Quantcast The Daily Northwestern
College Media Network
  • Home

ETHS reinvents curriculum in the humanities

'Mixed honors' classes hoped to boost ETHS test scores

Megan Crepeau

Issue date: 2/26/08 Section: City
  • Print
  • Email
The Evanston Township High School Board of Education devoted the bulk of its Monday night meeting to the administration's initiative to revamp the freshman humanities curriculum.

"We really do not plan on leaving any children behind," said board member Mary Wilkerson. "This is the year that we must move."

The curriculum overhaul, a response to the threat of government consequences after failing No Child Left Behind for five consecutive years, includes a revamp of freshman humanities courses.

Under the new plan, the majority of Evanston Township High School freshmen would be in "mixed honors" classes, which would bring average students and their honors-level peers together for advanced English and history curricula. The very top students would be in all-honors classes, and the lowest scorers would be taught a remedial, or "enriched," curriculum.

ETHS District 202 Superintendent Eric Witherspoon emphasized the school's readiness to make the transition.

"Our teachers are just demonstrating exemplary leadership to make this as positive and productive as they can," he said. "They really want to step it up."

He was quick to allay fears about an informal survey of students, who suggested mixed honors classes were "easier." In mixed honors classes, the advanced work was made more accessible but the difficulty level remained unchanged, Witherspoon said.

"Sometimes students' interpretation of a question is maybe a little different than it's being interpreted by the adults," he said.

As in previous meetings, the issue proved divisive, and the board made a special departure from their agenda to allow more people in attendance to ask questions and express their opinions.

Deborah Graham, a member of the District 202 Parent Teacher Student Association, spoke in the public comment section of the meeting. She said that while she approved of the program in theory, she had reservations about how it might be implemented.
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools

The DAILY encourages you to share your thoughts on this story. Please help us keep the discussion lively, but civil. Comments that are abusive to others, off-topic or vulgar, or comments that misrepresent someone's identity, will not be tolerated. We reserve the right to delete any comments in violation or to close comment threads on articles.

Please e-mail online@dailynorthwestern.com to flag a comment or for more information.

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.