Published 10-25-11
Submitted by Lipscomb University
After just one year of personalized, on-site professional development for teachers at Cameron Middle School, provided by Lipscomb University, 92 percent of Cameron teachers have made significant improvement in their annual teaching goals.
As part of the Cameron Transformation Partnership -- a five-year plan to eliminate achievement gaps at Cameron Middle School, a challenged, diverse school in downtown Nashville -- Lipscomb was contracted by the Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools (MNPS) to develop a model, on-site professional development program to meet the specific improvement needs of each teacher during Cameron’s transition to a charter school.
Cameron Middle School Principal Chris Hames said the partnership with Lipscomb has not only improved teacher performance, but has also helped students’ academic progress.
“Excellent professional development combined with committed teachers has paid off in terms of student learning here at Cameron,” Hames said. “What is remarkable about this teaching staff is that they knew there would be additional professional development requirements each week, yet they chose to stay and accept the challenge, knowing that they would be supported with embedded, personalized professional development.”
The Lipscomb College of Education created a year-long program that provided Cameron teachers with 1,141 hours of professional development and individualized training, far more than other MNPS teachers normally receive in a typical school year.
The model program at Cameron included:
The College of Education deans have been invited to present this new model of professional development at an academic conference this spring and to give a webinar based on their experience at Cameron to Tennessee educators in November.
“There has been a lot of discussion recently about getting the best people into classrooms to produce successful education reform. While teacher recruitment and selection is highly important, this program shows that consistent, targeted professional development for the committed, eager teachers we already have in the schools can make vast improvements,” said Candice McQueen, dean of the Lipscomb College of Education.
Lipscomb will continue the professional development model at Cameron for two more years. In the 2011-12 school year, Lipscomb will provide a total of 1,976 hours of professional development for the Cameron teachers, provide an opportunity to have a Lipscomb faculty member as a mentor for grade level teams and focus on improving planning, classroom engagement practices and instruction with English Learner students in the classroom.
In May 2010, the Metro Nashville Board of Education voted unanimously to enlist LEAD Public Schools in the transition of Cameron Middle School to a charter school and contracted with Lipscomb to reduce achievement gaps at the public school through professional development. Located just south of downtown Nashville, Cameron has struggled to meet federal No Child Left Behind benchmarks and was placed in a new “achievement school district” by the state.
Cameron received Race to the Top funds from the U.S. Department of Education to support the school’s management transition and help implement new, creative approaches to education. Cameron is among the first schools in the nation to be converted to a charter school in partnership with a public school system and university. As a result, its renewed academic success could serve as a benchmark for school improvement transformations across the country.
Lipscomb University is a Christian community of scholars, dedicated to excellence in learning, leading and serving, where students prepare for success today, tomorrow and forever. This principle is carried out in the classroom and in the broader community through our service-learning program and numerous humanitarian trips in the U.S. and abroad. Lipscomb offers 98 fields of undergraduate studies, including majors in the liberal arts, business, biology/pre-med, computer science, education, engineering and nursing. Master's degrees are offered in 33 areas of study including accounting, business, Christian ministry, conflict management, counseling, education, exercise and nutrition science, psychology, sustainability, and theological studies. Doctoral degrees are offered in pharmacy, education and, beginning in Fall 2011, in ministry. Located in Nashville, Lipscomb draws on the city as its campus and the world as its classroom. Study abroad opportunities are offered in Vienna, London, Beijing, Hong Kong, and Buenos Aires as well as other international destinations. Lipscomb's intercollegiate athletic teams compete at the NCAA Division I level.
Within our faculty and staff are a number of experts in a variety of areas including sustainability, business ethics, veterans education/Post 9-11 GI Bill, political commentary, societal issues, civic leadership, community engagement, Latino education, and pharmacy and health sciences among others.
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