Alameda Science and Technology Institute
Encyclopedia
The Alameda Science and Technology Institute (ASTI) is an Early College High School
Early College High School
The Early College High School Initiative provides students the opportunity to receive a high school diploma and an Associate degree or up to two years of college credit...

 in Alameda, California
Alameda, California
Alameda is a city in Alameda County, California, United States. It is located on Alameda Island and Bay Farm Island, and is adjacent to Oakland in the San Francisco Bay. The Bay Farm Island portion of the city is adjacent to the Oakland International Airport. At the 2010 census, the city had a...

.

School description

Alameda Science and Technology Institute is located on College of Alameda
College of Alameda
College of Alameda is a two-year community college located in Alameda, California.The college is part of the Peralta Community College District and was opened in 1968. The college has been located at its campus at Atlantic Avenue and Webster Street since 1970...

 campus in Alameda's West End neighborhood. First opened in 2004, ASTI is a collaboration between Alameda Unified School District
Alameda Unified School District
The Alameda Unified School District serves the city of Alameda, California USA.The school district is a "unified" district , meaning that it includes K-8 schools and high schools in the same jurisdiction. As with all California school districts, it is not a part of the city government of Alameda...

 and the College of Alameda. ASTI was planned and conceived as a small high school providing a rigorous college preparatory curriculum to students living in the San Francisco Bay Area. Students earn two years of college credit during their junior and senior years. The ASTI program actively implements project-centered learning and inquiry-based instruction in a teamwork setting, resulting in interdisciplinary work that spans the major content areas.

About the school

As an Early College High School, Alameda Science and Technology Institute is unique in its approach to secondary education. One of the very first Early College High Schools in California to receive funding through a catalytic "start-up" grant made available by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and others, ASTI's funding intermediaries are the Foundation for California Community Colleges
Foundation for California Community Colleges
The Foundation for California Community Colleges is a 501 tax-exempt nonprofit organization based in Sacramento, California. It was incorporated in 1998 by Dr. Larry Toy, the founding president and chief executive officer of the organization. Upon Dr. Toy's retirement in 2007, Dr. Paul I. Lanning...

 and Jobs for the Future. Students at ASTI are provided a rigorous college preparatory curriculum in grades 9 and 10 before then enrolling full-time at the College of Alameda
College of Alameda
College of Alameda is a two-year community college located in Alameda, California.The college is part of the Peralta Community College District and was opened in 1968. The college has been located at its campus at Atlantic Avenue and Webster Street since 1970...

 in a prescribed ASTI Course of Study that configures dual enrollment in such a manner as to satisfy California and AUSD high school graduation requirements while simultaneously allowing ASTI students to earn up to two years of community college transfer credits, thus saving students and their families up to two years of college time and college costs.

Performance

Three years ago ASTI received an Academic Performance Index
Academic Performance Index
The Academic Performance Index is a measurement of academic performance and progress of individual schools in California, United States. It is one of the main components of the Public Schools Accountability Act passed by the California legislature in 1999...

 rating that exceeded state targets with an API of 805; last year ASTI's API was set at 877, establishing it then as the top ranking high school in Alameda and the third highest ranking high school in all of Alameda County. ASTI is proud of this, especially considering its socioeconomic diversity and its high number of students who qualify for free and reduced meals. Other schools that exceed ASTI's API in the county represent students and families of considerable economic privilege and academic capital, and thus ASTI prides itself on the progress its students have shown to realize improved student learning outcomes.

Vision statement

ASTI's 2005-2006 School Accountability Report Card Vision Statement reads as follows: "All students at Alameda Science and Technology Institute will be prepared to enroll and succeed in college courses. To realize these ends, ASTI gears its rigorous instruction on critical thinking and effective communication while emphasizing a focus on math, science and technology to equip its students with the skills and knowledge necessary to succeed and compete in the new American economy." As an Early College High School, ASTI adheres to core principles that define these schools: most important of these to ASTI is the stated priority of the national ECHS initiative "to serve low-income young people, first-generation college goers, English language learners, and students of color, all of whom are statistically underrepresented in higher education and for whom society often has low aspirations for academic achievement."

Governance structure

Like all Early College High Schools, ASTI's interdependent governance structure is complex in as much as it requires significant boundary spanning between Alameda Unified School District and the College of Alameda. AUSD and ASTI staff cooperate jointly to help direct the program, working closely with a College Liaison who serves as a Dean at the community college. ASTI administrators and faculty have worked closely with College of Alameda stakeholders to develop an ASTI Advisory Committee that meets quarterly to review school progress and address concerns. This Advisory Committee includes the President of the College of Alameda as well as the Vice President of Student Services. In this manner, these stakeholders work together to facilitate successful college enrollment of ASTI upperclassmen once they complete rigorous preliminary college preparatory coursework. Moreover, this collaboration has resulted this year in English faculty from both institutions working closely together to align therir curricula and create a summer bridge program for students about to enter their first year of full-time college enrollment with ASTI support.

Physical plant

As a new school, ASTI has spent considerable time planning and developing its physical site in particular. Originally located in an abandoned upholstery shop at the College of Alameda, this year ASTI finally was able to install the last of seven modular buildings to achieve its vision of being truly an autonomous high school co-located on a college campus. Clearly this has increased morale of both staff and students as we have moved from a loud and drafty "one-room school house" to modern and clean facilities that are now well-lit and fitting to student and staff needs. In 2007-2008, ASTI created a new science lab classroom and new technology lab to provide increased functionality toward its thematic instructional foci.

State and district requirements

Alameda Science and Technology has defined an "ASTI Course of Study" that aligns Alameda Unified School District and State of California graduation requirements with the requirements of the College of Alameda required for transfer to four-year universities. ASTI emphasizes a freshman and sophomore core curriculum that supports student preparation for college preparation through enrollment in courses that concentrate on transfer of skills in reading, writing, speaking and critical thinking. As such, ASTI freshmen are enrolled in classes in Speaking in grade 9 as well as Composition in grades 9 and 10 to help prepare them for the literacy requirements of success in college. ASTI ensures all students are involved in challenging learning experiences through its deliberate focus on rigorous and accelerated instruction in a well-defined academic course of study. The ASTI curriculum explicitly provides for reinforcement of literacy in areas that are crucial to college success: through its concentration on writing and speaking, ASTI prepares its students with the skills necessary to promote college-level language production and content presentation. Students are involved in a strand of interdisciplinary projects that align disparate subject areas: in this manner, ASTI teachers scaffold and structure student learning experiences to consciously aim at individual assignments and group projects of increasing difficulty and progressing complexity.

Expectations

ASTI conducts an annual orientation for its incoming new freshmen and sophomores that includes an overview of what is expected in ASTI as well as the College of Alameda. Thus, all ASTI students have a personal introduction to a core curriculum that explicitly supports student preparation for early college enrollment in the 11th and 12th grades. Teachers collaborate weekly to identify student's individual learning strengths and challenges. ASTI has developed a college counseling program to ensure that underclassmen are clear about their current achievement and to support them in personalized learning plans for completion of college transfer classes. ASTI's 11th and 12th graders receive counseling in one-on-one personalized sessions to ensure their understanding of what they must do to meet the university transfer requirements.

ASTI ensures students will be able to meet all graduation requirements by requiring a prescribed college preparatory curriculum that is explicitly aligned to college transfer requirements that have been mapped backwards to meet and satisfy all Alameda Unified School District and State of California graduation requirements simultaneously. Tutoring is conducted formally in seminars designed to support 11 and 12th graders in their fledgling college participation efforts; mandated tutorials are also provided after school to support the needs of ASTI's 9th and 10th grade learners.

Teaching methods

ASTI teachers use a variety of strategies and resources to actively engage students and emphasize higher order thinking skills. Teachers are provided with weekly collaboration and common planning time that is used to identify individual student learning strengths and challenges. ASTI has made a commitment to embed computer technology and media literacy into its curriculum and instruction. Previously, students only had access to laptop computers that are accessible to the classrooms from a portable cart. This year, ASTI finalized its dream of building a dedicated state-of-the-art technology lab as well as a science lab to match its theme-based emphases on science and technology.

Assessment

ASTI participates in all the state-mandated standardized assessments, including the California Standards Tests (CSTs) and the California High School Exit Exam
California High School Exit Exam
The California High School Exit Exam is a requirement for high school graduation in the state of California, created by the California Department of Education to improve the academic performance of California high school students, and especially of high school graduates, in the areas of reading,...

 (CAHSEE). ASTI students are also assessed using the Measures of Academic Progress (MAP) tests in the areas of Reading and Mathematics. MAP testing software and training are provided through support provided by ASTI's intermediary Jobs for the Future, and MAP is a value-added assessment system created by NWEA (Northwest Evaluation Association) to provide dynamic student achievement data that is further disaggregated by staff to provide a cycle of inquiry to promote school improvement and identify academic support needed in order for students to access ASTI's accelerated curriculum.

Community involvement

Though only in its fourth year of operation, ASTI has created many entry points for parents and the community to become involved. In 2007 ASTI formed its PTSA, the first in the Peralta PTSA district to have a student president and majority student leadership. ASTI PTSA has already facilitated various events which have brought students, staff, and parents together for informal conversation and community building. Recently, it was brought to the PTSA and School Site Council's attention that the school needed beautification. A mural project was designed and funds allocated. This project connected students to a world-renowned Bay Area community mural group known as Precita Eyes
Precita Eyes
Precita Eyes Muralists Association is a community-based non-profit muralist and arts education group located in the Mission District of San Francisco, California, founded in 1977 by Susan and Luis Cervantes.-History:...

 and allowed students to collaborate with parents and teachers in creating a mural for the ASTI campus. Like all ASTI endeavors, this work was collective; spearheaded by teacher leadership, the mural project provided students with the opportunity to establish their identity as an autonomous learning community on College of Alameda campus.

Field trips

Field trips have been designed to expose students to resources in the local community. Sophomores visited Berkeley Repertory Theatre
Berkeley Repertory Theatre
Berkeley Repertory Theatre is a regional theater company located in Berkeley, California. It was founded in 1968, as the East Bay’s first resident professional theatre. Michael Leibert was the founding artistic director, who was then succeeded by Sharon Ott in 1984. The company runs seven...

 and had the opportunity to network with other high schools. A local non-profit group, Youth Speaks, held an assembly for all ASTI students about empowerment and spoken word poetry. Also, ASTI gained recognition at a 2007 citywide speech contest wherein ASTI students competed against representatives from all other high schools in Alameda
Alameda, California
Alameda is a city in Alameda County, California, United States. It is located on Alameda Island and Bay Farm Island, and is adjacent to Oakland in the San Francisco Bay. The Bay Farm Island portion of the city is adjacent to the Oakland International Airport. At the 2010 census, the city had a...

and won first, second and third place for speeches on the theme of non-violence and community-building. ASTI's newsletter is also a student production led by its ROP Journalism teacher, allowing ASTI learners the opportunity to find voice and produce the school's monthly publication entitled The Talon.

External links

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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