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It Starts With a Simple Belief

All children can learn. At the heart of our vision at the Louisiana Department of Education, to build a world class education system for Louisiana’s children is that belief. I’m certain that I wouldn’t have accepted this position if I didn’t believe that every child, rich or poor, black or white, urban or rural, had the ability to earn a quality education.

I believe that I have assembled a team of like minded individuals who, no matter what division they work in (finance, accountability, etc.) are finding ways to support higher student achievement. It’s a very different approach to a system that typically teaches us to stay in our silos and simply do the work that comes across our desks. But I don’t think that produces the effort that will get us to where we want to be.

I made a commitment to get out and visit schools on a regular basis so I can talk to principals, teachers and most importantly the students. A short time ago I had the privilege to visit Ory Elementary School in LaPlace. It’s a school that has a very mixed racial makeup, a good number of students who receive free and reduced lunch. And it also achieves outstanding school performance scores year in and year out.

They’ve done it by following a pretty simple formula. First, they have an outstanding principal who has been there a number of years and who has her own vision for what the school should be. They have teachers who have committed themselves to that vision and in every classroom I visited I saw professionals working their craft. And then you see energetic, enthusiastic, attentive students. I observed their “professional quality” television studio and their morning broadcast, and enjoyed what had to be one of the nicest interviews I’ve done in a long while. I also talked to classes from Kindergarten to 8th grade and heard directly from children. One math class in particular told me that their daily class work made the LEAP look basic in comparison.

I left Ory feeling even more deeply that the obstacles to quality education exist in us as adults far more than in any child. We can pass the blame or the failure to whomever or whatever but in the end when these children fail, it falls on all of us.

Comments 
It's terrific that you are getting out to the schools and speaking with the children and staff on site.

I am impressed by how the state department is trying to assist in this time when federal funding is less dependable. Teachers and administrators work very hard to do their best and it is swell that you are trying to support the improvements they have put into place.

Keep up the good work!
Comment By diana motsinger At 4/17/2008 9:57 AM
I agree with the first comment. I am also impressed that the state superintendent is finding time to visit schools. I visited a school in Florida that was designated a state model/research school. It was organized and constructed to ease or make more convenient the observation process.

Maybe Louisiana should establish exemplary schools that all administrators could visit. It might be a way to reproduce the great work happening at Ory.

Jenna
Comment By Jenna At 4/21/2008 2:31 PM
It was great hearing that you went to visit a school. It would have been nice had you actually provided your readers with the full name of the school, which is, John L. Ory Communications Magnet Elementary School. This might be important in letting the reading public know that this is, indeed, a Magnet school, which would help explain why it has nearly 50% White students in a district that only has 18% White students, and the percent of Asian students is about twice as high as in the district as a whole, while African-American students are represented at almost half the percent they make up in the district. Also worth noting is that the Free and Reduced meal qualifying students make up significantly less than their percent in the district, and less than the percent in the state.
Small things, but surely we want to be accurate, yes? In fact, isn't it true that every school in the state with these demographics is succeeding. Interesting. Perhaps you could provide your readers with the percent African-American and percent Free and Reduced meals at the schools the state is taking over?
Comment By amicus At 4/21/2008 4:28 PM
Thanks for your postings.

I have visited quite a few schools. As a non-traditional educator, I benefit by hearing directly from the teachers and administrators. Not only that, but visiting schools reminds me why we are doing what we do in Baton Rouge and that what we do needs to support teachers.

As for the magnet school aspect of Ory, you are correct. It is not based on the concept of admissions of high performing students, but it is based on trying to get an even mix of students in the school population.

In the schools that are being taken over, the most prevalent characteristic of the student population of the schools is poverty. More African American students are poor. The interesting thing is that we have a number of schools where poor populations (and minority) perform well. It can be done.

Paul
Comment By Paul Pastorek At 5/2/2008 6:35 AM
Very interesting!
I learned a lot of thinks about Louisiana
Comment By Bet At 11/11/2008 12:05 PM
I was glad to hear the Ory Magnet school principle has a vision and I'm hoping you could be able to share with us what that means. Might it be possible to share her vision with other principles and is this already occurring? Does this make her unique? I hope not for the sake of children all over the state but understand it just might.

It seems at times like we're our own worst enemy and fail to keep it simple. My wife and I have four kids who've excelled in private grade (we're Catholic) and public high schools and I can't think of anything we or the schools did that was particularly 'cutting edge'. The importance of school work was reinforced routinely and accomplishments praised. Their school administrators provided a stable learning environment, we did the same at home. No extra money for special training was available or needed. Like Ory's principle we had a vision. Like yourself we believe all children can learn. What a great future all Louisiana's children will have when those of us over the age of 21 focus on giving all our school children the same opportunity.
Comment By carl herrick At 12/20/2008 1:45 PM
Magnet schools are good most of the time, but sometime good students get left behind in schools that do not have the same quality education curriculum as the magnet schools.

<a href=http://www.windthewatch.com>watch winder</a>
Comment By Watch Winders At 9/20/2009 11:22 PM
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