Strong community support crucial in STEM schools’ success
Students, take a giant step forward.
For
the first time, Caddo Parish students are beginning their first year of
intensive science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) education at
schools entirely devoted to STEM study.
Students
in first grade at one of the six elementary schools (Caddo Heights,
Midway, Werner Park, University, Turner and Southern Hills) have a
chance to stay in a STEM school throughout their public school
education. Two middle schools (Youree Drive and Lakeshore) and two high
schools (Captain Shreve and Fair Park) have also been selected to offer
7,500 students the opportunity to jumpstart their chances of success in
college and beyond.
A
partnership between Caddo Parish and Discovery Education, the company
responsible for the Discovery Channel, Animal Planet and Investigation
Discovery, resulted in the consolidation of current STEM programs into
the 10 pilot schools in the iLearn initiative. Everyone at each school
will be actively involved in STEM’s new way of learning through hands-on
labs, entertaining and education videos, and interaction with
instructors who have been involved in the 18-month training, education
and curriculum development phase.
In my opinion, the impact
of the STEM program will be felt in prevention. The new direction the
school system has taken under Dr. (Lamar) Goree is frankly better at
addressing kids with a history of trauma. It is more welcoming.”
– Clay Walker
Caddo
Schools Chief Academic Officer Keith Burton believes this cooperative
effort is crucial in giving the 70 percent of Caddo Parish Public
Schools’ 41,000 students who are economically disadvantaged a chance to
excel.
“We are asking the community to take an active role in partnering, creating internships or advising students,” Burton said.
The
40 teachers and 20-plus administrators designated to work at the
schools have some support from businesses and community supporters
planning to enhance their educational experience and prepare them for
jobs in an increasingly complex marketplace. Outreach efforts to
business and community leaders to garner additional support will help shape and promote programs.
Junior
Achievement (JA), a nonprofit organization heavily involved in teaching
soft skills such as budgeting and social interaction, already has
around 300 volunteers working with schools in Caddo Parish, including
six of the 10 STEM schools, Nita Cook, JA’s president and executive
director said.
“Volunteers
talk to the kids about how they use math and other STEM skills in their
jobs. They get the connection on how they can apply these skills in the
real world,” Cook said.
“You
can connect all STEM curriculum to the Junior Achievement curriculum,”
said Nicole Brice, JA’s program director. “That’s where our country is
going,” particularly with the growing emphasis in entrepreneurships,
which Brice believes is at the forefront of new job creation. “Junior
Achievement can basically keep these (high-risk) kids out of jail,”
Brice said.
Clay
Walker, the director of the Juvenile Services Department for Caddo
Parish, believes STEM involvement may help students who otherwise lose
interest in class, misbehave, dropout or become one of the 4,000 truants
the parish deals with each year.
“In
my opinion, the impact of the STEM program will be felt in prevention.
The new direction the school system has taken under Dr. (Lamar) Goree is
frankly better at addressing kids with a history of trauma. It is more
welcoming,” Walker said. “They are doing their part to treat the kids
rather than kick them out of school. So STEM and other innovations are
going to do a better job at inspiring kids to stay engaged.”
STEM
jobs are the high end of the pay scale for almost every field and the
U.S. is underperforming compared to other first-world countries. Last
year, a Pew Research Center survey of members of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science found that just 16 percent of
the members surveyed thought U.S. public school STEM education was the
best or above average, while 46 percent ranked it below average. The
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development tracks new college
degrees in the world’s most advanced countries. The United States was
ranked 39th in the OECD list of top STEM countries last year, according
to the Web site Tech Insider.
Employers
are heavily recruiting workers who have mastered STEMrelated jobs, said
Dr. Cindy Moss, director of Global STEM Initiatives for Discovery
Education.
“Many
of the jobs in STEM are at the crossroads of old disciplines,” Moss
said. The biggest obstacle in bringing existing trades and careers into
the 21st century is lack of money and adequate training available for
teachers, she said. No new funding is available to support the STEM
schools because of budget cuts made in an attempt to recover from huge
deficits. This “robs schools of resources to compete with the
competition in the top STEM countries,” Moss said.
Because
of this lack of additional funding, there will be no new materials
available, and community support could make the difference in iLearn’s
success, Burton said.
“We just need your time, your efforts and your support,” Goree said.
“We
are going to start small,” Burton said. “We are going to have parents
question new methods of assigning homework.” If parents or volunteers
from the community want to help, “ask the principal to take a learning
lab or, if you ever want to just pop in, please do.”
– Kathleen Ward