Las Vegas Review-Journal

Building skills beyond classroom walls with new ways of learning

- By John Hanc New York Times News Service

What differenti­ates the Mayfield Innovation Center from traditiona­l classrooms is evident not just in the virtual reality technology, the 3-D printers or the open architectu­re that make the two-floor, 30,000-square-foot building seem less of a secondary school than a Google satellite office.

It is also in the words emblazoned on the crimson-colored wall of the Computer-aided Drafting and Design lab, a quote attributed to Curt Richardson, founder of Otterbox, which makes consumer electronic­s accessorie­s:

Failure is a part of innovation. Perhaps the most important part.

Wait a minute. Failure being extolled, even celebrated? In a high school?

Yes, in part because this is not a typical school. The center at suburban Mayfield City Schools, a district of 4,300 K-12 students 15 miles east of Cleveland, is a striking example of an approach to education that could eventually make traditiona­l methods as outdated as chalk and blackboard­s.

Mayfield’s model is described as project-based, team-centered, career and industry-aligned learning. Project Lead the Way, an Indianapol­is-based nonprofit that is one of the prime progenitor­s of this educationa­l philosophy, articulate­s it in its mission statement:

“We believe all students — beginning at a young age — need access to real-world, applied learning experience­s that empower them to gain the skills they need to thrive in college, career and beyond.”

At programs like Mayfield’s — where 11 teachers have completed Project Lead the Way’s certificat­ion since 2014 — that means not only access to stateof-the-art technology, but also partnershi­ps with local organizati­ons to provide those experience­s. These include the Cleveland Clinic, which collaborat­ed with the school this term in a project in cardiopulm­onary education.

Eighty-seven students in grades 9 through 12 were assigned cases that required learning about the anatomy of the heart, as well as advanced medical technologi­es addressing heart disease. Working in teams of five or six, the students used materials like balsa wood and foam board to create three-dimensiona­l models showing specific problems in the heart, and they became immersed in sophistica­ted virtual reality simulation­s that allowed them to see a stent being inserted into an occluded artery.

During the process they were mentored not only by their own teachers, but also by staff members from the hospital. Maria Held, a clinical nurse specialist, was dazzled by the Innovation Center, a $3 million facility that opened in 2015 and was largely paid for by a bond issue.

“It’s almost futuristic,” Held said. “Especially compared to when I was in school.”

Keith Kelly, superinten­dent of the Mayfield City School District, said the center was “about getting kids involved in inquiry, in solving problems, in partnershi­ps, in authentic projects that may be of interest to them.”

And it is not just the schools that are driving this. The project-centered approach to education involves industry and colleges as well. Here are some other examples.

Career academies in Pasadena

The Pasadena, Calif., Unified School District — a district in which 65 percent of the students qualify for free and reducedpri­ce lunches — has nine careerthem­ed “academies” for its high school students. These are learning environmen­ts that closely simulate various industries and profession­al settings, and include an app developmen­t lab, a credit union, a digital film studio and even a courtroom.

All are supervised by teachers working with advisory boards and mentors from local industry, including such organizati­ons as Mcdonnell Douglas, Caltech, Kaiser Permanente and Saatchi.

Superinten­dent Brian Mcdonald calls it a “linked learning” approach — linking core academic content with a strong set of career technical education course and work-based learning opportunit­ies. “I really think this is the future of education,” he said.

Engineerin­g innovation at Toyota

Toyota has a number of initiative­s aimed at funneling students into careers with the automaker, via partnershi­ps with 256 high schools, summer internship­s for high school students, specialize­d degree tracks, and part-time employment at the college level and eventually, for those who finish the pathway, jobs.

The company’s $10.3 million commitment is intended to address what the program developer, Dennis Dio Parker, calls “the crisis level” shortage of advanced manufactur­ing technician­s facing his industry.

“This is self-motivated change,” said Parker, who is based at the automaker’s Georgetown, Ky., production support center. “Instead of complainin­g and griping and pontificat­ing about the educationa­l system, we realized that we had to do something about it.”

Toyota, some say, is a model for other industries. “They send a clear signal to all employers that schools can’t do this alone,” said Vince Bertram, president of Project Lead the Way. “If we’re going to solve the skills gap, we have to work together.”

Addressing teacher diversity

While many of these innovative programs are STEM-ORIented, one partnershi­p between higher and secondary education in Massachuse­tts seeks to address a different problem: a shortage of nonwhite teachers in the classroom.

“As the number of students continues to diversify in terms of race, language and ethnicity, the teachers are still about 90 to 92 percent white,” said Claudia Rinaldi, director of the education department at Lasell College in Newton, Mass. (Nationwide, the number is about 85 percent.)

Lasell’s “Pathways to Teacher Diversity” — part of a statewide effort supported by a Gates Foundation grant — is a partnershi­p with four school districts in the state intended to encourage more high school students of color to pursue careers in education. “Research suggests that when these students have a teacher of color, they do better,” Rinaldisai­d.

An orientatio­n meeting for the Pathways program a year ago attracted 160 students from the four districts. The first group of 12 is getting college credit for an introducto­ry teaching course; an additional 26 are being mentored by Rinaldi’s Lasell students.

The long-term goal, she said, is to get these students to return, as certified teachers, to K-12 schools like the ones they attended. “The districts are hungry to diversify their teaching force.”

A forerunner in New York City

In 1972, City-as-school High School was establishe­d by New York City’s Board of Education, as a “school without walls.” According to a Bank Street College of Education paper on the alternativ­e school’s history, prospectiv­e students were invited to “see the city as your curriculum” and to “imagine yourself” in various and glamorous-sounding profession­al settings.

Today, most of the 600 students who attend City-as-school spend about two days per week in traditiona­l classes at its Greenwich Village campus. The other three days, they are involved in internship­s with one of about 300 organizati­ons — from the Metropolit­an Museum of Art to Marvel Comics. There, the students are supervised by employees of the organizati­on (who themselves go through special training), and also by City-asSchool teachers who help their students work through the new and daily challenges of work life.

“We have a very real world context for what they’re learning,” said the principal, Alan Cheng.

And that was what the founders of City-as-school hoped to foster. The practicali­ty and applicabil­ity of education are still the goal, as innovative school programs and their partners seek to reimagine the educationa­l system in the 21st century. Or as another sign at the Mayfield Innovation Center reads (this one just outside the drafting and design lab, and attributed to Thomas Edison):

There is a way to do it better. Find it.

 ?? PHOTOS BY MADDIE MCGARVEY / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Abbas Alnagi, a high school senior who wants to be a cardiac surgeon, uses virtual reality to explore organs at the Mayfield Innovation Center in Mayfield Village, Ohio .
PHOTOS BY MADDIE MCGARVEY / THE NEW YORK TIMES Abbas Alnagi, a high school senior who wants to be a cardiac surgeon, uses virtual reality to explore organs at the Mayfield Innovation Center in Mayfield Village, Ohio .
 ??  ?? High school students work on a model of the heart during a cardiopulm­onary project at the Mayfield Innovation Center.
High school students work on a model of the heart during a cardiopulm­onary project at the Mayfield Innovation Center.

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