The Colorado Association of Middle Level Education (CAMLE) is proud to honor five schools with distinguished designation of Colorado Trailblazer School to Watch. These schools include Brentwood Middle School in Greeley, Flagstaff Academy in Longmont, Preston Middle School in Fort Collins, Rocky Top Middle School in Thornton, and West Middle School in Colorado Springs.
These five schools will be part of the 100+ schools recognized at the National Schools to Watch Conference on June 28, 2019 in Washington, DC.
“These exceptional schools demonstrate that high-performance is the result of intentional focus on the whole child. Each has created a collaborative learning community where students thrive!” explained Diane Lauer, State Director of the Colorado Schools to Watch program. “These schools excel in providing active, engaging, and rigorous student learning for every student. They have built a powerful, high quality middle school program that are models for our state.”
Selection is based on a written application that requires schools to show how they met criteria developed by the Forum. State teams organized by the Colorado Schools to Watch (www.coloradoschoolstowatch.com) program conduct site visits in order to affirm that they have indeed met the rigorous requirements of the award. These teams observe classrooms, interview administrators, teachers, and parents, review achievement data, suspension rates, instructional quality, and student work. Schools are recognized for a three-year period, and at the end of three years must repeat the process in order to be re-designated.
“These Schools to Watch are indeed special; they make education so exciting that students and teachers don’t want to miss a day. They have proven that it is possible to achieve a high degree of educational excellence, and any middle-level school can truly learn from their example,” said Ericka Uskali, Forum executive director. “We are pleased that our Schools to Watch program have shown that schools can meet high academic expectations while preserving a commitment to healthy development and equity for all students,” Uskali said.
Launched in 1999, Schools to Watch began as a national program to identify middle-grades schools across the country that were meeting or exceeding 37 criteria developed by the Forum. The Forum developed a web site (www.middlegradesforum.org) that features online tours of schools, as well as detailed information about the selection criteria used in the recognition program. Nineteen states are currently involved in the program and the addition of these schools raises the total number of Schools to Watch to over 400 nationwide.
The National Forum sponsors the Schools to Watch state program with the support of members, the National Association for Elementary School Principals, the National Association of Secondary School Principals, the Association of Middle Level Education, Learning Forward, and the State Schools to Watch programs.
The National Forum to Accelerate Middle-Grades Reform is an alliance of 65 educators, researchers, national associations, and officers of professional organizations and foundations dedicated to improving education in the middle grades. (www.middlegradesforum.org)
Congratulations, Diane, for your work with these STW schools.
Bruce
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