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A visiting delegation from overseas would mark a special occasion at most schools, but itβs just another day at Clinton Townshipβs Clintondale High School. βSo many people come here that I canβt remember exactly who has interviewed us and who has followed us,β says Clintondale senior Autumn Flynn. βI canβt even keep track.β
The big draw is Clintondaleβs βflippedβ school, a radical revision of basic educational norms. All students at Clintondale do their homework in class under the guidance of their teachers, and then receive their lessons in the form of short videos to be watched at home.
Clintondale Principal Greg Green first tested the model with a government class in the spring of 2010. βThese kids were extremely at risk,β he says. βThey had failed the class three or four times, and it was kind of a last-chance, desperate attempt to get them through the content. They actually outperformed the other kids, and thatβs when the light bulb started to go off for us.β
At the time, performance among Clintondaleβs student body as a whole was looking grim. Thirty-five percent of students were failing their classes, and health teacher Dave Schindler says itβs because they werenβt understanding, or doing, their homework. βIf they have questions, Mom and Dad donβt always have the answers β¦ [or] they donβt go home to Mom and Dad,β Schindler says. βA lot of the time theyβre home by themselves.β
Clintondale slowly rolled out more flipped classes, and in fall 2011, it became the first completely flipped school in the United States. βIt was like lightning in a bottle,β Green says. βItβs just something that we could realistically live with, it didnβt cost a lot of money, and our teachers grasped the concept very quickly.β
Reformatting lessons for the flipped model did take some extra effort, however. Lesson presentations vary by class and teacher, but most are done in a βscreencastβ format β a teacher-narrated slideshow video thatβs usually about 10 minutes. Some incorporate images or YouTube videos; others include examples and problems drawn on the screen in the teacherβs handwriting, as on a traditional blackboard.
βThe first dozen or so [lessons] took a lot longer because there was a learning curve,β says social studies teacher Andy Kastl. βBut if I had to sit down and do one now, I could probably do it in 15 minutes.β
The lessons are much shorter than a traditional class period. But Kastl says that once you subtract traditional classroom time spent on attendance, disturbances, and collecting homework, the duration of actual content delivery is about the same.
Students like Clintondale junior Jahya Dunbar seem to enjoy watching a digest-size lesson via mobile device. βYou canβt really go wrong with a video on the Internet,β Dunbar says. Meanwhile, teachers are devoting classroom time to what Kastl describes as βhigher-learningβ projects that emphasize group work β and getting help when needed. βThereβs no excuse for the kids not to do it,β Kastl says. βIf youβve got a question, man, turn around and just ask me.β
Failure rates schoolwide have dropped to 11 percent, and those dramatic results have drawn countless visitors. Green says he lost track after Clintondale welcomed its 200th visiting school, and guests have come from every continent but Antarctica.
The school has also attracted considerable attention from media, including CNN, the New York Times, and PBS NewsΒιΆΉ·¬ΊΕ. European and Asian media outlets have traveled to report on the school, too. βWe see [reporters] a lot,β Dunbar says. βA lot. Everybodyβs taking pictures.β
The U.S. government has taken an interest in Clintondale, as well. After the Times piece ran in October, representatives from Oak Ridge National Laboratory contacted Green to participate in the development of a βpersonal recommenderβ software. βItβs similar to Amazon,β Green says. βBased on studentsβ demographics or previous learning styles or whatever data you put in, you get to nail down what resources kids need to be successful.β Clintondale will pilot the program this winter, before the laboratory rolls it out to more schools nationwide.
Clintondale now stands as the forerunner for a still-germinating, but genuine, educational movement. Green says most of the schools that have visited Clintondale have since implemented flipped practices βin some way, shape, or form.β And some, like Illinoisβ Havana High School, have flipped their schools entirely.
While Clintondale staff and students still seem a little overwhelmed by all the interest, they also have a renewed sense of pride. βClintondale never had the chance to show their strength in education before,β Dunbar says.
Although Green is thrilled with that newfound strength, he says that he never expected to draw attention. βWe intended it just to better serve our kids,β he says. βBut itβs much better for us. I think if you live through it and talk about it and get a grasp on it, you understand it more and more yourself.β
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