Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Durham State of the School - April 8, 2014

In case you missed the PTA meeting on April 8, 2014, here is the text of the speech that I delivered:

Welcome.  I am pleased to announce that Durham Elementary school is now an IB World School.  In receiving our authorization, Durham is the sixth school in HISD to offer the Primary Years Programme, joining Harvard, Northline, River Oaks, Roberts, and Mark Twain Elementary Schools.  This accomplishment is the culmination of years of work by the staff, parents and community.  I want to especially recognize Ms. Williams, who has worked tirelessly to keep Durham on track through multiple principals and a great deal of pain and suffering. 

The original intent of this talk was for me to share with you some information about where we are as a school community and where we are planning to go from here.  I want to take a minute to break down Durham by the numbers:
  • 21 - The average number of students in a class this year, compared with 23 last year - even with an increase in enrollment we have been able to keep our classes smaller by using our resources more strategically   
  • 547 – The number of students enrolled at Durham this year.  This is an increase of about 6% from the previous school year. 
  • 120 – The number of hours teachers have spent this year in collaborative planning meetings.  This includes time spend planning for instruction and learning about new teaching strategies so as to ensure are staff is the best in the district.
  • 315 – The number of hours our teachers have worked to provide enrichment and tutorial opportunities to our students after school.  This included classes for struggling students through spring break.
  • 79,000 – This is the number of dollars that we have spent this year to refresh our technology - including interactive white boards in every classroom, 60 new computers around the campus and 2 iPads in each Pre-K classroom.
I hope you all can agree that those are some exciting numbers!

As the great weather indicates we have entered, what others call Spring, but what we, here in Texas, call the season of testing.   My personally philosophy has always been that great instruction will ensure that students are successful in life and successful on tests.  This ideal is what we have worked to implement this year.  

If you have ever taken a test prep class, such as the SAT or GRE prep, your instructor took time to teach you about the test.  Is it better to guess or leave questions blank?  Should you start at the end and work forward or start with the beginning?  This is genre of testing.  It is important to teach it, but it should never be the curriculum.  No matter the grade level, from August to March, we should be solving open-ended math problems and we should be reading authentic texts such as novels, magazine articles and websites.  How many of you solved a math problem at work today that had multiple choice answers?  Did any of you curl up with a good STAAR reading passage last night before you went to bed?  We do our children a disservice when we teach them that math comes with multiple choice answers and that reading comes in short passages followed by questions.   The process of elimination is NOT a state standard.   As you may guess, this is a paradigm shift for some teachers, who have been rewarded with bonuses for getting students to pass the state test.  But those times are gone.  We now live in an era where student achievement is measured by growth and our tests assess a students’ ability to think.  

During many of those 120 hours mentioned earlier, teachers were busy writing challenging and engaging lessons;  they were learning how to let go so that our classrooms can be more student-centered; and they were working to use technology more effectively to support teaching and learning.  Receiving our IB authorization is just the first fruit of our work this year.  Once we are through the season of testing, we will receive a rating from the state that will tell us how well we did in helping our students to grow.  No doubt there will be much more to do and I will update you when our scores come in from TEA.

Now I want to talk about our plans for next year.  I expect applause with this -  we will not have early dismissal on Wednesdays.  To ensure that teachers have enough time to continue the great planning work that we started, we will have 55 minute enrichment classes.  Also, we are going to have clubs every Friday during the last hour of the day, to ensure that our students have meaningful enrichment opportunities.  Every staff member will host a club and students will get to choose what club they want to be in.  This is a great opportunity for our staff to share their gifts with our students.  For example, Ms. Ursula, in the office, is going to sponsor choir for the intermediate students.  She has her own CD and is an amazing singer.  Mr. Mender is a scratch golfer, who is working on a plan to teach golf to students who are interested.  

Next year our regular enrichment offering will be library, art, PE and Mandarin.  Both the art teacher, Ms. Jones and the librarian, Ms. Welker, will be full time.  We will offer music on Friday through clubs and also through our after school program.  We are adding a full time reading interventionist, who is bilingual so she will be able to work with English and Spanish speaking students.  We are also adding a second grade class and a fourth grade class so as to ensure that our class sizes stay manageable.   

All of these additions are possible because we have seen a large increase in the number of magnet applications.  We currently have waiting lists at every grade level and I’m hoping that we reach our capacity of 600 next year.  This magic mark should force the district to stop using Durham as the “cap” school.  As a cap school, Durham has been required to take overflow students who enroll late at nearby campuses.  Because this type of transfer is only good for one year, being a cap school increases our mobility rate making it difficult to build sustainable change and a strong community. 

I hope you share in my excitement about the changes in store for next year.

On a personal note, I want to reassure all of you that I remain committed to Durham.  I bought a house in December, 4 miles from the school.  I love coming to work every day and I am extremely excited about this path we are all on, as a community of learners.