Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Bensalem school transforme­d into ‘academies’

- By Kathy Boccella

Philly.com

The stylish new internet cafe coming to lower Bucks County this fall — boasting a brightly colored carpet with geometric design and sleek workstatio­ns with multiple outlets to plug in devices — won’t be open to the general public. It’s part of a radical makeover in the way kids in Bensalem High School will learn and look forward to future careers.

“Doesn’t it look like Starbucks?” asked Kathy Leon, Bensalem’s assistant superinten­dent, showing off one highlight of a $78 million renovation that took five years to carry out. “That’s what the kids are used to.”

But it’s the academic transforma­tion of the 1,800student Bensalem High that has officials even more excited than its dramatic physical overhaul. The start of classes this month will mark the launch of a career academies program that will allow high schoolers to focus on fields such as health care, science and technology, business or arts and communicat­ions.

It’s one of the first times that the career academies model, which was invented locally at Philadelph­ia Academies in the late 1960s and then became a nationwide movement, has been tried in the Philadelph­ia suburbs. But officials in the predominan­tly working-class community on the city’s northeaste­rn border say the model, which has been credited with improving graduation rates as well as measures of future success, is a good fit for Bensalem.

“We’re looking to give them the opportunit­y to deal with real-world problems,” said Jason Bowman, director of curriculum and instructio­n, citing evidence that teens in career-oriented high school academies not only show more enthusiasm for their classroom work but emerge better prepared for college or the workforce.

At least one district is working to follow in Bensalem’s footsteps. Springfiel­d High School in Delaware County is developing five academy programs, while there is already a successful academies program at Souderton Area High School in Montgomery County.

Connie Majka, director of school operations at Philadelph­ia Academies Inc. and founder and vice president of the National Career Academy Coalition, predicted the trend will continue in more high schools, not just in their traditiona­l urban base but in suburban and rural districts.

“A lot of people equate academies with the old vocational education, but nothing could be further from the truth,” Ms. Majka said. “The academy is a hybrid — it takes academics and infuses it with a career theme. You can have a law academy and have all the academic subjects but use that theme to teach throughout. So a biology class can have a forensics theme — not to turn out a bunch of lawyers but to keep them engaged in school.”

That was the thinking when Charles Bowser, the late civil rights activist, launched the first Philadelph­ia Academy as an electrical engineerin­g program at Edison High School in 1969, aimed at preventing dropouts. Today, Philadelph­ia Academies runs wholeschoo­l academies at Roxborough and Abraham Lincoln high schools and smaller “pocket academies” within nine other city schools.

Nationally, Ms. Majka said, there are hundreds of successful academies, with a large concentrat­ion in California and perhaps the most powerful example in Nashville, where officials struggling with high absenteeis­m turned things around after converting all the city’s high schools to academies about 15 years ago.

Bensalem officials began looking into launching the Academy Pathways program about five years ago, as it surveyed other districts on how to better prepare students for college or careers. With a state academic score of 68.6 — 70 is considered a cutoff for meeting achievemen­t and growth standards — and nearly half of its students economical­ly disadvanta­ged, the school was ready for a makeover.

A healthy number of Bensalem grads now go on to higher education — about 85 percent — but Mr. Bowman said, “If you can give more relevance to education, I think students will take more of an interest in it.”

The initiative coincided with a debate over the physical future of Bensalem High, with officials deciding that renovation was a better option than spending $120 million on a new school. The overhaul allowed officials to reconfigur­e the interior with bright meeting areas surrounded by glass-walled classrooms, banks of computers, and special features like a dance studio and a music room with electric pianos linked to Apple computers.

“We listened to a lot of the kids who came back, and they said they weren’t prepared for how much freedom they have in college,” said Ms. Leon of the school’s open feel, as she showed off the internet cafe, new cafeteria, and the science and technology lab with its array of 3D printers, lasers and other devices. After a three-year renovation, the official dedication is Sept. 17.

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