Western Digital Partnership a Decade in the Making

In 2008, Skyline Principal Patty Quinones was faced with a monumental task – transforming the high school experience for her Skyline Falcons.

“It was a time of incredible change and innovation. We knew that the world was changing quickly and we had to keep up. As we looked at the industries in our community, we realized that STEM offered our students that strong competitive advantage.” Together with a team of dedicated teachers and staff, Quinones set about creating the district’s first high school focus program, STEM Academy. Built in partnership with CU Boulder, the program focused on STEM and engineering skills, offering students a path to STEM careers. To complement the new explicit focus on STEM, the school also added a Visual and Performing Arts Academy to provide even more opportunities for students.

“We really did start small. We needed help from industry on a whole host of issues, but technology was at the center.” As the team began implementing the school’s first computer science coursework, they lacked something key: laptops. Western Digital had recently opened an office in Longmont and was dedicated to supporting its new community. “Western Digital stepped in and donated a laptop cart and set of laptops. In those days, 1:1 initiatives like we have now didn’t exist, so with that investment, we could suddenly provide a huge increase in computer science programming to our students.” With those laptops, Skyline was able to add its first course, Advanced Placement Computer Science. The STEM Academy blossomed, ultimately helping to earn the district a $16.6M Race to the Top District grant. In 2016, based on the success of the STEM Academy, Skyline added the district’s first Pathways in Technology Early College High School (P-TECH).

Built on early successes at Skyline and across the district, St. Vrain has since implemented a nationally recognized learning technology plan, focus programs at every high school, a second P-TECH program, and an Innovation Center. A decade after its first investment, the Western Digital Foundation recently awarded a $10,000 grant to St. Vrainnovation, the district’s future-ready mobile innovation lab. With the mobile lab, St. Vrain will not only be able to provide innovative, technology-driven programs to students, but also demonstrate to educators across the country how technology-enabled and personalized learning changes students’ lives.

Western Digital’s support is a story of how one investment can have far-reaching effects. “In those days, we were testing small projects to see what worked. Today, our teachers are leading the nation in their practices and taking the show on the road,” says Quinones. “We’re very grateful for longtime supporters like Western Digital, who are willing to invest in big ideas and a vision. It has been an amazing experience to see that vision come to life for students.”

Build Support, Innovate, Repeat: Agile Public Education In Colorado

By Tom Vander Ark, Contributor

With thoughtful sustained leadership, big school districts can earn community trust, establish and maintain rigorous academic standards, and become agile—even innovative. That’s the lesson from schools in Longmont, Colorado, north of Denver. 

St. Vrain Valley Schools (@SVVSD) serves the city of Longmont and a dozen smaller communities in four counties stretching from the Continental Divide to the plains and covering 411 square miles. 

Serving 33,000 students in 60 schools, the district is growing by several hundred students each year and is likely to double in size over the next few decades as people continue to move to this area of robust growth, technology, and other incredible opportunities (with equally spectacular views).  

When Don Haddad joined St. Vrain 19 years ago as a high school principal, the district was experiencing significant struggles. They lacked community trust, had a $14 million budget shortfall, and had never passed a local mill levy. 

When he became superintendent 12 years ago,  Dr. Haddad (@SVVSDsupt) began developing a team and building community support to work collaboratively developing a comprehensive mission and vision designed to provide a strong competitive advantage for every student. 

In addition to a can-do attitude, the leadership team urged a shift in the focus from asking, “What could our community do for us?” to “What could we do for our community?”

The new team began laying the groundwork for a strong foundation of rigorous academics and a plethora of incredible co-curricular programs in the areas of performing arts, visual arts, and much more. “We push academic excellence with an aligned system and a strong tech infrastructure,” said Haddad. “A strong foundation of academics serve as a platform for robust innovation.” 

How Business Partners Support Innovation 

St. Vrain Valley Schools is a ‘full-choice’ district with more than 90 business partners that support real-world learning in career pathways including STEM, biotech, aerospace, energy, medical and biosciences, visual and performing arts, leadership, and P-TEACH—a program promoting pathways to a teaching career. College credit partnerships offer a year or more of college credit in each pathway. 

In 2016, the district opened Colorado’s first Pathways to Technology Early College High School (P-TECH) program. The P-TECH model enables students to earn an associate’s degree alongside their high school diploma at no cost to the student. Students also earn valuable experience working with mentors from industry partners while enrolled in the program, and are first in line for jobs upon graduation.

At Skyline High School’s P-TECH program, students gain a powerful work experience at IBM while working toward an Associate of Applied Science in Computer Information Systems at Front Range Community College.

At Frederick High School’s P-TECH, students benefit from partnerships with TolmarAgilent Technologies, and Avexis while working toward an associate’s degree focusing on biochemistry from Aims Community College. An upcoming third P-TECH at Silver Creek High will focus on cybersecurity.  

More than 700 St. Vrain learners participate on 155 robotics teams with the support of mentors from local businesses. 

Haddad recognized that St. Vrain is a big business for northern Colorado. As it is approaching 6,000 employees and serving numerous industry and community partners, St. Vrain also employs about 140 students as technicians and designers in part-time jobs and work study programs. 

St. Vrain also recently moved its Innovation Center to a new 50,000-square-foot state-of-the-art facility. The Innovation Center is a next generation career center offering advanced opportunities in technology and entrepreneurship (see feature). 

This year, the district is also launching their new Mobile Innovation Lab initiative and will expand opportunities in academic and technology throughout Colorado and beyond. Funded entirely through corporate partners including IBM, UC Health, Stapp Toyota, Crestone Peak Resources, and United Power, the lab will highlight transformative learning experiences and pilot new curriculum and advanced technologies.

Using Grants, Local Levies, and Bonds to Fund Innovation

In 2010, St. Vrain won a federal innovation grant for $3.6 million and raised more than $700,000 in local matching funds.

In 2012, St. Vrain won a $16.7 million Race to the Top grant which laid the groundwork for P-TECH and the Innovation Center. 

Touring the Innovation Center, Hilary Sontag, Director of Competitive Grants & Strategic Partnerships (@SontagHilary) points to evidence of support from the Rose Community FoundationDaniels Fund, and the Morgridge Family Foundation.  

The district has passed two local mill levies, which are currently worth approximately $56 million annually (and growing) to support, among other things, enriched teacher development and 1:1 technology access for secondary students—the latter of which has been recognized with top awards by the International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE) and the Consortium for School Networking (COSN). The community also passed a facilities bond initiative in 2008 for $189 million and one in 2016 for $260.3 million.

“Building on top of a strong academic foundation has enabled disciplined, robust innovation,” explained Haddad. “It has expanded districtwide access to new programs and complex design thinking experiences.” 

Cultivating Leadership is Key to Stability 

Stable and effective leadership is key to St. Vrain’s success at improving on traditional measures and developing innovative new programs. 

One way that St. Vrain builds community support and develops leadership capacity is Leadership St. Vrain, a nine-month program that allows community volunteers to dive into school district operations, share their perspectives, and become more active participants. Many School Board members emerge from this program, yielding cohesive mission-focused governance. 

The local chambers of commerce recognized St. Vrain as the Business of the Year, Large Business of the Year, and most Innovative Business of the Year. The Longmont Economic Development Council recognized the district for serving as a top economic catalyst, preparing graduates to join society with a competitive advantage. 

Launched last year, Community Strong is a community engagement campaign that supports  partnerships between the district and the wider community. Interested partners create a profile highlighting their potential for presentations, tours, or internships and the platform matches them with schools. 

Advocating for Public Education 

“We are taking public education by #StVrainStorm!” is a theme that is supported by the district’s leadership, teachers, staff, students and community that has served to inspire the St. Vrain community around the many successes of its students and schools.

St. Vrain also sponsors an initiative to build support for public education in Colorado called Our Schools Our Community, led by Kerri McDermid, Chief Communications and Global Impact Officer (@mcdermid), and Brandon Shaffer, Executive Director of Legal and Governmental Affairs (@BShafferCO). Stories are shared on Twitter at @COSchoolsProud and #COSchoolsProud.

“Remarkable things can happen in public education when transformative leadership (such as St. Vrain’s team) is in place for a number of years, and systems are built to sustain a strong, equitable foundation, as well as innovative practices,” said Deputy Superintendent Jackie Kapushion.

Mead High starts inclusive percussion class

November 5, 2019, 11:06am  |  St Vrain Valley School District
By Amy Bounds, Times-Call

The band program is becoming more inclusive and accessible at Mead High School with the creation of a unified percussion class for students with special needs.

The class is based on the St. Vrain Valley School District’s unified sports program. New this fall, the district also started a high school unified bowling league.

Mead’s percussion class, created and taught by band director Chad Lemons, enrolls six students with special needs and five band student mentors.

Their first performance was Wednesday at the school district’s annual band night. The percussion students performed with Mead’s full marching band for the event.

SVVSD starts new Advanced Manufacturing Academy

By Amy Bounds, Times-Call

Starting this year, St. Vrain Valley high school students have the opportunity to learn manufacturing skills to prepare them for careers in machining, engineering, welding, electronics and optics.

The new Advanced Manufacturing Academy is located at Longmont’s Career Development Center, taking over space left by the Innovation Academy’s move to a standalone building. The program is starting with four sessions of the “Principles of Manufacturing” class. About 60 students are enrolled in the introductory yearlong class. 

“All the students are super motivated,” said Career Development Center Director Deniece Cook. “We’re super excited about their engagement.”

Skills to be covered in the introductory class include basics of 3D-design software, blueprinting, mechanical engineering, optics, electrical systems, fabrication and machining. Students are starting by learning machining, including safety and manufacturing terminology.

An Entrepreneurial Mindset

Visualize an entrepreneur and what do you see? An individual in business attire? Someone speaking next to a slideshow presentation featuring line graphs and pie charts? What about a 20-year-old female who started a handcrafted electric guitar company right out of high school? Or a male high school senior who is in the thick of creating a prototype for a shoe designed to replenish electrolytes back into the body? The modern-day entrepreneur encompasses anyone who can identify a problem or need and create a solution. While Jeff Lund, instructional technologist at the Innovation Center, would like to share more details on what his students are working on in the Entrepreneurial Zone, he can’t give away too much since they are in the middle of designing prototypes, exploring how to establish LLCs, and pitching ideas to local investors.

Through the Entrepreneurial Zone class, students create fluid business plans, conduct marketing SWOT analyses, and complete financial literacy coursework to understand what financing is required from investors to pay themselves and get their startup off the ground.

As an intern in the Entrepreneurial Zone, Skyline senior, AnneJeanette Gonzales, is paid as a district employee to serve as a marketer for community outreach events, an event planner for various networking events, and an online systems manager for entrepreneurial events. While enrolled in the course, she is also earning college credit. Participation in programs that combine coursework and real-world experiences are transformational for students. AnneJeanette shared, “The Entrepreneurial Zone has prepared me for my future, because I have been forced to step outside of my comfort zone. When I started high school I was very shy, but now I speak at a lot of events and this program has helped me expand my network and meet industry professionals and other students who have mentored me while I apply for college.”

Advocating for Financial Literacy

Financial literacy is one component of entrepreneurship and while it is incorporated into the Entrepreneurial Zone, this is not unique in St. Vrain. Financial literacy is woven through curriculum from kindergarten to high school. When personal financial literacy was first created as a Colorado Academic Standard in 2009, the content was looped into social studies and math classes. However, in 2016-2017, the St. Vrain Valley Schools Student Advisory Council met with district leadership to advocate for a standalone class to cover topics such as money management, financial planning, credit and debt, taxes, and risk management. Based on student input, the Board of Education voted to add financial literacy to St. Vrain graduation requirements starting with the class of 2021.

Students across St. Vrain high schools now have the option to take Personal Financial Literacy or Wealth Management, which cover job readiness and financial goal setting, to fulfill the new graduation requirement. Students engage in learning activities that simulate the financial world, such as an online stock market game and a virtual reality world where students are assigned a life and career where they learn how to provide for their needs. Longmont High sophomore, Tessa Money, shared, “before I took Wealth Management, I never really thought about how even people who have a lot of money can lose it if they don’t know how to manage their money.”

Students have many opportunities across all high schools to deepen and broaden their business skills. Longmont High is home to the High School of Business focus program, where students get a head start on exploring their postsecondary interests in the field. Classes include Leadership, Wealth Management, Principles of Business, Business Economics, Principles of Marketing, Principles of Finance, Principles of Management, and Business Strategies. Longmont junior, Matthew Cash, shared, “my enrollment in this program gave me the confidence to take on new leadership positions such as editor-in-chief of the yearbook.”

The Early Grades Matter

Another enrichment opportunity is through St. Vrain’s partnership with the Young Americans Center, a local nonprofit focused on financial literacy programming for youth. The nonprofit offers a program called Young AmeriTowne, which introduces numerous financial topics to students and then culminates with them “running town” for the day. Students receive visits from local community members who represent various career fields. They then decide which job they will apply for based on availability. Those who decide they’d like to serve as an elected official of the town must deliver a campaign speech to their peers. When the roles are decided and the students run the town for a day, they encounter real-world problems. If they are a store manager, they will run out of inventory and need to problem-solve how to replenish items. Another student’s character may receive a medical bill and have to navigate making payments. Community Schools Coordinator, Susan Zimmerman, emphasized the program changes the students’ perspective on money, “I’ve heard students talk about how they can start their own business and share ideas on how they can make their own money.”

Entrepreneurship is all about identifying problems and creating solutions. Elementary schools across St. Vrain participate in student-driven Genius Hour projects, where students research a topic they are passionate about and create a way to share it. One fifth grade student at Indian Peaks Elementary School visited a local farmers market and decided to bring one to the school as their Genius Hour project. The idea generated interest from fellow students and teachers who collaborated to make the project a community success.

St. Vrain’s Nutrition Services worked with the students at Indian Peaks to connect them to local farmers who ultimately donated food to be used at the school farm stand. On the evening of the school farmer’s market, students led everything from sharing their knowledge of farmers markets and seasonal produce availability, to preparing the farmers market stand with fruits and vegetables, to handling all of the transactions at the event. “I learned that you need to use a lot of math during the market,” shared fifth grader, Jonathon Lopez. He continued, “working with money and people is an important skill.” The students decided to donate their earnings back to the school to be placed in the school fund for field trips and co-curricular activities.

Indian Peaks STEM Coordinator, Alexandra Downing, speaks passionately on the success of the project and how the whole community enjoyed learning about the students’ research and experience. “Entrepreneurship is part of student voice. Students get to choose their topic and create something that’s new and share it with the world. The Genius Hour process gives students confidence and character, which instills in them the belief that they can make a difference in the world – whether it’s a simple change to something that’s already been made or a brand new invention, they go through the process of creation and you witness them grow.”

November 16: Future-Ready Robotics Showcase Highlights and Celebrates Student Learning and Whole Community Engagement

October 16, 2019, 1:08pm  |  St Vrain Valley School District

Walk into any St. Vrain robotics program – be it after-school clubs at the elementary level, secondary classes, or competitive tournaments – and you will be immediately struck by captivated engagement. Students (and teachers) are busily and eagerly developing knowledge and skills in computer science, coding, engineering, design and technology, mathematics, and more. What’s more, they’re working together as creative thinkers, reflective learners, team players, and self-managers.

“Robotics is an integrated field,” says Axel Reitzig, coordinator of innovation at the Innovation Center of St. Vrain Valley Schools. “It has immeasurable impact in helping our overall STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering & Mathematics) initiative, providing a wealth of integrative experiences. Through robotics, students gain transformative experiences as they see how language arts relates to math, which relates to science. It really has no limits.”

Student interacting with an underwater robot with fish swimming around it

Reitzig was one of several early adopters who recognized the potential of robotics six years ago, confident that it would take off. “It just made sense,” he says. “A lot of things come together by doing robotics. It’s very experiential.” “Everything is connected,” adds Alexandra Downing, STEM Coordinator at Indian Peaks Elementary School, and VEX Robotics Program Manager at the Innovation Center. “Teams of students work together to build a robot around specific parameters; they use design-thinking and write down their process in their engineering notebooks. Teachers can see skills they’re using carried over into the classroom. They’re communicating at a higher level.

Since its inception, robotics programming and participation in St. Vrain have grown at staggering rates. From an initial five schools offering the after-school club, there are now competitive VEX robotics teams, spanning grades 2-12, at almost all district schools. The district also supports robotics by hosting tournaments, opportunities for students to test their robots and interact with other teams in a competitive environment. This year, the district will host 12 tournaments, as well as two state tournaments. “Tournaments are opportunities for authentic engineering and feedback,” Reitzig says. “They’re very challenging, requiring teams to rely on skill and teamwork. The real draw is to earn the opportunity to go to the state championship, and then qualify for the World Championships.”


Over the last six years, St. Vrain teams have consistently qualified for World Championships, finishing as high as second and third place.
Robotics engages students beginning in the early grades, and spans their educational career. Older students have opportunities to mentor clubs, run tournaments, and choose from an increasing range of classes integrating robotics in secondary schools. “The VEX program is not only a great entry point and community builder, it’s also a stepping stone,” Reitzig says. “What we see happening more throughout the district is that kids are more aware of opportunities, and that interest and awareness drives future programs we’re developing, like aeronautics, underwater robotics, and more. The current and future workforce demands education rooted in traditional academics while leveraging modern technology and advanced learning. Robotics is building that talent pipeline, equipping students with skills they need for the future, whether they go into a related field or not.

Students aren’t the only ones continuously growing through the creative challenges and demands offered by robotics. “Robotics is a disruptive part of technology for education,” Reitzig says. “It forces us as educators to change how we practice. It’s more student-directed, authentic, and hands-on. There’s constant problem-solving and change that keeps everyone stretching their limits and collaborating.”

2019 Future-Ready Robotics Showcase
Saturday, November 16
10 am-2 pm

Village at the Peaks

See St. Vrain robotics in action at the upcoming 2019 Future-Ready Robotics Showcase, planned for Saturday, November 16 at Village at the Peaks from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The event includes the district’s ST. VRAINNOVATION Future-Ready Innovation Lab, which will be on-site providing a variety of blended experiences organized around how robots sense, think, and act within their environment. There will further be student-led stations to provide visitors with hands-on robotics experiences for the whole family.

The Robotics Showcase will also be a celebration, and a thank you to the community. “Robotics is growing so much because of everyone’s support,” Reitzig says. “It’s because of our district as a whole recognizing the value from the beginning. It’s Community Schools being such a strong sponsor at the elementary level. It’s district partners promoting volunteers and mentors, and sometimes offering funding. It’s parents supporting and enjoying this, appreciating this is a sport. It’s student dedication. It’s a celebration for everybody.”

November 16: Future-Ready Robotics Showcase Highlights and Celebrates Student Learning and Whole Community Engagement

Walk into any St. Vrain robotics program – be it after-school clubs at the elementary level, secondary classes, or competitive tournaments – and you will be immediately struck by captivated engagement. Students (and teachers) are busily and eagerly developing knowledge and skills in computer science, coding, engineering, design and technology, mathematics, and more. What’s more, they’re working together as creative thinkers, reflective learners, team players, and self-managers.

“Robotics is an integrated field,” says Axel Reitzig, coordinator of innovation at the Innovation Center of St. Vrain Valley Schools. “It has immeasurable impact in helping our overall STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering & Mathematics) initiative, providing a wealth of integrative experiences. Through robotics, students gain transformative experiences as they see how language arts relates to math, which relates to science. It really has no limits.”

Reitzig was one of several early adopters who recognized the potential of robotics six years ago, confident that it would take off. “It just made sense,” he says. “A lot of things come together by doing robotics. It’s very experiential.” “Everything is connected,” adds Alexandra Downing, STEM Coordinator at Indian Peaks Elementary School, and VEX Robotics Program Manager at the Innovation Center. “Teams of students work together to build a robot around specific parameters; they use design-thinking and write down their process in their engineering notebooks. Teachers can see skills they’re using carried over into the classroom. They’re communicating at a higher level.

Since its inception, robotics programming and participation in St. Vrain have grown at staggering rates. From an initial five schools offering the after-school club, there are now competitive VEX robotics teams, spanning grades 2-12, at almost all district schools. The district also supports robotics by hosting tournaments, opportunities for students to test their robots and interact with other teams in a competitive environment. This year, the district will host 12 tournaments, as well as two state tournaments. “Tournaments are opportunities for authentic engineering and feedback,” Reitzig says. “They’re very challenging, requiring teams to rely on skill and teamwork. The real draw is to earn the opportunity to go to the state championship, and then qualify for the World Championships.”


Over the last six years, St. Vrain teams have consistently qualified for World Championships, finishing as high as second and third place.
Robotics engages students beginning in the early grades, and spans their educational career. Older students have opportunities to mentor clubs, run tournaments, and choose from an increasing range of classes integrating robotics in secondary schools. “The VEX program is not only a great entry point and community builder, it’s also a stepping stone,” Reitzig says. “What we see happening more throughout the district is that kids are more aware of opportunities, and that interest and awareness drives future programs we’re developing, like aeronautics, underwater robotics, and more. The current and future workforce demands education rooted in traditional academics while leveraging modern technology and advanced learning. Robotics is building that talent pipeline, equipping students with skills they need for the future, whether they go into a related field or not.

Students aren’t the only ones continuously growing through the creative challenges and demands offered by robotics. “Robotics is a disruptive part of technology for education,” Reitzig says. “It forces us as educators to change how we practice. It’s more student-directed, authentic, and hands-on. There’s constant problem-solving and change that keeps everyone stretching their limits and collaborating.”

2019 Future-Ready Robotics Showcase
Saturday, November 16
10 am-2 pm

Village at the Peaks

See St. Vrain robotics in action at the upcoming 2019 Future-Ready Robotics Showcase, planned for Saturday, November 16 at Village at the Peaks from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The event includes the district’s ST. VRAINNOVATION Future-Ready Innovation Lab, which will be on-site providing a variety of blended experiences organized around how robots sense, think, and act within their environment. There will further be student-led stations to provide visitors with hands-on robotics experiences for the whole family.

The Robotics Showcase will also be a celebration, and a thank you to the community. “Robotics is growing so much because of everyone’s support,” Reitzig says. “It’s because of our district as a whole recognizing the value from the beginning. It’s Community Schools being such a strong sponsor at the elementary level. It’s district partners promoting volunteers and mentors, and sometimes offering funding. It’s parents supporting and enjoying this, appreciating this is a sport. It’s student dedication. It’s a celebration for everybody.”

Launching into the future

On a hot, sunny Monday in June, Burlington Elementary students filled the school’s classrooms, library, and gym. The energy that permeated the building was unusual for the time of year – normally on a summer day, students might be at a community pool or lounging at home. Instead, young learners could be found listening intently to stories in reading circles, sounding out words together around small tables, and completing innovative design challenges.

This summer, Burlington was one of 11 elementary school sites hosting Project Launch, an extended school year literacy program. Monday through Thursday throughout the month of June, nearly 2,000 St. Vrain elementary school students attended the all-day program to build on the reading progress they made during the regular school year and accelerate their learning to prepare for the year ahead.

“Project Launch is a comprehensive extended learning initiative that allows us to meet students where they are and provide increased instructional time for them to continue to learn and grow,” said Kerin McClure, principal at Burlington Elementary. “Over the summer, we often see regression in literacy. Through this program, we aim to ‘launch’ students into success next year.”

Project Launch increased instructional time through the summer with a goal of ensuring that all students are proficient in reading by third grade. Research has shown that early literacy is crucial in setting young students up for future success.

“Until third grade, students learn to read. After that, they read to learn,” McClure says.

More than 85 percent of today’s curriculum is taught by reading1. No matter the subject – from math and science to social studies and language arts – students get the bulk of their information from printed materials, digital resources, and whiteboard lessons. Because of this, a strong reading foundation for young students is critical.

Project Launch’s program design provided robust and targeted instruction in the areas of phonological awareness, phonics, and reading fluency. These components are critical to reading proficiently by the end of third grade. Each day, students received targeted literacy intervention using the Orton-Gillingham approach, participated in a robust literacy block to deepen and transfer reading comprehension skills, and applied their reading skills via content learning explorations in science, math, art, music, and drama. This format ensured that students received double the typical number of instructional hours in literacy-focused activities in a school day. Under the instruction of more than 200 St. Vrain teachers, students engaged in small-class instruction with 12 students in each class.

For teachers, the full-day format of Project Launch offered a unique opportunity to dedicate focused energy to one topic – literacy – and to participate in rich, job-embedded professional development. Teachers worked together and looked at data every day, making lesson adjustments based on daily evaluations.

“From a staff standpoint, teachers have been inspired and energized by the program,” said McClure. “Teachers had an opportunity to get to know students who will be in their classroom during the coming year, and to consider elements of the program that they could integrate into the classroom year round. We put a strong emphasis on professional development.”

Launching into learning

Through themed units, each lasting a week, teachers motivated and energized students around certain topics – life science explorations, water wonders, engineering and design, weather – with integrated literacy curriculum and research-based practices. Specials like technology and physical education were also included in the curriculum, extending the classroom and aligning to support literacy and the weekly theme.

“We have a really good balance of targeted literacy and engaging activities and topics that get students excited about reading,” McClure said.

During their outer space-themed week, Fall River Elementary Project Launch learners were visited by Mission Specialist Rick Hieb, a former NASA astronaut with local ties. Hieb acted as a content expert for the students, helping to connect their reading and research, and stressed the importance of fundamental skills learned in elementary school.

“Right now, you are learning what you need to know to be an astronaut, or whatever it is you want to be,” said Hieb. “No matter what you do in life, you have got to be able to read.”

Hieb explained to the students that in addition to reading, the skills needed to be an astronaut are not much different than what they are learning now – establishing good habits, perseverance, and cooperating with others.

Educating our Youngest Learners

One teacher team that really understands the importance of fundamental skills is the staff at Spark! Discovery Preschool. Tasked with educating the district’s youngest learners, teachers at Spark! take a developmental approach to educating kids who have an emerging understanding of literacy.

“We strive to create rich learning environments that develop all the domains of a child’s development – physical, social-emotional, cognitive, language, and literacy,” said Paige Gordon, principal at Spark!. “In preschool, pre-literacy skills are introduced in ways that students can actively engage – songs, stories, imaginative play, exploration, and games.”

Some of the other foundational components that help students move toward whole word reading include the development of language, vocabulary development, oral language, alphabetic knowledge, phonological and phonemic awareness, writing, concepts of print, and more. Spark! utilizes a curriculum called Fundations, which supports understanding of letter-sound and letter name associations by incorporating multi-sensory instruction and manuscript letter formation.

“Literacy and language development start early in life and are highly correlated with school achievement,” Gordon says. “We want to ensure that preschoolers are set up for success in the future.”

Mead Reads

At Mead Elementary School, teachers are dedicated to seeing that their students have access to library resources to keep up their reading year-round. While the school was undergoing construction this summer, principal Betsy Ball rented space in a facility across the street, relocating much of their library collection to ensure the continuation of their annual Summer Fun Reading Program. On Tuesday nights, Mead teachers opened the makeshift library to host story time and let students check out books. The program is open to all students, regardless of their reading level, but special invites were extended to struggling readers. For those students, teachers created weekly book bags with individualized materials to help them learn and grow, and included incentives for reading at home and logging their progress.

For Kenny and Paula Fitzgerald, the school’s commitment to engaging students and ensuring access to resources is key in helping their children – fifth grader Aiden and second grader Emma – become confident readers.

“As parents, we want to teach our children the importance of literacy, as reading is the foundation of all learning. Summer reading is also a great way to always be increasing their vocabulary and many of the books are good references to learn about history, science, and world events,” says Paula. “We also look at summer reading as a way to bring our family together as we often listen to books or read aloud together. This makes it a more interactive learning experience.”

Through the use of myON, a personalized digital library, students across the district are able to keep up with reading at home year-round, especially during the summer. The app personalizes reading by recommending books based on a student’s interests, reading level, and ratings of books they’ve read, and forges a home-to-school connection by allowing students to access library books on their personal devices.

The staff at Mead Elementary encourages the use of myON with a healthy sense of competition, and go as far as hosting pep rallies to cheer about reading. They also create contests and offer incentives and prizes.

“myON truly acts like a motivational tool to keep kids engaged over breaks. The myON program makes it entertaining to read and is a good source of positive screen time in which your kids are being educated and yet they don’t even know it,” said Paula. “myON has kick started our children’s love for reading which has made them seek out good books to read and has created a new helpful habit of reading.”

“We try to make it fun and encourage kids with rewards, but it’s more important that they read and grow,” said Ball.

A Strong Foundation

Project Launch is just one of many strategies across St. Vrain to raise student literacy achievement and provide a stronger academic foundation in the early grades. Results from the program indicate that the intervention had a significant, positive impact on student reading skills, reflecting the power of bringing together best practices and research-based approaches to improving student learning and achievement.

One of the most important predictors of graduating from high school is reading proficiently by the end of third grade1. Literacy is crucial to ensuring that students are motivated and engaged throughout their educational career and St. Vrain is dedicated to helping every student lay a strong foundation for success in school and beyond.

Join the next workshop: Families Can Create | October 12, 12 – 3pm

Families Can Create: Video
Saturday, October 12
12 – 3 pm
Lyons Regional Library

Technology is all around us, driving progress and opening up realms of possibilities at rapid, evolving rates. We appreciate and make use of the countless conveniences it affords. But rarely do we get the chance to pause and reflect upon the realms of possibility it can create for families. At Families Can Create workshops, you’ll learn just how exciting technology can be as a shared resource. Not only will kids, families, and community members gain awareness and develop skills around innovative tools, they’ll reignite creative energy that can be shared and grown, together.

Families Can Create free workshops are interactive, collaborative experiences organized around each of the Apple Everyone Can Create iBooks: Photos, Video, Music, and Drawing. Each session will offer hands-on, self-paced exploration with guidance offered in the form of prepared videos and materials alongside teachers on hand as learning partners. Last month’s session, the first of four, centered on Photos, and was a clear success, serving as inspiration for a diverse group of community members and catalyst for many early-prepped holiday cards! “This is a chance for families and community members to see and experience what technology can look like as a learning—and lifetime—tool,” says Learning Technology Coach Sarah Wegert, who organized and implements the workshops. “We’re sharing the authenticity. How students are creative producers rather than consumers.”

Family learning has always been a strong personal passion, Wegert shares. Prior to the Families Can Create workshops, she ran other panel-based family workshops, noticing the greatest impact happened when parents recognized what kids were doing in real time. “When Apple came out with these really great products, I saw an opportunity to really incorporate families into technology learning goals,” Wegert says. “As a district, our goals are always to support technology as a family learning tool. Through these workshops, we want families to be able to share experiences and develop capabilities with our learning devices. At the same time, they can see what a classroom might really look like with these devices, and hopefully alleviate some of the worry naturally stemming from preconceived notions around them.”

When Wegert began developing plans to offer the workshops, she wasted no time drumming up support. She put together a course by which interested educators could earn professional development credit by helping and learning alongside participants, and enlisted talented community members. “Over the last two years, I’ve made a personal goal of advancing my technology skills and knowledge,” says Pam Browning, Lyons Elementary Gifted and Talented Teacher, and one of the helpers earning professional credit. “Last month’s workshop was so much fun. I’ve already learned a lot personally, and it was such a pleasure seeing families sit down and really dig in together, co-learning.”

The Families Can Create experiences build relevant skills, applicable throughout lifetimes, Browning and Wegert emphasize. The devices are platforms for generating ideas, collaborating with others, and for self-expression. Most of all, they are fun. Students and adults alike discover outlets for putting one’s own personal stamp on projects. “It’s very important for students to have a variety of choices to showcase what they know,” Browning says. “With these tools, they are the drivers. They create products, make decisions, and personalize projects which can then be layered into even bigger projects.”


For this Saturday’s workshop, Families Can Create: Video, participants can drop in between noon and three at the Lyons Regional library and explore three facilitated learning stations created by Wegert and Lyons community member and Ascent Multimedia founder Ryan DeCesari. DeCesari brings extensive experience and passion for photography and cinematography to the table, and does so with joy, particularly when it comes to Lyons. “He is the epitome of community members coming together to share, learn, and grow,” says Wegert, who adds that DeCesari’s involvement has added an extra dimension to the upcoming workshop. “We’re infusing lots of industry language,” she says, explaining how the learning stations will be divided into pre-production, production, and post-production/editing areas, all built around Apple materials. Equipment will be provided, with groups being given two iPads, one for learning tutorials, and the other for project creation. Middle and high school students are welcome to bring their own devices as well.

Though facilitator and organizer, Wegert finds herself continuously learning and re-energizing through Family Can Create workshops herself. “While preparing the other day, Ryan shot a beautiful video on my iPad, just like that,” she comments. “That really shows, it’s not about the tool. It’s about the intentional decisions you make as an artist…and as a family you can add that collaborative element.”
Families, students, community members at large: be sure to check out Saturday’s Families Can Create: Video workshop and the two to follow (Music, Drawing). Check out the new Lyons Regional Library website for other upcoming dates, and mark your calendars! Guaranteed, you’ll come away having learned something. Even better, you’ll have had so much fun sharing the experience you may not even realize it.

Join the next workshop: Families Can Create | October 12, 12 – 3pm

October 10, 2019, 10:24am  |  St Vrain Valley School District

Families Can Create: Video
Saturday, October 12 – 3pm Lyons Regional Library 

Technology is all around us, driving progress and opening up realms of possibilities at rapid, evolving rates. We appreciate and make use of the countless conveniences it affords. But rarely do we get the chance to pause and reflect upon the realms of possibility it can create for families. At Families Can Create workshops, you’ll learn just how exciting technology can be as a shared resource. Not only will kids, families, and community members gain awareness and develop skills around innovative tools, they’ll reignite creative energy that can be shared and grown, together. 

Families Can Create free workshops are interactive, collaborative experiences organized around each of the Apple Everyone Can Create iBooks: Photos, Video, Music, and Drawing. Each session will offer hands-on, self-paced exploration with guidance offered in the form of prepared videos and materials alongside teachers on hand as learning partners. Last month’s session, the first of four, centered on Photos, and was a clear success, serving as inspiration for a diverse group of community members and catalyst for many early-prepped holiday cards! “This is a chance for families and community members to see and experience what technology can look like as a learning—and lifetime—tool,” says Learning Technology Coach Sarah Wegert, who organized and implements the workshops. “We’re sharing the authenticity. How students are creative producers rather than consumers.”

 Family learning has always been a strong personal passion, Wegert shares. Prior to the Families Can Create workshops, she ran other panel-based family workshops, noticing the greatest impact happened when parents recognized what kids were doing in real time. “When Apple came out with these really great products, I saw an opportunity to really incorporate families into technology learning goals,” Wegert says. “As a district, our goals are always to support technology as a family learning tool. Through these workshops, we want families to be able to share experiences and develop capabilities with our learning devices. At the same time, they can see what a classroom might really look like with these devices, and hopefully alleviate some of the worry naturally stemming from preconceived notions around them.”
 
When Wegert began developing plans to offer the workshops, she wasted no time drumming up support. She put together a course by which interested educators could earn professional development credit by helping and learning alongside participants, and enlisted talented community members. “Over the last two years, I’ve made a personal goal of advancing my technology skills and knowledge,” says Pam Browning, Lyons Elementary Gifted and Talented Teacher, and one of the helpers earning professional credit. “Last month’s workshop was so much fun. I’ve already learned a lot personally, and it was such a pleasure seeing families sit down and really dig in together, co-learning.”

The Families Can Create experiences build relevant skills, applicable throughout lifetimes, Browning and Wegert emphasize. The devices are platforms for generating ideas, collaborating with others, and for self-expression. Most of all, they are fun. Students and adults alike discover outlets for putting one’s own personal stamp on projects. “It’s very important for students to have a variety of choices to showcase what they know,” Browning says. “With these tools, they are the drivers. They create products, make decisions, and personalize projects which can then be layered into even bigger projects.”For this Saturday’s workshop, Families Can Create: Video, participants can drop in between noon and three at the Lyons Regional library and explore three facilitated learning stations created by Wegert and Lyons community member and Ascent Multimedia founder Ryan DeCesari. DeCesari brings extensive experience and passion for photography and cinematography to the table, and does so with joy, particularly when it comes to Lyons. “He is the epitome of community members coming together to share, learn, and grow,” says Wegert, who adds that DeCesari’s involvement has added an extra dimension to the upcoming workshop. “We’re infusing lots of industry language,” she says, explaining how the learning stations will be divided into pre-production, production, and post-production/editing areas, all built around Apple materials. Equipment will be provided, with groups being given two iPads, one for learning tutorials, and the other for project creation. Middle and high school students are welcome to bring their own devices as well.
 
Though facilitator and organizer, Wegert finds herself continuously learning and re-energizing through Family Can Create workshops herself. “While preparing the other day, Ryan shot a beautiful video on my iPad, just like that,” she comments. “That really shows, it’s not about the tool. It’s about the intentional decisions you make as an artist…and as a family you can add that collaborative element.”Families, students, community members at large: be sure to check out Saturday’s Families Can Create: Video workshop and the two to follow (Music, Drawing). Check out the new Lyons Regional Library website for other upcoming dates, and mark your calendars! Guaranteed, you’ll come away having learned something. Even better, you’ll have had so much fun sharing the experience you may not even realize it. 

St. Vrain Valley Schools