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Fall 2004 / Volume 10, Number 1.
A publication of the Northwest Regional Educational Laboratory

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Key Lessons From Carnegie's Schools for a New Society

Figuring out how to create a good high school isn't the problem: what's tricky is crafting an entire system of high schools that successfully educate all students at high levels. That's the assessment of Constancia Warren, director of the Urban School Reform Initiative of the Carnegie Corporation.

Working in concert with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Carnegie has awarded $60 million to educational partners to transform urban high schools in seven cities. According to Warren, the grants—which cover from five to two dozen high schools in each city—were driven by whether there was "enough traction on the ground for systemic reform." Warren points out that reforming high schools is as much about district reform as it is about school reform: looking at how districts manage and support high schools is critical in creating positive change.

Speaking at the Education Writers Association annual meeting in San Francisco in April 2004, Warren addressed six "key lessons" that the Carnegie Corporation has learned in the course of its initiative:

Warren advocates a "portfolio approach" to high school rather than a single model. "We need different kinds of high schools and choice within a system... (to) address the needs of kids from those who are gifted to those who are ELL and who are arriving two years behind with interrupted formal education." Finally, she says, America won't make headway in changing high schools until we recognize underlying race issues, name them, and confront them head on.

Original URL: http://www.nwrel.org/nwedu/10-01/carn/

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