Page 2 of 2   <      

Students Take to Program Hook, Line and Sinker

Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.

"Their questions," she said, referring to Wilde Lake students, "are not elementary at all."

This sophisticated approach is emerging at a school that was stung by notoriety in 1999, when a group of dissatisfied parents hired a bus to transport their children from Wilde Lake to the new Kiln Middle School, located in a more affluent area. There was an exodus of teachers as well from Wilde Lake, which has one of the county system's highest concentrations of low-income and minority students.

Indeed, when Brandon Shifflett got his first job teaching seventh-grade science at Wilde Lake in 2000, other teachers told him, "You don't want Wilde Lake. You're going to have problems with behavior."

But Shifflett discovered that wasn't the case. And he found a mentor in Keddell, who returned to Howard County in 2000 after spending six years developing math and science programs for Baltimore middle schools.

At 51, Keddell absorbs the latest academic research on technology and serves on the faculty at Johns Hopkins University's Columbia center. But he also possesses a boyish giggle that betrays the kid who skipped altar boy studies to go fishing near his home in Upstate New York. He wasn't a goof-off in school, though, and he thinks kids are under even more pressure today to do well early.

"You've really changed course in terms of choices in college if you don't do algebra well by ninth grade," he said.

For disadvantaged youngsters to tackle higher-level courses in high school, they have to erase patterns of failure during middle school, he said. The challenge is getting them to broaden their reach, he said.

At the outset, Wilde Lake Principal Brenda Thomas cautioned Keddell that she didn't have extra money for academic enrichment programs. So Keddell got his first grant of $2,500 in 2001 from a Florida firm that makes concrete fishing reefs and hopes to help replicate the Aqua Havens program in Florida schools.

All told, Keddell has helped accumulate more than $80,000 in grants and donations to expand the array of tanks and outfit three computer labs. This spring, using grant money, Aqua Havens plans to include a project on the Chesapeake Bay, with students growing a saltwater marsh on school grounds and in containers indoors.

"The thing about Bob, he doesn't take no for an answer," said Heather Chirtea, president of Tool Factory Inc., a Vermont-based software publisher that's donated $20,000 to $30,000 worth of software to Wilde Lake.

Online instruction has become a key strategy in math, where many Wilde Lake students struggle. "It's amazing how much more focus they have using computers as opposed to pen and paper tasks," Thomas said. A 10-minute attention span, she said, stretches to 30 minutes on the computer. That means students are doing more math problems.

During a recent after-school session, seventh-grader Kurt Benjamin tallied classroom survey results, calculated percentages and displayed his data on a color-coded pie chart. In only an afternoon, he had learned how to construct the chart on a computer.

"I was amazed how much they could do on their own," said Brian Wessner, a Wilde Lake parent volunteer. In fact, some students, such as eighth-grader Joey Zelenak, have become the experts. He tutored teacher Stevie Kolliegbo on her first PowerPoint presentation.

Keddell is hoping for promising results when the state's functional math test is administered to Wilde Lake and other Howard middle schoolers this week. The tests in reading, writing and math are a requirement for high school graduation, but increasingly they're used as benchmarks in middle school. For the past three weeks, Keddell has given an online practice version of the tests to seventh-graders who have performed poorly in math.

Twelve-year-old Toren Cooke said that when he clicks on incorrect problems, the online test shows immediately how he made mistakes in his calculations. "You can learn what you got wrong," he said. "On paper, you can't see what you got wrong by yourself. You need other people to check it."

Cooke failed the Maryland functional math test last summer after sixth grade. But now he's more confident, even without a calculator that school officials say he's entitled to use.

"Now I think it's going to be a little easier," he said. "I've had a lot of practice."


<       2


More in the Maryland Section

Blog: Maryland Moment

Blog: Md. Politics

Washington Post staff writers provide breaking news coverage of your county and state government.

Local Explorer

Local Explorer

Use Local Explorer to learn about Washington, D.C., Maryland and Virginia communities.

Md. Congressional Primary

Election Results

Obama and McCain swept the region on February 12.

FOLLOW METRO ON:
Facebook Twitter RSS
|
GET LOCAL ALERTS:
© 2003 The Washington Post Company