Arlington High School is reinventing itself as a bioscience school to give its students a new direction.
Ask St. Paul Schools Superintendent Meria Carstarphen about the future
of high schools and she'll point to St. Paul Arlington, a struggling
school recasting itself as a bioscience academy.
Thanks
in part to a three-year, $6 million grant from the U.S. Department of
Education, Arlington's Bio-SMART program seeks to create new pathways
to health and science careers. And, if Carstarphen has her way, it's
the first step to eventually recasting all the city's high schools with
career-oriented themes.
"This is a total redesign of a school," Carstarphen said. "We're completely restructuring the curriculum at Arlington."
The
idea is to create schools that become destinations because of their
program focus, not just their geography or football team. Arlington,
St. Paul's newest high school but struggling with the district's
highest concentration of poverty and lowest test scores, will become
the place for students drawn to careers in biohealth, bioengineering
and technology and bio-business.
"As enrollment declines, we
would like to see a system where schools don't have to compete for the
same kids," said Patty Murphy, Arlington's principal. "Schools will
become more specialized. This is going to open doors to careers that
our kids might not otherwise be able to access."
Arlington as a
science and technology school makes sense. Built in 1996, it has
extensive science and technology facilities and equipment already.
Grant money will enable the school to expand its curriculum and course
offerings. It is also working with St. Paul College, Century College,
the University of Minnesota's Carlson School of Management, the U's
School of Public Health, the nursing program and a new health care
business program at the College of St. Catherine, and myriad
businesses, hospitals and health care providers, Murphy said.
Arlington
will not only use curriculum developed by the National Consortium on
Health Sciences and Technology Education, its partnerships will enable
students to gain access to internships, job shadowing and even college
credit in health and business careers.
"The idea is to expose
kids while they're young to what real careers look like and feel like,"
said Murphy, whose bachelor's and master's degrees are in
health-related fields. "I think it's never too early for parents or
schools to work together to allow students to see and explore
opportunities."
Nearby Washington Technology Middle School is
also part of the redesign, and hundreds of Washington's students will
begin exploring bioscience as well. But Arlington is devoting itself to
this new focus. Every student entering the school as a ninth-grader
will choose one of the three bioscience pathways.
"We have the ethical responsibility to guide students to fields where there are going to be jobs," Murphy said.
Time for change
Arlington's
new direction has much to do with timing. The school has moved into the
corrective action phase under the federal No Child Left Behind law for
falling short of test score targets. Another bad year and the school
could be forced to begin planning to restructure. On statewide tests
given last spring, just over 10 percent of Arlington's students scored
at grade level or better in math. And just 24 percent were proficient
in reading. At the same time, more than 95 percent of Arlington's
students come from minority groups, 90 percent live in poverty and 60
percent still are learning English -- all groups that struggle on
statewide tests.
Murphy said staff members at Arlington are
embracing the new direction. She started the work last year, even
before the grant was awarded, hiring more math and science and business
teachers. In many classes, teachers will work in pairs. An English
language teacher will work with a math teacher to beef up the
curriculum for students still learning the language. In other classes,
two math teachers will work together, or a physics teacher will team
with a technology teacher.
The school already has spent $180,000
on technology, including GPS programs, a robotics program and about a
dozen "smart boards" that allow students and teachers to interact on
problems. Arlington students will be able to look at and analyze DNA.
"We're
excited and we hope it makes some real change," said Karen Casper, lead
teacher for the school's biohealth science pathway. And the school
continues to attract partners, eager for the potential infusion of
bioscience workers.
"We have almost more interest than we can handle," Casper said.
Those
partnerships will allow Arlington students to get a head start on
everything from two-year certificate programs in nursing and pharmacy
technology to advanced degrees in medicine and microbiology.
Students, too, are excited.
Alnansa
Anderson and Aprill Moua, both 15 and in 10th grade, say they are eager
to explore the career possibilities. Both said they are interested in
the bio-business and marketing pathway. Moua participates in a program
at the Carlson School of Management.
"Before, everything was so
broad when you looked at a school," Anderson said. "You didn't have
something that you could really look at. Now, it's kind of like
college."
Moua added that this new focus should attract students
from all over the city -- and from many different backgrounds. The
school is the only one in St. Paul without a neighborhood attendance
area and is often used to reassign students who couldn't get into other
high schools.
"I think Arlington will be really attractive to
kids who want to look at science or health careers," she said. "Our
name is Arlington Bio-SMART. Kids will say 'I want to know more.'"
James Walsh • 651-298-1541
James Walsh • jwalsh@startribune.com