SlideShare una empresa de Scribd logo
1 de 11
Descargar para leer sin conexión
WWW.CITIZENSLEAGUE.ORG
                                                                 WWW.STUDENTSSPEAKOUT.ORG
                                                            MILWAUKEE.STUDENTSSPEAKOUT.ORG




         What’s alternative about Minnesota’s alternative-education programs?
                     The schools? Or the students who attend them?

    Students speak out about their alternative education experience and how it
                                  could be better

                                         May 2008

  Alternative-education programs serve an important function in Minnesota K-12 public
  education, offering flexible, individualized learning environments for 146,000 students.
  Students are eligible to attend when they are, as defined by Minnesota Statute 124D.68,
  “at risk” of educational failure. In its handbook for state-approved alternative programs,
  the Minnesota Department of Education states, “The
  original mission, as it is now, was to provide viable
  educational options for students who are                       Kari from RiverBend Area
  experiencing difficulty in the traditional system.”            Learning Center (ALC) in
  Trouble is, requiring that students be “at risk” in order     New Ulm, Minn. reports that
  to attend alternative education programs may place            Area Learning Centers, one
  students in the position of having to first fail in          type of alternative program,
  traditional schools. This contributes to widespread              are socially known as
  perceptions that alternative programs are not                  “Assholes’ Last Chance”.
  “legitimate” educational options. In early 2008 on the
  Citizens League StudentsSpeakOut.org Web site,
  students reported that they avoided alternative programs because they believed them
  to be for “bad” or “stupid” kids. Already facing significant social and academic
  barriers, they wanted to avoid more problems.

  The negative stereotypes of the schools are anything but accurate, students report.
  Once they begin attending, they are relieved to find social and academic
  environments where on-time graduation seems to be a real possibility. Yet students
  indicate that perceived lack of legitimacy often delays entrance into the programs for
  a variety of reasons, and unnecessarily creates problems, including:

     •    Students come to see themselves as failures.



                                                                                1|Page
•    Students get more off-track in their education than need be.

    •    Conventional schools struggle with the behavioral and academic problems that
         result when students try unsuccessfully to make things work, frustrating their ability
         to serve well the students for whom conventional schools are a good fit.

    •    Presumably, some students simply never find their way to alternative programs
         and instead drop out.



Students Speak Out’s work with young leaders

In January 2008, the Citizens League selected six leaders from alternative-education
programs who decided to address the social stigma surrounding their schools. They
abhorred the idea that people think of them as “stupid, bad kids” and wanted the
public to understand the schools for what they really are: a valuable means to learning
and graduation.

The Citizens League pressed the students to find out if their observations were more
widespread. In turn, the leaders gathered stories from 21 students in 10 schools and six
additional individuals about their experiences in alternative programs. Based on those
stories, students co-created a survey taken by 60 self-selecting students at a student
leadership conference run by the Minnesota Association of Alternative Programs
(MAAP) in April 2008. This report conveys their findings.

Although the survey is small and the stories anecdotal, the students’ work should be
taken credibly. First, their self-reports are consistent with findings from the academic
literature.1 Second, they provide us an important glimpse into a world that education
leaders must seek to understand. As Parker J. Palmer wrote in “A New Professional: The
Aims of Education Revisited” in Change, the Carnegie Foundation’s publication, “We
must start taking seriously the ‘intelligence’ in emotional intelligence. We must do more
than affirm and harness the power of emotions to animate learning and leadership: We
must help our students develop the skill of "mining" their emotions for knowledge. By and
large, academic culture honors only two kinds of knowing—empirical observation and


1John Kovach and William Evans, “Empowering Youth and Alternative Education: Program Components and Evaluation
Strategies,” Educational Enterprises, LLC. Paper presented at National Youth-At-Risk Conference in Savannah, Georgia.
March 2006. http://www.educationalenterprises.org/LLC/EE_Savannah.pdf

Melissa Storm and Richard Storm, “Evaluation of the Oklahoma Alternative Education Program,” Oklahoma Technical
Assistance Program. Date N/A. http://gwired.gwu.edu/hamfish/merlin-
cgi/p/downloadFile/d/16863/n/off/other/1/name/25Stormpdf/

Winnie Hu, “”Profile Rises at School Where Going Against the Grain is a Norm,” New York Times, November 12, 2007.
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/12/education/12village.html?pagewanted=print



                                                                                                       2|Page
logical reasoning. But science begins in the hunches,
                                              intuitions, and bodily knowing that lie behind testable
    According to the Minnesota
                                              hypotheses.”
      Department of Education,
      146,000 students attended               Alternative-Education Programs: A Minnesota
     alternative programs during              Success Story
      the 2004-2005 school year,
    including roughly 19 percent    Minnesota was an early adapter of alternative
        of the middle and high      education programs, developing one of the first in
          school population.1       the nation in 1968, Wilson Open Campus School in
                                    Mankato. The sheer number of Minnesota students
                                    who opt for alternative programs at some point in
their middle or high school careers gives testimony to the important needs these schools
must fulfill. According to the Minnesota Department of Education, 146,000 students
attended alternative programs during the 2004-2005 school year, including roughly 19
percent of the middle and high school population.2

In the Students Speak Out survey, almost 79 percent of the respondents said they were
doing better academically at their alternative programs, and 62.5 percent said they
were doing better socially. Seventy-three percent agreed or strongly agreed that they
are learning more. One hundred percent of the students surveyed said the programs
are helping them to attain their educational goals. Story after story, students said the
schools weren’t academically easier and they consistently pointed out that students
must meet Minnesota’s standards for graduation.

            Nicole, 31 years old, Shoreview ALC graduate: “It was tougher for me to go through
            mainstream high school. At Shoreview ALC, I was very successful. I could work at my
            own pace. I didn’t feel pressure. I could take my time; do my work. I could ask
            teachers questions privately. It wasn’t like a hard core classroom setting. Instead of
            failing the normal high school, I was actually getting A’s and B’s. I graduated from
            college. I am a marketing coordinator in the promotional products industry, which
            means we source products from all over the world for large, major corporations to
            promote their brand. I am also a part-time DJ on a local radio station and I do
            promotions for them as well. I am successful.”

            Molly, RiverBend ALC in New Ulm: “[Going to the ALC after trying to make things
            work in my traditional school] was the best decision I have ever made. Now I
            actually pass classes. People don’t realize that students have different types of
            learning and ‘alternative’ is a different way to learn and a great way to learn. At my
            old school I would fall behind because I didn’t understand the work or didn’t know
            how to do things. At times the teachers would go too fast and I would be totally lost.
            Now at the ALC if I don’t understand anything the teachers work with me and help
            me out by getting me caught up.”




2The MN Dept of Education reports that as of October 2006, 69,501 high school students (grades 9-12) and 7,502 middle
school students (grades 6-8) received more than targeted services. In 2006-2007, there were 409,989 students total
attending Minnesota Secondary Schools (grades 7-12).



                                                                                                       3|Page
Widespread negative stereotypes

Despite their accomplishments, students attending alternative education programs
face persistent and widespread stereotypes. When asked why they didn’t enroll in
alternative programs sooner, 28 percent of the students surveyed indicated they
thought the schools were for “bad kids” and “stupid kids”, or had other negative
perceptions about the schools. Students describe their own perceptions and fears:

       Joe , Phoenix Learning Center in Buffalo: “I was thinking to myself that this is going to be a
       place where there will be fights everyday and hard-ass teachers…[but] right when I
       stepped in it was entirely different. All of the teachers treated me with respect and there
       were no students that I didn’t get along with.”

       David, Osseo ALC in Brooklyn Park: “I had doubts about going to an ALC. I never wanted
       to go. I didn’t think it was the place for me. But I really like it there. I thought it was for a
       bunch of…people that didn’t care about school anymore and they just went there
       because it was easier. It’s totally the opposite.”

Students also worry that the success of alternative programs is dismissed. People assume
that if “bad” or “stupid” kids who didn’t succeed in traditional schools are graduating
from the schools, then the schools must be “easier”.

       Travis, Osseo ALC: “Since it’s ‘alternative’, they think that means we’re stupid. There’s a
       state law that says [all students must learn the same thing in high school.] It’s not like we
       can’t understand, it’s just how we learn. It’s given in ways we can understand. It
       actually sticks in your head. You’re not just reading, getting it done, and handing it in.
       You’re actually taking something with you. It’s not like it’s any easier. It’s just different.”


Three unnecessary problems

The persistent stereotypes of alternative education programs and the students who
attend them create unnecessary problems. The first consequence is that students come
to believe that they are the problem; that they
are “alternative” from the norm because they                  Travis, Osseo ALC: “Since it’s
don’t fit in.                                                 ‘alternative’, they think that
                                                              means we’re stupid. There’s a
            Ashley, Spring Lake Park ALC: “No kid likes to be
                                                              state law that says [all students
            told they are lower than someone else. That
            makes kids wanna live up to something. Make       must learn the same thing in
            themselves seem better then the person who        high school.] It’s not like we
            lowered them. And if you completely eliminate     can’t understand, it’s just how
            that then there is no problem.”                   we learn. It’s given in ways we
                                                              can understand. It actually
Research suggests that “stereotype threat” may                sticks in your head. You’re not
be impacting learning. Joshua Aronson,                        just reading, getting it done,
Associate Professor of Psychology at New York                 and handing it in. You’re
University, writes about the impact of “stereotype            actually taking something with
                                                              you. It’s not like it’s any easier.
                                                              It’s just different.”
                                                                                         4|Page
threat” on students: “Numerous studies show how stereotype threat depresses the
standardized test performance of black, Latino, and female college students. These
same studies showed how changing the testing situation (even subtly) so as to reduce
stereotype threat, can dramatically improve standardized test scores and motivation…
We have found that we can do a lot to boost both achievement and the enjoyment of
school by understanding and attending to these psychological processes.”

Second, the students suggested that these stereotypes delayed their entrance into
alternative programs, and blocked their path to educational success. About 83
percent of those surveyed said they would be better off now had they attended an
alternative education program sooner.

         Abby, RiverBend ALC: “I have never had good grades. I have…attention deficit
         disorder. I was struggling my freshman year. I failed American history and physical
         science. During the summer I went to summer school for my history class, but I
         missed an opportunity to make up my science class. That wasn’t the first time I had
         been to summer school either. I had gone the summers after my seventh and eighth
         grade years along with my freshman year. When I was still at Sibley East, my old
         school, I was starting to go to an after school science class to make up my credits.
         But I also had gone to after school classes my seventh, eighth and ninth grade
         years. I was so sick of staying after school. But there were no other options ‘cause
         my old school didn’t put me in a new science class so I would have just kept falling
         back.”

         Brittany, Austin ALC: “I have been in ALC since seventh grade… Before that in like
         third to fifth grades I started not caring about school. I got what we were learning
         but I needed help on homework and my mom was always working or didn't help
         me because she was tired from working all day.”

         Brian, Osseo ALC: “When I was still in elementary school my parents never really did
         help me out with any of my school work and if they did help me out they would
         make a big deal out of nothing. They would just start yelling and calling me dumb. I
         never did any homework or any other work in class. There were a lot of deaths
         going on in my family at the time so I didn't really want to think that much about my
         education… So [after] 6th grade I started to smoke and drink and started doing
         things that I am not really proud of to this day…I started to hang out with gangs and
         started to do a lot of stuff that I really started liking to do to people. I [did] more
         hardcore drugs…for 2 years. I was in my ninth grade year now and still failing and
         getting into more fights. My school told me if I would get into one more fight then I
         would get kicked out of school. I didn't really like that idea. That’s when I started to
         realize that I needed to get my education… Without the ALC I don't think I would be
         graduating this year.”

Finally, students’ most frequently-cited reason for delaying attendance (36 percent)
was that they wanted to try and make things work in their traditional schools. They tried,
unsuccessfully, to “do better” and freely admit the problems they were creating as a
result:

         Joe, Phoenix Learning Center : “During my first high school years I was not doing so
         good, I was failing almost every class every quarter. I was skipping classes and
         playing video games in the library. I would skip whole days. I would get in fights (not
         physical) with my teachers. I would get in fights with other students. It was not going
         good. Then I talked to one of the assistant principals and he asked me how I was

                                                                                                5|Page
getting along with the teachers and students at the high school and I told him that I
         only liked one teacher in the entire school and I only had a couple friends. He told
         me that this was the wrong place for me then and he recommended that I go to
         Phoenix Learning Center, so I said whatever and I went just because I wanted to get
         out of the high school.”

         Shane, Osseo ALC: ““The main [legally authorized] reason I went to an alternative
         school was ‘truancy’, but the real reason was that I made a big deal and left before I
         even got kicked out was because I HATED going to a regular high school.”

         Eric, RiverBend ALC: “I have been attending this school since third quarter of last
         year. Since I came here I’ve succeeded…I’ve changed. My past with school was
         not the greatest. In the [traditional] high school I didn’t get along with others. I had
         a hard time with teachers. I had no opportunities to work one-on-one with them
         which was a huge problem. I have ADHD which, I mean, I guess that’s just an
         excuse, some people might say, but here they actually understand that it is harder
         to pay attention; to get motivated. And here at the RiverBend ALC people
         understand that. And that’s what I like.


A fourth potential problem: completion rates

The students’ work focused on gathering information from students attending
alternative education programs, so we can only speculate about the impact of
alternative programs’ lack of legitimacy on completion rates. However, when the
survey asked “Why didn’t you enroll sooner?” of students who reported they would be
better off now had they enrolled earlier, 34 percent said they had not heard about the
                                       programs. Others reported they were not yet “at
     Eric, RiverBend ALC: “I’m just    risk” enough to attend.
   another kid here. I don’t stand             Seth, an 18 year old with a GED: “I was behind
          out as much.”                        16 credits, and my counselors told me I wasn’t
                                               failing enough classes to attend an alternative
                                               school.”




Eliminating stereotypes by focusing on reasons for success

Students want to succeed; and the alternative
education programs they attend help them succeed.                         Seth, an 18 year old with a
The students’ stories support what the research has                       GED: “I was behind 16
found to be at the root of alternative education                          credits, and my counselors
programs’ success:                                                        told me I wasn’t failing
                                                                          enough classes to attend
      A sense of belonging. This may be difficult for                     an alternative school.”
      some students to find in large schools
      fragmented by peer groups and organized in
      ways that teachers have difficulty getting to know individual students.


                                                                                                6|Page
Relevant, engaging instruction. One ALC student declared, “It’s like life happens
      to us earlier [than it does for other people].” Students dealing with parenthood,
      serious illnesses, learning disabilities, uninvolved parents, death in the family,
      and/or supporting their families financially may have a greater demand for
      learning commensurate with their very adult-like experiences and lessons in the
      outside world.
      An organization and structure that support the first two factors. Students
      appreciate family-like atmospheres that are more emotionally supportive.
      Students describe a learning environment learning methods as well as flexible
      paces and schedules that accommodate their significant responsibilities and
      issues.

When they began attending their alternative education programs, they were able to
stop focusing on themselves as the problem. Instead, they focused on learning and
graduating.

         Ashley, Spring Lake Park ALC: “There is a more of an ‘everyone knows everyone’
         thing going around [at ALCs]. And I think the smaller environment is one big thing to
         that. Cause there are less students so everyone knows who it is if someone wants to
         start something. And most the kids in my learning alternative are probably there
         cause they don’t want to deal with so much people’s crap.”

         Kari, RiverBend ALC: “ALC schools have a message that no other schools can
         deliver to their students. ALC schools make you aware that you are welcome; that
         you can have trust in them, and that you’ll fit in among the other students. They
         don’t judge you even if you came from the streets. They give you the hope and
         encouragement to graduate and move on to better things in life.”

         Shane, Osseo ALC: “Some people don't even have time for the ‘traditional way’ of
         schooling. [In alternative education programs, students] come in on their time and
         get it done, because teachers and the school are nice enough TO TRY AND HELP
         YOU FINISH! THEY CARE.”

         Elizabeth, White Bear Lake ALC: “I chose to go there because I got pregnant [while
         attending] my other school and I thought that it would help me with my education.
         And the other school didn’t let me be there. I bring my baby to day care every
         morning (it’s at my school) and they take care of her. I get to take her out for lunch.
         And then I bring her back, and then they help me with my education.”

                                              ***
                          The students’ experiences raise questions.

As a state, are we really ready to say that nearly one in five high school students, and
146,000 Minnesota students overall, are “at risk of educational failure”?

Based on its work with students attending alternative education programs the Citizens
League suggests that one answer to avoiding these problems—and to improving
school completion and student achievement in Minnesota—is a simple one with no
price tag: integrate alternative education programs fully into Minnesota’s spectrum of
educational options by eliminating both the “alternative” moniker and the eligibility
criteria. As the key to the success of these schools is their small, community-like

                                                                                              7|Page
environment that permits adaptive instruction, they might be renamed “Customized
Learning Academies”.

Related questions for consideration include:

   •   Should alternative education programs be legally acknowledged as something
       students might want to attend to avoid getting “off track” socially and
       academically?

   •   Does the “at-risk” eligibility requirement imply that something must be wrong with
       students in order for them to want to access something nontraditional?

   •   Do the eligibility requirements and lack of awareness about the programs create
       a time delay, especially for those who are not aware of alternative education
       programs and other schooling options, between when students first know they’re
       struggling to succeed and when they are attending the schools they value as
       working well for them?

   •   If the “at-risk” requirement remains in place, is it important to find ways for
       students and their families to learn about public schooling options available to
       them at an earlier time?

   •   After an adult suggests that a student leave a conventional school, do any
       students quit school, sensing one type of school doesn’t want them and another
       type is for “bad kids”?

   •   What do the negative stereotypes sensed by students in alternative education
       programs mean for Minnesota at a time when it is working to improve school
       completion and students’ adequate yearly progress under the federal No Child
       Left Behind Act? What might students achieve if the state were able to diminish
       stereotypes of their schooling environments?

   •   Does lack of awareness about alternative education programs, or options for
       public schooling in general, contribute to the Minnesota’s overall school
       completion rate? If districts we able to refer students into alternative education
       programs earlier, would enrollment increase? Would quit-rates decline?




                                                                               8|Page
Learning by doing: SSO leaders discover active citizenship

Students Speak Out is as much about students developing an understanding of their role as
active citizens as it is about bringing new perspectives to a public problem. In addition to
affirming their project findings, SSO leaders from alternative-education programs report:

   •   Investigating a public problem helped them find common ground with other
       students. Understanding others’ experiences helped them to better define their
       environment, and made their own seem less harrowing.
   •   Being an involved citizen is not only “fun”, but makes one feel “responsible and
       appreciated”.
   •   Skills from SSO, like public speaking, setting and going for goals, and leadership, are
       good for the road. Ashley, who once said public speaking was not her forte, gave a
       speech for 150+ at her graduation. Shane says he’s more organized for himself, and
       his peers take heed of his insights.
   •   Young people’s ideas have a place in determining the common good.

Shane Saunders, Osseo Area Learning Center in Brooklyn Park
“Through our Students Speak Out research, I learned that kids are serious about getting
done with work and trying to finish school. At the Osseo ALC, most of the kids [I interact
with] are mature and show a lot of respect. A lot of them have families to take care of and
are busting their backs trying to get done and start their lives. I just learned that [at
alternative-education programs] people understand more of who you are and respect you
more.

I also learned that [being an active] citizen is, for one, a lot of fun. I learned that being a
part of an organization [the Citizens League Students Speak Out project] felt really good
and everyone was cool and cooperated and helped
each other out. It makes you feel really good
about yourself and makes you feel responsible and
                                                             I learned that [being an active]
appreciated. Also, respected for most part. I
really think I do have a voice to be heard. I just          citizen is, for one, a lot of fun. It
got chosen student of the month at school                  makes you feel really good about
yesterday. I know pretty much every single person              yourself and makes you feel
at our school, and they all know me, and take                  responsible and appreciated.
what I say to the head. They say I’m insightful.
[For the Students Speak Out project] I was on
time and exceeded the expectations... I feel more
organized for myself.”

Molly Dietz, RiverBend Area Learning Center in New Ulm
“I talk to my classmates about [the issues] and I learned a lot about my peers. While doing
this I have got[ten] closer to my peers. I learned some really want to make a difference and
learn about StudentsSpeakOut.org and some don't. But I believe everyone loves the ALC. I
learned a lot about how alternative schooling fits in with my life and I love coming to school
every day. Without the ALC I didn't think I would make it. I do think I could make a
difference. I think anyone can make a difference if they just try and put their mind to it.”




                                                                                       9|Page
Ashley Iverson, Spring Lake Park Area Learning Center
“I think Students Speak Out is a great program and I think it (we) did a very good job for
getting the message out to kids who don't know about Learning Alternative schools. I have
learned so much from meeting legislators who control more things than I ever thought. I
learned a lot about myself, too. Hearing other peoples’ stories, I realized mine wasn't so
bad. But I am also happy that I got the word out about ALCs and how they really do help
students.

                                        The teachers in ALCs get to know you personally.
                                        You’re not just a student that’s in one or two
   Students Speak Out has helped        classes. No, you’re a person they try to make a
                                        connection with and push you to try your hardest. I
    me open up and speak out. I
                                        want to go into teaching at an ALC. I have to say,
  never thought I would be able to      that’s probably where students and teachers
  speak in front of all my teachers     connect more. I know [becoming a teacher] takes a
       and about 150 more.              lot of school, but [I’ve learned that], no matter what
                                        I want to achieve, I can. All I have to do is try my
                                        hardest, and I hope to do so.

This year at our ALC graduation and award ceremony, I got up in front of my whole class
and gave a speech—something I thought I would never do. But I am happy I did, ‘cause it
was one of the best things. Before I did terrible in speeches, but this one I was really proud
of, and thought I did really well. I have to say I strongly enjoyed Students Speak Out.”

Joseph Otten, Phoenix Learning Center in Buffalo; then Blue Sky Online Charter
“ After working on this project I have learned that people who want to attend alternative
schools should not have to be ‘at risk’ to enroll and that anyone that wants to go to an
alternative school should have the option to do so. Being an engaged citizen I believe that
we should be able to do the things that we want to do and not have guide lines set for us to
tell us whether or not we can or cannot do them.”




                                                                                 10 | P a g e
About the authors

Kim Farris-Berg, Project Coordinator for Citizens League StudentsSpeakOut.org, and Stacy Becker, Director of the
                                 th
Citizens League Minnesota 150 Anniversary Project (MAP 150) prepared this brief. They were guided by the
“Students Speak Out Goes Alternative” student leaders who selected the topic, encouraged their peers to tell their
stories on the site, and gathered video testimony. They are Molly Dietz, Ashley Iverson, Joe Otten, Shane Saunders.
Other student leaders who have influenced this project include: Ilandrea “Nuny” Nichols and Eric Torgusen.

Access stories from alternative school students (both written and video testimony) on StudentsSpeakOut.org, where
we have posted a complete summary of quotes from the students’ stories and complete summary of data from an
online survey of students attending Minnesota’s alternative-education programs. We will also post a “supervideo”,
prepared by Southwest High School Freshman Annie Wood, featuring the students’ video testimony.

About StudentsSpeakOut.org

                                                                             th
StudentsSpeakOut.org is an initiative of the Citizens League Minnesota 150 Anniversary Project (MAP 150). MAP
150’s purpose is to find ways of cultivating citizens’ ability to participate in designing public solutions by developing
new spaces and roles that respect citizens’ experiences and ideas as relevant to the policy discussion. People
affected by the problem should be included in defining it. StudentsSpeakOut.org is a social networking Web site that
has been testing a variety of strategies for involving young people as active citizens by meeting them where they are
(on the Web, using technology, and in both school-based and outside-of-school learning environments). The Web site
was at first Minneapolis-focused, and has now expanded to all of Minnesota and Milwaukee, with potential for further
expansion nationally.

There are forum discussions where students and adults raise questions and discuss ideas for solutions. We’ve
“turned the tables” and asked students to act as commentators on the education-related ideas of high-profile adults in
Minnesota. Student leaders from Minneapolis and from Minnesota’s alternative-education programs have project
coordinators who assist them in investigating topics of their choice on video and in written story, and who connect the
students to decision-makers working in their scope of interest. The Web site was also the host of the “I Am
Minnesota’s Future” Video Contest, a pilot-level contest providing a forum for students to articulate what adults and
youth must do to ensure a better future in Minnesota. In Milwaukee, students learn how to use the site to address
education matters they care about via workshops, and adults participate in workshops to learn how to support them.
The workshop designs and recruiting strategies built on the successes of Minnesota’s site, and the strategies are
succeeding (as evidenced by rapid growth of site participation—75 new participants in the first 3 weeks!).

Useful Links
   •    Students Speak Out – Minnesota: http://studentsspeakout.org
   •    Students Speak Out – Milwaukee: http://milwaukee.studentsspeakout.org
   •    MN Statute 124D.68:
        https://www.revisor.leg.state.mn.us/bin/getpub.php?type=s&num=124D.68
   •    Minnesota Department of Education. State Approved Alternative Program Handbook. (Roseville,
        MN: Minnesota Department of Education, updated February 2007), 6.
        http://education.state.mn.us/mde/index.html
   •    Kim Farris-Berg and Jon Schroeder, “Alternative-Education Programs: The Quiet Giant in Minnesota
        Public Education,” (St. Paul, MN: Education|Evolving, June 2003), 7.
        http://www.educationevolving.org/studentvoices
   •    Joshua Aronson . Professional Profile. Social Psychology Network.
        http://joshua.aronson.socialpsychology.org/
   •    Parker J. Palmer. “A New Professional: The Aims of Education Revisited.” Change. (Stanford, CA:
        Carnegie Foundation, November/December 2007).
        http://www.carnegiefoundation.org/change/sub.asp?key=98&subkey=245

                                                                                                       11 | P a g e

Más contenido relacionado

La actualidad más candente

The Influence of Parental Education in Pre-School Preference in Nyamira Divis...
The Influence of Parental Education in Pre-School Preference in Nyamira Divis...The Influence of Parental Education in Pre-School Preference in Nyamira Divis...
The Influence of Parental Education in Pre-School Preference in Nyamira Divis...paperpublications3
 
Ch11 ppt compressed
Ch11 ppt compressedCh11 ppt compressed
Ch11 ppt compresseddwelkley
 
Dropout Prevention in California Schools through Civic Engagement
Dropout Prevention in California Schools through Civic EngagementDropout Prevention in California Schools through Civic Engagement
Dropout Prevention in California Schools through Civic EngagementMichelleHerczog
 
The iGeneration Goes to College
The iGeneration Goes to CollegeThe iGeneration Goes to College
The iGeneration Goes to CollegeJohny Tadros
 
Issues in Urban Education
Issues in Urban EducationIssues in Urban Education
Issues in Urban EducationMarianne Jones
 
Balancing the Educational Agenda
Balancing the Educational AgendaBalancing the Educational Agenda
Balancing the Educational AgendaAmber Ott
 
Educational philosophy and strategies for teaching bsw students
Educational philosophy and strategies for teaching bsw studentsEducational philosophy and strategies for teaching bsw students
Educational philosophy and strategies for teaching bsw studentsjaguar1204
 
CPS expands AP program
CPS expands AP programCPS expands AP program
CPS expands AP programDebra Crawford
 
Foundation of education 11
Foundation of education 11Foundation of education 11
Foundation of education 11Channy Leang
 
Causes of failure in Primary Education
Causes of failure in Primary EducationCauses of failure in Primary Education
Causes of failure in Primary EducationaitorU
 
Out of-school factors and school success
Out of-school factors and school successOut of-school factors and school success
Out of-school factors and school successLara Fordis
 
Youth truth, valerie threlfall
Youth truth, valerie threlfallYouth truth, valerie threlfall
Youth truth, valerie threlfallNAFCareerAcads
 
The Indianapolis Mayoral Transition and the Charter School Community
The Indianapolis Mayoral Transition and the Charter School CommunityThe Indianapolis Mayoral Transition and the Charter School Community
The Indianapolis Mayoral Transition and the Charter School CommunityChristine Marson
 
MT_statewide_graduate_2015
MT_statewide_graduate_2015MT_statewide_graduate_2015
MT_statewide_graduate_2015Ellen Leidl
 
B keenan 7 things you should know about
B keenan 7 things you should know aboutB keenan 7 things you should know about
B keenan 7 things you should know aboutBobbieKeenan
 

La actualidad más candente (19)

The Influence of Parental Education in Pre-School Preference in Nyamira Divis...
The Influence of Parental Education in Pre-School Preference in Nyamira Divis...The Influence of Parental Education in Pre-School Preference in Nyamira Divis...
The Influence of Parental Education in Pre-School Preference in Nyamira Divis...
 
Paper
PaperPaper
Paper
 
School To Prison Pipeline 2017
School To Prison Pipeline 2017School To Prison Pipeline 2017
School To Prison Pipeline 2017
 
Ch11 ppt compressed
Ch11 ppt compressedCh11 ppt compressed
Ch11 ppt compressed
 
Dropout Prevention in California Schools through Civic Engagement
Dropout Prevention in California Schools through Civic EngagementDropout Prevention in California Schools through Civic Engagement
Dropout Prevention in California Schools through Civic Engagement
 
The iGeneration Goes to College
The iGeneration Goes to CollegeThe iGeneration Goes to College
The iGeneration Goes to College
 
Issues in Urban Education
Issues in Urban EducationIssues in Urban Education
Issues in Urban Education
 
Balancing the Educational Agenda
Balancing the Educational AgendaBalancing the Educational Agenda
Balancing the Educational Agenda
 
Educational philosophy and strategies for teaching bsw students
Educational philosophy and strategies for teaching bsw studentsEducational philosophy and strategies for teaching bsw students
Educational philosophy and strategies for teaching bsw students
 
CPS expands AP program
CPS expands AP programCPS expands AP program
CPS expands AP program
 
Foundation of education 11
Foundation of education 11Foundation of education 11
Foundation of education 11
 
Causes of failure in Primary Education
Causes of failure in Primary EducationCauses of failure in Primary Education
Causes of failure in Primary Education
 
Out of-school factors and school success
Out of-school factors and school successOut of-school factors and school success
Out of-school factors and school success
 
Youth truth, valerie threlfall
Youth truth, valerie threlfallYouth truth, valerie threlfall
Youth truth, valerie threlfall
 
issue_middleschool_42
issue_middleschool_42issue_middleschool_42
issue_middleschool_42
 
The Indianapolis Mayoral Transition and the Charter School Community
The Indianapolis Mayoral Transition and the Charter School CommunityThe Indianapolis Mayoral Transition and the Charter School Community
The Indianapolis Mayoral Transition and the Charter School Community
 
MT_statewide_graduate_2015
MT_statewide_graduate_2015MT_statewide_graduate_2015
MT_statewide_graduate_2015
 
B keenan 7 things you should know about
B keenan 7 things you should know aboutB keenan 7 things you should know about
B keenan 7 things you should know about
 
Spring.2013.Cover.Story
Spring.2013.Cover.StorySpring.2013.Cover.Story
Spring.2013.Cover.Story
 

Destacado

First Generation Students Road to College -- Support
First Generation Students Road to College -- SupportFirst Generation Students Road to College -- Support
First Generation Students Road to College -- SupportLara Fordis
 
Exceptions to Highschool Dropouts
Exceptions to Highschool DropoutsExceptions to Highschool Dropouts
Exceptions to Highschool DropoutsLara Fordis
 
Students Speak Out Survey Results
Students Speak Out Survey ResultsStudents Speak Out Survey Results
Students Speak Out Survey ResultsLara Fordis
 
Keep School Safe - School Gangs
Keep School Safe - School Gangs Keep School Safe - School Gangs
Keep School Safe - School Gangs Lara Fordis
 
Parent survey v10
Parent survey v10Parent survey v10
Parent survey v10Lara Fordis
 
Urban Student Mobility in Chicago
Urban Student Mobility in ChicagoUrban Student Mobility in Chicago
Urban Student Mobility in ChicagoLara Fordis
 
Nashville Brochure
Nashville BrochureNashville Brochure
Nashville BrochureLara Fordis
 

Destacado (7)

First Generation Students Road to College -- Support
First Generation Students Road to College -- SupportFirst Generation Students Road to College -- Support
First Generation Students Road to College -- Support
 
Exceptions to Highschool Dropouts
Exceptions to Highschool DropoutsExceptions to Highschool Dropouts
Exceptions to Highschool Dropouts
 
Students Speak Out Survey Results
Students Speak Out Survey ResultsStudents Speak Out Survey Results
Students Speak Out Survey Results
 
Keep School Safe - School Gangs
Keep School Safe - School Gangs Keep School Safe - School Gangs
Keep School Safe - School Gangs
 
Parent survey v10
Parent survey v10Parent survey v10
Parent survey v10
 
Urban Student Mobility in Chicago
Urban Student Mobility in ChicagoUrban Student Mobility in Chicago
Urban Student Mobility in Chicago
 
Nashville Brochure
Nashville BrochureNashville Brochure
Nashville Brochure
 

Similar a Students Speak Out - Alternative Schools

Jamason m week6_investiagtiontopic
Jamason m week6_investiagtiontopicJamason m week6_investiagtiontopic
Jamason m week6_investiagtiontopicMochinique Jamason
 
A Blueprint for Public Scholarship atPenn StateJerem.docx
A Blueprint for Public Scholarship atPenn StateJerem.docxA Blueprint for Public Scholarship atPenn StateJerem.docx
A Blueprint for Public Scholarship atPenn StateJerem.docxransayo
 
Philosophy of Education
Philosophy of EducationPhilosophy of Education
Philosophy of Educationsarahcsreardon
 
The 10 best international schools in usa
The 10 best international schools in usaThe 10 best international schools in usa
The 10 best international schools in usaMerry D'souza
 
Charter School Segregation
Charter School SegregationCharter School Segregation
Charter School SegregationSkip Spoerke
 
AFFECTS SOCIAL CLASS HAS ON STUDENTS AND THE IMPORTANCE OF QUALITY EDUCATION
AFFECTS SOCIAL CLASS HAS ON STUDENTS AND THE IMPORTANCE OF QUALITY EDUCATIONAFFECTS SOCIAL CLASS HAS ON STUDENTS AND THE IMPORTANCE OF QUALITY EDUCATION
AFFECTS SOCIAL CLASS HAS ON STUDENTS AND THE IMPORTANCE OF QUALITY EDUCATIONjaimeshipman
 
Individual project
Individual projectIndividual project
Individual projectDawn Colsch
 
6mythsaboutservicelearning
6mythsaboutservicelearning6mythsaboutservicelearning
6mythsaboutservicelearningguest2881460
 

Similar a Students Speak Out - Alternative Schools (11)

Jamason m week6_investiagtiontopic
Jamason m week6_investiagtiontopicJamason m week6_investiagtiontopic
Jamason m week6_investiagtiontopic
 
A Blueprint for Public Scholarship atPenn StateJerem.docx
A Blueprint for Public Scholarship atPenn StateJerem.docxA Blueprint for Public Scholarship atPenn StateJerem.docx
A Blueprint for Public Scholarship atPenn StateJerem.docx
 
Urban Education
Urban EducationUrban Education
Urban Education
 
Philosophy of Education
Philosophy of EducationPhilosophy of Education
Philosophy of Education
 
The 10 best international schools in usa
The 10 best international schools in usaThe 10 best international schools in usa
The 10 best international schools in usa
 
Charter School Segregation
Charter School SegregationCharter School Segregation
Charter School Segregation
 
Affects of
Affects ofAffects of
Affects of
 
AFFECTS SOCIAL CLASS HAS ON STUDENTS AND THE IMPORTANCE OF QUALITY EDUCATION
AFFECTS SOCIAL CLASS HAS ON STUDENTS AND THE IMPORTANCE OF QUALITY EDUCATIONAFFECTS SOCIAL CLASS HAS ON STUDENTS AND THE IMPORTANCE OF QUALITY EDUCATION
AFFECTS SOCIAL CLASS HAS ON STUDENTS AND THE IMPORTANCE OF QUALITY EDUCATION
 
Study Group XVI
Study Group XVIStudy Group XVI
Study Group XVI
 
Individual project
Individual projectIndividual project
Individual project
 
6mythsaboutservicelearning
6mythsaboutservicelearning6mythsaboutservicelearning
6mythsaboutservicelearning
 

Más de Lara Fordis

Keeping the Promise Final
Keeping the Promise FinalKeeping the Promise Final
Keeping the Promise FinalLara Fordis
 
Sso survey results_alternativeed
Sso survey results_alternativeedSso survey results_alternativeed
Sso survey results_alternativeedLara Fordis
 
Pnrc adolescent survey v8 2
Pnrc adolescent survey v8 2Pnrc adolescent survey v8 2
Pnrc adolescent survey v8 2Lara Fordis
 
Poverty and potential
Poverty and potentialPoverty and potential
Poverty and potentialLara Fordis
 
Pewresearch.org pubs 1572_teens-cell-phones-text-message
Pewresearch.org pubs 1572_teens-cell-phones-text-messagePewresearch.org pubs 1572_teens-cell-phones-text-message
Pewresearch.org pubs 1572_teens-cell-phones-text-messageLara Fordis
 
Patesslinger.com wakeup wt_dunn_sept05.html
Patesslinger.com wakeup wt_dunn_sept05.htmlPatesslinger.com wakeup wt_dunn_sept05.html
Patesslinger.com wakeup wt_dunn_sept05.htmlLara Fordis
 
Highlights of APEX Student Survey 2011
Highlights of APEX Student Survey 2011Highlights of APEX Student Survey 2011
Highlights of APEX Student Survey 2011Lara Fordis
 
APEX Student Survey Report 2011
APEX Student Survey Report 2011APEX Student Survey Report 2011
APEX Student Survey Report 2011Lara Fordis
 

Más de Lara Fordis (8)

Keeping the Promise Final
Keeping the Promise FinalKeeping the Promise Final
Keeping the Promise Final
 
Sso survey results_alternativeed
Sso survey results_alternativeedSso survey results_alternativeed
Sso survey results_alternativeed
 
Pnrc adolescent survey v8 2
Pnrc adolescent survey v8 2Pnrc adolescent survey v8 2
Pnrc adolescent survey v8 2
 
Poverty and potential
Poverty and potentialPoverty and potential
Poverty and potential
 
Pewresearch.org pubs 1572_teens-cell-phones-text-message
Pewresearch.org pubs 1572_teens-cell-phones-text-messagePewresearch.org pubs 1572_teens-cell-phones-text-message
Pewresearch.org pubs 1572_teens-cell-phones-text-message
 
Patesslinger.com wakeup wt_dunn_sept05.html
Patesslinger.com wakeup wt_dunn_sept05.htmlPatesslinger.com wakeup wt_dunn_sept05.html
Patesslinger.com wakeup wt_dunn_sept05.html
 
Highlights of APEX Student Survey 2011
Highlights of APEX Student Survey 2011Highlights of APEX Student Survey 2011
Highlights of APEX Student Survey 2011
 
APEX Student Survey Report 2011
APEX Student Survey Report 2011APEX Student Survey Report 2011
APEX Student Survey Report 2011
 

Último

4.11.24 Mass Incarceration and the New Jim Crow.pptx
4.11.24 Mass Incarceration and the New Jim Crow.pptx4.11.24 Mass Incarceration and the New Jim Crow.pptx
4.11.24 Mass Incarceration and the New Jim Crow.pptxmary850239
 
Man or Manufactured_ Redefining Humanity Through Biopunk Narratives.pptx
Man or Manufactured_ Redefining Humanity Through Biopunk Narratives.pptxMan or Manufactured_ Redefining Humanity Through Biopunk Narratives.pptx
Man or Manufactured_ Redefining Humanity Through Biopunk Narratives.pptxDhatriParmar
 
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdf
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdfActive Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdf
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdfPatidar M
 
Team Lead Succeed – Helping you and your team achieve high-performance teamwo...
Team Lead Succeed – Helping you and your team achieve high-performance teamwo...Team Lead Succeed – Helping you and your team achieve high-performance teamwo...
Team Lead Succeed – Helping you and your team achieve high-performance teamwo...Association for Project Management
 
4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptx
4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptx4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptx
4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptxmary850239
 
Measures of Position DECILES for ungrouped data
Measures of Position DECILES for ungrouped dataMeasures of Position DECILES for ungrouped data
Measures of Position DECILES for ungrouped dataBabyAnnMotar
 
Concurrency Control in Database Management system
Concurrency Control in Database Management systemConcurrency Control in Database Management system
Concurrency Control in Database Management systemChristalin Nelson
 
BIOCHEMISTRY-CARBOHYDRATE METABOLISM CHAPTER 2.pptx
BIOCHEMISTRY-CARBOHYDRATE METABOLISM CHAPTER 2.pptxBIOCHEMISTRY-CARBOHYDRATE METABOLISM CHAPTER 2.pptx
BIOCHEMISTRY-CARBOHYDRATE METABOLISM CHAPTER 2.pptxSayali Powar
 
ROLES IN A STAGE PRODUCTION in arts.pptx
ROLES IN A STAGE PRODUCTION in arts.pptxROLES IN A STAGE PRODUCTION in arts.pptx
ROLES IN A STAGE PRODUCTION in arts.pptxVanesaIglesias10
 
Q-Factor General Quiz-7th April 2024, Quiz Club NITW
Q-Factor General Quiz-7th April 2024, Quiz Club NITWQ-Factor General Quiz-7th April 2024, Quiz Club NITW
Q-Factor General Quiz-7th April 2024, Quiz Club NITWQuiz Club NITW
 
Transaction Management in Database Management System
Transaction Management in Database Management SystemTransaction Management in Database Management System
Transaction Management in Database Management SystemChristalin Nelson
 
How to Make a Duplicate of Your Odoo 17 Database
How to Make a Duplicate of Your Odoo 17 DatabaseHow to Make a Duplicate of Your Odoo 17 Database
How to Make a Duplicate of Your Odoo 17 DatabaseCeline George
 
Mental Health Awareness - a toolkit for supporting young minds
Mental Health Awareness - a toolkit for supporting young mindsMental Health Awareness - a toolkit for supporting young minds
Mental Health Awareness - a toolkit for supporting young mindsPooky Knightsmith
 
MS4 level being good citizen -imperative- (1) (1).pdf
MS4 level   being good citizen -imperative- (1) (1).pdfMS4 level   being good citizen -imperative- (1) (1).pdf
MS4 level being good citizen -imperative- (1) (1).pdfMr Bounab Samir
 
Multi Domain Alias In the Odoo 17 ERP Module
Multi Domain Alias In the Odoo 17 ERP ModuleMulti Domain Alias In the Odoo 17 ERP Module
Multi Domain Alias In the Odoo 17 ERP ModuleCeline George
 
Grade Three -ELLNA-REVIEWER-ENGLISH.pptx
Grade Three -ELLNA-REVIEWER-ENGLISH.pptxGrade Three -ELLNA-REVIEWER-ENGLISH.pptx
Grade Three -ELLNA-REVIEWER-ENGLISH.pptxkarenfajardo43
 
4.11.24 Poverty and Inequality in America.pptx
4.11.24 Poverty and Inequality in America.pptx4.11.24 Poverty and Inequality in America.pptx
4.11.24 Poverty and Inequality in America.pptxmary850239
 
Q4-PPT-Music9_Lesson-1-Romantic-Opera.pptx
Q4-PPT-Music9_Lesson-1-Romantic-Opera.pptxQ4-PPT-Music9_Lesson-1-Romantic-Opera.pptx
Q4-PPT-Music9_Lesson-1-Romantic-Opera.pptxlancelewisportillo
 

Último (20)

4.11.24 Mass Incarceration and the New Jim Crow.pptx
4.11.24 Mass Incarceration and the New Jim Crow.pptx4.11.24 Mass Incarceration and the New Jim Crow.pptx
4.11.24 Mass Incarceration and the New Jim Crow.pptx
 
Man or Manufactured_ Redefining Humanity Through Biopunk Narratives.pptx
Man or Manufactured_ Redefining Humanity Through Biopunk Narratives.pptxMan or Manufactured_ Redefining Humanity Through Biopunk Narratives.pptx
Man or Manufactured_ Redefining Humanity Through Biopunk Narratives.pptx
 
INCLUSIVE EDUCATION PRACTICES FOR TEACHERS AND TRAINERS.pptx
INCLUSIVE EDUCATION PRACTICES FOR TEACHERS AND TRAINERS.pptxINCLUSIVE EDUCATION PRACTICES FOR TEACHERS AND TRAINERS.pptx
INCLUSIVE EDUCATION PRACTICES FOR TEACHERS AND TRAINERS.pptx
 
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdf
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdfActive Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdf
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdf
 
Team Lead Succeed – Helping you and your team achieve high-performance teamwo...
Team Lead Succeed – Helping you and your team achieve high-performance teamwo...Team Lead Succeed – Helping you and your team achieve high-performance teamwo...
Team Lead Succeed – Helping you and your team achieve high-performance teamwo...
 
4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptx
4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptx4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptx
4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptx
 
Measures of Position DECILES for ungrouped data
Measures of Position DECILES for ungrouped dataMeasures of Position DECILES for ungrouped data
Measures of Position DECILES for ungrouped data
 
Concurrency Control in Database Management system
Concurrency Control in Database Management systemConcurrency Control in Database Management system
Concurrency Control in Database Management system
 
BIOCHEMISTRY-CARBOHYDRATE METABOLISM CHAPTER 2.pptx
BIOCHEMISTRY-CARBOHYDRATE METABOLISM CHAPTER 2.pptxBIOCHEMISTRY-CARBOHYDRATE METABOLISM CHAPTER 2.pptx
BIOCHEMISTRY-CARBOHYDRATE METABOLISM CHAPTER 2.pptx
 
ROLES IN A STAGE PRODUCTION in arts.pptx
ROLES IN A STAGE PRODUCTION in arts.pptxROLES IN A STAGE PRODUCTION in arts.pptx
ROLES IN A STAGE PRODUCTION in arts.pptx
 
Q-Factor General Quiz-7th April 2024, Quiz Club NITW
Q-Factor General Quiz-7th April 2024, Quiz Club NITWQ-Factor General Quiz-7th April 2024, Quiz Club NITW
Q-Factor General Quiz-7th April 2024, Quiz Club NITW
 
Transaction Management in Database Management System
Transaction Management in Database Management SystemTransaction Management in Database Management System
Transaction Management in Database Management System
 
How to Make a Duplicate of Your Odoo 17 Database
How to Make a Duplicate of Your Odoo 17 DatabaseHow to Make a Duplicate of Your Odoo 17 Database
How to Make a Duplicate of Your Odoo 17 Database
 
Mental Health Awareness - a toolkit for supporting young minds
Mental Health Awareness - a toolkit for supporting young mindsMental Health Awareness - a toolkit for supporting young minds
Mental Health Awareness - a toolkit for supporting young minds
 
MS4 level being good citizen -imperative- (1) (1).pdf
MS4 level   being good citizen -imperative- (1) (1).pdfMS4 level   being good citizen -imperative- (1) (1).pdf
MS4 level being good citizen -imperative- (1) (1).pdf
 
Multi Domain Alias In the Odoo 17 ERP Module
Multi Domain Alias In the Odoo 17 ERP ModuleMulti Domain Alias In the Odoo 17 ERP Module
Multi Domain Alias In the Odoo 17 ERP Module
 
Grade Three -ELLNA-REVIEWER-ENGLISH.pptx
Grade Three -ELLNA-REVIEWER-ENGLISH.pptxGrade Three -ELLNA-REVIEWER-ENGLISH.pptx
Grade Three -ELLNA-REVIEWER-ENGLISH.pptx
 
4.11.24 Poverty and Inequality in America.pptx
4.11.24 Poverty and Inequality in America.pptx4.11.24 Poverty and Inequality in America.pptx
4.11.24 Poverty and Inequality in America.pptx
 
Q4-PPT-Music9_Lesson-1-Romantic-Opera.pptx
Q4-PPT-Music9_Lesson-1-Romantic-Opera.pptxQ4-PPT-Music9_Lesson-1-Romantic-Opera.pptx
Q4-PPT-Music9_Lesson-1-Romantic-Opera.pptx
 
prashanth updated resume 2024 for Teaching Profession
prashanth updated resume 2024 for Teaching Professionprashanth updated resume 2024 for Teaching Profession
prashanth updated resume 2024 for Teaching Profession
 

Students Speak Out - Alternative Schools

  • 1. WWW.CITIZENSLEAGUE.ORG WWW.STUDENTSSPEAKOUT.ORG MILWAUKEE.STUDENTSSPEAKOUT.ORG What’s alternative about Minnesota’s alternative-education programs? The schools? Or the students who attend them? Students speak out about their alternative education experience and how it could be better May 2008 Alternative-education programs serve an important function in Minnesota K-12 public education, offering flexible, individualized learning environments for 146,000 students. Students are eligible to attend when they are, as defined by Minnesota Statute 124D.68, “at risk” of educational failure. In its handbook for state-approved alternative programs, the Minnesota Department of Education states, “The original mission, as it is now, was to provide viable educational options for students who are Kari from RiverBend Area experiencing difficulty in the traditional system.” Learning Center (ALC) in Trouble is, requiring that students be “at risk” in order New Ulm, Minn. reports that to attend alternative education programs may place Area Learning Centers, one students in the position of having to first fail in type of alternative program, traditional schools. This contributes to widespread are socially known as perceptions that alternative programs are not “Assholes’ Last Chance”. “legitimate” educational options. In early 2008 on the Citizens League StudentsSpeakOut.org Web site, students reported that they avoided alternative programs because they believed them to be for “bad” or “stupid” kids. Already facing significant social and academic barriers, they wanted to avoid more problems. The negative stereotypes of the schools are anything but accurate, students report. Once they begin attending, they are relieved to find social and academic environments where on-time graduation seems to be a real possibility. Yet students indicate that perceived lack of legitimacy often delays entrance into the programs for a variety of reasons, and unnecessarily creates problems, including: • Students come to see themselves as failures. 1|Page
  • 2. Students get more off-track in their education than need be. • Conventional schools struggle with the behavioral and academic problems that result when students try unsuccessfully to make things work, frustrating their ability to serve well the students for whom conventional schools are a good fit. • Presumably, some students simply never find their way to alternative programs and instead drop out. Students Speak Out’s work with young leaders In January 2008, the Citizens League selected six leaders from alternative-education programs who decided to address the social stigma surrounding their schools. They abhorred the idea that people think of them as “stupid, bad kids” and wanted the public to understand the schools for what they really are: a valuable means to learning and graduation. The Citizens League pressed the students to find out if their observations were more widespread. In turn, the leaders gathered stories from 21 students in 10 schools and six additional individuals about their experiences in alternative programs. Based on those stories, students co-created a survey taken by 60 self-selecting students at a student leadership conference run by the Minnesota Association of Alternative Programs (MAAP) in April 2008. This report conveys their findings. Although the survey is small and the stories anecdotal, the students’ work should be taken credibly. First, their self-reports are consistent with findings from the academic literature.1 Second, they provide us an important glimpse into a world that education leaders must seek to understand. As Parker J. Palmer wrote in “A New Professional: The Aims of Education Revisited” in Change, the Carnegie Foundation’s publication, “We must start taking seriously the ‘intelligence’ in emotional intelligence. We must do more than affirm and harness the power of emotions to animate learning and leadership: We must help our students develop the skill of "mining" their emotions for knowledge. By and large, academic culture honors only two kinds of knowing—empirical observation and 1John Kovach and William Evans, “Empowering Youth and Alternative Education: Program Components and Evaluation Strategies,” Educational Enterprises, LLC. Paper presented at National Youth-At-Risk Conference in Savannah, Georgia. March 2006. http://www.educationalenterprises.org/LLC/EE_Savannah.pdf Melissa Storm and Richard Storm, “Evaluation of the Oklahoma Alternative Education Program,” Oklahoma Technical Assistance Program. Date N/A. http://gwired.gwu.edu/hamfish/merlin- cgi/p/downloadFile/d/16863/n/off/other/1/name/25Stormpdf/ Winnie Hu, “”Profile Rises at School Where Going Against the Grain is a Norm,” New York Times, November 12, 2007. http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/12/education/12village.html?pagewanted=print 2|Page
  • 3. logical reasoning. But science begins in the hunches, intuitions, and bodily knowing that lie behind testable According to the Minnesota hypotheses.” Department of Education, 146,000 students attended Alternative-Education Programs: A Minnesota alternative programs during Success Story the 2004-2005 school year, including roughly 19 percent Minnesota was an early adapter of alternative of the middle and high education programs, developing one of the first in school population.1 the nation in 1968, Wilson Open Campus School in Mankato. The sheer number of Minnesota students who opt for alternative programs at some point in their middle or high school careers gives testimony to the important needs these schools must fulfill. According to the Minnesota Department of Education, 146,000 students attended alternative programs during the 2004-2005 school year, including roughly 19 percent of the middle and high school population.2 In the Students Speak Out survey, almost 79 percent of the respondents said they were doing better academically at their alternative programs, and 62.5 percent said they were doing better socially. Seventy-three percent agreed or strongly agreed that they are learning more. One hundred percent of the students surveyed said the programs are helping them to attain their educational goals. Story after story, students said the schools weren’t academically easier and they consistently pointed out that students must meet Minnesota’s standards for graduation. Nicole, 31 years old, Shoreview ALC graduate: “It was tougher for me to go through mainstream high school. At Shoreview ALC, I was very successful. I could work at my own pace. I didn’t feel pressure. I could take my time; do my work. I could ask teachers questions privately. It wasn’t like a hard core classroom setting. Instead of failing the normal high school, I was actually getting A’s and B’s. I graduated from college. I am a marketing coordinator in the promotional products industry, which means we source products from all over the world for large, major corporations to promote their brand. I am also a part-time DJ on a local radio station and I do promotions for them as well. I am successful.” Molly, RiverBend ALC in New Ulm: “[Going to the ALC after trying to make things work in my traditional school] was the best decision I have ever made. Now I actually pass classes. People don’t realize that students have different types of learning and ‘alternative’ is a different way to learn and a great way to learn. At my old school I would fall behind because I didn’t understand the work or didn’t know how to do things. At times the teachers would go too fast and I would be totally lost. Now at the ALC if I don’t understand anything the teachers work with me and help me out by getting me caught up.” 2The MN Dept of Education reports that as of October 2006, 69,501 high school students (grades 9-12) and 7,502 middle school students (grades 6-8) received more than targeted services. In 2006-2007, there were 409,989 students total attending Minnesota Secondary Schools (grades 7-12). 3|Page
  • 4. Widespread negative stereotypes Despite their accomplishments, students attending alternative education programs face persistent and widespread stereotypes. When asked why they didn’t enroll in alternative programs sooner, 28 percent of the students surveyed indicated they thought the schools were for “bad kids” and “stupid kids”, or had other negative perceptions about the schools. Students describe their own perceptions and fears: Joe , Phoenix Learning Center in Buffalo: “I was thinking to myself that this is going to be a place where there will be fights everyday and hard-ass teachers…[but] right when I stepped in it was entirely different. All of the teachers treated me with respect and there were no students that I didn’t get along with.” David, Osseo ALC in Brooklyn Park: “I had doubts about going to an ALC. I never wanted to go. I didn’t think it was the place for me. But I really like it there. I thought it was for a bunch of…people that didn’t care about school anymore and they just went there because it was easier. It’s totally the opposite.” Students also worry that the success of alternative programs is dismissed. People assume that if “bad” or “stupid” kids who didn’t succeed in traditional schools are graduating from the schools, then the schools must be “easier”. Travis, Osseo ALC: “Since it’s ‘alternative’, they think that means we’re stupid. There’s a state law that says [all students must learn the same thing in high school.] It’s not like we can’t understand, it’s just how we learn. It’s given in ways we can understand. It actually sticks in your head. You’re not just reading, getting it done, and handing it in. You’re actually taking something with you. It’s not like it’s any easier. It’s just different.” Three unnecessary problems The persistent stereotypes of alternative education programs and the students who attend them create unnecessary problems. The first consequence is that students come to believe that they are the problem; that they are “alternative” from the norm because they Travis, Osseo ALC: “Since it’s don’t fit in. ‘alternative’, they think that means we’re stupid. There’s a Ashley, Spring Lake Park ALC: “No kid likes to be state law that says [all students told they are lower than someone else. That makes kids wanna live up to something. Make must learn the same thing in themselves seem better then the person who high school.] It’s not like we lowered them. And if you completely eliminate can’t understand, it’s just how that then there is no problem.” we learn. It’s given in ways we can understand. It actually Research suggests that “stereotype threat” may sticks in your head. You’re not be impacting learning. Joshua Aronson, just reading, getting it done, Associate Professor of Psychology at New York and handing it in. You’re University, writes about the impact of “stereotype actually taking something with you. It’s not like it’s any easier. It’s just different.” 4|Page
  • 5. threat” on students: “Numerous studies show how stereotype threat depresses the standardized test performance of black, Latino, and female college students. These same studies showed how changing the testing situation (even subtly) so as to reduce stereotype threat, can dramatically improve standardized test scores and motivation… We have found that we can do a lot to boost both achievement and the enjoyment of school by understanding and attending to these psychological processes.” Second, the students suggested that these stereotypes delayed their entrance into alternative programs, and blocked their path to educational success. About 83 percent of those surveyed said they would be better off now had they attended an alternative education program sooner. Abby, RiverBend ALC: “I have never had good grades. I have…attention deficit disorder. I was struggling my freshman year. I failed American history and physical science. During the summer I went to summer school for my history class, but I missed an opportunity to make up my science class. That wasn’t the first time I had been to summer school either. I had gone the summers after my seventh and eighth grade years along with my freshman year. When I was still at Sibley East, my old school, I was starting to go to an after school science class to make up my credits. But I also had gone to after school classes my seventh, eighth and ninth grade years. I was so sick of staying after school. But there were no other options ‘cause my old school didn’t put me in a new science class so I would have just kept falling back.” Brittany, Austin ALC: “I have been in ALC since seventh grade… Before that in like third to fifth grades I started not caring about school. I got what we were learning but I needed help on homework and my mom was always working or didn't help me because she was tired from working all day.” Brian, Osseo ALC: “When I was still in elementary school my parents never really did help me out with any of my school work and if they did help me out they would make a big deal out of nothing. They would just start yelling and calling me dumb. I never did any homework or any other work in class. There were a lot of deaths going on in my family at the time so I didn't really want to think that much about my education… So [after] 6th grade I started to smoke and drink and started doing things that I am not really proud of to this day…I started to hang out with gangs and started to do a lot of stuff that I really started liking to do to people. I [did] more hardcore drugs…for 2 years. I was in my ninth grade year now and still failing and getting into more fights. My school told me if I would get into one more fight then I would get kicked out of school. I didn't really like that idea. That’s when I started to realize that I needed to get my education… Without the ALC I don't think I would be graduating this year.” Finally, students’ most frequently-cited reason for delaying attendance (36 percent) was that they wanted to try and make things work in their traditional schools. They tried, unsuccessfully, to “do better” and freely admit the problems they were creating as a result: Joe, Phoenix Learning Center : “During my first high school years I was not doing so good, I was failing almost every class every quarter. I was skipping classes and playing video games in the library. I would skip whole days. I would get in fights (not physical) with my teachers. I would get in fights with other students. It was not going good. Then I talked to one of the assistant principals and he asked me how I was 5|Page
  • 6. getting along with the teachers and students at the high school and I told him that I only liked one teacher in the entire school and I only had a couple friends. He told me that this was the wrong place for me then and he recommended that I go to Phoenix Learning Center, so I said whatever and I went just because I wanted to get out of the high school.” Shane, Osseo ALC: ““The main [legally authorized] reason I went to an alternative school was ‘truancy’, but the real reason was that I made a big deal and left before I even got kicked out was because I HATED going to a regular high school.” Eric, RiverBend ALC: “I have been attending this school since third quarter of last year. Since I came here I’ve succeeded…I’ve changed. My past with school was not the greatest. In the [traditional] high school I didn’t get along with others. I had a hard time with teachers. I had no opportunities to work one-on-one with them which was a huge problem. I have ADHD which, I mean, I guess that’s just an excuse, some people might say, but here they actually understand that it is harder to pay attention; to get motivated. And here at the RiverBend ALC people understand that. And that’s what I like. A fourth potential problem: completion rates The students’ work focused on gathering information from students attending alternative education programs, so we can only speculate about the impact of alternative programs’ lack of legitimacy on completion rates. However, when the survey asked “Why didn’t you enroll sooner?” of students who reported they would be better off now had they enrolled earlier, 34 percent said they had not heard about the programs. Others reported they were not yet “at Eric, RiverBend ALC: “I’m just risk” enough to attend. another kid here. I don’t stand Seth, an 18 year old with a GED: “I was behind out as much.” 16 credits, and my counselors told me I wasn’t failing enough classes to attend an alternative school.” Eliminating stereotypes by focusing on reasons for success Students want to succeed; and the alternative education programs they attend help them succeed. Seth, an 18 year old with a The students’ stories support what the research has GED: “I was behind 16 found to be at the root of alternative education credits, and my counselors programs’ success: told me I wasn’t failing enough classes to attend A sense of belonging. This may be difficult for an alternative school.” some students to find in large schools fragmented by peer groups and organized in ways that teachers have difficulty getting to know individual students. 6|Page
  • 7. Relevant, engaging instruction. One ALC student declared, “It’s like life happens to us earlier [than it does for other people].” Students dealing with parenthood, serious illnesses, learning disabilities, uninvolved parents, death in the family, and/or supporting their families financially may have a greater demand for learning commensurate with their very adult-like experiences and lessons in the outside world. An organization and structure that support the first two factors. Students appreciate family-like atmospheres that are more emotionally supportive. Students describe a learning environment learning methods as well as flexible paces and schedules that accommodate their significant responsibilities and issues. When they began attending their alternative education programs, they were able to stop focusing on themselves as the problem. Instead, they focused on learning and graduating. Ashley, Spring Lake Park ALC: “There is a more of an ‘everyone knows everyone’ thing going around [at ALCs]. And I think the smaller environment is one big thing to that. Cause there are less students so everyone knows who it is if someone wants to start something. And most the kids in my learning alternative are probably there cause they don’t want to deal with so much people’s crap.” Kari, RiverBend ALC: “ALC schools have a message that no other schools can deliver to their students. ALC schools make you aware that you are welcome; that you can have trust in them, and that you’ll fit in among the other students. They don’t judge you even if you came from the streets. They give you the hope and encouragement to graduate and move on to better things in life.” Shane, Osseo ALC: “Some people don't even have time for the ‘traditional way’ of schooling. [In alternative education programs, students] come in on their time and get it done, because teachers and the school are nice enough TO TRY AND HELP YOU FINISH! THEY CARE.” Elizabeth, White Bear Lake ALC: “I chose to go there because I got pregnant [while attending] my other school and I thought that it would help me with my education. And the other school didn’t let me be there. I bring my baby to day care every morning (it’s at my school) and they take care of her. I get to take her out for lunch. And then I bring her back, and then they help me with my education.” *** The students’ experiences raise questions. As a state, are we really ready to say that nearly one in five high school students, and 146,000 Minnesota students overall, are “at risk of educational failure”? Based on its work with students attending alternative education programs the Citizens League suggests that one answer to avoiding these problems—and to improving school completion and student achievement in Minnesota—is a simple one with no price tag: integrate alternative education programs fully into Minnesota’s spectrum of educational options by eliminating both the “alternative” moniker and the eligibility criteria. As the key to the success of these schools is their small, community-like 7|Page
  • 8. environment that permits adaptive instruction, they might be renamed “Customized Learning Academies”. Related questions for consideration include: • Should alternative education programs be legally acknowledged as something students might want to attend to avoid getting “off track” socially and academically? • Does the “at-risk” eligibility requirement imply that something must be wrong with students in order for them to want to access something nontraditional? • Do the eligibility requirements and lack of awareness about the programs create a time delay, especially for those who are not aware of alternative education programs and other schooling options, between when students first know they’re struggling to succeed and when they are attending the schools they value as working well for them? • If the “at-risk” requirement remains in place, is it important to find ways for students and their families to learn about public schooling options available to them at an earlier time? • After an adult suggests that a student leave a conventional school, do any students quit school, sensing one type of school doesn’t want them and another type is for “bad kids”? • What do the negative stereotypes sensed by students in alternative education programs mean for Minnesota at a time when it is working to improve school completion and students’ adequate yearly progress under the federal No Child Left Behind Act? What might students achieve if the state were able to diminish stereotypes of their schooling environments? • Does lack of awareness about alternative education programs, or options for public schooling in general, contribute to the Minnesota’s overall school completion rate? If districts we able to refer students into alternative education programs earlier, would enrollment increase? Would quit-rates decline? 8|Page
  • 9. Learning by doing: SSO leaders discover active citizenship Students Speak Out is as much about students developing an understanding of their role as active citizens as it is about bringing new perspectives to a public problem. In addition to affirming their project findings, SSO leaders from alternative-education programs report: • Investigating a public problem helped them find common ground with other students. Understanding others’ experiences helped them to better define their environment, and made their own seem less harrowing. • Being an involved citizen is not only “fun”, but makes one feel “responsible and appreciated”. • Skills from SSO, like public speaking, setting and going for goals, and leadership, are good for the road. Ashley, who once said public speaking was not her forte, gave a speech for 150+ at her graduation. Shane says he’s more organized for himself, and his peers take heed of his insights. • Young people’s ideas have a place in determining the common good. Shane Saunders, Osseo Area Learning Center in Brooklyn Park “Through our Students Speak Out research, I learned that kids are serious about getting done with work and trying to finish school. At the Osseo ALC, most of the kids [I interact with] are mature and show a lot of respect. A lot of them have families to take care of and are busting their backs trying to get done and start their lives. I just learned that [at alternative-education programs] people understand more of who you are and respect you more. I also learned that [being an active] citizen is, for one, a lot of fun. I learned that being a part of an organization [the Citizens League Students Speak Out project] felt really good and everyone was cool and cooperated and helped each other out. It makes you feel really good about yourself and makes you feel responsible and I learned that [being an active] appreciated. Also, respected for most part. I really think I do have a voice to be heard. I just citizen is, for one, a lot of fun. It got chosen student of the month at school makes you feel really good about yesterday. I know pretty much every single person yourself and makes you feel at our school, and they all know me, and take responsible and appreciated. what I say to the head. They say I’m insightful. [For the Students Speak Out project] I was on time and exceeded the expectations... I feel more organized for myself.” Molly Dietz, RiverBend Area Learning Center in New Ulm “I talk to my classmates about [the issues] and I learned a lot about my peers. While doing this I have got[ten] closer to my peers. I learned some really want to make a difference and learn about StudentsSpeakOut.org and some don't. But I believe everyone loves the ALC. I learned a lot about how alternative schooling fits in with my life and I love coming to school every day. Without the ALC I didn't think I would make it. I do think I could make a difference. I think anyone can make a difference if they just try and put their mind to it.” 9|Page
  • 10. Ashley Iverson, Spring Lake Park Area Learning Center “I think Students Speak Out is a great program and I think it (we) did a very good job for getting the message out to kids who don't know about Learning Alternative schools. I have learned so much from meeting legislators who control more things than I ever thought. I learned a lot about myself, too. Hearing other peoples’ stories, I realized mine wasn't so bad. But I am also happy that I got the word out about ALCs and how they really do help students. The teachers in ALCs get to know you personally. You’re not just a student that’s in one or two Students Speak Out has helped classes. No, you’re a person they try to make a connection with and push you to try your hardest. I me open up and speak out. I want to go into teaching at an ALC. I have to say, never thought I would be able to that’s probably where students and teachers speak in front of all my teachers connect more. I know [becoming a teacher] takes a and about 150 more. lot of school, but [I’ve learned that], no matter what I want to achieve, I can. All I have to do is try my hardest, and I hope to do so. This year at our ALC graduation and award ceremony, I got up in front of my whole class and gave a speech—something I thought I would never do. But I am happy I did, ‘cause it was one of the best things. Before I did terrible in speeches, but this one I was really proud of, and thought I did really well. I have to say I strongly enjoyed Students Speak Out.” Joseph Otten, Phoenix Learning Center in Buffalo; then Blue Sky Online Charter “ After working on this project I have learned that people who want to attend alternative schools should not have to be ‘at risk’ to enroll and that anyone that wants to go to an alternative school should have the option to do so. Being an engaged citizen I believe that we should be able to do the things that we want to do and not have guide lines set for us to tell us whether or not we can or cannot do them.” 10 | P a g e
  • 11. About the authors Kim Farris-Berg, Project Coordinator for Citizens League StudentsSpeakOut.org, and Stacy Becker, Director of the th Citizens League Minnesota 150 Anniversary Project (MAP 150) prepared this brief. They were guided by the “Students Speak Out Goes Alternative” student leaders who selected the topic, encouraged their peers to tell their stories on the site, and gathered video testimony. They are Molly Dietz, Ashley Iverson, Joe Otten, Shane Saunders. Other student leaders who have influenced this project include: Ilandrea “Nuny” Nichols and Eric Torgusen. Access stories from alternative school students (both written and video testimony) on StudentsSpeakOut.org, where we have posted a complete summary of quotes from the students’ stories and complete summary of data from an online survey of students attending Minnesota’s alternative-education programs. We will also post a “supervideo”, prepared by Southwest High School Freshman Annie Wood, featuring the students’ video testimony. About StudentsSpeakOut.org th StudentsSpeakOut.org is an initiative of the Citizens League Minnesota 150 Anniversary Project (MAP 150). MAP 150’s purpose is to find ways of cultivating citizens’ ability to participate in designing public solutions by developing new spaces and roles that respect citizens’ experiences and ideas as relevant to the policy discussion. People affected by the problem should be included in defining it. StudentsSpeakOut.org is a social networking Web site that has been testing a variety of strategies for involving young people as active citizens by meeting them where they are (on the Web, using technology, and in both school-based and outside-of-school learning environments). The Web site was at first Minneapolis-focused, and has now expanded to all of Minnesota and Milwaukee, with potential for further expansion nationally. There are forum discussions where students and adults raise questions and discuss ideas for solutions. We’ve “turned the tables” and asked students to act as commentators on the education-related ideas of high-profile adults in Minnesota. Student leaders from Minneapolis and from Minnesota’s alternative-education programs have project coordinators who assist them in investigating topics of their choice on video and in written story, and who connect the students to decision-makers working in their scope of interest. The Web site was also the host of the “I Am Minnesota’s Future” Video Contest, a pilot-level contest providing a forum for students to articulate what adults and youth must do to ensure a better future in Minnesota. In Milwaukee, students learn how to use the site to address education matters they care about via workshops, and adults participate in workshops to learn how to support them. The workshop designs and recruiting strategies built on the successes of Minnesota’s site, and the strategies are succeeding (as evidenced by rapid growth of site participation—75 new participants in the first 3 weeks!). Useful Links • Students Speak Out – Minnesota: http://studentsspeakout.org • Students Speak Out – Milwaukee: http://milwaukee.studentsspeakout.org • MN Statute 124D.68: https://www.revisor.leg.state.mn.us/bin/getpub.php?type=s&num=124D.68 • Minnesota Department of Education. State Approved Alternative Program Handbook. (Roseville, MN: Minnesota Department of Education, updated February 2007), 6. http://education.state.mn.us/mde/index.html • Kim Farris-Berg and Jon Schroeder, “Alternative-Education Programs: The Quiet Giant in Minnesota Public Education,” (St. Paul, MN: Education|Evolving, June 2003), 7. http://www.educationevolving.org/studentvoices • Joshua Aronson . Professional Profile. Social Psychology Network. http://joshua.aronson.socialpsychology.org/ • Parker J. Palmer. “A New Professional: The Aims of Education Revisited.” Change. (Stanford, CA: Carnegie Foundation, November/December 2007). http://www.carnegiefoundation.org/change/sub.asp?key=98&subkey=245 11 | P a g e