DCHS named "High Schools That Work" Pacesetter Award for 2010-2012
The Southern Regional
Education Board is recognizing 62 high schools and
technology centers in 21 states, including Kentucky, with
national awards for outstanding achievement in school
improvement and preparing more students for success in high
school, college, careers and citizenship, and Corbin High
School has been selected as one of the top schools among
those to be awarded.
SREB President Dave Spence presented the awards on July
14 in Louisville, Kentucky, during the 24th annual High
Schools That Work Staff Development Conference, an event
that brings together thousands of educators to focus on
boosting student performance in the nation's public schools.
"These 62 schools have shown the great progress that can be
made when schools deeply implement the High Schools That
Work and Technology Centers That Work designs for
strengthening curriculum and instruction," said Gene
Bottoms, SREB senior vice president and founder of the High
Schools That Work (HSTW) and Technology Centers That Work (TCTW)
school improvement programs. "These schools illustrate the
spirit of change that SREB advocates and supports."
The schools will receive one of five national SREB awards,
based on performance on the 2010 HSTW Assessment and state
data.
Thirty schools will be designated as HSTW Pacesetter
Schools, an honor given to schools that exemplify the
progress schools can make when leaders truly embrace change
and support improvement efforts. These schools are model
HSTW sites that deeply implement the HSTW design, teach
students a rigorous curriculum linked to a program of study,
and have high achievement.
The HSTW Gold Achievement Award will be given to 11 schools
in which at least 50 percent of students earned the HSTW
Award of Educational Achievement based on their performance
on the 2010 HSTW Assessment. To earn this award, students
met all three readiness goals on the assessment, completed
the HSTW-recommended curriculum in at least two subjects and
completed a concentration in the humanities,
mathematics/science or a career/technical area.
Twelve schools will receive the HSTW Gold Improvement Award
for improving mean scores on the HSTW Assessment reading,
mathematics and science tests by at least 10 points from
2008 to 2010.
Four shared-time technology centers will receive the TCTW
Gold Readiness Award for their progress in improving
students' readiness for college and careers. To earn this
recognition, technology centers had to have at least 85
percent of their students meet at least one readiness goal
on the 2010 HSTW Assessment. Additionally, centers had 85
percent or more of students complete the HSTW-recommended
curriculum in at least one subject and had 45 percent or
more of students indicate they experienced an intensive
emphasis on quality career/technical studies.
The TCTW Gold Improvement Award will be given to five TCTW
sites that increased their mean scores on the HSTW
Assessment reading, mathematics and science tests by at
least 10 points from 2008 to 2010.
SREB's single largest program, HSTW is a national,
comprehensive school improvement design based on the premise
that most students can master rigorous academic and
career/technical studies if school leaders and teachers
create a school environment that motivates all students to
make the effort to succeed. More than 1,100 high schools in
30 states and the District of Columbia participate in the
HSTW school improvement initiative.
Founded in 2007, TCTW is based on the HSTW model, with
modifications to address the specific needs of shared-time
centers. More than 125 technology centers in 12 states
participate in the TCTW school improvement initiative.
For more information on SREB's school improvement efforts
and the HSTW Staff Development Conference, contact SREB
Communications.
SCHOOLS RECEIVING AWARDS:
HSTW Pacesetter Schools, 2010-2012
Siloam Springs High School, Siloam Springs, Arkansas
POLYTECH High School, Woodside, Delaware
Sussex Technical High School, Georgetown, Delaware
Dekalb School of the Arts, Avondale Estates, Georgia
Savannah Arts Academy, Savannah, Georgia
Twin Falls High School, Twin Falls, Idaho
Hagerstown High School, Hagerstown, Indiana
Corbin High School, Corbin, Kentucky
Daviess County High School, Owensboro, Kentucky
Graves County High School, Mayfield, Kentucky
Blackstone Valley Regional Vocational Technical High School,
Upton, Massachusetts
Montachusett Regional Vocational Technical School,
Fitchburg, Massachusetts
Joppatowne High School, Joppa, Maryland
Saginaw Arts and Sciences Academy, Saginaw, Michigan
Hicksville High School, Hicksville, Ohio
Little Miami High School, Morrow, Ohio
Monroeville High School, Monroeville, Ohio
Norwalk High School, Norwalk, Ohio
Scarlet Oaks Career Development Campus, Cincinnati, Ohio
Vermilion High School, Vermilion, Ohio
Warren County Career Center, Lebanon, Ohio
Columbia-Montour Area Vocational Technical School,
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania
Elk Lake High School, Dimock, Pennsylvania
Academy for the Arts, Science, and Technology, Myrtle Beach,
South Carolina
Blackman High School, Murfreesboro, Tennessee
Campbell County High School, Jacksboro, Tennessee
Los Fresnos High School, Los Fresnos, Texas
The Health Professions Academy at Bel Air High School, El
Paso, Texas
Powhatan High School, Powhatan, Virginia
Parkersburg High School, Parkersburg,West Virginia HSTW Gold
Achievement Award
Jackson County Comprehensive High School, Jefferson, Georgia
South Laurel High School, London, Kentucky
Tri-County Regional Vocational Technical High School,
Franklin, Massachusetts
Central R-III High School, Park Hills, Missouri
Granville High School, Granville, Ohio
Springboro High School, Springboro, Ohio
Sylvania Southview High School, Sylvania, Ohio
Talawanda High School, Oxford, Ohio
Xenia High School, Xenia, Ohio
Choctaw High School, Choctaw, Oklahoma
East Fairmont High School, Fairmont, West Virginia
HSTW Gold Improvement Award
Mountain Pine High School, Mountain Pine, Arkansas
Coosa High School, Rome, Georgia
Stone Mountain High School, Stone Mountain, Georgia
Prophetstown High School, Prophetstown, Illinois
New Prairie High School, New Carlisle, Indiana
Oswego County Boces BRTCC, Mexico, New York
Greene County Career Center, Xenia, Ohio
Broken Bow High School, Broken Bow, Oklahoma
Haltom High School, Haltom City, Texas
Mabank High School, Mabank, Texas
The Math, Science & Engineering Academy at Bel Air High
School, El Paso, Texas
Fairmont Senior High School, Fairmont, West Virginia
TCTW Gold Improvement Award
Central Nine Career Center, Greenwood, Indiana
Arcadia Valley Career Technology Center, Ironton, Missouri
Hunterdon County Polytech, Flemington, New Jersey
Wes Watkins Technology Center, Wetumka, Oklahoma
Lancaster County Career and Technology Center, Willow
Street, Pennsylvania
TCTW Gold Readiness Award
· National Park Technology Center, Hot Springs, Arkansas
· Summit Technology Academy, Lee's Summit, Missouri
· Anderson Districts I & II Career and Technology Center,
Williamston, South Carolina
· Fred P. Hamilton Career Center, Seneca, South Carolina
SREB, a nonprofit and nonpartisan organization based in Atlanta, Georgia, advises state education leaders on ways to improve education. SREB was created in 1948 by Southern governors and legislatures to help leaders in education and government work cooperatively to advance education and improve the social and economic life of the region. SREB has 16 member states: Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and West Virginia. Each is represented by its governor and four gubernatorial appointees. For more information, visit www.sreb.org.