Learning optimized: a conversation with Diane Tavenner.
Jacobs, Joanne
The summer of 2011 might have been a chance for Diane Tavenner to
rest on laurels, but the CEO of Summit Public Schools is not a restful
sort of person.
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The California Charter Schools Association had named Tavenner
Charter Leader of the Year in 2010. Summit's first charter high
school, Summit Prep, launched in 2003, was featured in the film Waiting
for Superman (2010). The 400-student school in Redwood City,
California--midway between San Francisco and San Jose--was named one of
the Top 10 Most Transformative Schools in the country by Newsweek in
2011.
Summits second Redwood City high school, Everest, which opened in
2009, had strong test scores and a wait list. Summit was expanding to
San Jose in response to parent demand so strong she was opening two new
high schools there, Rainier and Tahoma, with 100 9th graders in each.
Dissatisfied, Tavenner decided it was time to radically rethink
Summit's teaching model. Summit partnered with Khan Academy, known
for its online lessons and progress-tracking dashboard, to pilot
"hybrid" math instruction at the new high schools. Students
till in knowledge gaps and develop math skills online, working at their
own level and at their own pace, while also applying math to projects
and learning from teachers. The goal is to create "self-directed
learners."
Fast-forward to 2013: Tavenner's plans include a "Silicon
Valley College Ready Corridor" with 14 high-performing,
heterogeneous schools in the 50 miles from South San Francisco to San
Jose. Two "next generation" schools will open in the fall: a
high school in Daly City and a middle/high school in Sunnyvale.
The Summit Prep Model
With Summit Prep and Everest, "we took the factory model high
school and did it significantly better," Tavenner explains.
"We made it smaller, more personal, with no tracking, longer hours,
more support for kids. We recruited very talented teachers and fully
developed them. But it's still a factory model and kids are moving
through that system."
Summit hires graduates of elite universities to teach a
college-prep curriculum that includes six Advanced Placement (AP)
courses. About half the Redwood City students are Latino and black. Many
come from Spanish-speaking families and start 9th grade with significant
gaps in their academic skills and knowledge. Some take a basic skills
class in addition to college-prep classes. They can take more time to
pass if they need it, says Tavenner. "Algebra I ends when you show
competency. It doesn't necessarily end in June."
The Redwood City schools also enroll students from white and Asian
American families that range from middle class to wealthy. Some are top
students who choose Summit for the rigor and the Ivy-educated faculty.
Some have learning disabilities.
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Students from all backgrounds like the small size--a maximum of 400
students--and the sense of community.
Nearly all graduates are accepted at four-year colleges and
universities. The six-year college-graduation rate is expected to be 55
percent for Summit Prep's first graduating class, nearly the same
as the national average for all students. That isn't good enough
for Tavenner. Students who've relied on supportive high-school
teachers may not be prepared to "drive their own learning" in
college, she says. "We need to let kids set goals, make plans,
maybe fail in lots of short cycles. Try, fail, learn."
Summit 2.0
On a sunny Valentine's Day in 2013, Tavenner, 41, sits in a
room in the old elementary school that's now the temporary site of
Rainier and Tahoma. She has no office. She works in shared space at one
of Summit's two Redwood City schools or at the San Jose campus,
which is nestled behind National Hispanic University's newer
buildings in a part of town with many immigrant families.
Valentine's Day is her least favorite day to spend with
hormonally excited 14- and 15-year-olds. Still, the drab campus is
enlivened by teenagers carrying red and pink balloons and pink-frosted
cupcakes. Half the students are on their way to classrooms, while the
other half head for a large room where a more personalized learning
environment has been created.
In the second year of the experiment, Summit has gone "beyond
blended learning" to create what Tavenner calls an "optimized
learning environment."
Two hundred 9th and 10th graders at a time spend two hours a day
studying math and brushing up on basic skills. They start at a work
station by opening their personal guide, reading e-mail from the math
teachers, and setting goals. Students can choose from a
"playlist" of online learning resources, seek help at the
"tutoring bar," participate in teacher-led discussions in
breakout rooms, or work on group projects, such as designing a water
fountain.
When they're ready, students take an online test to see if
they've reached their goals. The math team, five teachers and two
coaches, keeps students on track.
It's an experiment in progress, but results are promising,
says Tavenner. Next year, San Jose students will spend the whole day in
self-directed learning.
A Tough Climb
Summit was started by affluent Silicon Valley parents in the
Sequoia Union High School District, which includes some of the
wealthiest towns in the U.S. (Atherton, Woodside, and Portola Valley),
affluent Menlo Park, middle-class Belmont and San Carlos, blue-collar
Redwood City, and low-income East Palo Alto. The high schools compete
with excellent private schools.
Sequoia's leaders and teachers bitterly opposed Summit, but a
district in far-off Tuolumne County agreed to charter the new school for
a small share of state funding.
From the start, Summit was accused of being an "elitist"
school for wealthy whites who didn't want their kids to mix with
Latinos and blacks. The founding parents vowed to recruit students of
all colors and income levels. They hired Tavenner, then vice principal
of nearby Mountain View High School, to fulfill that promise.
A native of South Lake Tahoe, she earned a bachelor's degree
in psychology and sociology at the University of Southern California and
a teaching credential at Loyola Marymount University. After five years
of teaching English and journalism at "a classic inner-city dropout
factory" near Los Angeles, she was so frustrated that she
considered leaving teaching.
By then, she'd married Scott Tavenner, whom she first met when
they were 15-year-olds at a summer leadership camp at Stanford. He
persuaded her to try teaching at a different sort of school. The couple
moved to Mountain View in the heart of Silicon Valley. While he ran an
online advertising business, she taught English at Mountain View High,
which was trying to close a large achievement gap between its affluent
white and Asian American students and its working-class Mexican American
minority. Tavenner was intrigued by the school's decision to open
AP classes to all students.
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Starting from Scratch
After earning a master's degree in educational administration
and policy analysis at Stanford, Tavenner moved into administration.
Opening up AP wasn't enough to close the gaps, she realized.
"How do we get students to make good choices? How do we inform
parents? How do we teach? How do we organize courses?"
She liked the work, but didn't think the high school would go
as far as she wanted. Then she heard about the Summit job, "a
chance to start from scratch" with a school that would educate all
kids together.
"When you live in Silicon Valley, there's so much
entrepreneurship, it's hard to resist," she says.
A new mother at the time--her son is now 10--Tavenner set out to
create a new charter school. She went to elementary and middle schools,
libraries, and lots of churches in Redwood City to spread the word. She
asked new recruits to reach out to their friends. "Every one of
those first families I had a relationship with," she recalls.
Forging a unified school community was a challenge. The school
almost started with two parent groups, one for English speakers and one
for Spanish speakers. To Tavenner's relief, parents decided on one
group with co-presidents from each community. Meetings are conducted in
both languages.
Teaching in a "truly heterogeneous environment is really hard
to do and generally not done well," Tavenner says. It's always
been her goal.
"I want to have as many doors open as possible, including
being legitimately ready for success in a four-year college when they
graduate. I don't think our education system does that."
Although Summit's enrollment reflected the district's
demographics, the school was accused of creaming the best students.
"I took it very personally," Tavenner says. Dealing with
Sequoia was "the hardest thing I've ever had to do."
Battling for Everest
Sequoia took over Summit Prep's charter in 2006, but the
school board denied a charter to Everest.
"Everest is clearly not designed for low-performing students,
and in fact Everest focuses selectively on high-achieving, privileged
students," charged Sequoia superintendent Pat Gemma, in a 2008
newspaper commentary. "Everest proposes offering a solely college
preparatory curriculum to prepare all its students for enrollment in a
four-year college."
"The superintendent said kids of color won't want this
because it's college prep," Tavenner recalls, still fuming.
"Teachers said we were an elitist school. It made me become a mama
bear. It was a fight, a war zone."
Summit was "demonstrably unlikely to successfully
implement" Everest's financial plan, concluded district staff.
Summit Prep had demonstrably succeeded with the same plan, Tavenner
pointed out, in vain. The charter network raises donations to fund
start-up costs. When fully enrolled, schools operate on the same state
funding as other high schools.
Sequoia trustees also claimed a new charter would draw white
students away from two small charter high schools serving East Palo Alto
that enrolled blacks, Latinos, and Pacific Islanders, but no whites.
After the state board of education chartered Everest, Sequoia
offered a vacant lot in East Palo Alto. Summit filed a lawsuit to force
the district to provide facilities, as required by state law. When
Sequoia named a new superintendent in 2010, the lighting ended. The
charter school now has a "very good" relationship with the
district, Tavenner says.
Taming the Wild West
In Summit's early years, "some people thought charter
schools could be 'stamped out,'" Tavenner says. "It
was the Wild, Wild West."
Now 8 percent of California's public school students attend
the more than 1,000 charter schools statewide. As president of the
member council of the California Charter Schools Association, Tavenner
believes strongly that ineffective schools should be closed. "It
can't be like traditional schools that perpetually fail," she
says.
But it's clear that charters are here to stay. And so is
Summit.
Hewlett-Packard CEO Meg Whitman, who serves on the board of Summit
Public Schools, donated $2.5 million to fund new schools and pledged to
match up to $2.5 million in contributions from other high-tech leaders,
potentially giving Summit $7.5 million for the Silicon Valley corridor.
Attracting high-profile supporters is undoubtedly aided by a strong
track record: all four Summit charters exceed state goals on the
Academic Performance Index. Summit also has raised an innovation fund to
pay for its experiments with "optimized" learning.
While it's easier to start a charter school than it was 10
years ago, it takes a "solid plan" and "a leadership team
with experience in running schools and running a business," advises
Tavenner. "It's a political process. Do your homework, meet
with everyone, be open to feedback." And perform.
Joanne Jacobs, a former San Jose Mercury News editorial writer and
columnist, writes about K-12 education and community colleges at
joannejacobs.com and ccspotlight.org. She's the author of Our
School on the early years of a San Jose charter school that prepares
Mexican American students for college.