Calendar of
Upcoming
Events

HTHL Internship and College Advising Institute
Dec. 1st and 2nd 2005

HTH and HTHI Annual MANPOWER Academic Internship Showcase
Dec. 1. 2005
5:00-8:00PM



Other Issues:

October 15, 2005
September 15, 2005
August 15, 2005
May 15, 2005
April 15, 2005
February 15, 2005
January 15, 2005
October 15, 2004
September 15, 2004
August 15, 2004
June 15, 2004
May 15, 2004
April 15, 2004
March 15, 2004

 

 

 

HTHL Network News

Issue #10, April/May 2005

 

1. HTH Bayshore Begins Renovations
2. HTHL Hosts Teacher Residency
With Focus on HTH Exhibition
3. On Writing in PBL
4. HTH Network Site Updates

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HTH Bayshore Begins Renovations

HTH Bayshore (formerly San Carlos High School) began renovation of its dynamic new facility at 890 Broadway, in Redwood City, CA, during the last week of March, 2005. The 28,700 square foot building, slated to open its doors for the start of the 2005-06 school year, was originally built as a beer warehouse in 1962. The building was subsequently used as a tire warehouse and then as a photo processing facility until 1999. New owners began a major remodel in 2000 to ready the building for use as office space. By adding a floor to the dramatic bowstring truss structure, local developers created a lower parking level that can accommodate 75 cars, and an upper "open office" level with high vaulted ceilings, large expanses of window walls, and exposed wooden trusses.
Timing is everything, however, and 890 Broadway, having missed the dot.com boom of the late 90's, sat vacant for the past 5 years. HTH Learning real estate scouts spotted the building early on in 2004, while assisting with San Carlos High School's exhaustive 3 year search for a permanent school site, but it had been under agreement several times and earmarked for conversion to a variety of uses. When the last deal fell through at the 12th hour, HTH was ready to pounce on the building with very little notice. Although it has a relatively small floor plate, the open and airy space seemed ideally suited to a HTH makeover! A design team that includes the Redwood City architectural firm of DES, as well as HTHL Design Director, David Stephen, and HTHL Regional Director, Linda Stevenin, set to work on developing architectural plans for the renovation this past fall. The local construction company of Rudolph & Sletten has also been involved in the design process from the start, participating in a myriad of decisions that have helped to keep renovation costs down. Located 20 miles south of San Francisco and immediately adjacent to San Carlos, where the school has been located in temporary quarters during its first 2 years of operation, Redwood City is a residential and industrial area poised to become the next High Tech and biotechnology center for Silicon Valley. Because the city is currently focused on redevelopment efforts to generate rich opportunities for the local community and promote local business, its planning department has been eager to assist HTH Bayshore in its efforts to locate the school there. This has helped to streamline the processes of applying for and obtaining a "Use Permit," which reviews traffic, parking, and fire safety issues, among others, and is necessary when a change of occupancy or zoning occurs (in this case a change from an office occupancy to an educational one). Surrounded by cities with largely middle and high income residents, Redwood City itself is a middle income community with a significant population of underserved families and a large Hispanic community. HTH Bayshore currently enrolls 122 students, 20% are Title 1, 19% special needs, and 51% students of color. The school has a strong commitment to maintaining racial and socio-economic diversity.

HTH Bayshore held a fabulously successful Community Open House on February 17th, at 890 Broadway. Current and potential students and parents toured the new building and viewed drawings that showed how the building will be transformed during the next 4 months. Students exhibited presentations of learning, walked visitors through their digital portfolios, and acted out a scene from the school's performance of Alice in Wonderland. The open house provided an effective forum for HTH Bayshore to introduce its program to residents of Redwood City.

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HTHL Hosts Teacher Residency
With Focus on HTH Exhibition

 

Dinner theater with a silent auction, a baseball diamond, habitats from around the world, a rock climbing wall, film screenings, art galleries…even in a culturally rich city like San Diego, one might expect you'd have to make a few stops to see all of those things. But during Exhibition Night at High Tech High, High Tech Middle, and High Tech High International on Thursday, March 17, 2005, it was practically one-stop shopping. Teaching teams at every grade level 6-12 pulled out all the stops as their students displayed projects, gave tours, showed their films, and, perhaps most importantly, shared what they learned with their parents, teachers, fellow students, and other friends of High Tech High schools. In to the midst of all the excitement of Exhibition night, and by design, HTH Learning hosted the Spring Teacher Residency. Our network colleagues had a rare opportunity to see the before, during, and after phases of one of High Tech High's most anticipated annual events.

Students from one of the network schools, Mirta Ramirez
Computer Science Charter School, jumped right in on
exhibition night and gave a video and PowerPoint presentation on their recent project, which examined the social implications of proposed changes to Chicago's public transit schedules and routes.
As CEO Larry Rosenstock described the night, "this
place was floating six inches off the ground!" Imagine
what it will be like next year when there are five schools
on the HTH campus in San Diego…we may be visible
from outer space!

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On Writing in PBL

In a project-based environment, we all share the responsibility for helping students develop as writers. This is a cause for celebration, not despair. PBL offers an ideal context for implementing the most important elements of a process approach to writing, articulated everywhere in state and national standards: students should write daily in a variety of forms, for a variety of purposes and audiences. Here are some reminders for those who would make writing a vital component of their project-based approach: Write often. Students need to practice, and to see purposeful writing as part of their daily routine. The journal is a reasonable means to accomplish this goal. In assigning journals, strive for a balance between freedom and structure. Some students prefer to write on their own with minimal direction; others ask, "What am I supposed to write about?" Other routines can be laid over the daily journal routine, such as biweekly journal summaries, end-of-term reflections, and the construction of indexes, tables of contents, and lists of recurrent themes. Write for a variety of purposes. We write to think, to remember, to discover, to create and communicate meaning, to persuade, to amuse-not merely to demonstrate competence, though becoming a better writer is a certain by-product of regular writing. Every piece of writing has a use-or multiple uses. Even brief free-writes serve as a resource bank for larger products: a project report, a presentation script, a newsletter, an autobiography, a resume. Write in many forms. Hands-on projects call for forms of writing rarely, if ever, introduced in schoolwork, including memos, inventories, orders, requests for information, newsletter articles, incident reports, and training manuals. The range extends beyond these, to include everything from free-writing exercises to scripts, autobiographies, stories, and poems. Write for a variety of audiences. One of the great advantages of project-based learning is that it calls for authentic audiences for student work: workplace colleagues, mentors, clients, expert panelists, and the general public. Share the writing as part of an ongoing conversation. As students discover each other's responses to common situations, they see new possibilities for their own writing. Such conversations don't materialize out of thin air. They require training and practice, with plenty of explicit teacher modeling.
Teachers write and share their writing, too. Nothing demystifies writing more quickly for students than to watch their teachers struggle to put words on paper. Nothing helps teachers understand student writing more than to write in response to their own assignments. Start where the students are, and take a long-term, developmental perspective. Good writers develop over time. Students will develop as writers when they see the results of regular writing and attend to what their peers are writing. The key is to ask for thoughtful products, honor students' present work, and let complexity and propriety flow from there, as students become more practiced and fluent.

 

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Site Updates
Camino Nuevo High School, Los Angeles, CA


Written by Eric Escobar, 9th Grade Student Recently I was involved in a program called Emaze. CNHS was one of thirty high schools selected to participate in this statewide project. To summarize it briefly, we split up into groups of three or four. Then we all picked a day to take a digital camera.
We took pictures in six categories: My Community, Technology in Schools, Learning in the Classroom, Before and After School, Students Playing, and Thoughts about School. Picture taking went on for a month, and then we wrote about the pictures that we took. A statewide committee selected the best pictures and reflections. I like to use photographs to create memories of fun times I have with family members or friends. Without photography, things can slip by your mind, and you forget how beautiful the tree by the English class is. Photographs can show how nice the sun looks setting over that apartment building in front of your house. Often we are too busy thinking of things we have to do tomorrow or later on, so we don't notice how beautiful thing look, even if we think it is the worst place to live. My participation in Emaze helped me to realize how beautiful my community is. The students' pictures and writings will be on display at the Cerritos Center for the Performing Arts on May 14, 2005. The exhibit is called My So-Called Digital Life.
City High School, Tucson, AZ by Samantha Smith, 10th grade student
As a benefit to our class and the school, the City Works design crew flew to San Diego on March 15 to visit High Tech High and observe their teachers and students at work. The traveling City High School team included students Samantha Smith, Andy Olander, and Sophie Jones along with instructors Camellia Cosgray, Daniela Diamente, and Ignacio Rivera de Rosales. We spent three days visiting classes at High Tech High, talking with teachers and students, and attending a special evening event when students share their projects with parents and community members.

The culture that High Tech High has built over the five years since they started the school is amazing. One thing we noticed was the trust and respect the students and teachers had for each other. Another thing we observed was that teachers use a project-based learning system, where students do projects in their classes that help them learn the material while having fun.

Photo: Samantha Smith, Sophie Jones and Andy Olander back at City High School All of the art in the hallways and the different teaching methods around the school made High Tech High feel, well, not so high tech at all. While we don¹t want to be exactly like High Tech High, we definitely would like to use the experience and ideas we gained from visiting them here at City High School to make our school a better place. High Tech High Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA On Monday, March 14th CSPAN came to HTH-LA and taped two episodes of "Students and Leaders" at our school. The 10th graders had the opportunity to have a question and answer session with former mayor of Los Angeles and current California Secretary of Education Richard Riordan and the llth graders will have a question and answer session with Albert Carnesale, current Chancellor of UCLA. Both groups of students, under the direction of their History teacher Mat McClenahan, researched the person they were meeting with and prepared and conducted the Q and A. The program can be viewed at the c-span website (c-span.org under the "Students and Leaders" section).


High Tech High Los Angeles students have been busy applying to various summer programs for enrichment. Junior Cynthia Cruz was accepted to the highly selective summer program at CalTech (YESS) and freshman Emily Harake was admitted to The Junior Statesmen Summer School at Stanford. Other students have applied and are eagerly awaiting letters from: The California State Summer School for the Arts (at CalArts), Carnegie Mellon Summer of Exploration, California State Summer School for Mathematics and Science (COSMOS), and the Quest Scholars Program at Stanford. Thirty-five students are currently enrolled in a school-sponsored Ivy West SAT Preparation course here on the High Tech High Los Angeles campus that meets twice a week. Students will be taking the SAT on May 7 and SAT Subject Exams in June. HTHLA families will be going together on a bus from HTHLA to the Greater Los Angeles College Fair in Pasadena on April 20th. Students at all grade levels have been exploring and thinking about their future college plans. Most recently, HTHLA has hosted admissions officers visiting from CalArts, CalTech, Florida Institute of Technology, University of Chicago, Purdue University and Mills College. Mirta Ramirez Computer Science Charter School, Chicago, IL MR(cs)2 Dean of Students José Morales started full-time on April 1st. He has begun the process of forming the first Student Council at the school. Already over 35 students have participated in four meetings, one intensive seven-hour training and a field trip to see a documentary. The Student Council has been actively involved in evaluating the current discipline code and getting student input on the discipline code for next quarter. Additionally, students are starting to organize a trip to Venezuela in August, 2005, to the World Youth and Students Festival.

A small group of 18 students dedicated a week of normal school sessions and their week off (Intercession week) to writing a book called The Suicide of Silence. The project was led and facilitated by Daniel Custodio, a student at the Kellogg School of Management, with the help of Humanities teacher Natasha Cavitt. The students learned and reviewed basic poetry form and structure as well as gained exposure to the writings of Sandra Cisneros and Miguel Pinero. The result of their tireless effort is a collection of poetry that reflects the issues, life, and struggles of being a high-school teenager in this millennium. The book is available for purchase at www.travelingpoet.com. All are encouraged to read and see a side of our students that educators and parents do not normally see.
Additionally, students of Spanish teacher Angie Galvan-Rodriguez (who just had a baby girl!) worked on an impressive, challenging and fairly comprehensive Rain Forest POL. Students formed teams to study rain forest geography, plants, animals and people, and then put together Spanish-language reports in journalistic format, including graphics and pictures to demonstrate their new knowledge. A team of eight MR(cs)2 students who recently visited High Tech High had this to say about their experiences: High Tech High is one of the many outstanding schools.

We the students from Mirta Ramirez Computer Science
Charter School think that in the short amount of time we
spent there, we realized that your teacher-student bond was extraordinary. We found that the connection between the students and the teacher enables the students to want to learn and improves their ability to actually learn. If there was one thing we could bring back from High Tech High it would be that, the student-teacher bond. At High Tech High we found that to be the most astonishing thing that we saw. The trust, the patience, and the bonds were awesome. The way people treated us at High Tech High, the way they acted as if we had been there forever. People there were so kind to us. Overall, we had a blast at High Tech High, and in the process of having fun, we learned a lot, not just about ways to improve our school but also ways we could help High Tech High out."

New Bedford Global Learning Charter School, New Bedford, MA All 9th grade NBGLCS students recently participated in a day-long seminar in which student learned about presentation techniques in preparation for their 1st annual exhibition. The Evening of POL's will take place on May 5th. A featured Marine Science project that evening will be From Fan Boats to ROV's. Students have been working throughout the semester to create fan boats and remotely operated vehicles. Students have been involved in the conceptual and design phases of the project, and have worked with an engineer who has mentored them. The school culture is thriving in New Bedford. Students recently attended a fun overnight event where they sang karaoke, danced, ate pizza, and watched movies. They had a great time and hope to host another before the end of the school year. The high school will also be hosting a Curriculum Night in May for current and new students and parents to attend. The event will include socializing, as well as the opportunity to leaf through curriculum, share ideas for the next year, and learn more about new elective offerings for the next school year.

New Urban High School, Clackamas, OR NUHS is planning for its move next year into a school facility that the local school district has made available for their use and renovation. NUHS plans to focus first on upgrading the building's life-safety and data systems, then live in it for a year before renovating its spaces to better suit the school's needs. A local bond levy will help to pay for building renovations. The 38,000 sf., 70- year-old masonry structure formerly housed a traditional high school and has a variety of spaces that lend themselves to large group gathering and community building, such as a gymnasium, a cafeteria, and a multi-purpose room with a stage at one end of it. Just 2 miles from their present school site, the new facility will be located closer to where many NUHS students presently live. The school has many plans for how it will integrate itself into the new community, including student internships and the creation of a community garden. Back at the school, a number of the school's "houses" or academic teams recently held some terrific Presentations of Learning. More POL's are coming up on June 9th, and will showcase integrated projects focused on the theme of Astronomy. At the same time, preparations are underway for the first ever NUHS graduation ceremony to be held on June 14th. A group of18 Seniors will receive their diplomas. All of these students have been accumulating college credits by attending classes at Clackamas Community College, through NUHS' middle college program. This year's valedictorian is graduating this year with over 70 transferable college credits, and has been accepted into the University of Portland. Next year's Senior class will have approximately 80 graduates. High Tech High, San Diego, CA

High Tech High held its annual Exhibition on the evening
of March 17th. Parents, community members, and High
Tech High Village members were invited to view student
work. The school was transformed into a museum in which
each nook and cranny of the school became a display area.
Student projects included work on architecture, a climbing
wall, pool tables, the San Diego Boat Channel, Internships,
Senior Projects (including poetry readings), science fair
projects, a silent auction featuring a World War II war
memorial, and 9th grade documentary films.
HTH Director Ben Daley is also leading the new teacher
hiring process. High Tech High schools are looking to hire
20 new teachers for next year to staff up High Tech High Media Arts
and High Tech Middle Media Arts. Prospective teachers attend an
all-day interview where they observe a lesson being taught, teach a lesson, and are interviewed by students and staff. The interview is a two-way process. Several students from High Tech High recently traveled to Paris to learn about art and European history. The trip was chaperoned by Jeff Robin (Art), Brett Peterson (11th Grade Humanities), and Stacey Praizner (Director of Internships). All Juniors attended a college fair to learn more about college opportunities. Several seniors have been traveling to their prospective post-secondary schools to learn more about student life and academic opportunities.

High Tech High Bayshore (formerly San Carlos High School), San Carlos, CA HTH Bayshore (formerly San Carlos High School) held a grand opening celebration for their new building at 890 Broadway in Redwood City. Students, parents, teachers, and community members were excited to have the opportunity to view the empty building before construction began. Demolition in the building has now been completed, and contractors are presently framing out walls for classrooms and offices. The renovated building will incorporate signature HTH design elements such as high ceilings, exposed systems, studio spaces, shared teachers offices, teamed classrooms, and a large multi-purpose commons area. Prior to their spring break, teacher ambassadors Mark Aguirre (HTH Humanities) and Blair Hatch (HTH Multi-Media) visited HTH Bayshore and worked with teaching teams, giving feedback and helpful suggestions. The school also conducted its first teacher bonanza last month, with HTH Director Ben Daley donating his time to come up from San Diego and observe the bonanza. Humanities teacher, Bill Jeffers, had the exciting opportunity to take his students to a stone carver to learn how ancient cultures carved monolithic objects. The students are working on their own carvings using the same primitive hand tools. One of their objectives is to carve out "High Tech High Bayshore" on a piece of stone for the new building. He is also planning to work with the other 9th grade Humanities teacher to have students carve their names into stone squares to be laid in the entry way of the new school as well.

High Tech Middle, San Diego, CA High Tech Middle held its first annual 8th Grade Retreat in April. The program took place off campus and lasted for four days. Focusing primarily on youth development and leadership issues, the retreat aimed to assist students in making the transition from middle to high school. Through a series of group oriented activities and challenges, students posed and answered questions about what it will take to be an empowered HTH student. Topics discussed at the retreat included: staying organized, making good academic choices, navigating groups and cliques, developing school spirit, and maintaining a high level of service to the school.
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After the success of their April "Hiring Bonanza," in which 25 teacher candidates spent a day at the school, HTM is excited to have established a culture in which bringing in new staff involves all teachers and many students. It was especially refreshing to see poised middle school students asking teacher candidates thoughtful questions about their approaches to academics, project-based instruction, and class discipline. Student input into the selection process was most often right on target! HTM has hired 8 new teachers for next year. Meanwhile, a recent visit to the school by nationally renowned education reformer Debbie Meier, has sparked much reflection on the part of both teachers and students about curriculum, student work, and school climate. In advisory groups and staff meetings, students and teachers alike are grappling with questions about what they would like to maintain, and what they would like to let go of for the next school year. Finally, HTM was recently chosen as an "Outstanding Middle School" by the California League of Middle Schools. As such, it has hosted many visiting teachers and administrators from schools throughout California. High Tech High International, San Diego, CA High Tech High International was buzzing as students returned from their first Immersion Week experience in April. Immersion week was created to allow students to travel to various parts of the country and world, and become immersed in different environments and experiences. Trips varied from doing home stays with students from CETYS high school in Tijuana, to traveling to Costa Rica and studying ecotourism and sustainable development. One of the biggest highlights from doing this as a school is the sense of community and relationship building that has taken place. Students seem to feel more connected to their peers, teachers and the school as a whole. It has also been a very challenging program to pilot and we are looking into ways to create a more sustainable approach to executing trips. It was an exciting risk to take in the first year and we look forward to improving the program even more. HTHI also brought on its new internship coordinator, Erin Wyatt, to start working with 10th graders in preparation for their internships next year. Erin was a humanities teacher at High Tech High and will be a great asset to the program. The program's goals are to focus on the development of rich internship experiences and the student projects that emanate from them. Erin also hopes to bring more writing into the internship class, as well as teach an Exploratory on service learning. On a recent visit to the International Studies Academy in San Antonio, HTHI learned about a project that all freshmen complete called "Make a Difference". Small groups of students focus on a community issue and create a project that gives back to the community. It is exciting to start work on creating these types of experiences for our students.

 

 


For More Information Please Visit:
www.hightechhigh.org