Superintendent of the Denver schools, Michael Bennet, described the process as a very powerful experience and was happy to find that many parents support the Denver schools in their work toward reform. “Parents realize that there is ample room for improvement across the district,” stated Bennet.
The purpose of the Denver Plan is to succeed in graduating students who can read and write at expected levels. It addresses this problem by focusing on improving the quality of teaching, provided in all classrooms by the Denver schools.
Feedback, provided by educators, parents and the community, meant some changes to key provisions within the plan. Once these changes were evaluated and made, The Denver Plan Committee then scrutinized the Plan. The Committee, a group of 40 teachers, principals and staff, has one purpose — analyze and critique each word of the Plan, which they did at two meetings each week for a two-month period. Upon completion of their mission, the Committee sent the finished Plan to the Denver schools’ board, which then evaluated it during a four-hour work session.
Bennet believes the resulting Plan is an enduring, common roadmap for reform within the Denver schools; yet, flexible enough to be referred to as a “living document”. It was structured so that it can be adjusted and refined, based on classroom plan implementation.
Some key points of the Denver schools’ Plan are:
• Explicitly describes the strategies to close the achievement gap for students of color;
• Calls for diversity training for faculty;
• Provides “double block” intervention for ninth graders, who are not learning on grade level;
• Creates eight Instruction Support Teams (ISTs) with facilitators within each of the schools; and
• Places a parent advocate with each Support Team.
Two major issues that concerned educators, parents and/or community were the double block (taking lessons twice) intervention and the closing of several high school campuses. The campus closings are still being resolved with ongoing discussions and analysis.
In the original plan proposed by the Denver schools, intervention was to be applied to both ninth and tenth graders, who were not learning reading and/or math on grade level. The intervention consisted of doubling up on those core subjects until the student became proficient for their grade level. Common consensus was that those students forced to double block the core subjects of math and reading would lose too many elective hours, if intervention were at two grade levels. This would mean that such Denver schools students would miss out on music and the arts, something everyone strongly opposed. The final Plan now intervenes only with ninth graders not learning on grade level.
There are eight new Instructional Support Teams, each with four staff developers, who are teachers with specialties in math, science, humanities, special education, and English Language Acquisition (one teacher for each specialty) on special assignment. Each IST is responsible for 15 schools, where facilitators support them. The purpose of the ISTs is to:
• Work with principals and teachers to support quality instruction;
• Combine curriculum, content awareness, and data assessment to plan program improvements;
• Assist principals, assistant principals, and teachers in grade level planning meetings to evaluate student performance; and
• Be highly visible within the schools and classrooms.
Next for the Denver schools is to develop and finalize timelines for each step of the Plan, as well as develop progress measurements.
The Denver Plan focuses all efforts of the Denver schools on student instruction by providing teachers and principals with the best professional development possible. Additionally, the Denver schools will support their efforts to efficiently apply educators’ time to help students learn, without being distracted by other non-instructional issues.
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