Publications

Resources to support and inform all stages of the school design journey.

Blog

The news, research, ideas, and opinions from across the Springpoint ecosystem.

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Five Lessons from a School Design Leader

At Springpoint, we are fortunate to work with a variety of dedicated and experienced practitioners to support their work to reimagine high school. The Barr Foundation’s Engage New England initiative, which invests in the design and launch of new school models for students who are off-track toward graduation, recently welcomed its…

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VOTE: SXSWedu 2017 PanelPicker voting is open!

SXSWedu's PanelPicker community voting is open and we need your votes for Springpoint's three session ideas! Voting closes on Friday, September 2nd, so make your voice heard before then to help us present in Austin in March. Keep reading for more details on our sessions, which focus on innovative school design and the often untold stories and perspectives of adults and young people in those schools.

Iterating on College and Career Readiness Offerings to Support Students in Designing Their Futures

When we opened our doors to 9th graders one year ago, we had a plan in place to meet our vision: To empower ALL students to own their learning, shape their dreams and create a better world. Embedded within our personalized model was a strategy to give ALL students access to high value opportunities, such as Advanced Placement classes and a concurrent enrollment. To reinforce this instructional vision, we created two student support structures as part of our college and career programming: a pilot course focused on college and career readiness, and advisory.

Student Voices: Moving Beyond “When I Grow Up…”

A major task for high schools today is to guide students toward postsecondary opportunities. In the best schools, a strong college and career office develops relationships with students and families, presenting them with possible postsecondary pathways and helping them secure opportunities that are a good fit.

How Can We Personalize Rigorous Projects?

Project-based learning (PBL) is an incredibly useful way to prepare students for the world—especially today's world. By definition, project-based learning is an approach that allows students to gain knowledge and skills as they investigate and respond to an engaging and complex question. At their most effective, projects are inquiry-based and focused on real-world issues.

Three Conditions for Implementing PBL in my Classroom

As educators, we have many tools in our toolbox to help students learn, and own their own learning. Project-based learning, or PBL, is one that I've employed on many occasions to encourage students to think critically and master content knowledge and skills with an authentic purpose.

Developing a Competency-Based ELA Classroom

When I started my journey at Denver School of Innovation and Sustainable Design (DSISD) in spring 2015, I was excited. After nine years of teaching in a traditional model of education, the new possibilities at my disposal sparked my creativity. Little did I know how much I would feel like a first year educator all over again once school started in the fall. I was embarking on uncharted territory, and no amount of summer planning could have prepared me for what was next. Now, a year in, I'm able to reflect on what I've learned, and offer a bit of advice to teachers and school leaders who might be interested in this model.

Moving from Theory to Practice: Designing a New Competency-Based High School

Every school leader wants to create their dream school. They want the kind of opportunity that would allow a passionate team and community of learners to cast a shared vision, to side step the bureaucratic elements of schooling, and to create an atmosphere and experiences that educators and students long for. However, when the opportunity of a blank canvas for school design arrives, there are a number of unspoken challenges in moving from theory to practice. In December of 2014 we embarked on this leadership journey with Denver School of Innovation and Sustainable Design (DSISD).

Top Tips from Springpoint’s ‘Shark Tank’ Session

Recently, Springpoint hosted a ‘shark tank' style pitch event featuring presentations by three school design teams from the Cleveland Metropolitan School District. These teams are in the process of designing new high schools that will open in Cleveland this summer. The school designers pitched their models to groups of teachers, leaders and students for ideas and feedback.

Springpoint School Study Tour: Insights into Serving ELL Students from Two Internationals Schools

Some of the most valuable learning tools in the Springpoint toolbox are our partner schools themselves. That's why we started organizing school study tours this fall—to celebrate and learn from schools in the Opportunity by Design network. Our first three tours included visits to NYC, Cleveland, and Denver.

Student-Centered Design at the Denver School of Innovation and Sustainable Design

Last month, we led our network of school designers and principals of Opportunity by Design schools on a visit to the Denver School of Innovation and Sustainable Design (DSISD). Since opening last fall, DSISD has cultivated a student-centered, mastery-based culture rooted in clearly articulated competencies. Led by Principal Danny Medved, Dean of Curriculum and Instruction Lisa Simms, and Dean of Assessment and Technology Matt Dodge, DSISD is rapidly evolving in response to its students' needs. In the words of one student, "we feel like DSISD is our school, not the district's. It's the students'."
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