By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc. Classical Charter School 101.

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By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc. Classical Charter School 101

Transcript of By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc. Classical Charter School 101.

Page 1: By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc. Classical Charter School 101.

By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc.

Classical Charter School 101

Page 2: By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc. Classical Charter School 101.

By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc.

Overview of Presentation

1. Explain what our proposed Classical Charter School is and is not.

2. Answer audience questions.

3. Meet with attendees to talk about next steps. (We need lots of volunteers!)

Page 3: By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc. Classical Charter School 101.

By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc.

What is a charter school?It is NOT a private school.

It does NOT charge tuition.

It is NOT religious.

It does NOT screen applicants in any way.

It is a free, secular, public school.

Page 4: By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc. Classical Charter School 101.

By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc.

How do charter schools start?

Parents, teachers, and others develop a proposal.

They incorporate as a non-profit and apply to the local Board of Education

If the charter is approved, the school receives funding on a per pupil basis.

Page 5: By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc. Classical Charter School 101.

By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc.

How do parents enroll their children?

Parents submit an application to the school.

If there are more applicants than slots, students are selected by a random lottery process performed in an open, public meeting.

We plan to serve 360 students.

Our school is open to boys and girls, grades K-8, and will open in August 2013.

Page 6: By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc. Classical Charter School 101.

By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc.

What is a classical education?

It is NOT about being “old fashioned”.

It is NOT a teaching technique.

It is education that follows the Trivium.

Page 7: By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc. Classical Charter School 101.

By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc.

What is the Trivium?It has nothing to do with trivia.

It is a way of organizing topics that roughly corresponds with students’ developmental stages.

It came from the Middle Ages & Ancient Greece

It consists of three phases: grammar, logic, and rhetoric.

Page 8: By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc. Classical Charter School 101.

By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc.

What is taught in each phase?Phase Emphasis

Our School

Grammar(K-4)

Fundamental knowledge and skills (or “grammar”) of all subjects—not just English grammar.

Logic(5-8)

Building on existing knowledge and skills, use reasoning to learn more and to more deeply understand previous learning.

High School

Rhetoric(9-12)

Marshal knowledge and reason to persuade others and express yourself.

The emphasis at each phase is an emphasis, not a sole focus.Knowledge, reasoning, and self-expression are part of each phase.

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By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc.

How are topics organized?For “content” subjects (history, science, art, music, and literature) history provides the

organizing structure.

Students take two chronological sweeps through history: 1-4 and 5-8.

For “skills” subjects (math, reading, handwriting, and Spanish), the hierarchy of skills within the subject itself provides the organizing structure.

Page 10: By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc. Classical Charter School 101.

By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc.

What is the sequence for content?Grades

Topic15

26

37

48

History & Humanities Ancient Middle

Ages Renaissance Modern

Science BiologyAstronomy

& Earth Science

Chemistry Physics

The science topic reflects the era in which the roots of the discipline were developed. Art, music, and literature

selections include works from the corresponding period.

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By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc.

How will content be taught?NO emphasis on disconnected facts or inert knowledge.

Instruction uses “big ideas” to organize factual knowledge

for recall and for conceptual understanding.

Facts are not taught for fact’s sake, but are building blocks that students must master and use in applications.

Material is taught in easily digestible “chunks”.

The goal of teaching is to facilitate generalization, or the ability to apply knowledge to new, untaught problems.

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By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc.

How will skills be taught?The curriculum does not “spiral”, or touch briefly on the

same skill for several years in a row.

Our approach: If it’s worth teaching, teach it to mastery.

There is an emphasis on practice to the point of automaticity (not having to think about it).

The goal is fluency, which frees students’ short term memory to focus on complex problem solving and analysis.

Page 13: By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc. Classical Charter School 101.

By Frederick Classical Charter School, Inc.

What are the school’s goals?Demonstrate strong performance on a variety of

assessments (including MSA).

Narrow (or close) the achievement gap.

Provide teachers with world-class professional development.

Be nationally recognized as a replicable model for providing a liberal arts education. (Long Term Goal)