|
Twin Cities Charter School Students Ace Minnesota State Writing
Assessment With WriteToLearn
Two Neighboring Schools Turn to Pearson's Web-Based Writing and
Reading-Comprehension Development Tool to Build Student Literacy Skills
MINNEAPOLIS, and BOULDER, Colo. - Sept. 23, 2008 - When
"Anna," a ninth-grade student receiving special-education
services, enrolled in a new charter school last year, her writing skills
were far below what she would need to pass the Minnesota state writing
assessment.
"Her writing skills had been extremely low for a number of
years," said Duane Dutrieuille, dean of Academic and Student Affairs
of Dunwoody Academy High School, which provides academic and
career-focused training for students from the inner-cities of
Minneapolis and St. Paul.
After just three months of honing her writing skills with the help of
Pearson's award-winning Web-based literacy learning tool
WriteToLearn™, Anna scored 3.5 out of 5, exceeding the passing
threshold of 3 on the Minnesota Comprehensive Assessment-II
Graduation-Required Assessments for Diploma (MCA-II/GRAD).
"She was able to pass this test, and it made a world of difference
in her confidence," said Dutrieuille. "After years of not
passing, it was a major accomplishment and practically transformed her
into a new student."
Anna was in good company at Dunwoody Academy, with a full 73 percent of
the student body reaching or exceeding the standard - a number on-par
with the state average and above what would normally be seen in a new
charter school, said Dutrieuille. "This is an accomplishment for
our school that we are very proud of," he said.
Dutrieuille attributes the students' success to the writing skills they
developed by using WriteToLearn, adopted by the school in January 2008,
along with the guidance from their language arts teacher, Beverly Davis,
Ed.D., and their teachers in the content areas.
"The success of Dunwoody Academy is a stunning example of the
amazing writing and reading-comprehension gains that students are
achieving with WriteToLearn," said Lynn Streeter, president of the
Knowledge Technologies group of Pearson, developer of WriteToLearn.
"We commend the school's educators and students for working so hard
to build important writing and reading-comprehension skills."
With WriteToLearn, students practice essay writing and summarization
skills, and their efforts are measured by Pearson's state-of-the-art
Knowledge Analysis Technologies™ (KAT) engine. The KAT engine is a
unique automated assessment technology that evaluates the meaning of text
by examining whole passages, not just grammatical correctness or
spelling.
"WriteToLearn gives students immediate feedback, so they are able to
receive a great deal of practice in refining their writing skills,"
said Dutrieuille. "Our teachers across all the content areas worked
together, along with Dr. Davis, and did an excellent job with
WriteToLearn."
Dunwoody Academy added another grade level this school year and increased
its student body from 130 to 225, in grades nine through 11. Dutrieuille
looks forward to the challenges ahead. "We are confident that we
have the proper tool in WriteToLearn, combined with excellent instruction
from our teachers," he said. "It's very gratifying to see the
results, and we're looking for even greater gains this year."
After seeing the data that show Dunwoody Academy's success, two
neighboring schools are bringing aboard WriteToLearn to help boost their
students' literacy skills.
Harvest Preparatory School, a charter school that has been educating K-6
students for 10 years, is piloting WriteToLearn this year. And, a new
charter school, BEST Academy, a boys-focused Science, Technology,
Engineering and Mathematics Talent Expansion Program (STEP) school for
K-8 students, has opened its doors with a launch of WriteToLearn. Both
schools will include WriteToLearn in their individual learning plans,
which will detail a designated number of writing prompts to be completed
throughout the school year.
Eric Mahmoud, chief executive officer and startup coordinator for SEED,
Inc., the organization that oversees Minneapolis charter schools,
foresees growth in literacy skills at both Harvest Prep and BEST Academy.
"Based on Dunwoody Academy's outstanding accomplishments, we're
confident that implementing WriteToLearn is the right decision for our
students," he said. "They will gain the writing and
reading-comprehension skills they need to succeed."
More information about WriteToLearn is available at www.WriteToLearn.net.
|