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What Makes Barron Park a Great School?
Barron Park promotes caring relationships between and among children,
families, and staff members
We nurture empathic and respectful interactions between community members
of all ages and backgrounds. Staff members like and respect each other,
and consistently model that for the children. Students, parents, and
staff members alike see these relationships as a critical foundation
for building a caring community of learners.
In a June 2005 survey, parents
wrote, “BP teachers are dedicated
and caring!” “The teachers and support staff are amazing.” “My
son’s teacher has been outstanding in helping him mature in his
social skills.” In fifth grade Exit interviews, a consistent student
comment was “The teachers really care, and the aides and yard duties
do, too.” And in a school-wide student survey in May 2005, 98%
of students agreed that they “like” or “love” going
to our school (62% say they “love it”).
Barron Park provides
a stimulating and engaging learning environment
Teachers have high expectations of their students, themselves, and each
other. Every member of the community is a learner, seeking continuous
improvement. Within classrooms teachers differentiate instruction to
challenge and support all children. We use multi-level assignments, open-ended
projects, individualized materials, “menus” of activities,
and small group work (such as leveled reading groups) to teach the PAUSD
curriculum in a variety of ways within the same classroom.
On the June
2005 survey, 93% of parents responding were satisfied or very satisfied
with their children’s academic experiences in reading
and writing; 95% were satisfied or very satisfied in mathematics. 95%
agreed or strongly agreed that “My child is engaged and challenged
in learning at school.” On their survey, 97% of students said they
like learning new things in school some or all of the time. In fifth
grade Exit Interviews, students noted, “Teachers won’t let
us do the least amount.” “Our teacher picks something that
is just out of our reach and says, ‘You can do it.’”
School-wide
culture of respect
As adults, we teach and model the acceptance and celebration of the many
ways we are different from each other, including but not limited to race,
ethnicity, language, religion, age, gender, economic class, sexual orientation,
abilities, and physical characteristics. For example, different abilities
and learning styles are acknowledged and each person’s contribution
is valued. One parent wrote “It seems like just about everyone
at Barron Park has embraced the children in room 4. It’s a wonderful
thing for the Special Day Class students.” (June 2005)
We focus
on being a community through learning about and valuing the cultures
of our families and staff. We celebrate and enjoy our richly
diverse community! On the May 2005 schoolwide survey, students were asked, “Do
you feel that people at school accept people who are different from them?
(such as color of skin, language spoken, physical abilities, likes and
dislikes)?” 59% of the students responded “Yes, almost everyone,” and
an additional 35% responded that “Some people are, and some people
are not.” Whatever groups a child may belong to, we seek to nurture
the development of awareness and self-confidence and the ability to interact
in positive ways with people from diverse backgrounds.
Shared responsibility
and opportunities for each community member to make a difference
Teachers collaborate on curriculum and instruction, and work together
to ensure the success of all students, not just the ones in their own
classes. Students of all ages help “buddies” in younger classes
and younger students in multi-age constellation groups. Each child votes
for student body officers, and each class elects representatives to Student
Council. Upper grade students help as peer tutors, library helpers, and
lunch servers. All children are taught conflict resolution skills (“Talk
It Out”) so they can begin to learn to resolve disagreements on
their own. In the fifth grade Exit Interviews, the students came up with
many examples of specific ways they have been able to make a difference
at Barron Park, from reading to kindergarten students in the morning
to helping in the room 15 Special Day Class to helping develop new school-wide
playground rules. One student added, “And we’re giving advice,
like now [in the interviews].”
Parents make a difference in classrooms,
across the school, and through leadership in PTA and on the School Site
Council. One parent wrote, “It’s
great helping the teacher in the classroom. I feel it helps my child
and the other children and especially the teacher.” (June 2005)
Parents and staff members work as partners to develop our “School
Improvement Plan” each year and to figure out how best to implement
it.
In each of these areas, we share a common vision and strive to model
and implement that vision throughout our school community.
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