National Network of Partnership Schools

Johns Hopkins university

 

partnership award winners – 2004

WEBSITE SUMMARIES

www.partnershipschools.org

 

2004 Partnership DISTRICT AWARD

with Special REcognition

 

LOCAL District B (Now, Local District 2) Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD), CA

Charlotte Castagnola, Facilitator; Sue Shannon, Local Superintendent

Row: Beatriz Gutierrez, Charlotte, Castagnola (NNPS Key Contact), and Ana Aranda. Row 2: Monica Carazo, Susana Martinez, Sue Shannon (Superintendent), Marianela Sardelich, Marvin Silver, and Laura Gonzalez.

 

Local District B (now, Local District 2) in LAUSD serves students and families with diverse cultural and linguistic backgrounds.  The district is a five-year NNPS Partnership District Award winner.  With the support of the Local Superintendent, the leaders for partnerships have continually improved their program by “scaling up” the number of schools that organize comprehensive partnership programs and by improving the quality of activities to involve more families in increasing student success.

 

This district has a well-organized approach to help schools improve their partnership programs.  Parent Community Facilitators assist sets of schools.  They guide Action Teams for Partnerships with their plans, activities, and end-of-year evaluations, and conduct monthly meetings with groups of team co-chairs to share ideas, learn new strategies, and discuss challenges.  Parent Center Directors conduct workshops for parents on literacy, math, technology, values education, and preparing kindergarten children for school.  The district leaders for family involvement communicate with a monthly newsletter, link with Title I and Bilingual Program Coordinators, and meet with Facilitators, Action Team co-chairs, and principals to guide progress and to resolve challenges.

 

Local District Superintendent, Sue Shannon, noted: “The structure . . . to support partnership efforts is ideal for accomplishing my overriding goal of developing programs for parents that are parallel to our efforts for students, teachers, and administrators.  Over the past four years our schools have made significant gains in the California Academic Performance Index scores, which measure achievement in reading and math.  It is not coincidental that in the same four years, the district has focused parental involvement on literacy and mathematics.”  The district is working to improve standards-based math programs in all classrooms.  The leaders for partnerships developed information for parents on Family Math, state math standards, and how to use computers, technology, and the Internet at home to support children on the new approaches to math.

 

In 2004, the district conducted Parent Center Walks to evaluate family involvement programs at each school.  The daylong observations and conversations with the principal, assistant principal, action team cochairs, team members, teachers, staff, and parents enabled the leaders for partnerships to assess the strength of teamwork, quality of partnership activities, and outreach to parents with information about the school’s instructional program and how to be involved in their children’s education.  Twenty-five to forty people were interviewed at each school.  The results indicated that the most striking difference between strong and weak programs was the quality of work of the Action Team for Partnerships, ranging from very high at Arminta Elementary (an NNPS Partnership School Award winner in 2003) to low in some schools that were avoiding action.  The intensive evaluation resulted in plans to improve teamwork in 2004-05.

 

Next year, the leaders aim to continue strengthening family and community involvement in math, science, writing, and with English language learners so that more parents can support students in reaching school goals.  As a result of LAUSD’s reorganization, the district now includes more schools.  The leaders of Local District 2 plan to work with Families in Schools (see 2004 Partnership Organization Awards) and NNPS to assist more schools on partnerships.

 

 

ABOUT NNPS: What Local District B’s Leaders Say to Other Districts . . .

 

We were fortunate to have discovered NNPS at the very beginning of our journey (in 1997) and it has guided our work ever since.  I know that every time I either “lose heart” or think “we have it made,” I am prodded gently by NNPS, and we are off and running again to further improve our programs.  This year I was contacted by several school districts about our work and my #1 piece of advice is: join the Network.  The work is too overwhelming to do alone and it is not necessary to try to do so – there are some wonderful, experienced professionals just a phone call or e-mail away!

 

 

Also see Local District B’s history of Partnership District Awards from 2000 to 2003 and examples of Promising Partnership Programs on the website, www.partnershipschools.org, in the section In the Spotlight.  Also, visit www.lausd.k12.ca.us and click on Local District 2 and Parents.