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Think
you’re not college material?
‘No Excuses University’
tells grade-schoolers to think again
by Dave Evensen
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| From left,
Jasminka Sabic, Deisy Molina
Cortes and James Triplett sport
their Illini colors. The fourth-graders
at Anne Fox Elementary School
in Hanover Park, outside of
Chicago, are learning about
the University of Illinois this
school year in order to familiarize
themselves with college. |
One damp
January morning this year, students
gathered in fidgeting lines outside
Anne Fox Elementary School in Hanover
Park, just northwest of Chicago.
The teachers waited until everyone
arrived. Then they started the cheer.
“We are! Anne Fox!”
the high-pitched group cried. “We
are! College-bound!”
“Louder!” yelled a
teacher.
“We are! Anne Fox! We are!
College-bound!”
With a satisfied nod from the instructors,
the backpack-lugging bunch filed
neatly inside. The pupils marched
through the halls to classrooms
which each bore a university banner.
Seventeen universities – one
for every class, from kindergarten
on up – have been placed on
prominent display at the school.
The flags of Notre Dame, the University
of Wisconsin, the University of
Texas, DePaul and others stretched
down the corridors.
Approximately 25 fourth-graders
entered teacher Amanda Smith’s
classroom, adorned with the orange
and blue of the University of Illinois.
Banners hung on the walls. A bulletin
board was filled with Illinois news
articles and paraphernalia.
New Illinois T-shirts lay folded
on their desks. After students put
them on, Smith led them in reciting
“Hail to the Orange,”
followed by an Illini cheer. Finally
they settled down for the day’s
first assignment: Write about college.
“I want you to think about
going to college and what you’re
going to have to do to get there.
Where do you want to go?”
Smith said, pacing about the desks.
Pencils scratched paper. The tune
of “Illinois Loyalty”
filled the room.
We’re
loyal to you, Illinois,
We’re
Orange and Blue, Illinois,
We’ll
back you to stand
’Gainst
the best in the land …
James Triplett, 9, shot his hand
into the air.
“How do you spell Princeton?”
he said.
Smith sighed in defeat but couldn’t
help smiling. “P-R-I-N…”
After all, the point of all this
is not only to excite the kids about
Illinois, Princeton or any other
particular school, but about college
in general, whichever one it may
be. Smith herself isn’t an
Illinois alumna – she graduated
from Bradley University in 2004.
Last fall, however, teachers chose
universities from across the country
as part of “No Excuses University,”
an approach meant to battle high
poverty rates and low academic achievement.
Fox is just the third school in
the country – and the first
outside of California – to
try the program.
Every Friday, students don school
colors and put the University under
a microscope. Smith’s students,
for example, pore over Illinois
news, facts, traditions and student
life. They attend monthly schoolwide
pep assemblies.
On Mondays, the program helps students
– 20 percent of whom live
at or below poverty levels –
refocus on their bright futures.
The No Excuses University shirts
the children are expected to wear
that day bear the year they plan
to graduate from college –
2019 for Smith’s students.
The hope is that, by planting the
idea of college early enough, more
kids will attain the goal.
“We keep reminding kids that
they can’t get to college
if they don’t meet those smaller
goals along the way,” said
Principal Nick Myers. By the time
some high-schoolers start thinking
of college, they have already squandered
their grades.
“We’re just trying
to pound in that you’re going
to be successful here, and you’re
going to be successful in high school,
and after high school comes college.
After high school comes college.
It’s not negotiable.”
There are encouraging signs that
the program is making a difference.
Test scores are up. Homework is
improving. Discipline is better.
Parents are more involved. For the
first time, Smith said, teachers
hear kids talk about college to
each other in the halls and on the
playground.
This is a milestone for a student
population that in large part was
unfamiliar with college. No Excuses
changed that quickly. Within a few
months of the rollout, the school
conducted a dance and encouraged
students and parents to show up
bearing their university colors.
More than 200 students attended
the event, and Smith’s class,
which had the most people show up
in Illinois gear, won an award for
displaying the most school spirit.
Back in her classroom, the music
played on, and students quietly
filled their pages. Marlene Garcia,
9, wrote that she wanted to go to
college to become a teacher.
“I will have to work really
really hard,” she wrote. “I
would really want to go to college
of Fighting Illini because I am
learning about what the college
is doing.”
Yazmin Nunez, 10, wrote, “While
I am in college I will learn how
to support myself. I don’t
know which college I want to go
to, but I have plenty of time to
think about it.”
“When I go to college, I
have to be prepared,” wrote
9-year-old Alec Cynova. “You
got to know where your dorm is.
Know your classes. Get good grades.
Have all your school supplies.”
As for James, he wrote that he
wants to go to Princeton –
or Illinois.
“I mean who doesn’t
love learning and college,”
James wrote. “I love school,
work, learning and education.”
No Excuses
University originated in 2004 at
San Diego’s Los Penasquitos
Elementary School, a place similar
to Fox. Approximately 40 percent
of Los Penasquitos students live
at or below poverty levels, and
for years the school had the lowest
test scores in the district. Many
students are poor immigrants.
Attitudes began to change with
the arrival of co-principals Damen
Lopez and Jeff King. During district
meetings about college readiness,
Lopez was told that no research
had been conducted about university
preparation in elementary schools.
Inspired, he decided that Los Penasquitos
would be the research.
 |
| Does wearing
an Illinois shirt make math
easier? Antwain Windham, at
top, may hope so. Of her pupils,
such as Elizabeth Navarrete,
above left, and Marlene Garcia,
teacher Smith said, “I
just feel like [they] are coming
to school more excited than
ever before.” |
He pulled an all-nighter and drafted
No Excuses University, named for
the belief that every child can
get to college. Now, more than two
school years later, he’s explaining
his school’s turnaround to
visitors from around the world.
Test scores at Los Penasquitos now
rank 10th out of Poway Unified School
District’s 23 elementary schools.
No Excuses University is now spreading
across the country through TurnAround
Consulting, co-founded by Lopez
and King. By this fall, they expect
several more elementary schools,
including another one outside Chicago,
to adopt the program.
According to Lopez, No Excuses
lets students know “that the
road to the future starts today
as they enter kindergarten. No Excuses
University has put a face on what
it is we’re working toward.”
Fox Elementary is in many ways
a mirror image of Los Penasquitos.
Approximately 80 of the school’s
398 students live in poor circumstances.
During the 2004-05 school year,
Fox’s Illinois Standards Achievement
Test scores ranked last in Schaumburg
School District 54.
In fall 2005, an upbeat Nick Myers
arrived as Fox Elementary’s
new principal. Student performance
began to improve under his changes,
but in spring 2006 Superintendent
Ed Rafferty encouraged Myers to
go to California to learn more about
No Excuses University. When he reported
back, teachers showered the idea
with praise.
Lopez said that becoming a No Excuses
school requires only an approved
application and staff attendance
at an institute, but the Schaumburg
school district elected to pay TurnAround
Consulting $8,000 for four days
of additional training. Fox Elementary
began No Excuses University at the
start of the 2006-07 school year,
and the results have been electric.
Assessment tests indicate that
by January of this year, students
were as proficient in math and reading
at the midyear point as their Fox
counterparts were at the end of
the 2005-06 school year. While the
next round of the ISAT won’t
be administered until March, Myers
said he expects a big jump over
2006 scores.
Improvements are noticeable in
other areas as well, such as discipline.
Myers said as of early January,
no out-of-school suspensions occurred,
compared to several by the same
point a year ago.
Smith said the staff has become
more excited about the school, too.
They’ve been encouraged by
more parent feedback and a greater
sense of community around the building,
she said.
“I really think our school
in general has become a more positive
place,” she said. “
No Excuses University has a growing
number of believers outside grade-school
circles. Notably, universities and
their alumni are beginning to respond.
The Univer-sity of Nebraska, for
example, sent backpacks full of
supplies to its classroom at Fox.
A sixth-grade class that adopted
Northern Illinois University was
invited to tour the school.
Smith’s fourth-graders caught
the eye of Martin Neumann ’99
ENG, MS ’04 ENG, a UI graduate
student in both the Department of
Nuclear, Plasma and Radiological
Engineering program and the Medical
Scholars program.
Neumann, who led the Orange Krush
student fan section at Illini basketball
games as an undergraduate, was dismayed
that Illinois was not mentioned
in news reports about Fox collaborating
with colleges. He sent notebooks,
pencils and a banner to the classroom.
The students responded with a thick
stack of orange and blue thank-you
notes, and Neumann, along with fellow
alumnus Richard Stockton
’97 ENG, JD ’00 LAW,
sent each of Smith’s pupils
an Illinois T-shirt. Both the chancellor’s
office and the University of Illinois
Alumni Association sent packages
of Illinois items to the class.
Neumann
is now trying to raise money to
bus the kids to visit the campus.
As of January, the children had
not yet met him – they knew
him only as “Marty”
who wants to be a doctor –
but he had made an impression where
distant connections can make a big
difference.
After the
college writing assignment, Smith
deployed laptop computers for her
students to take a virtual tour
of the Illinois campus. They spent
the next 45 minutes soaking up details
about the University.
“Some of you probably forgot
what a Quad is. We’re going
to look it up again,” Smith
said to the class.
“Doesn’t quad mean
four?” said DeVonte Lane,
10, holding up four fingers.
“In math it means four,”
Smith said, “but we’re
learning what it also means in college.”
The kids chatted excitedly as they
surfed the Web site. The school
was bigger than they imagined. They
couldn’t believe students
crossed campus by bus.
“Ms. Smith!” one yelled.
“There’s a swimming
pool at this school! It’s
huge!”
Andrew Collins, 10, nudged his
partner when he came across a picture
of the Student Services Arcade Building.
“Holy schnapple, look at
this arcade,” he said, in
awe. “I’m going to this
school.” After a moment of
searching, Andrew sat back in his
chair, disappointed.
“All it is is more computers,”
he muttered.
Seated across from him, 9-year-old
Mackenzie Agosta kept the disappointment
in perspective.
“If we go to college, we
know all about it,” she said.
DeVonte knew that the U of I has
one of the biggest libraries in
the world. “See?” he
said. “I was listening.”
Cassandra Carrillo and Deisy Molina
Cortes, both 10, studied a page
about Altgeld Hall. When asked if
they knew anything about college
before this year, both girls shook
their heads and went back to work.
Later on, they’d hang their
college essays on the wall along
with pictures of themselves in their
No Excuses University shirts –
just in time for conferences, when
their parents would see them.
Evensen is a freelance
writer in Champaign.
Photos by Lloyd DeGrane
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