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School of Hard Choices; In the KIPP Academy Program, It's Motivation That's Fundamental
by
Mathews, Jay
in
Classroom management
/ Education reform
/ Feinberg, Mike
/ Levin, Dave
/ Low income groups
/ Public schools
/ Teachers
2004
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School of Hard Choices; In the KIPP Academy Program, It's Motivation That's Fundamental
by
Mathews, Jay
in
Classroom management
/ Education reform
/ Feinberg, Mike
/ Levin, Dave
/ Low income groups
/ Public schools
/ Teachers
2004
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School of Hard Choices; In the KIPP Academy Program, It's Motivation That's Fundamental
Newspaper Article
School of Hard Choices; In the KIPP Academy Program, It's Motivation That's Fundamental
2004
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Overview
[Dave Levin] thought his home town might work better for KIPP. Armed with the first-year scores, he persuaded the New York City school district to let him open the second KIPP school in the Bronx. But it had the same ugly beginning. His new principal verbally flayed him to show her staff she wasn't playing favorites, he recalls. To find more students, he had to sneak into a parents' meeting from which he had been barred, and whisper invitations to take a look at KIPP, before he was escorted out. There is no active opposition to KIPP, although some skeptics say they want to see how the achievement gains hold up, and note that it will take many, many more such schools to make a dent in the problems of low-income neighborhoods. They also suggest that KIPP might be doing well because it attracts the most motivated parents, to which KIPP teachers reply that their students had the same parents when they were doing terribly in regular public schools. KIPP schools have many students with disabilities, and expulsions are rare, their enrollment figures show. KIPP accountants calculate that the longer hours and trips increase per-pupil costs by about 13 percent in their schools across the country. In some expensive cities like New York, however, KIPP is still spending less per student than regular public schools are. [Mike Feinberg], married now to a former Teach for America teacher, has left his post at San Francisco headquarters to go back to Houston and be with kids again, supervising two KIPP middle schools and the new elementary and high school. Levin, still looking for the right woman, resisted attempts to move him to San Francisco and remains at KIPP New York, helping the new principal, Quinton Vance, while focusing on KIPP principal and teacher training and the development of KIPP curriculum materials.
Publisher
WP Company LLC d/b/a The Washington Post
Subject
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