USD
alumni are helping charter school students thrive under a new educational
paradigm.
High
school. The mere thought of it induces shudders. Long hallways with crammed
lockers and mass crowding; alarm bells that summon students from room
to room like Skinnerian rats in a maze; rows of desks where pupils, immobilized,
write notes and take tests.
Maybe your high school was even worse. Perhaps your memories — or
those of someone you know — are of armed guards, metal detectors,
fights, chaos. Who among us wants to go back? And yet, despite the near-universal
angst of such memories, many still believe that to educate adolescents,
high schools must resemble work camps in which students endure standardized
examinations, classroom isolation from their peers and a one-size-fits-all
learning model of droning lectures and rote homework.

The idea that high school doesn’t have to be a negative experience
is the concept behind San Diego’s High Tech High, a revolutionary
and visionary charter high school that opened in 2000. All 154 students
from the school’s first two senior classes have been accepted by
— or now attend — college, a 100 percent success rate. According
to High Tech High’s Web site, the students comprise the most ethnically
diverse student body in the region and consistently rank among the best
and brightest in California on state-mandated tests. The school, which
was created by a coalition of education practitioners and business leaders,
was profiled last year in Forbes magazine as a model charter school.
In five short years, the school has expanded to include grades 6-12 and
doubled its enrollment to more than 1000. Inside High Tech High’s
three large buildings, located on the grounds of the former Naval Training
Center in the Point Loma area of San Diego, are big-windowed project rooms
that resemble business spaces at a design firm or advertising agency.
A ceiling enhanced by skylights and exposed steel girders evokes a church-like
loft. Although no bell rings, at 8:40 a.m. morning chatter gives way to
purposeful quiet: some kids are in class, forming groups to develop Web
sites or PowerPoint presentations; others are outside the project rooms
with laptops, huddling with peers, making neat messes. The atmosphere
may look unstructured, but the engagement of the students is evident in
their focused concentration.
Students working quietly, productively and independently? How is this
version of high school possible? Some of it has to do with the innovative
curriculum, which strongly emphasizes personalization of each student’s
instruction, internships that connect students to the real world, and
the school’s intellectual mission — students work together
on projects in which they solve problems and present their work to their
fellow students and adults.
But a lot of it has to do with High Tech High’s dedicated teachers
and professionals, more than 10 percent of whom are USD graduates. They
believe in, and live, High Tech High’s mission to provide students
with an innovative liberal arts and technology-based education and to
graduate students who will be thoughtful, engaged citizens in their communities.
As they teach their students, these USD alumni are raising the expectations
for education in America.
The High Tech High Way
Song
and Dance, with a Twist
Brett Peterson ’02 (M.A.) is an 11th-grade humanities instructor
at High Tech High. He embraces the range of learning abilities among his
students, from the gifted to the struggling and everyone in between. It’s
the opposite of the traditional Advanced Placement educational system,
he says, which rewards gifted students but segregates under-performers.
“What pulled me in to teach here was the autonomy of the students
and the autonomy granted to the teachers,” says Peterson. “At
other schools, teachers wield the gigantic textbook, rush through it to
hit every point, and hope to God the kids will do well on the state tests.
Here, stronger learners help those who are not as strong. You see their
passion for the subject grow simultaneously.”
Like his colleagues, Peterson teaches two two-and-a-half-hour classes,
morning and afternoon, 80 students total. That’s less than half
the load of the typical high school teacher. Fewer students allow faculty
to work on the school’s core principle of “personalization,”
best reflected in the advisory program, in which each teacher advises
15 students.
“For the time the students are at High Tech High,” Peterson
says, “the advisor is the one constant here, the student’s
primary advocate.”
Peterson and the other advisors begin the school year with a home visit.
“I’ll go to these palatial residences in La Jolla, where the
maid opens the door and escorts me to the dining room, and I sit down
with the parents who make cell phone calls during the meeting,”
he says. “That same day, I’ll go to Barrio Logan, a bit nervous,
[finding the apartment] through a chain-link fence, and the student is
translating everything for the mother. The disparity is profound.”
The point, Peterson says, is that teachers know the income and the participation
levels of the parents; with that knowledge they can individualize each
student’s needs, from computer training to college applications.
“My biggest challenge is not discipline, but rather designing project-based
assignments that aren’t trite,” says the popular teacher.
One example is the evolution of his unit on Manifest Destiny. In his first
year, he lectured and the students read.
“It was so traditional. I wasn’t really getting to them, and
I was struggling,” Peterson says. “A colleague said, ‘Why
don’t you have them sing a song about Manifest Destiny?’ So
the next year, in addition to some lecture and some readings, they had
to write a song, and they performed it in front of the junior class. Some
kids were musically talented, other kids were dancers. This year, I’ve
turned it into a several-weeks-long process, with guest speakers, primary
research and, again, they write and sing a song.”
The current class’ production will be publicly performed at a local
coffeehouse, professionally lighted and videotaped. “Eventually,
none of them will remember my lecture on Manifest Destiny,” laughs
Peterson. “But they will recall from photos and memories the event
itself, which they’ll tie to the learning and the material.”
No trace of fatigue wearies the spirit of the 26-year-old, even though,
as Peterson describes it, his out-of-class duties — hiring fairs,
coffeehouse projects, weekend review sessions for the infrequent exams
— can be endless. But, he says, “I wouldn’t have it
any other way. Teaching is a sacrifice no matter where you are.”
The High Tech High Way
Overachievers
‘R’ Us
High Tech High is a school to its students, but to the people behind the
scenes it’s partly a business, too. One of the hubs of this well-oiled
machine is Rebecca Haddock ’93 (M.Ed.), the school’s regional
director of communications and outreach. She bubbles with energy as she
walks through the halls, checking in with students about their latest
projects and talking about what brought her to High Tech High.
Haddock met Larry Rosenstock, the creative force behind High Tech High
and the school’s CEO/principal, when she worked at Price Charities.
Rosenstock, a former teacher who worked for the U.S. Department of Education
before becoming the president of Price Charities, told Haddock about his
vision to build High Tech High as an innovative, individualized, technologically
driven learning environment. When the school was seeded with money from
business executive and philanthropist Gary Jacobs, Haddock was ready to
come on board.
Haddock’s main function is fund-raising. She promotes High Tech
High to law firms, universities and industry, creating partnerships and
sponsorships. She recalls that her first big donation came from Manpower
of San Diego, which bought the naming rights to High Tech High’s
internship program: $10,000 a year over five years.
“I’m always looking for more donors, people in technology
who want to create a pipeline from the school into industry for motivated
students, or who want to sponsor our science program,” Haddock says.
Tuition-free High Tech High gets some funding from the state, but it’s
never enough. To survive, Haddock and the staff must raise additional
money every year to cover the mortgage, buy computers and pay teachers
comparably well. This year, three new buildings and 36 new teachers will
be added.
“We’re expanding like mad,” says Haddock, explaining
that because students face a district-mandated lottery by ZIP code to
get in, only one out of five make it. “There’s story after
story. Kids will tell you that without High Tech High they wouldn’t
know where they would be, or they wouldn’t have gotten into college.”
In fact, the expectation is that every kid who attends High Tech High
will go to college. Chris White ’95 (M.A. ’01), High Tech
High’s director of college advising, was attracted to the school
after hearing the late-’90s buzz about the school’s launch.
Like his colleagues, he joined up with a purpose.
“I wanted to put this school on the college admissions map,”
says White, who began by forging relationships with local colleges and
big-name universities. His efforts paid off: 85 percent of graduates are
at four-year schools, among them MIT, Stanford, all nine University of
California campuses, and USD.
“Two advantages of High Tech High are the college-bound culture
and our small size,” White says. “I can know the interests,
goals, background and GPA of every senior, all 80 of them.”
White helps each student apply to three colleges, but a big part of his
job is to assist students — many of whom will be first in their
families to attend college — with adapting to the culture of big
schools like San Diego State, where large classes are the norm, individual
attention is rare and lines of students waiting for a counselor predominate.
White’s gregariousness comes alive during his regular college prep
talks to 7th and 8th-graders. He kicks off one by asking, “Who’s
to say how much money you make is the measure of happiness?” then
pauses for an ironic smile. “But, for the moment, let’s say
there’s something to it.” As he continues — asking a
name, listening actively, praising good responses — White points
out the financial gap between those with a high school degree, who earn
an average of $21,600 per year, and those with a college degree, who earn
around $50,000.
“Can you buy a nice car if you only graduate from high school?”
he asks. Their eyes already on the prize, nearly every head shakes no.
The High Tech High Way
Students or Teachers: Who’s More Revved Up?
On a recent day at High Tech High, a lanky, dark-haired 14-year-old named
Nick was in an open area outside his 9th-grade humanities room, working
with a laptop and a slide projector. This week, the “World Religions”
component of the class has the students making an altar to express their
spirituality. Nick wants to be an architect; he hoped to one day design
skyscrapers like the twin towers of the World Trade Center. With the towers
fallen, he will instead pay homage to their loft and geometric rigor by
erecting a large wall-size poster. As he draws, other students stop by.
“Cool,” they say. A reporter marvels at Nick’s self-direction,
but he takes it in stride. “Obviously, our teachers have a lot of
trust in us to do our work,” he says.
The altars project was developed by Ian Eggleston ’98 (M.A.) and
a colleague, who set out to get kids interested in world religions while
fulfilling the objectives of their humanities class. The altars project
includes a written testament and an oral presentation; in addition, students
will visit a Buddhist temple, a Jewish synagogue and the Self-Realization
Fellowship temple in nearby Encinitas, Calif.
Calm and gracious, Eggleston hails from Nottingham, England. He did his
undergraduate work at the University of Evansville, Indiana, and, impressed
by USD’s counseling program graduates, came to San Diego —
sight unseen — to study college services.
He returned to England for a three-year stint as a dean of students at
a small college, but a subsequent “two long years in corporate America”
convinced him to call Haddock, who arranged a tour of High Tech High.
“Once she showed me around, I knew I had to teach here,” he
recalls. “I was supremely thankful to get a position.”
Eggleston began teaching in August 2004 at High Tech High’s new
sister school, High Tech High International, where faculty internationalize
the curriculum for their 188 students. In just one semester he’s
found a lot to appreciate: the freedom he receives to design curriculum;
the effort of his students; the reward of seeing how group learning drives
their creative and critical thinking; even the many afternoon hours of
coaching soccer on the school’s too-small, lumpy field.
“High Tech High has been exactly as I expected,” he says.
“I understood from the beginning how hard everyone worked, but I
can’t think of any other place I’d rather spend 60 or 70 hours
a week. It’s an absolute privilege to be here.”
Eggleston’s sentiments are echoed by Janel Holcomb, a credentialed
10th-grade math/science teacher who’s finishing her master’s
in education at USD with a focus on curriculum design. Two years ago,
she volunteered at High Tech High and got excited by its project-based
learning approach. Later, as a student-teacher at Mar Vista High School,
she found packed classes and scant technology resources.
“I tried out everything I could in the non-traditional lecture,
but a lot of it didn’t work,” she recalls. Before long, she
decided to take a job at High Tech High.
Now, to begin a new semester, Holcomb, a vibrant young woman with long
flowing hair, puts her kids in groups. They learn science by designing
homes that use renewable resources, and they learn math by applying principles
of geometry to the home’s energy consumption. Each house must have
a blueprint, exterior elevation drawings and a scale model. Holcomb also
includes economics by having the students budget their expenses via spreadsheets.
Does Holcomb ever witness adolescent girls getting turned off to science
at High Tech High? Rarely, she says. Parents often tell her that their
daughters had never been excited about science before having Holcomb in
the classroom. “The girls get revved up by having a woman as a math
and science teacher,” she explains.Holcomb, a graduate of Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute with a degree in chemical engineering, knows there
are bigger paychecks elsewhere. She has friends who were hired right out
of college at near-six-figure salaries. But money’s not really the
point of teaching at High Tech High, she says. Like most teachers, especially
first-time teachers, she expects to work hard and long. “I’m
usually here at 7 a.m. and don’t leave until after 5,” she
says. “It’s hard, but I love it.”
The
High Tech High Way
Kids
Like School Here
In 2002, High Tech Middle opened next door to High Tech High. The middle
school, with 393 6th-to-8th-grade students, also is geared toward project-based
learning. Before applying as a middle-school instructor, 8th-grade humanities
teacher Melissa Vincent ’03 (M.A.) did her student-teaching at High
Tech High. At USD, she says, “My professors distinguished between
visual and hands-on learners. But you can’t understand what’s
involved in teaching and all the diverse abilities in the classroom until
you start working here.”
Vincent, whose young face belies an intellectual nature, is focusing her
American History lessons on the revolutionary period. Different student
groups research and present from a variety of perspectives: Native Americans,
women, the writers of the Declaration of Independ-ence and the Fugitive
Slave Act, attendees at the Constitutional Convention. “It’s
a lot less me talking,” she says, “and a lot more of them
talking.”
How is Vincent convinced that the school’s learning models work?
“Kids like school here. They line up after lunch, waiting to get
back into the building. I don’t know how that happens, but they
say, ‘We need to get back in, it’s 12:30.’ Kids stay
after school; they like their teachers. They beg me to read. How many
schools are there where they’re begging to read?”
Last year, Vincent created lessons on Cesar Chavez and on migrant workers.
After a bake sale and the purchase of food to distribute to those in need,
her class visited an orphanage in Tijuana. Buoyed by the opportunities
for such on-site learning, Vincent intends to author a new curriculum
that will partner with a nonprofit organization and focus on social issues
in the community. But she still dreams of substantive reforms.
“I want to free kids from huge public schools, from having to take
those standardized tests,” she says. “With ‘No Child
Left Behind,’ testing has overtaken everything. It’s very
political; I’m very interested in how education is influenced by
federal policy.”
The teachers certainly believe in the school, but the measure of a school’s
success really shows through the willingness of its alumni to bear its
torch. Though just 19, Rory Ball, who graduated in 2003, is already promoting
High Tech High. Now a USD sophomore majoring in communications, the soft-voiced
Ball calls himself “a High Tech advertiser.” He often gives
tours of the school to families, new students, businesspeople, whoever.
“I like the school,” he says. “I support it in any way
I can.”
As a 10th-grader at Point Loma High School, Ball wanted out.
“It was really boring, the same thing every day,” he says.
“Always busy work, fill out these assignments. There was an anti-learning
feel to it. I wasn’t doing anything substantial.”
Once he got in to High Tech High, Ball says there wasn’t a day that
he woke up and didn’t want to go to class. The projects inspired
him, especially when they came from real-world experts — like the
Boeing engineer who taught his physics class and had the kids design their
own catapult. From design to torque and velocity calculations, from power-tool
assemblage to launch, from detailed record-keeping to a school-wide presentation,
Ball remembers the experience fondly. “It was like real-world work,”
he says.
When it came time to apply to colleges, however, Ball was concerned that
his unorthodox experience at High Tech High might work against him. Those
worries weren’t warranted. USD not only accepted him, but allowed
his education to continue on the same kind of path that kept him so engaged
in high school. Small classes, opportunities to know his professors, a
liberal arts and technological focus, all remind him of what he most treasures
from his alma mater.
Think about that — he treasures his memories of high school.
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