This is great news for the folks in Chicago involved with the NSF grant!

-ML


Education Week
American Education's Newspaper of Record
<http://www.edweek.org/ew/ew_printstory.cfm?slug=42nsf.h20>

July 11, 2001 

Study: NSF Initiative Reaps Payoff In Cities


By David J. Hoff
Education Week

Arlington, VA 
An eight-year federal effort to improve mathematics and science education in
urban schools paid off in higher test scores and increases in the number of
minority students taking high-level courses, according to an analysis of the
project. 

What's more, average enrollment in algebra, physics, and other high- level
courses increased on average in the districts that had won grants under the
project, the NSF's Urban Systemic Initiative.

"There were significant gains in achievement in mathematics and science,"
Floretta D. McKenzie, a consultant to the project, said at a news conference
held near the foundation's headquarters here last month to release the
study. "The impact on individual sites, as well as collectively, has been
significant."

The projects have been successful, added Ms. McKenzie, a former District of
Columbia superintendent of schools, because they needed to take a
comprehensive approach to improving math and science achievement. All of the
participants needed to adopt math and science standards and create tests
tied to them, offer professional development to help teachers learn new ways
of teaching under the standards, and set up an accountability system to
identify low-performing schools.


Pieces of a Puzzle

Each of the pieces of the puzzle is necessary if districts are going to make
gains in achievement and increase the number of students taking high-level
courses, experts said.

"You don't want to pull one [piece] out and put it above all the others,"
Harold A. Pratt, the president of the 53,000- member National Science
Teachers Association and an education consultant, said in an interview. "We
know if we don't have all of those things, we'll have problems."

The NSF made its first multiyear grants under the Urban Systemic Initiative
in 1993 to Baltimore, Chicago, Dallas, Detroit, Miami, New York City,
Phoenix, and El Paso, Texas. In following years, it awarded funding to Los
Angeles, Philadelphia, and 12 other cities.

For the report, "Academic Excellence for All Urban Students," Systemic
Research Inc., a Norwood, Mass., firm, reviewed data from all of the
districts that received the urban grants.

In the 16 districts that had comparable test scores from the year before
they started in the program and 1999, all but Memphis, Tenn., showed gains
in science achievement, and all but Los Angeles raised math scores.

Similarly, enrollment in high-level courses increased on average in each of
the cohorts that received the grants in 1993, 1994, and 1995. For example,
the percentage of students signing up for Advanced Placement science courses
jumped above the national average in most of the districts. Enrollment in AP
math increased, but remained below the national average in many districts.


Teachers' Learning

While the report focuses on students' learning experiences, some educators
say that the hallmark of the project is that teachers are expected to
improve the way they teach.

"We believe that the most compelling piece ... has been the professional
development," said Gene T. Harris, the superintendent of the 65,000-student
Columbus, Ohio, district.

Columbus spent part of its NSF grant to hire mentor- teachers to work
directly with teachers in their schools, offering assistance through
workshops and one-on-one sessions.

"Our teachers respond very well to the support they've gotten from their
[mentors]," Ms. Harris said through an Internet link to the NSF press
conference.

Professional development is especially important in an era when many math
and science teachers are not certified to teach those subjects, said Mr.
Pratt, a former director of science education for the Jefferson County,
Colo., schools in suburban Denver.

"One of the ways to compensate for unqualified teachers is with professional
development on the job," he said. "Any other industry would do the same
thing."




------------------------------------------------------------------------
© 2001 Editorial Projects in Education Vol. 20, number 42, page 14 


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