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  • rbenton@sacbee.com

    Granite Bay High School mathematics teacher David Laughrea uses a "Smart Board" to help teach his students during a class at the high school.

  • rbenton@sacbee.com

    Oakmont High School student Jessica Rutledge, 16, left, uses a laptop to listen to audio comments about her homework from her English teacher while her mother, Angela Rutledge, observes at their home in Roseville on May 21.

  • rbenton@sacbee.com

    Granite Bay High School student Avery Geary listens as mathematics teacher David Laughrea uses a "Smart Board" to help teach his students during a class at the high school.

  • rbenton@sacbee.com

    Granite Bay High School mathematics teacher David Laughrea uses a "Smart Board" to help teach his students during a class at the high school on May 21.

  • rbenton@sacbee.com

    Oakmont High School English teacher Daniel Flinn records notes about students writing in his classroom at the school in Rosevile on May 20.

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Roseville high schools raise their sights

Published: Wednesday, May. 28, 2008 | Page 1A

The public high schools serving Roseville have much to commend them: Strong course offerings. Healthy test scores. Well-equipped campuses where sports, music, theater and debate teams thrive.

Yet, in an effort both humble and far-reaching, the Roseville Joint Union High School District has decided a solid reputation is not enough.

Drawing from schools as far away as Fairfax County, Va., Roseville educators are on a mission to make their high schools not just good, but excellent.

"We're looking at what great schools and successful schools are doing and bringing it back," said Tony Monetti, superintendent of the growing suburban system, which serves 9,000 students in grades nine through 12.

Among the efforts:

• Bringing International Baccalaureate programs to Oakmont and Granite Bay high schools this fall. It will mark the first time the prestigious global learning program is offered in Placer County.

• Creating a new collection of "common assessments" in key subjects. The goal is to go beyond the state's standards tests and make sure all students receive the same high-level academic content regardless of the school or teacher.

• Addressing head-on something many schools avoid mentioning in public: High numbers of freshmen earning D's and F's.

• Adding new Internet-based technologies often found on college campuses. District leaders hope to capitalize on teenagers' comfort with technology and expand their learning opportunities beyond the standard six- or seven-hour school day.

"24-7 learners" is the new catchphrase.

Existing budgets paying bill

In the world of public education, it is not unusual to find a district trying to improve. Often, such initiatives are driven by a blue-ribbon commission. Or a multimillion-dollar grant. Or a partnership with the private sector bearing a lofty name.

What sets the picture apart in Roseville is the absence of big names, big checks, or big-ticket agendas.

"It's not a packaged initiative," said Ron Severson, Roseville Joint Union's executive director of curriculum and instruction. He noted all enhancements are being made within existing budgets. "It's just a bunch of us working together. Principals. Teachers. Administrators. We're in our infancy with all this stuff."

The effort is already touching students.

Last Wednesday, for example, Jessica Rutledge, a sophomore at Oakmont High, experienced something she never had before: her English teacher instructing her personally in her home.

No, Daniel Flinn wasn't there in her dining room. He had used a new online program called "Blackboard" to record an electronic audio file for Rutledge. It contained his comments on a writing assignment she had turned in two days before.

Sitting at her laptop, Rutledge followed an electronic version of her paper as she listened to her teacher's husky voice. He complimented her writing triumphs, pointed out problems with capitalization, and told her that with revisions, she could bring her paper up to at least a B.

"Kinda cool," she said when the audio comments concluded.

"Who was that?" her brother asked from the living room.

"Mr. Flinn, my teacher."

Virginia district is model

The push toward greater excellence was born four years ago of a single goal, Severson said.

At the time, Severson was principal at Granite Bay High and researching how to start International Baccalaureate classes. The IB program puts students through college-level coursework under strict standards, and requires several years of planning and training to start.

Severson and other educators traveled to other schools that had both an IB program and a block schedule like that used in Roseville Joint Union. Under Roseville's "four-by-four" schedule, the day has four periods rather than the standard six. The periods run longer and enable kids to complete courses in just a semester. It means they can take eight courses in a year instead of six.

Among the schools the Roseville educators visited were three in Fairfax County, Va., a suburb of Washington, D.C.


Call The Bee's Deb Kollars, (916) 321-1090.

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