Houston Chronicle

Other districts should follow El Paso ISD’s lead

- By Juan E. Cabrera Cabrera is the superinten­dent of the El Paso Independen­t School District.

In the 1860s, a typical Texas classroom consisted of rows of desks that faced the front of a class where a teacher would stand and lecture. Student work, presentati­ons and lessons all revolved around memorizing content. At that time in history, teaching students this way adequately prepared them for the limited set of manual, repetitive career opportunit­ies available.

One hundred fifty years and two industrial revolution­s later, many classrooms and curricula across Texas still look the same. But not in the El Paso Independen­t School District, home of the sixth largest city in Texas and 22nd largest city in the U.S. In 2013, the administra­tors, teachers, students and families decided we wanted something different.

The traditiona­l education model that required students to study one subject one hour at a time and often based a student’s entire semester’s worth of work on whether they passed or failed a single test was outdated. It also left students ill-prepared for today’s workforce that requires employees to apply their knowledge concurrent­ly and incorporat­e career-ready skills like agency, collaborat­ion and oral communicat­ion. A true education isn’t just what a person knows, it’s how people apply what they’ve learned.

With this in mind, we sought a learning model that would give our students the ability to chart their own courses and get the jobs they dream about – including ones that may not even exist yet. But how would we as administra­tors and teachers provide our students with this type of education?

In the fall of 2014, we found our answer: project-based learning. We also found a new partner, New Tech Network (NTN), an innovator in school-wide project-based learning and a leading design partner for comprehens­ive K-12 school change.

Our goal was to move away from a test-driven instructio­nal culture, shift toward assessing career-ready skills in addition to core content knowledge, and embrace this innovative model that aims for students to regularly engage in authentic, complex thinking and problemsol­ving. We theorized that by engaging students more in their own learning and assessing multiple student learning outcomes, they would be better prepared for a career field of their choice and also improve on end-of-course exams.

Our theory is proving true and the results have been incredible, including:

· Students continue to outperform on all end-of-course exams for both the 2017-2018 and 2018-2019 academic years.

· The first middle school data from the 2018-2019 academic year shows strong outcomes including that NTN middle school students consistent­ly outperform non-NTN students across all performanc­e bands in reading and math for both sixth and seventh grades.

Now at nine elementary, middle and high school sites and growing, this model has emerged as a powerful force within the El Paso ISD, transformi­ng both adult learning and engaged student learning. Since the first two academies opened in El Paso in 2015, we will soon have nearly 4,000 El Paso ISD students enrolled to participat­e in this effective school model focused on providing students with deeper learning experience­s.

This type of holistic, innovative learning is a growing trend. El Paso ISD recently hosted superinten­dents from across Texas who are also finding success with this approach as an effective way to meet student needs and see strong academic growth, particular­ly for underserve­d and English-language learner communitie­s.

And now, because of the recently passed transforma­tional school finance reform in the Legislatur­e, every Texas middle and high school has a chance to provide those same choices to students and parents in their districts.

House Bill 3 specifical­ly offers a financial incentive for engaging in school design and profession­al developmen­t. In the Career and Technology Education section of HB 3, campuses that are NTN members qualify for an additional $50 per student allotment.

The old ways of educating students are not producing the results our economy needs or our children deserve. We at the EPISD encourage district and school leaders throughout Texas to take advantage of this historic legislatio­n and prepare students for the careers of tomorrow by exploring all of the opportunit­ies in HB 3, including additional Career and Technology Education courses or – as we’ve done here in El Paso – the creation of project-based learning schools that better equip our children to live their dreams and change the world.

 ?? Staff file photo ?? As HISD goes through a period of transition, it can look to its own successes with project-based learning at Energy Institute High School, where students work in teams on challenges.
Staff file photo As HISD goes through a period of transition, it can look to its own successes with project-based learning at Energy Institute High School, where students work in teams on challenges.

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