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IT TAKES A VILLAGE TO RAISE RESULTS PROGRAM SPEAKS STUDENTS' LANGUAGE.


Byline: Rachel Uranga Staff Writer

RESEDA - Like too many other African-American students at Cleveland High, Brae brae  
n. Scots
A hillside; a slope.



[Middle English bra, from Old Norse br
 Brown was a slacker - ignoring teachers, cutting class, failing subjects.

Then came the day a dedicated group of educators pulled Brown and his friends into the auditorium classroom for a reality check - dismal test scores, high dropout (1) On magnetic media, a bit that has lost its strength due to a surface defect or recording malfunction. If the bit is in an audio or video file, it might be detected by the error correction circuitry and either corrected or not, but if not, it is often not noticed by the human  rates and a bleak future as adults.

That first session two years ago shocked Brown and moved others to tears. It also spurred them to action.

``I got more serious when I saw the dropout rates and talked about how we were doing,'' said Brown, now 16 and earning average grades as a junior. ``I said, I don't want to be one of those people. I didn't want to be a statistic.''

The program known as The Village is one of the success stories in the Los Angeles Unified School District The Los Angeles Unified School District (the "LAUSD") is the largest (in terms of number of students) public school system in California and the second-largest in the United States. Only the New York City Department of Education has a larger student population. . Targeting the 300 black students among the 3,700 teens attending Cleveland, the monthly workshops seek to understand the connections between culture and academics.

During the monthly meetings, held during school hours, students are free to discuss any topic - from test-taking skills to the use of the ``n-word.'' But the common denominator common denominator
n.
1. Mathematics A quantity into which all the denominators of a set of fractions may be divided without a remainder.

2. A commonly shared theme or trait.
 is race - whether it's the 43 percent dropout rate among black students in Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850.  Unified, the legacy of Martin Luther King Jr., or the Supreme Court ruling that desegregated schools nationwide.

And that has been the key, reaching beyond academic studies and speaking to students in a language they don't often hear in the classroom.

``It's not that these students are dumb or they can't achieve, it's that sometimes they don't see the significance of these tests,'' said Andre Chevalier, Cleveland's dean of students and co-founder of The Village. ``Our initial idea was to affect their academic achievement score, but these students tend to respect us more (if we talk about anything) than if we just talk about grades.''

Chevalier, life-skills coach Fluke Fluker and nearly a dozen African- American teachers work hard with the students without sugar-coating the information. The straight talk presented by guest speakers to The Village - named for the African proverb proverb, short statement of wisdom or advice that has passed into general use. More homely than aphorisms, proverbs generally refer to common experience and are often expressed in metaphor, alliteration, or rhyme, e.g. , ``It takes a village to raise a child'' - reached Brown and others in a way only a family member could.

Since the program began, standardized test A standardized test is a test administered and scored in a standard manner. The tests are designed in such a way that the "questions, conditions for administering, scoring procedures, and interpretations are consistent" [1]  scores among African-American students at Cleveland have shot up 100 points.

Cleveland's success has prompted other schools to consider addressing academic performance in a culturally specific way, instead confronting the problem among all students as they usually do.

El Camino Real El Camino Real (Spanish for The Royal Road or The King's Highway) was the name of a series of pre-automobile highways linking the various New World colonies of Spain:
  • There is an El Camino Real in California; see: El Camino Real (California).
, Chatsworth and Crenshaw High schools Crenshaw High School is a secondary school located in South Los Angeles, California.

The school first opened in 1968 and currently enrolls an average of 2,600 students.
 are looking to replicate The Village. Other school officials hope to create a Latino version of the program.

``It is probably one of the most impressive stories regarding student achievement in the country,'' said Bob Collins, LAUSD's chief instructional officer of secondary education and recent architect of the district's anti-dropout program.

``It represents some breakthrough work on the part of teachers and administrators in changing the achievement level of African-American students. The teachers, it is their commitment, their willingness to take ownership for those students. The results have been dramatic.''

Fluker and the educators say there is no big secret to their success, no fancy academic formula or costly book that makes the program - rather it's honest people who care.

And for many of the students, it rings true.

``The teachers in this room demand a certain respect,'' said Travis Wallace, a 17-year-old senior. ``We need somebody to tell us to get our grades together, to get ourselves together. And when you get out of here, you are energized.''

John Rogers John Rogers may refer to: Europeans
  • John Rogers (Protestant minister) (c.1500–1555), first English Protestant martyr under Queen Mary
*Other Protestant ministers named John Rogers are also noted at the end of the above article
, associate director of the Institute for Democracy, Education and Access at University of California, Los Angeles UCLA comprises the College of Letters and Science (the primary undergraduate college), seven professional schools, and five professional Health Science schools. Since 2001, UCLA has enrolled over 33,000 total students, and that number is steadily rising. , said it does not necessarily take a black teacher to reach black students, but it helps to provide a role model that is easily accessible in a student's mind.

``One of the things it's addressing is that young people are often seeking to create identities that are powerful. Too often in our public schools we don't create space to have an identity that is culturally attuned at·tune  
tr.v. at·tuned, at·tun·ing, at·tunes
1. To bring into a harmonious or responsive relationship: an industry that is not attuned to market demands.

2.
 and that embraces deep appreciation of academic work.''

This program does, said Cleveland Principal Robert Marks Robert Marks is the General Editor of the Australian Journal of Management[1] and Professor of Management at the Australian Graduate School of Management (AGSM)[2].

He was the former head of the Economics Cluster of AGSM[2].
.

As importantly, the idea builds on a larger trend in education to build small intimate ``communities'' in which teachers and students know each other well and feel connected to their school.

``Any time you can bring young people together to believe in themselves, you will have a better attitude, and it translates in the classroom,'' Marks said.

On a recent weekday meeting, one college counselor talked about growing up in the projects and struggling to get into college while a master's student spoke about the draw and pain of the motherland moth·er·land  
n.
1. One's native land.

2. The land of one's ancestors.

3. A country considered as the origin of something.
 - Africa.

Fellow students came up to read poetry about Black History Month and the voice of a new generation of blacks. And even though it's never stated, they all talk about taking responsibility for their own actions.

Chris Cheronke read his own poem, and the auditorium fell silent.

``Our history's a beautiful thing. But while ya'll watching the past I'm making black history now. Cause this time won't last. So whether past, present or future, their time, my time, our time, it's deeper than 28 days, black history lifetime.''

Applause erupted. And at least one student said under her breath, ``That's right.''

Rachel Uranga, (818) 713-3741

rachel.uranga(at)dailynews.com

CAPTION(S):

2 photos

Photo:

(1 -- color) From left, Cleveland High School students Barrington Parsley, Christian Windom and Travion Odom attend a Village meeting Tuesday morning.

(2 -- color) California State University, Northridge CSUN offers a variety of programs leading to bachelor's degrees in 61 fields and master's degrees in 42 fields. The university has over 150,000 alumni. It's also home to a summer musical theater/theater program known as TADW (TeenAge Drama Workshop) that leads teenagers through an , student and Village speaker Empress Nontsikelelo speaks to students at Cleveland High School in Reseda on Tuesday.

Tina Burch/Staff Photographer
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Feb 26, 2006
Words:948
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