Huntersville parents had been pushing Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools for a special program at Hopewell High, and now they'll have it.
CMS said this week that they're implementing a Cambridge International program at Hopewell and its feeder schools. Essentially, it's an advanced course of study and rigorous set of standards developed at the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom. The program is viewed similarly to International Baccalaureate and Advanced Placement coursework.
You often hear about programs like this at magnet schools, but CMS is not changing the boundaries for Hopewell High or the feeder schools.
Akeshia Craven-Howell, the CMS assistant superintendent of the Office of School Options, Innovation and Design, said the idea to implement the program at Hopewell all came from the parents. She said it represents one of the most significant investments the district has made in a neighborhood school.
It's also likely a reaction to the growing charter school movement. Mecklenburg County has seen a bigger flurry of charter activity than anywhere else in North Carolina, and the northern end of the county has several popular ones.
"We want parents to know that inside CMS, parents have choices," Craven-Howell said.
The program is not quite a done deal. CMS must still get final approval.
Three other high schools -- West Charlotte, West Mecklenburg and Garinger -- are getting new programs focused on career education. Called "Pathways to Prosperity," the goal is to let students complete high school with industry certifications or credit that can transfer in to Central Piedmont Community College or schools like Johnson C. Smith University.
At West Charlotte, for example, the plan is to create an "academy of information technology" in partnership with JCSU. Students could emerge with valuable credentials like those offered by Cisco, Craven-Howell said.
CMS also wants to build out programs in areas like agriculture, energy, aerospace and supply chain management. They'll ultimately expand beyond the three schools.
Saturday, October 18, 2014
Four high schools getting specialized programs
Monday, July 8, 2013
Do grads pay off for principals?
Superintendent Heath Morrison says he expects "an uptick" in Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools' graduation rate for 2013, though official numbers aren't out yet. (It was 76.4 percent in 2012; check details for districts and schools here.)
Comments on this blog have raised the question of whether principals collect bonuses if their graduation rates rise. The answer: Only at West Mecklenburg and West Charlotte High, as part of school improvement grants. Bonuses based on 2013 graduation rates will be paid in September, according to spokeswoman Tahira Stalberte.
The CMS bonus system has long been a patchwork of pilots and special projects, with schools moving in and out of eligibility as one funding source runs out and another grant comes through. The CMS payroll data I got in April showed 1,054 people getting bonuses (out of almost 18,700 employees). Twenty-four were principals, including four at high schools: West Charlotte ($10,000 for John Wall), West Meck ($5,500 for Eric Ward), Vance ($2,950 for Melissa Dunlap) and Garinger ($2,400 for Kondra Rattley, who was recently promoted to executive director in a zone office). Even at West Charlotte and West Meck, that money wasn't necessarily tied to graduation rates. Wall, for instance, was recruited last July through Project LIFT, which paid him a $10,000 signing bonus.
Meanwhile, the school board has yet to set the standards for Morrison's performance bonus. His contract allows him to collect up to 10 percent of his $288,000 base pay, awarded by Oct. 31. New state exams are complicating efforts to measure his impact on student achievement; the results won't be released until October (some speculate it could be later) and it's far from clear that 2013 scores will be comparable to previous years. I'm guessing the graduation rate will be one of several measures used to rate the superintendent.
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Charter costs and West Meck suspensions
A caller raised a good question about this morning's story on per-pupil costs at charter schools serving Mecklenburg students. He correctly noted that charters don't get public money for buildings, while Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools gets construction and renovation money through county-issued bonds. The caller suspected that would skew the per-pupil spending reported on the N.C. school report cards.
I'm not sure there's ever a perfect apples-to-apples comparison, but the state does not include capital expenses -- that is, building and renovation -- in the per-pupil tally for charters or traditional public schools, so it should be a reasonably close comparison of spending on education (or at least school operating expenses).
While we're scrutinizing numbers, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools has issued a correction to some eye-popping suspension numbers from West Mecklenburg High that were reported at last week's school board meeting.
As part of a staff report on discipline and other issues at schools that saw major changes in enrollment, CMS initially said West Meck had 2,452 suspensions during the first half of 2010-11 -- with an enrollment just under 2,200 -- and 1,482 with a slightly smaller student body this year. A corrected report issued last week (while I was taking a few days off, thus the delay in reporting) amends that to 1,226 last year and 741 this year, exactly half of what was presented to the board.
The email from CMS Communications Director Tahira Stalberte noting the revisions does not address the source of the error.