R&L Education
Pages: 128
Trim: 0 x 0
978-1-57886-968-8 • Hardback • January 2009 • $82.00 • (£63.00)
978-1-57886-969-5 • Paperback • January 2009 • $32.00 • (£25.00)
978-1-57886-970-1 • eBook • January 2009 • $30.00 • (£22.99)
Ronald J. Newell serves as the Learning Program and Evaluation Director for EdVisions Schools. Mark J. Van Ryzin is Research Assistant at the Institute for Child Development at the University of Minnesota.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 What Is Learning
Chapter 3 Schools of Hope
Chapter 4 The Research
Chapter 5 A Good Stage/Environment Fit for Adolescents
Chapter 6 Results of the Study
Chapter 7 Why EdVisions Schools Obtain Positive Results
Chapter 8 Using the Hope Study for School Improvement
Chapter 9 Afterword: Rigor Redefined
To achieve authentic academic success for more students, we need schools that are developed around adolescent needs and interests in belonging, being competent, and being responsibly free. Here is such a powerful, insightful perspective.....
— Walter Enloe, coauthor of Project Circles and Learning Circles and former lead teacher and principal of the Paideia School and Hiroshima International School
This book offers a rare combination?a fresh perspective on student learning, a serious effort to measure success, and a practical way to inform discussions about schools as a learning environments. The authors conceptualize rigorous learning as the outcome of an environment that promotes positive youth development, not changes in course offerings or testing requirements. They champion the idea that students should be at the center of their own learning agenda and that overall success in life requires educating the whole child. This has led them to create and study schools that test an important idea ? that academic rigor comes from students establishing positive relationships with others and having opportunities to face personally relevant challenges.The Hope Study demonstrates what can happen when pioneering educators partner with researchers to go beyond their intuitive understandings to better understand what helps learners. The result is fascinating portrait of schools where students tackle real-world challenges in the context of supportive relationships with others. One comes away convinced that it is a mistake to ignore the social and emotional needs of students (and teachers), or to underestimate what young people can do when given appropriate
— Jason Ravitz