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Checklist for Evaluating Schools: What
To Look For On Your School Visit
Before you make any decision,
you must visit the school. Schools have tours that you can take, some
better than others. You won't get to see much teaching in action, but
it gives you a chance to ask questions (see the checklist below). There
are other ways to visit the school: (a) open houses; (b) volunteer; (c)
take your own unguided tour.
Rank possible choices
before you visit it will help you maintain a schedule and decide how
many you really want to see. Even if you know you will be unwilling to
send your child to the assigned neighborhood school, it's wise to visit
it, if only to gather information for comparison.
Since schools do not
accept unscheduled visitors, you should make an appointment to tour a
school. Don't be afraid to ask questions. As an assertive and caring
parent, you can do quality detective work without seeming nosy or overbearing.
Teachers, secretaries and students are often valuable sources of unseen
but important information. Though you may not consider yourself an expert
on curriculum or teaching methods, observing a few active classrooms will
provide clues about the school's potential match with your child.
The questions below are
prompts to encourage ideas, rather than exhaustive lists of every possible
detail. The checklists are grouped into five categories: academics; teachers,
principals, and staff; student life; parent life; and logistical concerns.
All five are important aspects of a school, although one may be more essential
to you than another.
ACADEMICS
How are students expected
to learn and demonstrate their progress?
- Do students work independently
or in groups? Are desks and tables thoughtfully organized?
- How and when are resources
such as the library and computer lab used? Are relatively new computers
available? In classrooms?
- How do students demonstrate
what they learn - by taking tests, writing essays, making oral presentations,
building three-dimensional projects, helping other students?
- How are grades calculated?
- How is class time
spent? What is the balance between written work, whole-class discussion,
reading, and working on various projects?
- How are ideas presented
- by textbooks, by examples and demonstration, by lectures, or by visiting
experts?
- What are the daily
or weekly homework expectations and how are parents expected to be involved?
Do parents sign contracts and what are the commitments required?
Is the work level appropriate?
- How many of the students
seem in over their heads? How and when do they get extra help?
- How are students with
greater abilities challenged in the classroom? Do they attend special
classes or extracurricular enrichment programs such as Gifted and Talented
Education (GATE) programs?
- How well are students
prepared for the AP and SAT tests? How many take them? What college
guidance is offered?
- What exposure to the
work world is provided? Do students receive help finding summer jobs
or placement following graduation??
- Is the content of
the class important and interesting? Does it seem appropriate for your
child?
- Do you wish that you
had been taught this way?
How is the curriculum
planned?
- Are curriculum materials
up-to-date? Are teachers active in designing and implementing new materials?
- Are parents included
in curriculum planning?
- How is this school
using its teacher training time? Are teachers taking classes to improve?
Are the communities resources
well used?
- Does the school have
artists in residence? What about other outside experts on subjects being
taught in class?
- What are the field
trips or other opportunities to learn off-campus and how do they complement
the curriculum?
- How do students benefit
from the school's relationships with outside organizations?
- What role does community
service play in the curriculum?
Is the environment supportive
of academic work?
- Is student work prominently
displayed around the school and in classrooms, creating an informal
reward for student achievement? Do displays show the full range of academic
work or are they limited to "pretty" projects?
- Is useful information
related to the subject at hand available on the walls and elsewhere
in the classroom?
TEACHERS, PRINCIPALS,
AND STAFF
The staff at the school
are the most critical element in the quality of a child's education. You
will need to work in a team with these adults if your child is to succeed
in school.
- Do you respect and
trust the people you encounter at the school? Do they treat you and
your child with respect?
- Does the school have
a specifically sound vision or mission statement?
- How long has the principal
been at the school? How many other principals have been assigned to
the school recently?
- What is the principal's
management style with teachers? With students? With parents?
- How do the teachers
interact physically with students?
- How many adults, including
aides, parents or volunteers, help teach in the classrooms? What preparation
have they had?
- How do the teachers
draw on their own individual interests or specialties to benefit the
school? Do they work together?
- How much experience
do teachers have? How many are new to the school this year? Is there
much turnover of staff? What awards have teachers won?
- Are secretaries and
other support staff at the school treated with respect? Do they contribute
to the mission of the school?
STUDENT LIFE
This section offers some
ideas for evaluating how your child will respond to the school. Children
vary in their needs for structure, independence, quiet, friendship, activities,
and help in adjusting to a new school.
- What are expectations
of student behavior? How do students learn about disciplinary policy?
- Do students feel safe
getting to and from school? At lunch and during breaks? Participating
in after-school programs?
- Are the bathrooms
accessible, working, and clean?
- What are students
doing during lunch breaks or recess? Is sports equipment available?
Are adults supervising the yard appropriately?
- Are quieter places
available - courtyards, gardens, protected play areas for reading or
small group interaction?
- How do students' demographic
backgrounds affect the dynamics of the student culture?
- Do students seem friendly
and open? Are they encouraged to interact with adults? Would a new student
feel welcome here?
- Do the extracurricular
activities match your child's interests? Are they accessible to your
family?
- Are students formally
recognized in front of their peers for varied accomplishments, not only
academic and athletic?
PARENT LIFE
In the rush to get into
a school everyone says is good, many people overlook that they are joining
a new community. Think ahead - you will be spending a lot of time with
these parents, and your child will develop close relationships with these
children.
- Are these parents
going to be good role models for your child? Are their ideas about education
similar to yours?
- What are the expectations
of the family? When are parent conferences and back-to-school nights?
- What are the volunteer
opportunities? How much fundraising goes on, and what does it support?
- How are parents organized
and how active is the group? Are new families welcomed to the school?
LOGISTICAL CONCERNS
Location and services
such as after-school care can make a huge difference in your satisfaction
over time. If you can't easily get to the school, you won't go there.
If you don't go, you can't be much involved, and it becomes hard to keep
abreast of what is new and changing. That type of disconnection may lead
to dissatisfaction.
- What time does school
start and end? How will your child get safely to school? Walking? School
buses? City transit?
- Are uniforms required?
What is the school's dress code?
- Is there accessible
before- and after-school care on the premises? What does it cost?
- Do certificated staff
supervise athletics or other after-school activities? How sound are
these programs?
- How are medical needs
handled? Under what circumstances are children sent home during the
day? How is this handled?
ANSWERS FOR YOUR QUESTIONS
Once you have developed
your list of questions, take the school tour and read any printed materials
you have about the school. If you're still searching for answers, you
may want to schedule a personal meeting with the principal or vice principal.
In-depth questions about academic programs may be referred to individual
teachers or department heads.
Often the principal is
able to locate someone to answer questions. If a question requires the
attention of a teacher who is in class, you may be asked to call after
school.
Ask around for names
of parents who might be willing to talk with you as well. It is in the
school's interest, as well as yours, to ensure a good fit -- before your
child enrolls.
Doing Your Homework: What You Can Read
To Prepare For Your School Visit
INDEPENDENT GUIDEBOOKS
Independent and more
thorough research materials, such as the Choosing a Public School guides from School Wise Press, will provide you with a variety of detailed
information including test scores, teacher and principal experience, and
college prep data. These books also rank schools by various categories,
so that you can see which schools have the best students-to-teacher ratios,
or which schools report the best test scores for math.
SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY
REPORT CARDS
Every public school in California by law must produce an annual School
Accountability Report Card (SARC), generally a simple description of the
more positive aspects of the school, combined with statistics describing
the student body, the teaching staff, and student test scores. Some districts
place a high priority in producing detailed and meaningful SARCs, while
others fill in a basic district template which make all the schools in
a district seem the same. You should be able to get one at the school,
but an easier and more reliable source will be the district office. You'll
be able to look through SARCs for all the schools in the district at the
office, although they probably won't give you an entire set if the district
is a large one. Some schools and school districts supplement SARCs with
brochures, district profiles, and internet home pages.
CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT
OF EDUCATION
Their website (www.goldmine.cde.ca.gov) has much to offer. The California
High School Performance in particular provides quite a bit of information
about schools, such as dropout rates and SAT scores. Some of the information
is specific to school districts. Other data is specific down to the school
level itself. They also offer a link with Ed Data, a source of general
statistics about California schools from Ed Source.
COUNTY OFFICES OF
EDUCATION
County offices are coordinating centers for information about the
districts in their county. Very often the county offices receive very
little funding and therefore don't have much in the way of resources that
you couldn't get at the district offices. But others are a driving force
in the education field and produce a large amount of information about
the schools in the county. Santa Clara County Office of Education, for
example, produced a large volume called "Vital Signs." While
it wasn't intended for the general public, anyone can go to the office
and examine it. It is also available for purchase.
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