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  • >>Narrator: Built in 1898, this brick schoolhouse on the southwest side

  • of Chicago has seen good times and bad.

  • >>Arne: Twenty years ago,

  • we were called the worst school system in America.

  • I don't know whether that was true or not,

  • but we definitely didn't have a school system we could be proud of.

  • And we've come an extraordinarily long way,

  • particularly since the mayor took over in 1995.

  • And I absolutely am convinced that where school becomes the true heart,

  • the true center of the community, our students are going

  • to do extraordinarily well.

  • >>Narrator: One of Chicago's most successful new initiatives began

  • in this old schoolhouse in 2003.

  • It's a pre-kindergarten through high school learning community called

  • Spry, where test scores are on the rise

  • and the graduation rate hovers around 100 percent.

  • >>Student: I pledge to myself to do only my best and to lead

  • by example for all of the rest.

  • >>Narrator: To alleviate overcrowding and avoid conflict between younger

  • and older students, Spry devised a unique schedule.

  • K-8 students start the day at nine a.m.

  • and the high schoolers' first class starts at eleven.

  • >>Tim: Okay, similes.

  • What is a simile?

  • >>Isamar: It's good, because I'm not a morning person.

  • >>Tim: Get specific, you understand?

  • Go the extra step.

  • >>Narrator: High school students put in a full eight-hour day,

  • and many participate in afterschool programs.

  • They also attend sessions on Saturday and throughout the summer in order

  • to graduate in just three years.

  • >>Isamar: I'm a sophomore, but it's like we also call each other

  • "sophners" because in a different school, we would actually be juniors.

  • We have to come during the summer.

  • I thought at first it was going to drag, but it's gone by so fast.

  • It's like, I can't even believe it that next year, you know,

  • I'm going to be a senior.

  • >>Tim: All right?

  • Again, the details of pictures come in.

  • So Cora, which one did you use?

  • >>Cora: The room is crowded like a mall on a Saturday afternoon.

  • >>Tim: Oh, the details.

  • >>Carlos: We aim for 100 percent graduation.

  • We have the highest expectations.

  • And our theme is that the greatest influence

  • on the student is the family.

  • And the greatest influence on the family is the community.

  • So it is very important to develop a school to meet community needs.

  • >>Narrator: The school takes advantage

  • of many community resources, like a local hospital, where Isamar Martinez

  • and several of her classmates spend three mornings a week as interns.

  • >>Tim: The internship is a very special part of what the school is.

  • And it's important for a number of reasons.

  • Number one, getting them out there.

  • Number two, giving them the opportunity

  • to see what may be working is all about and the kind

  • of difficulties you're going to face.

  • >>Arlyn: Put together discharge kit.

  • >>Arlyn: Right now, the students are scheduled and assigned

  • in all different departments.

  • They work with information systems, finance,

  • medical records, telecommunication.

  • And everybody enjoys having the students here with us.

  • >>Isamar: [speaks Spanish]

  • >>Okay.

  • >>Isamar: I work with the pediatricians.

  • And if I finish early, I get to watch them do like everything,

  • like take the temperature.

  • And I like that because, I mean, not that I don't have anything to do,

  • but I like the fact that I get to watch them do what they do, you know?

  • >>Tim: Some kids, it's a success from the get-go, and some kids,

  • they're going to fall on their face sometimes

  • or not do what they're supposed to do.

  • But I think that's why it's valuable.

  • I mean, I think you learn more from your mistakes than you ever do

  • from just being successful all the time.

  • >>Narrator: Some high schoolers get to experience the successes

  • and failures of teaching, serving as tutors for the elementary kids.

  • >>Claudia: If you see that they're still struggling giving you a good

  • summary, ask them questions.

  • >>Claudia: It has been so helpful, especially with the newcomers.

  • They enjoy it, because they're, you know, they could relate to them

  • and they know they're language.

  • They're also bilingual.

  • >>Student: Who wants to keep reading on the third paragraph?

  • Go on.

  • >>Claudia: And I've noticed that as soon as they start working

  • with the high school kids, you get more interaction,

  • you get more involvement, so they enjoy it more.

  • >>Carlos: Sometimes when we describe our model, some people ask,

  • "You're going to have high school kids and elementary kids together?

  • That's not a good practice.

  • That's not safe, you know.

  • That's why we have high schools separate."

  • Well, I think our work is incomplete if we think

  • that after eighth grade, well, we're done.

  • And then suddenly, they go elsewhere, and many of them are not successful.

  • >>Student: And then choose one--

  • >>Carlos: We work with the high school students saying

  • that you are role models to the elementary children.

  • You represent what they would like to be.

  • So there's an added degree to personal responsibility to this.

  • >>Ana: Move this window down over here, just for a--

  • >>Narrator: Another program that links elementary

  • and high school studies is a national afterschool program called Miracles,

  • which offers a project-based curriculum

  • in an all-inclusive computer lab.

  • >>Ana: Miracles is a two-hour program three times a week.

  • The students have access to computer and they learn Word,

  • Excel, PhotoShop, Publisher.

  • And so that gives them an advantage, as opposed to the other students

  • in their class who are not members of Miracles.

  • >>Ana: So you do need to crop this.

  • >>Narrator: Designed to boost math, reading, technology, and life skills,

  • Miracles requires students to commit to a six-hour per week program

  • that begins in the sixth grade and continues through high school.

  • Sixth grade students illustrate the life skills they learn

  • by creating claymation movies.

  • >>Adrian: The first thing you have to do is to draw it, so see how it looks

  • on the computer in Paint.

  • And then we get the clay for it to be hard and steady.

  • So and then we move it, we take more and more pictures

  • for it to look like a movie.

  • >>Narrator: This movie illustrates the life skill, friendliness.

  • >>Adrian: So he's walking and then he falls down.

  • And then he sees that he's fallen, so he picks him up.

  • He is the person that helps another person without asking.

  • So then that's a life skill.

  • >>Ana: How many pegs does it have?

  • >>Narrator: In seventh grade, they build Lego robots.

  • >>Ana: Basically, I just kind of watch

  • that they don't get sidetracked, or that-- if I see that they're stuck,

  • just kind of guide them a little.

  • Because the beauty of this program is that they can be creative with it.

  • >>Narrator: The Miracles lab also serves the community

  • with adult literacy and computer fundamentals classes offered

  • on Saturdays.

  • >>Student: [speaks Spanish]

  • >>Narrator: It's just one of the many out-of-school time offerings at Spry.

  • By partnering with agencies like the Boys and Girls Club directly

  • across the playground, Spry offers everything from adult math

  • to computer science and salsa.

  • [music] Spry has become the fulfillment of its principal's dream,

  • a community where learning happens everywhere, all the time,

  • and everyone has a stake in it.

  • >>Carlos: This trilogy of school, family,

  • and community is very important.

  • Because if you take a look at our school and you see the potential

  • when they move to the local church, to the Boys and Girls Club,

  • when they go to their homes, and the message of education is reinforced,

  • then the opportunities for success are greater.

  • I think it empowers us.

  • And we know it's extra work,

  • but we have to share the work, and that's what counts.

  • >>Narrator: For more information on what works

  • in public education, go to edutopia.org

>>Narrator: Built in 1898, this brick schoolhouse on the southwest side

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24時間体制の学習。学校」の定義を広げる (Around-the-Clock Learning: Extending the Definition of 'School')

  • 213 10
    .. に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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