- About PSI
- What We Do
- Support and Study Groups
- Collaboration
- Dissemination
- Books
- Portraying Identity Through Art
- Supporting Students to Reach High Standards
- Working with Your Faculty
- Making Inferences from Text
- Building Supportive High Schools
- Creating Professional Learning Communities
- Becoming a Community School
- Learning After School
- Supporting At-Risk Students
- Including Every Parent
- Calculated Success
- Skills for Success
- Cultivating Student Reflection
- Building Character
- Create Your Own KidLab
- Including Every Child
- Learning Exchange Conference February 9th
- Books
- How to Get Involved
- Tools and Resources
Supporting Students to Reach High Standards
![]() | Based on a Successful Program at: Written by teachers:
|
Look Inside: |
|
Description of Supporting Students to Reach High Standards
Academy of the
What Does Success Look Like at APR? One way to answer this question is quantitatively. At this inner-city public school, every graduating student earns at least two college acceptances, and the average is four per student. Last spring, one hundred percent of tenth graders passed the state’s Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System (MCAS) in both English and Math on their first try, with between 80 and 90 percent of students scoring at the Advanced and Proficient levels, well above the state and city average. Draw a graph of students’ MCAS scores from the year they first enrolled at APR and you'll see that they rise noticeably the longer they are at the school.
But success at APR is not only seen in numbers. Success also looks like a student stopping a teacher in the hallway to ask a question or students beginning their Do Now assignment soon after entering the class without having to wait for directions or external motivation. It sounds like tenth-grade students discussing where they want to go to college or a Learning Specialist helping a History teacher to improve a lesson plan. It feels like the pride and determination of a student who receives an 89 after revising a paper for the third time and reflects on what she’ll do next time for the 90.Major Topics Covered
Creating Systems of Academic Support
Building a Culture of Achievement
Establishing Faculty Structures that Encourage Student Achievement
PSI Can Help You Implement These Strategies:
Customized WorkshopsOur staff can come to your school to help you implement these school-tested skill-building strategies.
School Visits
We can coordinate a visit to the Cambridgeport School, so you can see their successful strategies first hand.
In 2002, teachers at APR wrote Building Character, another PSI publication.

