Tuesday, October 27, 2009

AHS Weekly Update 10-27










It’s a busy week here at Animas High School. Some important things to note:

• Thank you all for your attendance and participation in last week’s Student Led Conferences. I hope you were as impressed with our students as we were! Many parents have requested follow up meetings/check-ins with our teachers and I want to encourage you all to reach out to our faculty. We are always available to update you on student performance and hope you’ll access us in regards to your student’s progress. Contact info for AHS staff can be found at the bottom of this email.

• Speaking of SLCs, I wanted to thank all the volunteers who prepped, cooked and provided our faculty with food on the night of conferences. Nothing like hot lasagna, fresh salad and chocolate cookies to really win over a teaching team. A special thank you to Michelle Stowers for coordinating volunteer efforts and food donations last Tues. evening!

• Reminder- NO SCHOOL THIS FRIDAY OCTOBER 30th- AHS will be closed so teachers can participate in professional development and in-service training. We will however be celebrating Halloween on Thurs. and we encourage students to dress up!

• NO LEFT TURNS! I want to remind our community that during drop off and pick up times at AHS, PLEASE do not try and take a left out of our school’s front parking lot. We have committed as a school to following a traffic flow and the Dept. of Transportation is watching! If we do not honor the traffic pattern we had approved with CDOT, we jeopardize future use of the front lot. Please, we understand that it may be easier at times but must insist we all follow the rules. The alley behind school is always a good option as it leads out to 33rd st. and provides an easy left turn onto Main Ave. Questions? Please get in touch.

Head of School, Michael Ackerman Internet Technology,
michael@animashighschool.com it@animashighschool.com


Director of Student Services, Jake Lauer Business Office
jake.lauer@animashighschool.com business@animashighschool.com

Coord. of Exceptional Student Services Math Specialist, Josh Dalley
Jeff DiGiacomo josh.dalley@animashighschool.com
Jeff.digiacomo@animashighschool.com

Humanities Team A, Lori Fisher Spanish, John Sheedy
lori.fisher@animashighschool.com john.sheedy@animashighschool.com

Math/Science Team A, Colleen Dunning Parent Advisory Council (PAC)
Colleen.dunning@animashighschool.com PAC@animashighschool.com

Humanities Team B, John Fisher
John.fisher@animashighschool.com

Math/Science Team B, Cathy Cullicott
Cathy.cullicott@animashighschool.com

Digital Media/Art, Roxanne McKnight
Roxy.mcknight@animashighschool.com

Monday, October 19, 2009

AHS Weekly Update 10-19-09









I hope this note finds you well and I hope you and your family had a relaxing and enjoyable autumn weekend. Please allow me a quick second to update you all on AHS happenings this week:

Student Led Conferences Tomorrow Night!

From the looks on students’ faces this morning, there’s definitely some anxious anticipation for tomorrow night’s SLCs. Students are busy readying there Digital Portfolios and rehearsing their presentations. Parents/guardians should already know what time their student is scheduled to present. There also is an SLC update included in the most recent Head of School update that went out on Friday. Please consult the update and the letter that teachers sent home regarding SLCs if you have any questions. Never saw a letter or update on SLCs? This information is available online and teachers are available via telephone or email. We are looking forward to Tues. evening and we’re excited for your participation in Student Led Conferences.

Speaking of the Head of School Update, below is the link to the most recent AHS news. Please make sure to check out all the great happenings at Animas High School at:

http://www.keepandshare.com/doc/view.php?id=1461767&da=y



Staff In-Service

There will be no school on Friday, October 30, 2009 so Animas High School staff can participate in a full day of faculty in-service and professional development. Please note this scheduling update as we continue to work hard enhancing our curriculum and refining our school’s programs. Please direct any questions or concerns related to teacher in-service to Head of School Michael Ackerman

I cannot wait to see all of you tomorrow evening and I hope you are as excited as we are. Our students have been performing brilliantly and we are excited for them to share their performance with you. Have a great week and thank you all for your continued encouragement and support!

Friday, October 9, 2009

AHS WEEKLY UPDATE 10-12 to 10-16






Greetings Animas High School Families!

I want to personally thank everyone who showed up at this week’s PAC meeting and shared feedback and continued ideas for improvement with the school. We work hard every day to make Animas High School better and your assistance with this effort is valued and appreciated. As part of this commitment, it is our desire to send out Monday email blasts to families so that you can stay abreast of everything ahead in the coming week(s). With school being closed this Monday, we are sending this note out a few days early. As always, please feel free to contact the school at 970-AHS-AHS4 (247-2474) or reach me personally at 970-403-4827 or michael@animashighschool.com

DON’T FORGET- Monday, October 12th, Animas High School will be closed for Indigenous People’s Day (Columbus Day) recess. We love our students but they’ll be quite lonely if they decide to attend school on Monday!

MATH UPDATE- We’ve increased our math specialist work to include two staff members. Josh Dalley is now facilitating both remedial and advanced math instruction at AHS while Carla Rossi continues to be available for afternoon tutoring and specialized instruction. This blend better accommodates our teacher’s schedules and makes the most sence logistically for AHS. Look for more about Josh and his accomplishments as a teacher, athlete and professional engineer in the next HOS update.


SUPPLIES, SUPPLIES, SUPPLIES- We continue to accept any supplies that help support our school’s day to day programming. Items such as paper towels, toilet paper, hand sanitizer, trash can liners, hand soap, as well as pencils, pens, printer paper, etc. are always appreciated. The next time you are in the grocery or office supply store and there’s a two for one offer…Think AHS!

SAVE THE DATE- “Children of the Dump” Life portrayed through the photographs of children living in a Tijuana garbage dump. Join filmmaker and AHS Spanish teacher John Sheedy for a photo exhibition and learn more about the Tijuana Project and AHS’s pen pal program with Mexican students. Opening reception is Friday, Oct.16th from 5:30 to 7:30 PM and refreshments will be served. The photos will be hosted at Animas High School through the 15th of November and we hope our community can stop by, see John’s great work and learn more about Animas High School’s involvement with this project.


SAVE THE DATE- Student led conferences will be held October 20th from 3:30 to 7:00 PM. Students will be practicing their presentations for SLC’s next week and we’ll provide a comprehensive overview of conference particulars in the next HOS update. This is a mandatory event for all Animas High School students and we’ll begin scheduling the evening next week. Each family will need to commit to a half hour time slot. We’re looking forward to our students sharing their work and their excitement about their academic performance with our community.


Wishing You All a Safe and Enjoyable Three Day Weekend!

Regards,
Michael Ackerman

Thursday, October 8, 2009

AHS in the News








Inside Animas High School
Durango’s new charter school is off and running



Animas High School freshman show off their “Identity Masks,” reflections of the influences of society upon their personalities, early this week. The new charter high school has been offering a “21st century education” for the past six weeks at its location off North Main Ave./Photo by Stephen Eginoire
by Anna Thomas

The new Animas High School is quietly taking shape, sandwiched between a Chinese buffet and a SCUBA shop in an unassuming Durango strip mall of all places. The renovated space, formerly a maze of partitioned medical offices, is now home to 10,000 square feet of classrooms – classrooms in which 75 freshmen are being exposed to a new kind of education.

The high school features an innovative curriculum of “project-based” learning and community involvement. The curriculum is modeled after that of the highly successful High Tech High, in San Diego. HTH boasts 15 percent higher scores on standardized tests than traditional high schools, with 99 percent college acceptance upon graduation.

“I have moms come up to me in tears at City Market,” says head of school Michael Ackerman. “They say, ‘Little Johnny actually likes school! Whatever you’re doing, it’s working!’”

The Animas High students’ most recent project involved Durango Fire and Rescue. Fire Marshall Tom Kaufman put on a “Hydraulics 101” course at the school, in which students learned the science behind the water pressure of the city’s hydrants. The students then painted 200 hydrants around town, color-coding them according to pressure, thereby making the engineer’s job easier by knowing at a glance which hose to pull in a fire.

In the course of such a project, says Ackerman, the students not only receive a physics lesson, but get firsthand exposure to the value of community service. One of the founding principles of this model is the integration of technology into the learning process.

“Education has historically been sluggish to react to technology,” says Ackerman. The incorporation of technology, such as laptops, digital media and the internet, is vital in “making our country competitive in the global climate,” Ackerman claims.

A walk through the school’s digital media lab offers insight into the school’s unique approach to education. Atop the “Tinker Table” is a dismantled fax machine, with a note from one of the teachers telling students to “see me if this really interests you.” Even after school lets out, students huddle around the computers, updating their “digital portfolios,” or individual webpages, on which all school-related work is posted.

Downstairs, formerly a parking garage, there is a laptop for every student in Cathy Cullicott’s math and science room. A quote by Jackie Chan on the wall urges kids to “Study with all your might … and never stop fighting to reach your dreams.”

While the students are currently learning about Newton’s First Law on a planetarium website, Cullicott’s background as a geologist will be influencing their next assignment. Standing in front of a poster of an erupting volcano and corresponding seismograph, Cullicott says, “The eruption of Mount St. Helen’s was a turning point in my life.” The next project? Studying the physics of waves, amplitude and frequency through the lens of seismography. One of her students is the daughter of a Fort Lewis College geology professor who has volunteered to contribute his expertise to the project.

Next door, in the humanities room, kids work on “identity masks.” The project calls for students to create a plaster of Paris mask reflecting society’s influence on identity while concurrently writing an essay on the same topic. Freshman Sam Kater’s mask advertises cogito ergo sum on its cheek. “‘I think, therefore I am,’” explains the teen-ager, who adds, “It’s Descartes.”

Humanities instructor and High Tech High transplant John Fisher oversees the activity.

“You get to teach your passion,” Fisher says, echoing Cullicott’s enthusiasm. The next project stems from Fisher’s love of the book Gates of Fire, about the battle of Thermoplyae, upon which the movie “300” is based. The kids will construct “artifacts,” write historical fiction stories, and use Photoshop to design characters that would have lived in an ancient civilization of their choosing.

Students take in a math class at Animas High, where the focus is on innovative problem solving/Photo by Stephen Eginoire

When projects like the identity masks are finalized, they are presented to the public at a community exhibition. The students are required to display their work and be on hand to answer questions. The experience of public presentation and critique exposes kids, says Fisher, to the social pressures of the real world.

In addition to classroom projects, the curriculum incorporates electives and physical education activities suggested by the students. Reflecting the unique social environment of Durango, students get the opportunity to go rock climbing, practice yoga, make a documentary and learn about beekeeping.

Parents, says Ackerman, often express concern over whether or not Animas High’s model addresses the standards. And, in the absence of traditional, test-based assessment, if their son or daughter will be prepared for the CSAP.

Ackerman explains that all the state standards are met, but with a different approach.

“Getting used to this type of educational model is like driving a new car,” says Ackerman. “You still get there the same way, it’s just going to feel a little different.”

As for the CSAP, students also receive education on test-taking strategies, important for standardized, multiple-choice tests like the CSAP.

But times they are a changing at the Colorado Department of Education. Traditional, grade-based standards are being modified to incorporate what Ackerman defines as “21st century skills.” These skills are defined by the Department of Education as “problem-solving, information literacy and innovation” and “the ability to take responsibility for additional learning, self direction and interaction with others to learn new information quickly and more naturally.” The emerging approach bears remarkable similarity to that of the educational model upon which Animas High is based.

As Ackerman puts it, “Learning is not just about attaining information, but what you do with it once you’ve got it.”

At the core of the approach, says Fisher, is accountability. “If kids are having a hard time with a project, they are held accountable to advocate or modify their project.”

As to the student perspective, Freshman Sergio Verduzco asserts, “I’ve never been so engaged in learning.”

This mentality stretches across educational bounds and into the social lives of students. Mathew Longwell, who admittedly let his grades slip at the beginning of the year, has since improved his performance. Of the culture of social acceptance, Longwell says, “There is no room for

That the melting pot of expected high school cliques allows for such a culture of tolerance is a source of pride for Ackerman. “We have 13-year olds using ‘I’ statements!”

Next fall, this year’s students will enter their sophomore year, as a new crop of freshmen take their place. The school has plans for more teachers, and more classrooms, to accommodate a new class each year, up to a maximum of 400 students. After that, Ackerman expectantly declares, “We’ll just build another school!” •