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Success for All Middle School

Number of Schools: There are currently 52 middle schools implementing the Success for All Middle School program. These schools are located in 16 States and jurisdictions: Arkansas, Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Missouri, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, and Washington.

Program Description: The Success for All Middle School is a model of middle school reform based on the Success for All (SFA) reading program—a comprehensive, effective, and replicable program for the elementary grades. Primary goals of the middle school program are to assess student strengths and weaknesses, fill in existing gaps in their skills, and provide a bridge to more challenging content with practical applications. We also hope to strengthen students’ relationships with both family and community. The SFA Middle School expects eventually to incorporate cooperative learning strategies into all subject areas and to integrate language arts throughout the school day.

Traditional instruction focuses primarily on course content. The SFA Middle School, however, emphasizes not only the facts that students are expected to know, but also the meaning behind those facts. Not just how to do something, but why it works. SFA middle school students learn effective strategies to extend their knowledge beyond the facts at hand. They learn to think critically, to be intellectually engaged, to relate what they already know to new situations, to take the initiative and act on their beliefs—and in doing so to make a difference in their lives and those of others.

Middle School Curriculum Components

Reading Instruction

Children in the Middle School Project are exposed to reading in each of their classes. Such integration is important. But so is a structured time devoted to reading instruction—readers of all levels profit from specialized work to develop and enhance their skills. As a result, SFA requires that middle grade students devote an additional sixty minutes to reading every day.

Reading classrooms are grouped by reading level to facilitate student learning. At eight-week intervals, children are assessed and regrouped according to the progress they have made. Students who improve dramatically may be reassigned at intermediate stages. Those who read significantly below grade level benefit from Stage One, designed specifically for upper elementary and middle grade students who have great difficulty reading.

For students at or above grade level in reading, class time can be spent on study and research skills, math support and enrichment, or other desired extensions and activities.
The daily reading period:

  • Allows schools to customize instruction for individual students
  • Grounds beginning readers in the basics of reading
  • Helps weak readers steadily improve their reading skills
  • Offers tips to help good readers become even better
  • Provides a flexible time for academic support or extensions
  • Prepares all students for success in middle school and beyond

Humanities
The centerpiece of the middle school curriculum is a two-hour core humanities block that combines social studies with language arts. The SFA Middle School takes an integrated, comprehensive approach to these subjects, including well-designed student materials and extensive professional development to help teachers become proficient in teaching all aspects of the course.

In the middle school humanities block, students learn about the world by experiencing it in simulated form, by conducting experiments, and by investigating important real-world problems and topics in cooperative groups. The world outside the school is a crucial part of the program, accessed by means of field studies, telecommunication, computer technology, and the involvement of members of the community.

The humanities block also integrates reading and writing strategies to facilitate the language arts component. Children make extensive use of writing skills and reading of expository and narrative texts, as well as math, science, and fine arts. In addition, students are continually encouraged to ask questions, to collect data, to investigate, and to predict the impact of actions or events. Yet students do more than study real-world problems—they also take an active part in planning and implementing projects that contribute to the community.

The two-hour core humanities class offers:

  • Time for in-depth study
  • Occasions for reading, writing, and language arts
  • Opportunity for learning in context
  • Experience with expository texts
  • Chances for students to take the initiative in their studies
  • More ways to engage and challenge children

Science
A full range of science units for grades six through eight complement the reading curriculum and the core humanities block. The middle school science program springs from instructional methods already implemented by WorldLab, a proven model of science education currently in use in a number of SFA elementary schools.

The middle school science curriculum makes extensive use of hands-on investigations, simulations, and experimentation to introduce students to science. Students work in teams throughout the units. Experiments are supplemented with a period of observation, research, and interesting activities that both build on children’s own experiences and help students ask meaningful questions.

Middle school science units provide the guidelines and all materials teachers need to present information in an engaging, integrated, and active manner. Science class is a laboratory where students can use and enhance the skills they learn in other components of the SFA Middle School, including reading, writing, and mathematics.

The hands-on approach to science:

  • Builds on children’s observations and experiences
  • Creates critical thinkers
  • Sets a model for inquiry, data analysis, and problem solving
  • Emphasizes the connections between society, science, and technology in daily life
  • Spawns positive attitudes about science
  • Provides opportunities for integration of curriculum
  • Establishes habits of mind for a lifetime

Technology
Given the many ways in which technology has transformed the twentieth century, it is imperative that schools incorporate existing and emerging technologies into the classroom. Students will be required to use diverse and powerful technologies in high school, college, and beyond. In middle schools, they learn the basics on which to build.

Teachers and students alike must take every possible opportunity to use computers, the Internet, video and cassette recorders, and other available media. Computers, in particular, are valuable educational tools. Before leaving middle school, children should be familiar with word processing, publishing, data storage, conducting analyses, making projections and displays, using spreadsheets and databases, and accessing the outside world through resources available on the Internet. Many of these skills are incorporated directly into SFA Middle School lesson plans.

Because technology changes rapidly, schools allow for ongoing teacher training to ensure quality classroom instruction for students.

Adaptations & Interventions:

Special Education
The Success for All Middle School program attempts to reduce special education placements, in favor of inclusion classrooms. The more that learning disabled students are able to accomplish in regular classrooms with the help of their teammates, the more confident they will become and the more success they will have with their schoolwork.

Classroom strategies and the middle school curriculum are designed to give learning-disabled students the greatest chance for success. Because students learn in different ways, all instruction incorporates a combination of sight, sound, movement, and touch whenever possible. The repetition helps reinforce concepts, and it ensures that no one misses out due to a momentary lapse in attention.

In an SFA Middle School, most children who would ordinarily be in special education now remain in the regular classroom programs and are served flexibly by supplementary services (one-to-one tutoring, family support services, social skills training, behavioral intervention, speech or language assistance, or other services). Those who still require special education participate as fully as possible in regular classroom programs, and they are released from special education as soon as they no longer need it.

Research: The Success for All Middle School design is one of few comprehensive, replicable models for middle schools serving many at-risk young adolescents. Consistent data indicating whether and how this model can be successfully replicated across a wide variety of circumstances will provide an important tool for educators concerned with the success of these children. This data is being gathered through achievement measures in several subject areas, implementation ratings, and interviews with SFAF trainers.

Preliminarily, we have compared the gains made by SFA Middle Schools to the performance of non-SFA control sites in five states participating in the Middle School Study. By looking at each school’s performance on standardized tests, it helps determine how effective the program has been in each SFA school. Performance data was collected from each state’s department of education website from 2001-2002. SFA schools gained more on the state test than each of the control schools. Even though each state has a different standardized tests, the SFA Middle Schools had greater gains than the controls for each pairing of schools after only one year of implementing Success for All.

These early results are derived from a much larger study, funded through the U.S. Department of Education and due to be completed in 2004. The complete evaluation focuses on the implementation of the SFA Middle School model, the impact of this model, and the relationship between implementation and impact. NORC is conducting this evaluation.

For more information, please contact Cheryl Sattler, Education Policy and Constituent Relations Manager, at 1-800-548-4998 x2583.

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