schools in West Virginia are set to receive $1 million in funding.

STEM Network schools will receive resources, including a $30,000 grant over three years and a STEM Coordinator Volunteer in Service to America to become demonstration sites for innovative STEM practices. The aim is to boost student achievement. The Education Alliance made the announcement Thursday.

STEM stands for Science, Technology, Engineering and Math. The STEM Network consists of eight secondary schools, middle and high schools, identified through a rigorous selection process.

Each school will develop and implement a school-based STEM plan over three years. The Schools include Edison Middle in Wood County, George Washington High School, Greenbrier East High School, Sherrard Middle in Marshall County, Spring Mills High School, Tucker County High school, Warwood School in Ohio County and Wheeling Park High. 

EDTalks Poses Questions on Next Step in Education in W.Va.

Members of the state’s education community gathered in Huntington Thursday for EdTalks, a speaker series sponsored by the Charleston based nonprofit The…

Members of the state’s education community gathered in Huntington Thursday for EdTalks, a speaker series sponsored by the Charleston based nonprofit The Education Alliance.

EDTalks, modeled after the innovative speaker series TedTalks, highlights speakers with innovative ideas for education in the state. Thursday’s speakers at the Marshall’s campus event were Interim Marshall University President Gary White and State Superintendent of Schools Michael Martirano. Both speeches focused on monetary limitations and the usefulness of an education no matter the level. Martirano said it’s about West Virginians using their abilities to help students around the state.

“Everybody in this room has a role, it’s not always donating money, but using time and talent,” Martirano said. “It’s a level of using your ability to persuade and advocate, it’s the ability to reach your hand down and help the less fortunate young people in our community’s.”

Marshall Interim President Gary White said it can be challenge to find ways to get things done when money isn’t there.

“We have a challenge to maintain financial viability, notwithstanding the loss of state support, notwithstanding a change in our federal government as to how federal dollars flow into educational institutions, we have an obligation,” White said.

Both White and Martirano understand the challenges in higher education and public schools and the need for innovative ideas. 

Accountability, early literacy key to education success

“Excellence in Education: It’s Everyone’s Business.” Those words served as the slogan for an education summit in Charleston focused on bringing educators,…

“Excellence in Education: It’s Everyone’s Business.” Those words served as the slogan for an education summit in Charleston focused on bringing educators, administrators, business leaders and even state lawmakers together to talk about the future in education for our state. To improve that future, those groups looked to Florida to learn how the state was able to take their education system from 49 to 6 in a just over a decade.

Accountability and early literacy. Those were the two major ways former educators and policy analysts from Florida say they were able to turn the public education system in their state around.

They joined Charleston-based non-profit The Education Alliance at their first annual education summit to share strategies that may help West Virginia do the same.

“Primarily, we choose to look at them because of their success,” said Dr. Amelia Courts, President and CEO of The Education Alliance.

Courts said Florida  was chosen as a focus this year not because West Virginia should mirror their efforts, but because they started in a similar place in terms of student achievement and were able to make a change.

“They have specific data that shows how they’ve moved student achievement over the last ten years from below the national average to above the national average,” she said, “and that’s absolutely where West Virginia wants to go.”

The morning started with a strategy session focused on accountability. Florida implemented a new grading system for schools, giving them a simple A through F rating based on student achievement and other variables.

Former Assistant Deputy Commissioner at the Florida Department of Education Dr. Christy Hovanetz said by putting the new system in place and making school’s scores available to everyone, they saw a change in instruction that lead to drastic results.

“That following year, instructional practices changed so much that we had more A and B schools than we had D or F schools,” she said, “and then the following year we had twice as many A and B schools as we did in that first year.”

The West Virginia Department of Education implemented a new accountability system earlier this year with the intent to be more transparent, but it’s too soon to tell if the new system will have similar results to Florida’s.

The second major focus of the day was early literacy.

Governor Tomblin’s education reform bill, passed during the 2013 legislative session, calls for West Virginia students to meet reading proficiency levels by the third grade, a benchmark state Board of Education President Gayle Manchin said 73 percent of students in the state aren’t meeting.

“We know that if you’re not reading well by the end of third grade, where you’re supposed to be learning to read, as you progress through school where you’re supposed to be reading to learn, you’re not going to be able to do that,” Manchin said, “and so we know that children start dropping out of school way before they turn 16.”

“It starts happening when they can’t keep up. They’re not able to engage and be involved in what’s going on in the classroom.”

Cari Miller served as the Deputy Director for Just Read, Florida!, Governor Jeb Bush’s statewide literacy initiative. She showed summit participants decade old statistics from the state.

“Twenty-nine percent of Florida’s third grade students scored at the lowest achievement level on Florida’s statewide assessment,” Miller said.

That means ten years ago, about a third of Florida’s third graders couldn’t read. Miller said that statistic combined with leadership that understood the value of reading led the state to implement a new measure.

“And that measure was requiring students in third grade that scored at the lowest achievement level on our statewide reading assessment to be retained.”

Retained, meaning held back to repeat the third grade.

There were, however, six exemptions to being retained, including a second test, additional coaching, and many that dealt with special education or English as second language students, but Miller admits that notion was still a hard sell for parents.

“I just want to share from a teacher perspective is that although the retention seems scary for adults, it’s not as scary for kids and actually many kids have benefited from a second year because some kids just need more time,” she said.

As someone who taught under the standards, Miller said she saw her retained students’ self-esteem improve, which, in turn, improved their level of achievement. Statewide, reading scores went up and in recent years they’ve been able to continue the increase while the number of students being held back has dropped off.

Courts said these policies are just examples of things West Virginia should begin to look at as we move forward trying to increase student achievement.
 

Education Summit kicks off Tuesday, Nov. 5

Governor Tomblin’s education reform bill passed by the legislature earlier this year requires all children to read proficiently by the third grade. A…

Governor Tomblin’s education reform bill passed by the legislature earlier this year requires all children to read proficiently by the third grade.  A strategy to make sure that happens will be discussed at an education summit Tuesday, November 5. 

From grades kindergarten to third grade, children learn to read.  By fourth grade, they must read to learn.

Dr. Amelia Courts, the President and CEO of The Education Alliance in Charleston says it takes more than a law on the books to do that.  It takes support from the school community.

“Obviously Governor Tomblin has made it very clear that he views the improvement process for education to be a long term commitment and that’s where our organization stands as well. There were some legislative changes this past session,” said Courts. 

“We would envision that some additional changes will occur this coming session and we want to continue to engage the community as we move through that process. Also as we work with individual schools and school districts we hope to take some of these lessons learned from the summit and work with them as they are implemented in programs at different schools.”

The summit includes speeches, panel discussions and a town hall meeting hosted by former governor Gaston Caperton.  It convenes Tuesday morning at the Charleston Civic Center.

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