
Archdiocesan
official: Catholic schools at the cutting-edge of education

By NADIA POZO
CS&T Staff Writer
The student of today is more advanced, knows how to multitask,
and can grasp larger concepts because of advances in technology
and globalization according to recent research.
That means the traditional model of education — when
students sat through lectures and engaged in memorization
— is no longer enough, according to Mary Rochford, archdiocesan
assistant superintendent for elementary educational services.
As result, Rochford said, a new way of educating, based on
the most recent research, is making its way into archdiocesan
elementary Catholic schools, where solid education begins.
Beginning in 2003 with five pilot schools, the parish schools
have been implementing the “Rigor and Relevance Model”
of the International Center for Leadership in Education, which
is promoted by the U.S. Department of Education, among others.
The model takes into account the students’ changing
learning environment, and seeks to challenge them in problem-solving
as well as in applying the concepts and skills they learn
in school to life. Rochford said.
“When teaching students long division, for example,
it’s not good enough to give them work sheets alone,”
she said. Instead, teachers are encouraged to find new and
innovative ways to teach the subject, relating it to everyday
life, perhaps setting up a “store” in the classroom
where students go shopping and have to use long division to
calculate their purchases.
“Students today need stimulating class settings,”
Rochford said. “The goal is to get students to think
at higher levels and be able to apply [that thinking] to …
many real-world examples.”
Taught in that manner, she said, “students will be excited
about their learning, and participate more” as they
learn skills to help them excel in the competitive world.
That’s exactly what Carol Ann Luongo, principal of St.
John Chrysostom in Wallingford, has seen in her school since
the faculty began implementing the new model in 2004.
“I’ve seen students ask deeper questions,”
Luongo said. “They are moving beyond the facts and thinking
about the applied concepts.”
The school has implemented the model’s concept of integrating
basic skills in all subjects.
Previously, writing skills were taught in language arts class,
but in the new model, teachers are encouraged to integrate
writing, math, and problem-solving in all areas of education.
Recently at St. John’s, for instance, students were
assigned a project that brought art and writing together in
a way that linked the two subjects to the real world, when
they were asked to take photos of an object and write an essay
explaining how the object was relevant to their life.
“The students thoroughly enjoyed it because it was coming
from a different angle,” Luongo said. “It wasn’t
just sitting through a lecture, but they really had to apply
their writing and use art theory.”
In another such application, students learning about another
country and culture in such classes as social studies, history
and foreign language are now able to use the Internet to take
“virtual” trips to those countries, Rochford said.
That also helps students master technology— a vital
skill in the 21st century.
According to Willard R. Daggett, president of the educational
leadership center, today it is easier for students to get
into college than to find low-entry-level positions in the
labor force, where employers increasingly complain that their
employees are not equipped with basic skills.
Daggett believes that indicates some students don’t
know how to apply the concepts they study, leaving them unprepared
to find success in the world. For that reason, he said, his
center has conducted extensive research to determine how to
improve student preparation for the 21st century and train
educators to improve and adapt their schools’ curricula.
The challenge for educators does not result because the old
model has failed, Daggett said. It is simply no longer relevant
in today’s changing world.
“The world of today requires a different core of knowledge
that all students need for success,” he said. Daggett
presented his program at the fall archdiocesan education conference
for Catholic educators.
“The push of global competition, elimination of unskilled
jobs, advancement in technology, and the demand for maintaining
a middle class has led the public, media, and government to
push for higher standards for all students,” he said.
At present, all but 10 of the Archdiocese’s 187 parish
elementary schools have been trained in Daggett’s model
of education, said Rochford, who hopes all the schools will
have the training by 2007.
“Everything must point to a student’s success,”
she said. “This framework is helping us continue on
that track.”
Having witnessed the results of the training in the short
time since it’s been implemented at St. John Chrysostom,
Principal Luongo said she believes “this approach is
helping us get the students ready for the world they will
inherit.”
Added Rochford: “We have to wake up the potential in
every child.”
CS&T staff writer Nadia Pozo can be reached at npozo@adphila.org
or (215) 965-4614.
Home | Subscribe | Advertise | Classifieds |
Archives
Education | In
the Parishes | Contact
Us | Vocation Series | Young
Adult
Youth | Fresh
Faith
| Cardinal
Justin Rigali | Hispanic
Black Catholic | Catholic
Directory
| People
and Events |