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Humes School, Elvis’ Alma Mater, to Close

Humes Middle School in North Memphis will close at the end of this school year as it returns to the Memphis Shelby-County district’s control after a decade in Tennessee’s failed turnaround district for low-performing schools.

The last-minute decision to shutter the nearly 100-year-old building, where a young Elvis Presley attended high school, is a change in plans since the fall, when teachers were told the school would stay open, said Bobby White, head of Frayser Community Schools, the charter company that runs Humes for the state’s Achievement School District.

“I just wish it had been sooner,” White said of the decision.

The school has long struggled with low enrollment. Students will be rezoned to Booker T. Washington, a grade 6-12 school three miles away in South Memphis, according to Memphis-Shelby County Schools documents.

The decision, shared with families and staff in recent days, happened with little to no public discussion in the community or by the school board. And the prospect of students having to shift to a faraway school has some education leaders concerned.

White and district leaders have known for years that they would need a plan for Humes’ students and the building. Schools like Humes that are taken over by the state typically spend a maximum of 10 years in the ASD.

Humes is one of five Memphis schools that are reaching the end of their 10-year term this summer. Of the other four, one will remain open and operated by MSCS, one received approval to operate under another state-run charter district, and one will continue to operate as a charter school under MSCS.

The fourth, MLK College Prep High School, operated by the Frayser charter network, is also set to close in its current building, but families have received more regular communication from the Memphis district about the changes there. MLK is set to merge with Trezevant High in the fall while a new neighborhood high school is built.

Meanwhile, the Humes community has been waiting for clarity. Last summer, the Memphis district rejected White’s application to continue running the school under Frayser Community Schools.

“When you’re dealing with poor, marginalized folks,” White said, “you respect them enough to communicate with them as soon as possible, and think through things in a way where they’re going to be valued and respected, where you’re doing right by them.”

For Humes, conversations changed after the district faced renewed concerns about the physical condition of the building, which turns 100 years old next year. When another charter school inquired about leasing the building during a January board meeting, then interim Superintendent Toni Williams said the building had “major issues.”

Around that time, Chalkbeat reported that a draft plan for all district schools suggested that Humes would close. Still, the district hadn’t communicated any new plans to Humes teachers and families since an earlier fall meeting, said White.

MSCS did not respond to Chalkbeat’s inquiries in time for the publication of this story. During a meeting with board members Tuesday, Superintendent Marie Feagins said the district reviewed several factors including the capacity of the buildings. Feagins, who became district leader on April 1st, told board members she was under the impression the news about Humes had already been shared.

The building is on the National Register of Historic Places because of Presley, who graduated in 1953 from Humes when it was a high school.

But enrollment at Humes has remained low since even before it was taken over by the state. It can serve more than 1,300 students, but only 193 are enrolled. A previous charter operator, Gestalt Community Schools, also struggled with low enrollment at Humes.

White says the district’s plans to send students from Humes’ zone out of the neighborhood for middle school could result in lower enrollment at Manassas High School in North Memphis.

Memphis board members Stephanie Love, who has kept a focus on schools in the turnaround district, and Michelle McKissack, whose district includes Humes, Manassas, and Booker T. Washington, both said the board should revisit the district’s policy on school zoning.

“The culture in South Memphis and North Memphis is not the same,” Love said, adding that she understands why families and teachers could be upset by the last-minute closure.

The district and board face more decisions about remaining Memphis schools in the ASD, as their charters expire in the next two years. The takeover district itself could wind down, too.

In a letter to parents, Feagins suggested that they consider Cummings K-8 Optional School and Grandview Heights Middle School as alternatives to Booker T. Washington. White said some of the students have considered nearby charter school options as well, including KIPP Collegiate Middle or Frayser Community Schools’ Westside Middle.

The district is holding online meetings for family members on April 17th at 12:30 p.m. and 5 p.m. A community meeting will be held at 6 p.m. at the Porter-Leath location at 628 Alice Avenue.

Laura Testino covers Memphis-Shelby County Schools for Chalkbeat Tennessee. Reach Laura at LTestino@chalkbeat.org.

Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educational change in public schools.

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Hanley School in Tennessee’s Turnaround District Will Return to MSCS Control

For the first time, a charter school in Tennessee’s turnaround district will exit the state program and return to the Memphis district’s management, Memphis-Shelby County Schools announced last week. 

Hanley School, a K-8 school in Orange Mound, was taken over by the state and placed in the Achievement School District a decade ago to be run by a charter operator. This fall, it will be part of the Memphis district’s turnaround model, known as the iZone. 

The move marks a setback for the school’s charter operator, and another twist in the chaotic unwinding of the Achievement School District, which has been rocked by leadership turnover and turmoil. 

The state district began operating in 2012 and was designed to elevate some of Tennessee’s lowest performing schools by turning them over to charter operators under 10-year management contracts. The schools were to exit the ASD once their performance improved and return to their home districts — either Memphis, home to all but two of the schools, or Nashville.

But state leaders have acknowledged for years that the turnaround effort had failed in its mission. And as some of the 10-year management contracts near expiration, they have scrambled in recent years to figure out how to move schools out of the faltering ASD and get them on a path to improvement. 

The current state policy describes several pathways for an ASD school to leave the district, including some options to stay open as a charter. The policy stresses “school specific” plans to account for each school’s “unique” situations. 

In the case of Hanley, the policy resulted in the current operator, Journey Community Schools, not being able to keep the school under its network, and the transition to MSCS began over the last few months.

As other ASD schools creep up on their final years, Memphis could see a wave of school closures if MSCS doesn’t bring those schools back into the district.

Nickalous Manning, executive director of Journey Community Schools, denounced the way Hanley’s transition is being handled. 

“The children and families in Orange Mound and at Hanley deserve a voice and a say in their children’s education,” Manning told Chalkbeat Wednesday, echoing a common complaint in Memphis that state leaders make decisions and policies affecting local families — like creating the ASD — without their input.

Manning accused state officials of not communicating an impending deadline for Hanley to apply to remain open as a charter school, and faulted them for not holding more public meetings with families. The exit process was unclear, Journey wrote in a letter to the state asking for a waiver of laws that prevent Journey from continuing to operate the school.

The state’s education commissioner, Penny Schwinn, cited state law and rules in denying the waiver. MSCS shared copies of the letters between Manning and the state with Chalkbeat to explain why the district won’t consider Journey’s charter application for Hanley.

The Tennessee Department of Education, where the ASD is housed, told Chalkbeat that all ASD charter operators received information about transition plans in 2020. ASD leaders meet monthly with the charter operators to review school status, department spokesperson Victoria Robinson said. 

Robinson supplied a list of meetings scheduled over the last academic year with Hanley officials about the transition. Parents received a letter about the plans in January, Robinson said, and were invited to a meeting early last week.

Manning, who grew up in Orange Mound, said Journey plans to keep trying to hang on to Hanley.

Hanley will be the first charter school in the ASD to return to MSCS as a traditional public school. Four other ASD schools in Memphis were never operated as charter schools, and transitioned to MSCS operations this school year, also as part of the district’s iZone program.

Others have followed different pathways as dictated by the state policy, which takes into account the school’s test scores, the local district’s test scores, and how many years are left in the charter contract.

In most of the exits, schools where students showed high growth on state tests have swapped from the ASD to the Tennessee Public Charter School Commission’s oversight. 

That option wasn’t available for Hanley. Available school testing data shows Hanley’s students haven’t noticeably improved during the state takeover, much like other schools in the ASD. 

Hanley’s reading scores, for instance, are nearly on par with the ASD average this year, and lower than a nearby MSCS elementary school, Dunbar. Neither school had more than 12% of students meeting reading benchmarks.

Only one Memphis ASD school has applied to join MSCS as a charter. The board approved it against the recommendation of the district. In April, MSCS board members will have a slate of five ASD schools to consider reabsorbing as charter schools, including Coleman School, another Journey school in its ninth operating year.

Laura Testino covers Memphis-Shelby County Schools for Chalkbeat Tennessee. Reach Laura at LTestino@chalkbeat.org.

Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educational change in public schools.

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SCS iZone Adds Three New Schools

Mitchell High School

In the 2016-17 school year, Shelby County Schools will add Douglas High School, Mitchell High School, and Westwood High School to its iZone program.

The iZone program is SCS’ alternative to the state-run Achievement School District (ASD). Both programs attempt to turn around schools with scores in the bottom five percent statewide, but the iZone does so while retaining the schools within the SCS district. The ASD is a separate state-run district that pairs failing schools with charter schools. Through the iZone program, low-performing schools are able to avoid ASD conversion.

All three high schools are part of an iZone feeder pattern that already includes elementary and middle schools in the same neighborhoods as the high schools. Bringing them into the iZone ensures that students in lower grades that are currently run through the iZone program will remain in the iZone through graduation unless they move or transfer to other schools within the district.

Once a school is chosen for iZone, faculty and staff must reapply for their jobs. The principal is replaced and given more autonomy than before. The way the school is run is primarily set by its principal rather than dictated by SCS’ central office. 

“We believe the proven strategies and culture of the iZone will accelerate student achievement in these schools,” said Superintendent Dorsey Hopson. “The current academic status of these schools illustrates the fact that we have not been effective enough in supporting students. We have a responsibility to do things differently in order to improve achievement at a more aggressive pace.”

A Vanderbilt University study released earlier this month found that the iZone program is actually doing better than the ASD in improving student scores. That study found looked at data from the first three years that the ASD and iZone have been in operation and found that iZone schools had made greater gains.

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ASD Announces School Takeovers for 2016-17 School Year

Malika Anderson

The state-run Achievement School District (ASD) will take over Caldwell-Guthrie Elementary, Hillcrest High, and Kirby and Raleigh-Egypt middle schools in the 2016-17 school year.

Those schools, which all had scores in the bottom five percent statewide, have been matched with charter school operators that will rename the schools, hire new staff and a new principal, and reformat the way the schools are run. The ASD is the state school district charged with turning around the state’s lowest-performing schools (called “priority schools”).

Charter operator Scholar Academies will take over operation of Caldwell-Guthrie and Raleigh-Egypt Middle, and Green Dot Public Schools will be taking over Hillcrest High and Kirby Middle.

“The input we received from parents, teachers, and community members was critical in making these matches,” said Malika Anderson, incoming ASD superintendent. “And we look forward to working shoulder to shoulder with parents and educators in our new schools to ensure every child meets their full potential.”

The ASD’s Neighborhood Advisory Councils (NAC) — made up of parent, students, teachers, and community members — worked with the ASD on the charter matching process.

“We are so grateful to all NAC members for their hard work over the last few months assessing operators and for their commitment to ensuring appropriate matching decisions were made,” said Anjelica Hardin, ASD’s Director of Strategic Partnerships. “We believe strongly in the NACs and the process we used this year to include more parent and community voice in our conversion decisions.”

A Vanderbilt University study released earlier this month found that Shelby County Schools’ (SCS) iZone program, which attempts to turn-around low-performing schools that ASD doesn’t take over, is actually doing better than the ASD. That study found looked at data from the first three years that the ASD and iZone have been in operation and found that iZone schools had made greater gains.

At a press conference on Thursday, State Representative Antonio Parkinson called for the possible abolition of the ASD. He cited the Vanderbilt study and claimed that “the ASD model has not worked.”

There are 77 priority schools in the state. Currently, the ASD runs 23 of those, and 26 are run by SCS’ iZone. The majority of the state’s priority schools are in Memphis.

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Community Uproar Over Proposed Charter School

Last week, around 50 parents and students of Sheffield Elementary filed out of their school, lined up on the sidewalk, and chanted this simple demand for the news cameras: “Leave us alone.”

Sheffield Elementary is one of five Shelby County Schools (SCS) slated for state takeover by the Achievement School District (ASD) — the state-run school district that manages schools in the bottom five percent of performance. Once a school is taken over by the ASD, it’s converted into a charter school.

The parents’ opposition to the proposed ASD plans for Sheffield stems from the simple argument that Sheffield is making great strides toward academic success on its own, and they say a disruption of the progress would only prove detrimental to students.

Protesters demonstrate against the ASD takeover of Sheffield Elementary.

“Why do people want Sheffield right now?” asked Barbara Riddle, whose two grandchildren attend the school. “Why now after the last few years of building a foundation with our new principal?”

Under Sheffield’s principal, Patricia Griggs-Merriweather, the school has made academic gains as measured by the Tennessee Value-Added Assessment System. A TVAAS score of four or five would warrant the school’s removal from the ASD’s priority list. Sheffield’s gains in reading and math scores have earned them a score of three.

State Representative Raumesh Akbari sponsored the TVAAS law that currently renders Sheffield eligible for ASD takeover but joined the parents and students in asking for their progress to be left uninterrupted.

“The biggest fear is that this school will be taken out of the community’s control,” Akbari said. “If a school is already doing the right thing, then I want to support those efforts. I don’t want those students to go through the trauma of a takeover where the principal is gone, all of the teachers have been fired, and a whole new mentality comes in.”

SCS board member Miska Clay Bibbs, also in the crowd, echoed Akbari’s concerns about the sudden disruption of a working formula.

“For me as a school board member, it’s about choice. What does true choice look like?” Bibbs asked. “If a school is already making academic gains and growing in the way that it’s growing, how can they be matched with someone who can’t compare to that same growth? That’s not choice.”

Aspire Public Schools is the charter network that has applied to take over Sheffield. No representatives from Aspire were on hand during the protest, but parents did confirm that they had heard from representatives from the network. Riddle remains unconvinced that Aspire is the best solution for the school.

“What they did was very unimpressive,” Riddle said. “They said, ‘Well, if we take over your school, your child receives a free laptop, iPad, or desktop.’ Well, I’m not impressed with that, and my children are not for sale. It made me wonder if the children’s best interests are at heart or if there’s a hidden agenda.”

In a statement released last Thursday, the ASD said parental input was welcome and encouraged via a neighborhood advisory council charged with the task of reviewing Aspire’s application.

“The criteria for ASD are clear, and since the recent passing of the TVAAS law championed by Rep. Akbari, it is now clearer than ever,” said the statement.

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Malika Anderson Named New Head of ASD

Malika Anderson

The Tennessee Achievement School District (ASD) will be headed up by its former deputy superintendent Malika Anderson, following the resignation of its first superintendent Chris Barbic.

Anderson was named for the role by Governor Bill Haslam and Tennessee Department of Education Commissioner Candice McQueen on Tuesday morning. She has served on the ASD’s executive leadership team since its founding in 2012, first as the chief portfolio officer and then as deputy superintendent.

The ASD is a state-run organization that takes over schools with scores in the bottom five percent with a goal of moving those schools into the top 25 percent. Of the 29 schools the ASD has taken over in Tennessee, 27 are in Memphis.

Barbic announced this summer that he’d resign at the end of the year, citing both what he saw as the need for a new ASD leader and his personal health concerns. Barbic suffered a heart attack in 2014.

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ASD Superintendent Chris Barbic Will Resign

Chris Barbic

Chris Barbic, who has led the state’s Achievement School District (ASD) since its inception in 2012, has announced that he will resign in December.

Barbic broke the news in a letter on the ASD website Friday morning. The letter states that Barbic is leaving because he feels like it’s time for a change in leadership and because the demands of the lead role at the ASD have led to strains on his health and family. Barbic suffered a heart attack last year.

The ASD was established in 2012 to facilitate charter school takeovers of failing Tennessee public schools. So far, most of the schools the ASD has taken over have come from Shelby County Schools’ priority list, which lists schools in the bottom five percent. The takeovers have caused controversy and resulted in numerous hostile public meetings, where many parents and community leaders expressed disdain with the state takeover system.

The ASD schools have had varied success in improving academic achievement. Some have shown more improvement than others. The model for how ASD schools are run differs depending on the charter operator, but all allow more autonomy for teachers and all allow school leadership to make their own staffing decisions and set their own budgets and programming.

“I came here to answer Tennessee’s urgent call to improve priority schools and to build a new kind of school district that would put the power back in the hands of parents and teachers. Now that this foundation is in place, it is the right time to think about passing the baton to a new leader who will take our work to the next level for the benefit of the students and families we serve,” Barbic states in his letter.

As for his more personal reasons for leaving, Barbic writes “I am simply at a point in my life where I need to focus more on my family and my health. Building the ASD has been grueling work. The pace and stress of a superintendent role, especially this one with weekly trips from Nashville to Memphis and multiple nights away on the road, does not lend itself to decades of work. We have been at this for nearly four years, and I have promised my family a change in pace.”

Despite criticism of the ASD, Barbic’s letter remains optimistic.

“The impact has been clear. Kids’ lives are being changed. Over the last two years, student proficiency in Tennessee’s priority schools grew four times faster than in non-priority schools, and thanks to hardworking partners and educators in Memphis, there are 4,500 fewer students attending priority schools,” Barbic writes. “By this time next year, every priority school in Tennessee will be in the ASD, in a district-led iZone, or undergoing some kind of major local intervention. If we keep this up, within just a few years, chronic failure in schools will have real potential to be a thing of the past.”

Barbic’s full letter is available on the ASD website.

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ASD Charter YES Prep Pulls Out of Memphis

Justin Fox Burks

Chris Barbic, ASD superintendent

Houston-based charter operator YES Prep has pulled out of its commitment to run Airways Middle School in the 2015-2016 school year, citing concerns from the community with the school’s phase-in model. The charter operator had been authorized to take over the Shelby County School (SCS) by the state Achievement School District (ASD) because Airways Middle was on the state’s list of priority schools, those with scores in the bottom five percent statewide. 

YES Prep was set to phase in Airways Middle, starting with just the sixth grade in the next school year. The practice of charter operators phasing in schools grade by grade has been controversial, and state Representative Raumesh Akbari has introduced a bill to ban phasing in by ASD charter operators.


A statement from YES Prep cites the fact that community members have concerns with phasing in as its reason for pulling out of Memphis:

“It has become increasingly clear that our “phase-in” model – opening with one grade level the first year and adding one new grade level per year – is not the preference of the community due to the displacement of hundreds of 7th and 8th grade students across the city. We saw evidence of this in December when the Achievement Advisory Council (AAC) did not recommend us for a match with American Way Middle School.
We have never been, nor will we ever be an organization that goes against the will of the community

We believe that in order to meet the current demand of the Memphis community, YES Prep would need to adapt to a “full transformation” model and begin operating with all grade levels at the same time. It is our belief that the stakes are too high for the students of Memphis to experiment with a “full transformation” model, one in which have never implemented before.

Because we have never opened schools this way, we feel the stakes are too high to experiment, with a model that we have not yet found success with.”

ASD officials have said they learned of YES Prep’s decision to pull out on Tuesday. A statement issued by ASD reads “We are as surprised as everyone else regarding this sudden decision and disappointed that YES Prep is backing out of its commitment to Memphis. The sixth grade families of Airways Middle deserve better, and we’re working with Shelby County Schools to ensure they have access to a high quality option next year.”

SCS was already planning to move current sixth- and seventh-graders at Airways Middle to Sherwood Middle in the fall because SCS has recently ended the practice of co-locating with ASD charters that are phasing schools in grade by grade.

Airways Middle would have been YES Prep’s first school outside of Houston. ASD Superintendent Chris Barbic founded YES Prep in 1998 in Texas, but in 2011, he took the job heading up Tennessee’s ASD.

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Getting Schooled

Inside a kindergarten classroom at Cornerstone Preparatory School in Binghampton, a little boy is seated at his desk, working diligently on an iPad. A handful of other kids are also working on iPads, while others are gluing paper cutouts of numbers to a worksheet.

Cornerstone’s Principal Lisa Settle, who is visiting the classroom, approaches the boy with the iPad and asks him to open his word games app. The boy eagerly opens the app, excited to show his principal what he can do. The screen displays a cartoon image of a tin can and an image of a piece of wide-ruled notebook paper where he’s supposed to use his finger to spell out what he’s looking at.

Photographs by Justin Fox Burks

Class at Cornerstone Prep

“Do you know what that is?” Settle asks.

“It’s a can!” he says, as he begins to spell out the letters C-A-N with his tiny index finger. He spells the word correctly, but the app doesn’t accept his answer.

“It doesn’t like that ‘a,’ does it?” says Settle, taking the iPad and writing a perfect lowercase “a” with her finger. She hands it back to the boy and says, “You need to make sure you make your letters neat, okay? Good job. Keep going.”

Cornerstone Prep Principal Lisa Settle

Settle and her staff’s emphasis on perfection have helped the failing school make some headway. Since the 2012-13 school year, charter school Cornerstone Prep has operated the school under the state’s Achievement School District (ASD), the state’s answer to improving schools with scores that fall in the bottom five percent statewide. Schools operated by the ASD are removed from the local school district and taken over by charter school operators.

Before Cornerstone took over, the school was a Shelby County School (SCS) known as Lester School. In 2011, before the state takeover, only 10.5 percent of Lester’s students were proficient in math, 7.9 percent in reading and language arts, and 12.8 percent in science. Cornerstone has since made modest gains.

“When we came into the building, most of our third graders were below pre-K [level]. We had a lot of students with undiagnosed needs, and that’s heartbreaking,” Settle said. “We had to go back and do a lot of back-filling and teach a lot of foundational skills. We still have a lot more work to do.”

“We still have a lot more work to do” could probably be the motto for the ASD. It could also be the tagline for SCS’ Innovation Zone (iZone), the county-run alternative for dealing with priority schools. Since the 2012-13 school year, both have made gains overall, but some schools were so behind that it’ll take a few more years to see real improvement.

As both districts work to improve the schools they’ve taken over, another 23 SCS schools that have not been taken over by the state or the iZone remain on the state priority list, meaning they fall in the bottom five percent statewide. Those schools are eligible for takeover by the state or the iZone in the future, a prospect that has some parents and faculty fighting mad.

ASD: How It Works

When SCS merged with Memphis City Schools (MCS), it inherited a long list of failing schools, most of which are in low-income, inner-city neighborhoods. “It’s not all about money. There are poor children who do well in school, but many of these children have some type of dysfunctional family structure. It could be related to unemployment, imprisonment, or having a parent on drugs,” said SCS Board Chairwoman Teresa Jones. “We’re trying to educate those children, and we don’t have parental involvement.”

To deal with the issue of failing schools, the ASD was created in 2010 as part of Tennessee’s Race to the Top grant. The state gave the ASD charter authorizing authority, meaning the ASD can match failing schools that once belonged under control of the local school district with charter operators from across the country.

Currently, the ASD operates 22 schools in the state, but they’ll have 28 in the 2015-16 school year. Six of those new schools are in Shelby County — SCS schools Denver, Brookmeade, and Florida-Kansas elementary schools and Airways and Wooddale middle schools, and a new charter school operated by KIPP Memphis. The ASD only runs one school in Nashville now, and it’s taking over one more there next school year.

“If you look at where the bottom five-percent schools are statewide, they’re clustered in four places — Memphis, Nashville, Chattanooga, and Knoxville. And there are a small handful of rural schools,” said ASD Superintendent Chris Barbic. “We’re only three years old in terms of running schools, so we wanted to start where there was the biggest need. That was in Memphis, and we’ve added some in Nashville. We want to get those sites working well before we look at adding additional parts of the state.”

ASD Superintendent Chris Barbic

Here’s how it works: “Every three years, the [Tennessee] Department of Education runs a list of priority schools. They give us the list and say, ‘This is the list of schools we’re expecting you to improve,'” Barbic said. “Any school on that list could come into the ASD.”

The bottom five percent of the state currently represents 85 schools, 69 of which are in Shelby County. So Barbic says they look at a few criteria to determine which schools to take over each year.

“We look at things like recent growth — how many more kids were proficient in reading, math, and science this past year than the previous year? And we look at whether or not the school is on the list for the first time or if it was on the list the previous time it was run,” Barbic said, citing that priority is given to those schools that are on the list more than once.

A short list of available schools is given to the ASD’s charter schools, and a volunteer group known as the Achievement Advisory Council weighs in.

“We get input from communities and families on the short list, and we give charter operators opportunities to have large or small group meetings with folks in the school communities, so they can get to know the charter operators and what they provide,” Barbic said.

Once the charters are matched with schools, all faculty from the former county school are laid off, but they’re invited to apply with the charter operator.

There’s no one model for how an ASD school is run since they’re all run by independent charter operators. Some schools, like Cornerstone, have two teachers per classroom and apply a blended learning model, meaning kids work at their own pace. At Cornerstone, each child has an iPad set up with lessons appropriate for their current skill level.

By law, the ASD has 10 years to turn a school around, but Barbic says the ASD’s goal is to move those bottom five percent schools to the top 25 percent in five years.

“We look at the charters in three-year increments to make sure they’re tracking toward what we want to see,” Barbic said. “At the end of the 10 years, the charter comes up for renewal, and then we move the schools back into local control. The intent was never for the state to run these schools forever.”

iZone: How It Works

A first grade teacher at Cherokee Elementary, an iZone school in Orange Mound, is quizzing her students on vowel sounds. She calls one boy to the front of the class and asks him to read aloud a question that’s projected onto a white board. Below the question are a set of four multiple choice answers.

Class at Cherokee Elementary

“I need a collegiate voice,” the teacher instructs the boy before he speaks.

“Which word has the same vowel sound as cook?” the boy reads.

Only one of the choices rhymes with cook, and the class of 10 or so students all know the answer. They enthusiastically shout: “shook!”

Something the teacher and her colleagues are doing has worked, because Cherokee shot up to 26.7 percent proficiency in reading in the past three years since the iZone took over. In 2011, before the takeover, only 11 percent of its students were proficient in reading. The same thing has happened with math scores — up to 43.8 percent in 2014 versus 16.5 percent in 2011.

“When we first brought the staff in, the way we framed it was, in 2011, only 16 percent of the children at Cherokee were proficient [in math], which is almost like saying that 84 percent of the patients who went to this doctor died. That really paints a picture of how students were dying at Cherokee academically,” said Cherokee Principal Rodney Rowan, who was hired when the iZone took over the school in the 2012-13 school year.

Rodney Rowan

The science gains are even more impressive — 41.9 percent proficient in 2014 versus 7 percent proficient in 2011.

“I was not at Cherokee in 2011, but I’m convinced they didn’t open a science book. We’re talking about 93 percent of the children failed a TCAP test in science,” Rowan said.

Shortly after the creation of the ASD, the state allowed SCS to create its own method for dealing with priority schools. The district can select schools from the priority list to run using its iZone model. Like the ASD, the iZone also began operation in the 2012-13 school year. There are 17 iZone schools.

“Our iZone is our district’s version of the ASD,” said SCS Superintendent Dorsey Hopson. “In those schools, we give the principals the autonomy to select their staff and the curriculum design.”

The way the school is run is primarily set by its principal rather than dictated by SCS’ central office. As with the ASD, faculty at schools chosen for the iZone are let go, but they’re invited to reapply. New principals are hired for those schools, and they are in charge of hiring teachers. Only teachers with Teacher Effectiveness Measure (TEM) scores (SCS’ system for evaluating teachers) of three, four, or five are eligible for jobs at iZone schools (TEM scores range from one to five, with one being the worst and five the best).

Rowan retained only two of the former teachers from Cherokee.

“If you’re interviewing someone for a teaching job, and they’re saying, ‘Well, the parents are blah, blah, blah,’ that’s not good,” Rowan said. “We know the parents aren’t as active as we would like them to be, but I say to my teachers that it may be a parent’s responsibility, but it’s your job.”

Parents Just Don’t Understand

At an SCS boarding meeting in December, a number of parents and school faculty in the standing-room-only board room held up hand-made signs calling for a moratorium on state school takeovers. During the public comment period, a woman named Hattie Woodard approached the podium, proudly displaying her “Moratorium Now” sign.

“Let’s put a stop to it! These are our children. Let’s stop the ASD takeover!” she exclaimed as she addressed the SCS board.

Since last fall, parents of SCS students and faculty have flooded the board meetings with cries against the ASD’s plan to take over six more county schools in the 2015-16 school year. One would think parents would be pleased that more attention is being paid to the district’s failing schools. But it’s not that simple.

“I think some parents are hearing that their school is failing for the first time,” Barbic said. “That’s on us and SCS to do a better job getting that information out to families prior to the [charter] matching.”

Hopson agrees: “I think we haven’t done a good job at all with community engagement because there are so many misconceptions about school data. People will show up [to an SCS board meeting] and say, ‘This is a great school. My kid is doing great.’ But when you go inside the numbers in most of the schools on the priority list, less than one in six kids is proficient in math and reading.”

There’s also some misunderstanding about how the law works. The cries to the board for a moratorium are useless.

“You say ‘Save our schools. Place a moratorium on [the ASD].’ If this board had the opportunity to do that, we would. But we are bound by certain legal obligations,” Jones told those gathered at that December board meeting. “The state tells us what we can and cannot do. Just because you elected us doesn’t mean we can do whatever you want us to do. It’s not about us not wanting to fight. Legally, we don’t have that option.”

Jones said she doesn’t have a problem with charter schools, but she does feel like the state takeovers create more chaos for students already affected by the shake-up of the SCS/MCS merger.

“It seems like, for the first time in [a couple years], the suburbs are finally calming down [since they’ve created their own districts]. But we’re still in flux,” Jones said. “Every year, we’re still trying to figure out how many schools we’ll have and who is being educated where. Children need stability.”

ASD vs. iZone: The Scores

Another reason for the anger may lie with the ASD’s performance thus far. Although the ASD is making gains as a whole, the iZone schools are out-performing the ASD.

“The iZone had 13 schools before last year, and 7 of those 13 were on track to go from the bottom five percent to the top 25 percent in the state,” Hopson said.

According to SCS’ statistics, iZone schools made 28.8 percent gains in math, 21.6 percent gains in reading, and 41.2 percent gains in science in 2014. Compare that with ASD’s 21.8 percent gains in math, 17 percent gains in reading, and 24.6 percent gains in science in 2014.

Barbic believes it’s a little too early to judge the overall ASD scores since some schools have only been in state control for a year. But he says the ASD schools they’ve been running for two years are showing growth.

“Last year, we had 17 schools, but only six of them were in their second year. We’re really encouraged by the progress those [second year] schools are making. Those schools were making 11-point gains in just two years time,” Barbic said.

At a recent meeting at South Side Middle, an SCS priority school that may merge into iZone school Riverview Middle next school year pending board approval, one parent suggested that all SCS schools be run as iZone schools. But the state funding allotted for iZone simply won’t cover that, Griffin said.

“You pay more to go to the orthodontist than you do the regular dentist,” she said.

State Representative Antonio Parkinson believes it’s up to the state to pour more funding into the iZone.

“The performance of iZone schools has outpaced the performance of ASD schools, so that begs the question from the state level as to why we’re not shifting more resources into the iZone model versus that of any other model,” Parkinson said.

But Barbic believes that turning schools around should be a multi-pronged approach. “It shouldn’t be left up to the district alone because, if we followed that logic, they would have already turned these schools around [before the creation of the ASD], and we wouldn’t be having this conversation in the first place,” Barbic said. “But there still needs to be a place for the district to have some skin in the game for solving this problem on their own. In Memphis, where you’ve got a large portion of these [priority] schools, we could have never taken them all on ourselves. By working together, we can spread capacity across more schools than we can by fighting with each other.”

The Future of Priority Schools

Not everyone agrees with Barbic’s attitude of “working together.” State Representative Bo Mitchell of Nashville has filed a bill to abolish the ASD at the end of the 2015-16 school year. The bill would give control of the schools the ASD has already taken over back to their local districts.

Representative Raumesh Akbari of Memphis has filed a bill that would stop the ASD-approved practice that allows some charter operators to phase a school in grade by grade. For example, Cornerstone is phasing in Lester School — the first year, it only ran pre-kindergarten through the third grade, while SCS ran the rest of the grades. In the second year, Cornerstone added grades four through six, and next year, it’ll have grades six through eight.

“With phasing in, you’re not considering the [older] students at the school who led to the school being placed on the priority list to begin with,” Akbari said. “It’s almost like you’re turning around a building rather than a school. If this bill passes, charter operators will have to take an entire school.”

Akbari is also sponsoring a piece of legislation that would rank schools on the priority list from poorest-performing to highest-performing and would require the ASD to work from the bottom up. In the past, the ASD has been accused of cherry-picking schools that have higher scores.

That was the case with SCS’ Raleigh-Egypt High School, which was already making gains from the year prior when it made ASD’s short list last year. After push-back from the community, however, the charter school set to match with Raleigh-Egypt pulled out. It will remain an SCS school next year.

Last week, State Representative Mike Stewart of Nashville called on Governor Bill Haslam to conduct a review of the ASD following the release of a Department of Education audit that found some issues with mismanagement of federal grant funds and other financial irregularities by the ASD.

The issues involved the ASD inappropriately charging a grant program for expenditures incurred before the grant award was effective and failing to properly review invoices paid to charters in the 2012-13 school year. But ASD General Counsel and COO Rich Haglund said the findings have been addressed, and charter schools have been asked to pay back the state about $66,000.

“[The findings] were not allegations of illegal activity. They’re just findings of [how we need to be] tightening practices,” Haglund said.

With so much legislation on the table relating to the ASD, coupled with the intense pushback from SCS parents and faculty over the state takeover announcements last fall, Hopson said SCS is ramping up its efforts to improve the priority schools not under ASD or iZone control.

“We’ve decided to hire more reading and math personnel to give those schools in the bottom five percent some additional support,” Hopson said. “And I envision having an authentic discussion with the community about the state of the schools. There’s a disconnect between the performance of these schools and the perception of these schools, and it’s incumbent on the district to make it better.”

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South Side Middle Parents Speak Out at School Consolidation Meeting

Supporters of South Side Middle gathered in the school’s auditorium on Monday night to voice opposition to a plan to consolidate the school with Riverview Middle.

In the 2015-2016 school year, South Side Middle School students may be bussed to Riverview Middle, leaving another massive, empty school building in the heart of a South Memphis neighborhood. Just down the street from South Side sits the vacant Longview Middle School, which Memphis City Schools closed in 2007.

The reason for the proposed consolidation with Riverview is South Side’s low academic achievement. South Side falls in the bottom five percent of county schools, which means it’s susceptible for state Achievement School District (ASD) takeover. To prevent such a takeover in the future, the Shelby County Schools (SCS) administration is recommending moving the students at South Side into Riverview, an SCS iZone school.

“South Side is on the ASD short list. And South Side will have to be in the iZone or the ASD. Those are the only options we have on the table. It just makes more sense to educate these children through the iZone,” said SCS Superintendent Dorsey Hopson.

When the ASD selects a school, they send in a charter school organization to run the facility with the goal of moving the school from the bottom five percent to the top 25 percent. When the ASD comes in, the school falls out of the SCS district.  And because of state law, when the ASD wants a school on the SCS priority list, there’s nothing SCS can do to stop them from taking it over.

A couple years ago, SCS launched it’s own program, iZone, to help move some of those priority schools into higher achievement status so they wouldn’t be susceptible to state takeover. The iZone schools only hire teachers with Teacher Effectiveness Measure scores of three or higher, and the principals have more autonomy, including the ability to hire all of the school’s staff. Since the iZone’s start in 2012, all 13 iZone schools have shown improvement, and six of them have already moved from the bottom five percent to the top 25 percent.

But at a public meeting at South Side on Monday night, parents and students of South Side spoke out against the plan to merge with Riverview. Many spoke about their fears of moving children into what they say is gang territory around Riverview, home of the Rollin 90s gang. Several students even told the SCS board members in attendance that they were worried about being mugged or even raped while walking from their homes near South Side to the Riverview neighborhood.

“Who here wants their children in a gang? Who here wants their child being raped?” asked one South Side Middle student, as parents and students cheered her on.

Others spoke about how closing the school could destroy the community and devalue surrounding homes. SCS has not released any plans yet for what would happen to the building if the school is closed.

More than a couple times, SCS board member Teresa Jones admonished speakers for going over their two-minute time limit at the microphone. And at one point, board members cut off a young girl who was reading a prepared statement about why she wanted to save her school. That brought angry cries from the audience, and from that point on, the meeting remained contentious, with many speakers refusing to stop talking into the microphone after their two-minute warning.

The consolidation proposal has not yet been approved by the SCS board. They’ll also be considering consolidating Lincoln Elementary with A.B. Hill Elementary. There is a community meeting at Lincoln (1566 S. Orleans) on Thursday, February 12th at 6 p.m.