Empowering Students at Tapestry Charter

Empowering Students at Tapestry Charter

Sweater weather arrives with cozy new looks It’s time to fall in love with pullovers, Fair Isles or hand-knit cowls. | PAGE F1 Is the Patriots’ dynasty fading? Reports of New England’s fall from dominance may be a bit premature. Page B1 BUFFALONEWS.COM • O CTOBER 12, 2014 • WNY E DITION UP TO $607 IN SAVINGS HOW TO FIX BUFFALO’S SCHOOLS The dawn EMPOWERING STUDENTS of a new day for the Bills AT TAPESTRY CHARTER Ownership change kicks excitement level up a notch By Vic Carucci NEWS SPORTS REPORTER Do you really need anything more than the New England Patriots in town and first place in the AFC East on the line to cause Ralph Wilson Stadium to shake with enough force to generate seismic activity today? Probably not, but the Buffalo Bills will have something else to create even more excitement for a sellout crowd of nearly 70,000: new ownership. Today will mark the first game with Terry and Kim Pegula as the Bills’ owners. They’re expected to be introduced on the field before kickoff. And they undoubted- ly will receive a rousing ovation, primar- ily for putting to rest uncertainty about the franchise’s future in Western New York since the passing of its founder, Ralph C. Wilson Jr., last March. “I’m excited for the people, the fans, the organization, the region,” Bills coach Doug Marrone said. “I’ve never looked at our fans as needing something to be electric, even as far as when I’ve been an opponent in this stadium. But to say it’s going up a notch, obviously, I have to recognize that. “I’ve always thought the fans have al- ways been a big part of our success when we play at home. They can make a dif- ference, and they did in” the 29-10 home- opening victory against Miami, only days Principal, teachers develop winning formula for bringing up to speed – and after the Pegulas’ agreement to purchase the Bills for $1.4 billion became public. sending on to college – teens from impoverished inner-city homes The Bills and Patriots share 3-2 records, giving the Bills rare equal footing with a See Pegulaon Page A2 Inmate deaths tied to private medical firm Photos by Derek Gee/Buffalo News State cites new hire Sixth B Y S ANDRA T AN / NEWS STAFF REPORTER by Niagara County in a series ilton Sheehan holds up a lime green beach ball covered with numbers. Milton Sheehan, By Thomas J. Prohaska ¶ Sheehan is a math teacher at Tapestry Charter School in Buffalo. His top, wearing his NEWS NIAGARA REPORTER “tactical math short, spiked hair, olive-colored dress shirt and beige tie are secondary de- vest,” helps LOCKPORT – A state investigation concludes that two inmates died four days tails to his key accessory: a black tactical vest with reflective, fluorescent students solve Regents practice apart in the Niagara County Jail in 2012, Myellow trim. He resembles a well-dressed crossing guard. ¶ Sheehan tosses the beach ball exam problems. victims of “grossly inadequate” medical to each of his algebra and trigonometry students. Whatever number a student’s right thumb At bottom left, care and “patient abandonment.” Both inmates died two weeks after a lands on when the ball is caught is the question that student must answer from the Regents Jaquoine Fogan and Lisa Vidal Miami-based medical company took over practice exam booklet. ¶ “Who needs help?” Sheehan asks during the last week of school be- take notes; at medical care at the jail. The Niagara Coun- ty Legislature hired Armor Correctional fore the Regents exams. ¶ Whatever help his students need, there is a good chance Sheehan right, Janai Murray takes Health Services in hopes of saving money. carries a solution, either in his brain or in one of the 15 pockets and holders on his cheap, black part in daily Daniel Pantera’s death on Christmas vest. ¶ For a model of how to educate impoverished inner-city students, few schools beat quiet reading. morning 2012 was preventable, the state Commission of Correction’s Medical Re- Tapestry. The 13-year-old charter school’s | SEE SCHOOLS ON PAGE A6 view Board concluded, citing “grossly in- adequate medicalandmental health care,” BUFFALONEWS.COM/FIXINGSCHOOLS See Deathson Page A2 Books ............................ D5 Home & Style ............. F1 Real Estate News .....G4 Travel .......................... F10 INDEX Business ....................... G1 Lottery numbers ..... C2 Science Page .............. 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C1 Where We Live .........C4 Details on Page C10. machine price Discover the Evans difference Differentis better APY* CHECKING | APY** YEAR CD Be choosy Evans Bank NAMember FDIC evansbankcom * Annual Percentage Yield (APY) as of ** Annual Percentage Yield (APY) as of minimum balance required to open the CD and there may be a penalty for early withdrawal Rates subject to change without notice Fees may reduce earnings Details regarding the CD Product as well as the Checking Account qualifications and maximum balance to earn the APY are available at any Evans Bank branch 1075494 A6 The Buffalo News/Sunday, October 12, 2014 A7 HOW TO FIX BUFFALO’S SCHOOLS English teacher Sara Dolloff asks her exiting ninth-graders to write a letter to Che Brown, 14, and all other Tapestry Charter High School students, cease themselves reflecting on what they’ve learned during the school year. regular school wook and read for personal enjoyment for 20 minutes every day as part an effort to raise student literacy. Kayla Wood, right, cuts loose with a classmate to re-enact the “Friday chicken Photos by Derek Gee/Buffalo News Andrela Wilson, 15, works with classmates in science class. She stands a better dance” each week in Milton Sheehan’s 11th-grade crew. All Tapestry high school students meet daily with a “crew” of 12 classmates who become their in-school family. Hillary Kelkenberg’s 10th-grade crew trades stories about student drinking. chance of passing the Regents exam now that her reading scores have gone up. STUDENTS KNOW HOW FAR THEY HAVE TO GO, AND WHY egated to a large trailer in the backyard. SCHOOLS • from A1 Alongside student artwork and exhib- By the numbers / Tapestry Charter High School and Buffalo district high schools its, images of the Tapestry Compass pop 4-year Asian/ English student population mirrors the city up everywhere. That compass is a star Graduation 2013 Pacific Students with language Economically schools: three of every of four students with four long points, each compass tip HighSchool rate Enrollment White Black Hispanic Islander Multiracial disabilities learners disadvantaged poor enough to qualify for a free or re- pointing to a quality needed for a suc- Tapestry Charter High School 93% 327 23% 61% 9% 2% 5% 13% 5% 75% duced-price lunch, the majority start- cessful future: Perseverance, integrity, re- ing high school with reading skills below sponsibility and respect. Buffalo Public Schools (high schools) 56% 8,804 23% 51% 16% 8% 1% 17% 12% 65% grade level. Tapestry’s values tend to squeeze out Source: 2013-14 demographic data from Tapestry Charter School, Buffalo Public Schools and New York State Education Department. Graduation rates are for August 2013. Yet Tapestry graduates 93 percent of deception. Students typically know exact- its students on time, and 80 percent of ly how they are doing in school, how far graduates go on to college in the fall. they have to go, and why. and other perks. About the series her daughter painted at age 5. The secret to Tapestry’s success starts In Sarah Dolloff’s English class, the Students who fall behind in their Near the door hangs a graduation pho- with the flexibility it has as a charter walls explode with words both printed schoolwork – particularly freshmen – How to Fix Buffalo’s Schools is an occasional series highlighting to of her son, the reason Bass got involved school, free from school system bureau- and handwritten. The wispy ninth-grade have built-in time to meet with teachers urban schools across the country that have made outsized progress in Tapestry. Her son enjoyed his early cracy and many state and local regula- teacher, who has built her career at Tap- and catch up. One former freshman de- on some of the seemingly intractable problems plaguing inner-city years at Buffalo’s Olmsted School 64 until schools. The successful schools were selected through statistical analy- third grade. tions. It can adjust its schedule to meet the estry, seizes on this last day of class be- scribed the experience as being “hunted sis of data on academic performance and demographics. The schools needs of students, teachers and parents. fore Regents exams to drive home how far down” by the staff. chosen are some of the best examples of successfully educating students After her son’s miserable, tear-filled The administration can select and hire each student has come since the fall. Rites of passage are common. All soph- with backgrounds similar to those in the Buffalo Public Schools. experience with his third-grade teacher, staff who embrace Tapestry’s mission and Anna Burton works on a project in English class. Students are told their Lexile She passes out light blue paper to every omores must assemble and present a “pas- Bass took a chance on Tapestry because model of teaching. scores, measuring reading comprehension, and encouraged to improve them. student and tells the class to look over all sage portfolio” to apanelof adults –includ- To read the first five parts of this series and for online-only features, she knew the founder of the school, Joy The teaching model is nontraditional.

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