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Seven Kansas School Districts Selected For ‘Moon Shot’ Redesign

Courtesy Kansas State Department of Education
Officials with the seven Kansas school districts selected for a redesign project attended the official announcement Tuesday in Topeka.

Fourteen schools in seven school districts across Kansas will work this year on revamping the way they serve children, with the goal of becoming statewide models for overhauling primary and secondary education.

The education department is branding the effort to re-envision schools as Kansas’ version of “a moon shot,” referring to the U.S. race to put a man on the moon in the 1960s.

The participants announced Tuesday range in size from the Kansas City area’s 29,000-student Olathe school district — the state’s second-largest — to the 340-student rural Stockton district in northwest Kansas.

In each district, one elementary school and one secondary school will join the effort. The schools will collaborate with the state education department, which is promoting a vision that focuses more on the individual goals of students and less on standardized testing.

Among other things, this vision involves having schools work with secondary students to develop individualized plans of study that help them explore their career aspirations — such as through internships and career classes — and identify appropriate steps, which might include pursuing college for some and technical education or other training for others.

Little information was available as to the concrete changes schools will carry out. Teachers and administrators will have leeway in shaping their efforts locally but will be expected to build and launch their schools’ redesign plans within a year.

Randy Watson, education commissioner, outlined the project during the Kansas State Board of Education meeting in Topeka. Asked how the schools would achieve successful overhauls on a short timeline — academics have spent decades researching how to improve schools — Watson said Kansas is rethinking the system as a whole.

“We’re about, in 12 months, to invert the system and be totally focused on the child,” he said. “This has got to be about teacher voice and student voice. And then it has to be not about, ‘What English credits do I need?’ It’s ‘What do I need to be successful at what I want to become?’”

Credit Courtesy NASA
Each Kansas school district will have one of the seven astronauts from the 1960s Mercury spaceflight program as its symbol for the effort. Front row, from left: Walter M. Schirra Jr., Donald K. "Deke" Slayton, John H. Glenn Jr. and M. Scott Carpenter. Back row, from left: Alan B. Shepard Jr., Virgil I. "Gus" Grissom and L. Gordon Cooper Jr.

The schools will not receive extra dollars to achieve their goals but will have support from the education department and outside education and youth groups.

The student bodies at the participating schools vary demographically and include some with significant proportions of children from low-income or minority backgrounds. Kansas, like the country as a whole, is trying to address low academic achievement among students in racial minority groups or from low-income families.

The moon-shot initiative did not attract applications from the state’s largest urban, high-poverty districts: Wichita, Kansas City and Topeka.

The seven participating districts and their schools are:

  • Coffeyville USD 445, Community Elementary School and Field Kindley Memorial High.
  • Liberal USD 480, Meadowlark Elementary School and Liberal High School.
  • McPherson USD 418, Eisenhower Elementary School and McPherson Middle School.
  • Olathe USD 233, Westview Elementary School and Santa Fe Trail Middle School.
  • Stockton USD 271, Stockton Grade School and Stockton High School.
  • Twin Valley USD 240, Tescott Elementary School and Bennington Junior-Senior High School.
  • Wellington USD 353, Kennedy Elementary School and Wellington High School.

Each district will have one of the seven astronauts from the Mercury spaceflight program as its symbol for the effort

"When we say 'every child,' that's Hispanic, female, male, urban, suburban. It's everyone."

Asked about the optics of the department’s decision to represent its new program with seven white, male astronauts at a time when schools are trying to close achievement gaps for minority children, present students with more role models of color and encourage girls to pursue science and math careers, Watson said the astronaut metaphor is apt because the Mercury 7 stepped up to a historic challenge.

“What’s important is, just like those seven people didn’t know what they were getting into and Kennedy issued a challenge, the nation responded,” he said. “And that’s what we hope Kansas will do.”

Watson, former superintendent of McPherson schools, emphasized the department and Kansas State Board of Education’s goal of improving outcomes for all students.

“When we say ‘every child,’” he said, “that’s Hispanic, female, male, urban, suburban. It’s everyone.”

Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer also spoke at the launch, congratulating education officials on the initiative.

“Kansas wants to lead the world in the success of each student,” Colyer said, referencing the education department’s stated mission. “I want to say thank you for what all of you do to help lead us in that direction.”

Colyer announced shortly afterward that he will run for governor

Celia Llopis-Jepsen is a reporter for the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KMUW, Kansas Public Radio and KCUR covering health, education and politics. You can reach her on Twitter @Celia_LJ.

Celia Llopis-Jepsen is based in the Kansas News Service’s Topeka newsroom. She writes about how the world is transforming around us, from topsoil loss and invasive species to climate change. He aims to explain why these stories matter to Kansas, and to report on the farmers, ranchers, scientists and other engaged people working to make Kansas more resilient. Email me at celia@kcur.org.