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Khalid Oluewu, principal of Webster Elementary School in Chicago, has done what many principals would love to do: He has created structures and practices at his school to ACCELERATE learning for all, and in particular for Black males.
Wow. The idea started when he was a teacher and taught middle school math and had students come to him years behind. He looped with the students and in three short years he not only got them on grade level, but when they went to high school they were able to skip Algebra and start with Geometry.
Now as a principal he put four things in place to accelerate learning - to have students learn one and a half years' worth in just a year):
Have teachers focus on PRIORITY standards
Have teachers provide JUST-IN-TIME supports not live in remediation
Provide more individualized learning by having teachers use small groups and by partnering with organizations who could provide high-impact tutoring
Using tech platforms for more individualized learning
The results? In one year the overall proficiency level leaped from just 6% to 50% and for Black boys, it went from just 2% to 30%! Truly impressive. And those numbers keep climbing up, far from the single-digit proficiency levels they were before.
To learn more, check out these resources:
Read Khalid's research paper: Year of Acceleration for All (Yes, that includes Black Males)
Visit Webster Elementary School if you're in Chicago
Reach out via email: [email protected]
As always, send your comments, questions, and show ideas to [email protected]. Consider rating the podcast in iTunes and leaving a comment. And please pass the show along to your colleagues. Additionally, if you have other non-education books with implications for school leaders, send those suggestions our way, too. And finally, If you or someone you know would like to sponsor the show, send Mike an email at [email protected].
By Dr. Mike Doughty4.7
6060 ratings
Khalid Oluewu, principal of Webster Elementary School in Chicago, has done what many principals would love to do: He has created structures and practices at his school to ACCELERATE learning for all, and in particular for Black males.
Wow. The idea started when he was a teacher and taught middle school math and had students come to him years behind. He looped with the students and in three short years he not only got them on grade level, but when they went to high school they were able to skip Algebra and start with Geometry.
Now as a principal he put four things in place to accelerate learning - to have students learn one and a half years' worth in just a year):
Have teachers focus on PRIORITY standards
Have teachers provide JUST-IN-TIME supports not live in remediation
Provide more individualized learning by having teachers use small groups and by partnering with organizations who could provide high-impact tutoring
Using tech platforms for more individualized learning
The results? In one year the overall proficiency level leaped from just 6% to 50% and for Black boys, it went from just 2% to 30%! Truly impressive. And those numbers keep climbing up, far from the single-digit proficiency levels they were before.
To learn more, check out these resources:
Read Khalid's research paper: Year of Acceleration for All (Yes, that includes Black Males)
Visit Webster Elementary School if you're in Chicago
Reach out via email: [email protected]
As always, send your comments, questions, and show ideas to [email protected]. Consider rating the podcast in iTunes and leaving a comment. And please pass the show along to your colleagues. Additionally, if you have other non-education books with implications for school leaders, send those suggestions our way, too. And finally, If you or someone you know would like to sponsor the show, send Mike an email at [email protected].

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