School News – 10/18/2023

School News – 10/18/2023

Welcome to Quarter 2!

Thank you all for a great first quarter! We are looking forward to a fun and busy quarter two, full of learning and activities! Here is what to look forward to:

National Principals Month 

October is National Principals Month! We are so thankful for our Headmasters and Assistant Headmasters who together have 70+ years of experience serving our schools! Please help us make them feel extra special this month!

  • Mr. Steve Smith, Lead Administrator, serving our schools since 2006
  • Mrs. Laurie Benton, CCS-Leland Headmaster, serving our schools since 2012
  • Mrs. Jourdan Crawford, CCS-Leland Asst. Headmaster, serving our schools since 2013
  • Mr. William Stidham, CCS-Southport Headmaster, serving our schools since 2019
  • Mrs. Amy Monroe, CCS-Southport Asst. Headmaster, serving our schools since 2016
  • Mrs. Dawn Ivey, CCS-Whiteville Headmaster, serving our schools since 2012
  • Mrs. Kimberly Patrick, CCS-Whiteville Asst. Headmaster, serving our schools since 2012
  • Mr. Marcus Dos Santos, CCS-Wilmington Headmaster, serving our schools since 2018

Teachers of the Year

All four Classical Charter Schools of America campuses recently named their Teacher of the Year, Beginning Teacher of the Year, and Teacher Assistant of the Year, given annually to the schools’ standout educators.

The Teachers of the Year are nominated by their colleagues for embodying the high ideals and standards of The Roger Bacon Academy. The award is highly competitive, and we are so proud to recognize these remarkable individuals! Congratulations to the 2022-2023 Teachers of the Year!

CCS-Leland:

  • Teacher of the Year: Ms. Erin Brangan
  • Beginning Teacher of the Year: Mr. Erik Veach
  • Teacher Assistant of the Year: Ms. Kaitlyn Eddy

CCS-Southport:

  • Teacher of the Year: Ms. Kimberlee Bareika
  • Beginning Teacher of the Year: Ms. Emily Stagaard
  • Teacher Assistant of the Year: Ms. Kimberly Boumpani

CCS-Whiteville:

  • Teacher of the Year: Ms. Leslie Smith
  • Beginning Teacher of the Year: Ms. Jordan Singler
  • Teacher Assistant of the Year: Ms. Cynthia Walters

CCS-Wilmington:

  • Teacher of the Year: Ms. J’Quanna Dalton
  • Beginning Teacher of the Year: Ms. Sydney Sellers
  • Teacher Assistant of the Year: Ms. Barbara Aaron
School News – 10/4/2023

School News – 10/4/2023

Shakespeare Week

CCS-America ended Quarter 1 with its annual Shakespeare Week! Students and staff celebrated with a performance by a court jester from No Sleeves Magic, a presentation from Cape Fear Raptor Center, crafts, and activities capturing life during the 1500 to 1600s!

Students in 6th-8th grade read several Shakespearean plays in their entirety, and some middle school classes even prepared a Shakespeare Showcase for the elementary students. K-5th graders read grade-level-adapted Shakespearean plays and made crafts corresponding with their play. Students learned so much while celebrating the life of the greatest writer in the history of the English language, William Shakespeare!

Check out pictures from the week below!

CCS-Leland

CCS-Southport

CCS-Whiteville

CCS-Wilmington

Charters in the News

Check out the links below to see what is happening with charter schools throughout the country!

Mr. Baker Mitchell, RBA Founder, wrote an Op-Ed published throughout the country on how direct instruction and the classical “trivium” would improve America’s schools. Read more here.

The National Alliance for Public Charter Schools shared results of a national survey of more than 1,200 district and charter school teachers. Check out their key insights here.

Students of the Month

Virtue is an important part of the CCS-America curriculum. Each month, students are recognized for displaying a specific character trait that they are not only learning and practicing, but also recite daily in our Pledge.

September’s character trait was Loyalty. Students who are loyal show commitment, even in difficult times. Loyalty is seen in the Pledge as “I Pledge to be obedient and loyal to those in authority.” Students apply these words to their everyday lives by keeping their commitments, helping those in need, and caring about others.

Congratulations to all of these students who demonstrated exemplary loyalty. Check them out on the links below!

CCS-Leland

CCS-Southport

CCS-Whiteville

CCS-Wilmington

OpEd: Get back to basics to improve America’s schools

By Baker A. Mitchell Jr. September 23, 2023

It’s understandable that many parents are upset about what is being taught in their schools. They should be even more upset about what’s not being taught (at least not effectively): English grammar, reading, writing, mathematics, logic, truth, goodness, aesthetics.

Last year’s National Assessment of Educational Progress exams, which tested tens of thousands of students nationwide, found that only about a third of fourth and eighth graders qualified as “proficient” in reading, math, civics and American history. In urban districts, 47% of fourth-graders couldn’t even read at a basic level.

Much of the controversy over what’s being taught revolves around the treatment of race and gender issues in classrooms, textbooks and school libraries. These are legitimate concerns. But focusing solely on book content is a distraction when so many children can’t read the books to begin with.

At the elementary school level — grades kindergarten through five or six — the best model for student success is direct instruction and the classical “trivium.” Albert Chung, the director of the Classical Education Research Lab at the University of Arkansas, has noted that this goes back “to between the 5th century B.C. and the 5th century A.D. during the Greek and Roman classical periods.”

But classical thought “is not limited to these two civilizations,” he points out. “Many other cultures … throughout Africa, East Asia and the Islamic Empire” also had classical periods.

The trivium — Latin for “three ways” — identifies a sequence of three phases necessary for learning any subject. It’s the way students were taught throughout the Western world from the time of the ancient classical scholars until the early 20th century when John Dewey and other “progressive reformers” rejected it.

The first phase, during the early grades, involves the basic facts and vocabulary of a subject. This is known as the “grammar” phase. A major goal during this phase is for students to learn as many words and concepts as possible. These are the building blocks for all future learning:

  • The names of objects, people and places.
  • The rules of math, phonics, spelling and sentence structure.
  • The stories of history, literature and myth.
  • Descriptions of plants and animals.
  • The roots of our language, especially Latin.

Second is the “logic” phase, where students learn to apply and enhance the information, rules and vocabulary they’ve learned. During this time, students become less focused on rote facts, start thinking more analytically and logically, and begin to question the “why” behind the order of things.

Finally, the “rhetoric” phase helps students learn the art and discipline of persuasion. It helps them develop the skills to communicate effectively to become lifelong independent learners.

Any topic can be taught in this sequenced way. While it may be out of fashion, this step-by-step phased succession of learning is no less effective today than it was 2,500 years ago.

Families don’t need the dysfunctional federal government telling them what and how their children should learn. K-12 education hasn’t noticeably improved since 1980, when the Department of Education was established. 

Families know what their children need to learn — and we and others know how to teach them, just as the ancients knew: First you help them accumulate knowledge (grammar). Then you help them understand the why and how of the facts they’ve learned (logic). Then you give them the skills to explain it to others (rhetoric).

At the end of the process, you’ll have well-rounded young adults ready for life’s challenges, for being parents and, as Aristotle said, for making civilization “flourish.”

 

School News – 9/20/2023

School News – 9/20/2023

Constitution Day

Last Friday, CCS-America students observed Constitution Day, commemorating the signing of the U.S. Constitution on September 17, 1787. Students celebrated by participating in parades and activities focused on the importance of the Constitution. Each campus even had a special visitor, the Father of the Constitution, James Madison!

Click the links below to see pictures from the CCS-America Parades.

CCS-Leland Pictures

CCS-Southport Pictures

CCS-Whiteville Pictures

CCS-Wilmington Pictures

Classical Curriculum Highlight: Latin

A core aspect of CCS-America’s Classical Curriculum is instruction in Latin. Here are a few reasons we teach it:

  1. Some 60% to 80% of English words come from Latin, so it helps expand vocabulary.
  2. Latin is at the root of languages spoken in 57 countries, so other languages are more-easily accessible.
  3. Latin is also the language of law, medicine, science, and many other important fields.
  4. Latin helps us understand English grammar, which improves writing skills.
  5. Students who have studied Latin outscore students of Spanish and French on college admission tests.

CCS-America students begin learning Latin in 4th grade and continue through 8th grade. Students even learn how to say the Pledge of Allegiance in Latin!

Learn more about why Latin is part of our Curriculum

The Roger Bacon Academy’s Three Laws 

The Roger Bacon Academy and teachers at our four CCS-America campuses follow three laws that lead to the continued success of our schools and students.

Law 1: Reward good behavior – you’ll get more of it.

This law lays the foundation for the other laws. When a student receives specific praise or reward, other students are encouraged to follow that behavior. Students are rewarded for showing respect, good penmanship, correct answers, and being in correct uniform.

Law 2: Teach each step to mastery – every child will learn.

The skill or knowledge being taught is divided into small parts and students learn each part in sequence. They do this by Model, Lead, Test:

  • The teacher models and demonstrates the skill or knowledge. “Watch me do it.”
  • The teacher leads in performing the skill. “Let’s all do it.”
  • The students demonstrate the skill. “Now, show me how you can do it.”
  • This process is repeated and practiced to mastery.

Law 3: Watch the Children. If they are not behaving or learning, you are not following the first two laws.

If students are rewarded for good behavior and have the appropriate learning material to challenge them, they will behave and learn in the classroom. A teacher must watch the children to apply positive reinforcement (Motivation- Law 1) and to guarantee mastery at each step in the curriculum (Mastery- Law 2).

These three laws are time-tested and field-proven. They set the tone for an orderly learning environment and pave the way to success!

Learn more about our three laws

School News – 9/6/2023

School News – 9/6/2023

K-9 Training at CCS-Leland

On Wednesday, August 23rd, the Brunswick County Sheriff’s Office and their K-9 trainees ran a practice search at the CCS-Leland Middle School. The dogs sniffed lockers, classrooms, and the courtyards as part of their training.

CCS-Leland’s Assistant Headmaster, Mrs. Crawford, said, ” It was a privilege to host the Brunswick County Sheriff Department K-9 Unit on our campus for their training. We appreciate their continuous support to ensure our campus remains a safe environment for our staff and students.”

CCS-America is always happy to help the community and Sherriff’s department! Plus, all our students and staff love seeing the dogs in action!

Charter Schools in the News

Check out the links below to see what is happening with charter schools throughout the country!

Two members of the North Carolina House of Representatives, John Torbett and Tricia Cotham, were given the 2023 Champion for Charter Schools Award last month for their push for legislation that advances school choice and access to charter schools. Read more here.

A University of Arkansas study has found that charter schools, despite receiving significantly less money than traditional public schools, produce better results. While funding is important, the study confirms that other factors, including curriculum, teaching methods, and charter-school accountability, are more directly responsible for student and school success. Read more here.

Dress for Success

Thank you to all our students and parents who participated in the first Dress for Success Day! It was wonderful to see the confidence and pride each student displayed.

Students will have lots of opportunities to wear their Dress for Success outfits this year. The next optional Dress for Success Day is Thursday, September 21st. Visit ShopRBA.school to get your student’s Dress for Success items!

Students of the Month 

Virtue is an important part of CCS-America’s classical curriculum. Each month, students are recognized for displaying a specific character trait that they are not only learning and practicing, but also recite daily in our Pledge.

August’s character trait was Responsibility. Students who are responsible take ownership of their thoughts, words, and actions. Responsibility is seen in the Pledge as “I Pledge to keep myself healthy in body, mind, and spirit.” Students apply these words to their everyday lives by taking care of themselves, doing their best, and fulfilling their duties.

Congratulations to all of these students who demonstrated exemplary responsibility. Check them out on the links below!

CCS-Leland

CCS-Southport

CCS-Whiteville

CCS-Wilmington

OpEd: Thaddeus Lott’s neglected formula student success

By Baker A. Mitchell Jr. August 23, 2023 06:00 AM

A new “ Report on the Condition of Education ” from the National Center on Education Statistics shows a significant increase in the percentage of school teachers with advanced degrees, which in many districts will earn them extra pay.

What the report doesn’t show, however, is that the increase in advanced teaching degrees has been accompanied by corresponding decreases in student achievement in reading , math , civics , and U.S. history .

How can this be? According to NCES, “the number of master’s degrees conferred in education” jumped 5% from the 2018-19 school year to the 2020-21 school year. Yet, the increased percentage of supposedly better-educated and better-prepared teachers seems to be producing increased numbers of poorly educated and poorly prepared students.

The problem doesn’t lie primarily with America’s 4 million teachers , though some certainly appear more interested in union activism than teaching. The problem lies with 1) school administrators who seem averse to time-tested, effective curricula and teaching methods and 2) the 1,300-plus colleges and universities that offer teacher-certification degrees , which are failing, and in some cases refusing, to focus teacher education on the most critical elements of student success: order in the classroom, the need for an effective curriculum, and reading proficiency.

I separated reading out because it is arguably the most critical skill for students to master. If students can’t read proficiently (and in some cases read at all) by the fourth grade, they’ll likely struggle in life. As the Annie E. Casey Foundation has noted, “Third grade has been identified as important to reading literacy because it is the final year children are learning to read.” After that, “students are ‘reading to learn.’”

Teaching reading successfully is a straightforward, well-documented process, and most children, with proper instruction, should be successful readers by the end of kindergarten. Most of the kindergarten students in our charter school network will be reading before then.

The federal government began a 10-year, billion-dollar effort called Project Follow Through in 1968 that tested various methods for teaching reading to at-risk children in grades K-3. It compared 22 curriculum models in 178 communities with 200,000 children. The “Direct Instruction” model, the study found, “produced the best results in all areas.” The findings were further validated in a 2000 follow-up report from the National Reading Panel , an expert advisory group convened by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, with the Department of Education, to study “the effectiveness of various approaches to teaching children to read.”

Yet instead of embracing direct instruction, which has been widely available for decades and is integral to the curriculum of our schools, most school systems and, as they are taught, most teachers snub direct instruction. As a result, year-after-year significant numbers of nonreaders advance through traditional public schools. These aren’t just students who can’t read at grade level; many can’t read at any level.

We have first-hand knowledge of this. When the 2020-21 school year began, the four charter schools our organization manages received record numbers of transfer applications from parents of children who had been attending traditional public schools, which remained closed due to COVID-19 fears.

Reading problems surfaced immediately. Of the 168 first- and second grade transfer students who joined us, 51 first graders and 24 second graders were unable to pass the basic readiness assessment to begin kindergarten-level reading instruction. Not only could they not read at any level, their vocabularies were so limited they wouldn’t be able to understand basic reading instruction. So, we enrolled the 75 students in a direct instruction kindergarten preparatory course called “ Language for Learning ,” which they had to complete before reading instruction could begin.

The youngest transfer students weren’t the only ones unable to read. Many newly enrolled students in grades three to seven also couldn’t read or write. So, instead of wasting their time (and their teachers’) by having them sit through grammar or history lessons that required reading, we assigned them to Language for Learning classes as well.

The problem I just described isn’t a local one. State and national testing indicates that large numbers of students are pushed through the public education system every year without being able to read. On last year’s NAEP reading test, fewer than one-third (32%) of North Carolina’s public school fourth graders performed at or above the “proficient” level, exactly matching the national average . Students in just eight states exceeded that average.

Yet most of the education establishment ignores Language for Learning, “ Reading Mastery ,” and other direct instruction programs because to embrace them would shift blame for nonreaders to teachers, administrators, schools of education, and the lawmakers who ignore, or make excuses for, widespread public school failings.

Two decades ago, I was a volunteer science instructor in a low-income inner-city Houston elementary school run by Dr. Thaddeus Lott, one of public education’s most successful innovators. His innovation, bucking popular trends that continue to this day, was to emphasize student behavior, reading, and direct instruction.

His students thrived and excelled — so much so that Lott was persecuted by higher-ups in the school system and accused of cheating. Lott stood up to the bullies and won. He was then given three additional hard-luck schools to manage; they thrived as well.

My friend and mentor has since died. But his formula for student success lives on: orderly classrooms, direct instruction, and reading proficiency.

Baker A. Mitchell Jr. is the founder of the Roger Bacon Academy in Leland, North Carolina, a former member of the North Carolina Public Charter School Advisory Council, the state Charter School Advisory Board, and past chairman of the North Carolina Alliance for Public Charter Schools. The Roger Bacon Academy manages the Classical Charter Schools of America in southeastern North Carolina.