What real innovation in education looks like
Davidson Academy and ACE Charter School break Nevada’s
rigid mold
By Joe Enge
Any public schools pretend to be innovative while completely
avoiding the substantive changes necessary for genuine innovation.
Yet they always ask for more money.
Nevertheless, Nevada does have some solid examples of true
educational innovation.
The Davidson Academy in Reno and the Academy for Career Education
(ACE) in Sparks are models of education that actually serves
the learning needs of students. These are different schools
for different students, the former targeting the profoundly
gifted and the latter serving students interested in the construction
trades.
Just this month the Heritage Foundation, citing a report from
the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, noted the most promising
strategy for addressing America’s drop-out problem:
[It] is to provide different schools for different students.
“Instead of the usual ‘one-size-fits all’
schools,” the report explains, “districts should
develop options for students, including a curriculum that
connects what they are learning in the classroom with real
life experiences and with work, smaller learning communities
with more individualized instruction, and alternative schools
that offer specialized programs to students at-risk of dropping
out.”
The strategies proposed by the Gates Foundation’s March
report, The Silent Epidemic, have already been integrated
by these two Nevada schools.
Jan and Bob Davidson founded the Davidson Academy this year,
concerned that our nation’s most gifted and talented
young people are largely neglected and underserved. The school
— first of its kind in the nation — operates to
provide opportunities not available to gifted students in
regular schools. Parents are moving across the country to
Reno so their children can attend and better realize their
potential.
Opening ceremony for the Davidson Academy reflected its national
significance. U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings
delivered prepared remarks. Also in attendance were U.S. Senator
John Ensign and Governor Kenny Guinn. The future of the school
looks as bright as its students.
For contractors and educators in Washoe County, the lack of
preparation and training of students entering the construction
industry was a concern. Another factor in the push for the
unique ACE charter high school was the decline of vocational
programs in the Washoe County School District. Thus the Academy
for Career Education opened its school doors in August 2002.
Changhua Wang, Ph.D., a researcher at the Northwest Regional
Educational Laboratory, explained the ACE success story in
an evaluation report.
“It is not an at-risk school or ‘dumping ground,’”
wrote Wang, “but rather a school that offers opportunities
for those students who do not do well in a traditional school
setting to excel by means of meaningful learning curricula
and hands-on activities.”
“ACE has a close relationship with the local construction
industry for its business expertise, financial support, and
apprenticeship opportunities,” noted Wang. “A
number of local business representatives serve as members
on the ACE School Board. The school also has articulation
agreements with local community colleges so that students
can earn college credits while still enrolled in the high
school.”
Students at ACE take their academic classes in the morning.
Math, science, and English are directly connected to their
chosen vocations — diesel mechanics, construction, CAD,
etc. Each year the students build a house from the foundation
up including all plumbing and wiring.
When the Washoe County School District tried to do the same,
its trade school spent three years on one house and professional
contractors finally had to complete the project. In the area
of what used to be called “vocational education,”
ACE proves that public-private charter schools are a better
solution.
How does ACE impact students?
“I came to ACE in the middle of my sophomore year,”
recalls one youth. “I barely passed the freshman year
and my counselor recommended me to come here. Now I am right
on the track with grades…. It is (the) first time that
I start to get A’s in school.”
“All our subjects taught at ACE pertain to building
the house,” says another. “We talked about the
history of house building and how math and science are used
in building construction. We have a lot of opportunities for
hands-on learning. We understand better when the subjects
are taught relevant to what we are doing every day.”
Public schools are loath to give up their monopoly. Yet they
avoid serious reforms and just keep asking for more money.
Feeding this broken and rigid system is not the answer. More
Nevada children will succeed when the state abandons its one-size-fits-all
approach.
That means: when parents get the freedom to choose the school
that matches their child’s needs … and not everyone
else’s.