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Sunday, June 11, 2006

The Star City helps create bright students

Roanoke's improving test scores prove that graduating students are well-prepared for life after the diploma.

Changing schools

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See for yourself

Many of the statistics on public schools and school systems in Virginia are readily available on the Internet.
Virginia Department of Education: www.pen.k12.va.us
In its school report cards and data and publications areas, the department provides data on enrollment, demographics, free and reduced-price lunch, Standards of Learning test scores, graduation and dropout rates, school safety and teacher qualifications. Both the report cards and the data tables are accessible from the home page.
Schoolmatters.com: www.schoolmatters.com
Operated by Standard and Poor's, the business analysts, this site presents demographic, enrollment and performance data on individual schools and entire school systems, and also includes information on the surrounding community. Additionally, it provides college prep exam scores and allows the user to create data tables to compare one school or division with another.

What they say

Jason Bingham, Roanoke school board member
"It's a culture that made these numbers. ... You don't change a culture overnight."
Ed Holstrom, director of professional development and school improvement for Roanoke City Public Schools
"I will be amazed if we don't make some significant gains in one year."
Courtney Penn, Roanoke school board member
"At the end of the day we're still going to need to be dealing with students who are dealing with real-life issues that are unfathomable ... and which make school seem less important."
Cathy Crews, William Fleming High School PTSA president
"Part of it falls back on the parents ... You need to be active, you need to be in there and know what's going on. ... The programs are there. If the students use them, if the parents are involved, there's no reason we can't succeed."
Trisha Edwards, Patrick Henry High School PTSA president
"I don't think it's just a school system issue ... Once we all realize it's more than just the schools' responsibility to graduate these students, then we'll have success."
Thais Teotonio, Patrick Henry High School senior
"Parents have got to care about the school ... I mean like know what's going on in the school."
Ryan Sample, William Fleming High School junior
"I personally feel like if a teacher doesn't push you, and you don't get pushed at home, then who will let you know you can make a difference?"
Kathy Stockburger, Roanoke school board chairwoman
"I think we start building in the expectation of a high school diploma when we send these kids to preschool ... Tell parents early on, 'Here is our expectation for your child, and your child is capable of reaching that goal.' It's cementing that partnership with that family."
Susan Lawyer Willis, William Fleming High School principal
"It's bigger than a William Fleming problem. It's bigger than a high school problem. It becomes a systemic problem."
Jaime Barker, Roanoke's 2005-06 teacher of the year:
"I think if there's any possible way for a student to move on, I think that is being done."

For all the issues facing Roanoke's public schools, the system got upcoming William Fleming High School grad Miaisha Nunnally where she wanted to go: into Ohio State University with a raft of academic scholarships so she can study business and go into corporate finance.

The system worked for classmate Ashlee Murphy, too. With a 3.9 grade point average and 1100 on her SAT, she's off to the University of Richmond to study psychology.

And for Nikki Mays, a Patrick Henry High senior bound for Emory & Henry College to set up a career as a veterinarian.

While the city has struggled to boost its graduation rate and close achievement gaps for growing numbers of poor and minority students, data indicate its high-achieving students are as well-prepared for life after the diplomas as ever.

Scores on both the SAT and ACT college prep exams by city students have risen over the past three years, data available at schoolmatters.com show.

Roanoke's scores on those tests are competitive with scores in surrounding school systems. They're also ahead of, and in some cases well ahead of, scores in other urban districts around Virginia. The tests are nationally recognized predictors of how well students are prepared for learning at the college level.

Over the past nine years, about two-thirds of graduating Roanoke students say they plan to attend a two- or four-year college, according to Virginia Department of Education data.

"I feel like I've gotten the most out of my education at Fleming," Nunnally said.

"It's definitely worked for me, it's definitely got me in the right direction for where I want to go," said Cody Remington, a Patrick Henry student headed to the University of Virginia.

"The resources are there for you," said Thais Teotonio, a Patrick Henry student with a 4.38 grade point average soon to enter James Madison University. "School is what you make it to be."

Patrick Henry PTSA President Trisha Edwards likes the custom fit for students' strengths the system provides, such as the Center for Humanities at Patrick Henry, the International Baccalaureate program at William Fleming, and the Roanoke Valley Governor's School and CITY School programs for students at both schools.

Students interviewed agreed those programs provide consistently good teachers and close personal attention to their work.

That's something they don't always find in regular classes at their high schools, where behavioral issues can consume the teacher's attention.

"PH is so big that you ... get lost in the masses," Teotonio said.

The big difference, they say, is expectations. In their specialized programs, students find high expectations and are surrounded by nothing but high achievers.

"My friends, we all support each other," said Mays, who takes mostly advanced classes at Patrick Henry.

The success of the brightest students pleases Roanoke School Board Chairwoman Kathy Stockburger.

"This division must present challenges for every student," she said. "We do focus on those students who are struggling ... but we have high achieving students, and we need to continue to provide them challenges as well."

At the same time, she'd like to see more students taking those college prep tests.

"In some ways, these tests are looked at as belonging to a certain group of students," she said. "If a student does not see himself or herself as college material, then they're not going to choose to take it."

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