R&L Education
Pages: 118
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-1-61048-705-4 • Hardback • May 2012 • $83.00 • (£64.00)
978-1-61048-707-8 • eBook • May 2012 • $78.50 • (£60.00)
Melinda Strickland is currently a principal at the Floyd County Education Center, Floyd County School System, located in Rome, GA.
Foreword by Franklin Schargel
Introduction
Chapter 1: The Power of the Test Score
Chapter 2: MIA: Mission in Action Service Learning
Chapter 3: A-B-C It’s Easy as 1-2-3
Academic Strategies
Chapter 4: From Zeroes to Heroes
The Tier Factor Program Behavior Strategy
Chapter 5: Connecting the Dots . . .
Social/Community Strategies
Chapter 6: Beyond Brick and Mortar
Parent Strategies
Chapter 7: Running on Empty
Voices of Student Success
Conclusion
Appendices
A Weight Training Work-Out Chart
BAn Ounce of Prevention
C How is Obesity More than just Being Overweight?
D Weekly Goal Sheet
E Student Goal Sheet
F Student Sample Goal Sheet
As a teacher and administrator, I have had the great privilege to work with colleagues who have not only shaped the lives of their students, but who have also shaped my life, personally and professionally. Dr. Melinda Strickland is definitely one of those people. Her dedication to the success of her students is contagious, and her commitment to helping students reach their potential knows no barriers or obstacles. More Than a Test Scoreattests to Dr. Strickland’s expertise as an educational leader, as well as her insight into the complexity of educating, motivating, and supporting the at-risk learner. Dr. Strickland is without a doubt, “more than a principal”.
— Dr. Lynn Plunkett, Superintendent, Floyd County Schools, Rome, GA
More Than a Test Score is an exciting, accessible tool alive with useful innovations needing utilized in alternative education. Filled with lively examples, the book reveals the power of real options. Dr. Melinda Strickland provides a much needed treatment of real choices aimed at the educator who believes in being real. It is comprehensive, highly readable, and replete with useful examples. Dr. Strickland took the things that so many of us in education know intuitively and put them to pen and paper. It was such a huge help to have them articulated so well - it provided a deeper explanation of many of the things I have talked about with my colleagues in Georgia and throughout the United States.— Jerry Randolph, Alternative Education Programs and Magnet Schools,Office of Education Support and Improvement, Georgia Department of Education
“The heart-beat of a successful alternative education program is an experienced, determined and tenacious caring adult that will continuously offer new directions for students. Dr. Strickland details a roadmap to exemplary outcomes through her lifelong pursuit of excellence in all areas. She clearly demonstrates that student lives are More than a Test Score”.
— Lori L. Lamb, President of National Alternative Education Association, Director of Alternative Education, Arkansas Department of Education
This easy-to-read book focuses on how the overemphasis on high-stakes tests for difficult-to-teach students may be a threat to their futures. Strickland (principal, Floyd County Education Center) has spent decades working with students in alternative educational settings, and relates numerous specific strategies for making the best of bad situations. Not merely stressing ways to improve academic performance and hence achieve better test scores, Strickland provides ways to actively engage students and, in the process, make them better people. The book offers success stories as well as stories about attempts to work with students that resulted in less than satisfactory outcomes. The author does a good job of letting the reader know that one size does not fit all, and that what works in one situation will probably not be as useful in another. Ways to involve students in community service, increase attendance, become sensitive to the needs of families and caregivers, and basically "parent a wayward teenager" are stressed. The book contains brief descriptions of some excellent ways to turn incorrigible youth back to the right path, and educators will be able to put these ideas into practice in quick order. Summing Up: Recommended.— Choice Reviews