One kid at a time : big lessons from a small school
Titre:
One kid at a time : big lessons from a small school
PERSONAL_AUTHOR_EPSB:
Sommaire:
Imagine a high school where there are no classes, grades, or tests; where each teacher is responsible for only 14 students, and students stay with the same teacher all four years; where the learning style of each student is accommodated; and where students complete internships in the real world based on their interests. This is the concept practiced at the Metropolitan Regional Career and Technical Center (the Met), a public high school in Providence, RI. Students are selected from a lottery of applicants and come from a variety of economic and academic backgrounds. Levine, who immersed himself in the Met for two years, describes the school's first four years. It's to be expected that such a unique school would have its critics, but few could argue with the school's successes. Even its creators say that it's not the answer to all that ails American education, but they believe that it holds many of those answers among them, small, personalized schools, teachers and administrators who know the students well, and a focus on learning through the students' interests. Levine succeeds in bringing the Met to life for readers.
Date de publication comme intervalle:
2002
SERIES_EPSB:
Description matérielle:
xx, 170 p. ; 24 cm.
Vedette-matière - nom collectif:
Numéro international normalisé des livres (ISBN):
9780807741535
Informations de publication:
New York : Teachers College Press, c2002.