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Welcome to the Kent Lake Learning Community
Kent Lake Elementary is the setting where all
members of the learning community are dedicated to ensuring that students
experience high achievement and opportunities for social, emotional and academic
growth. Students attending Kent Lake are assigned to the building based on
residence within the geographic attendance boundaries of the school, as well as the
district’s School of Choice Program.
Kent Lake Elementary is located two miles north
of the City of South Lyon in the southwest corner of Oakland County. Oakland
County is located north of Detroit, Michigan. This growing county is rich in
culture, resources, quality living opportunities and the home of many major
industries. Kent Lake is in close proximity to highly respected colleges and
universities. The building is a short drive to the University of Michigan in Ann
Arbor, Eastern Michigan University in Ypsilanti and Washtenaw Community College,
also located in Ypsilanti.
Our mission statement reflects the high standards
and expectations we place on our students and ourselves. Students maintain high
academic achievement as well as high average daily attendance. To realize these
standards, the staff of 29 teachers, one administrator, one secretary, one
office clerk, one building engineer, one social worker, eight playground
supervisors and two custodians, together with parents and volunteers, are
committed as a team for each student to realize success. Our PTO and CHEERS
volunteers are a tremendous support to the programming at Kent Lake. Members of
each of these organizations consistently contribute over 3600 hours each year to assist in
various activities throughout the school. Curriculum Night and Parent/Teacher
Conferences, which take place in the fall, are also well attended by parents.
The core curriculum at Kent Lake is the
foundation for the learning that takes place on a daily basis. Students are
provided rich learning experience in all areas of Language Arts (reading,
writing, speaking, listening and literature), Mathematics, Science, Social
Studies, Health, Physical Education, Music, Art, Technology and Vocal Music.
Students at Kent Lake benefit from the curricula
that are based on validated research about what children should be learning in
all of the traditional elementary subject areas. Teachers are well trained and
use their best practice as their guide to instruction. Our curricula are
constantly updated to insure that they are aligned with the State of Michigan
standards and benchmarks. Strong efforts are made to prepare our students for
the Michigan Assessments called the MEAP Assessments.
Teachers at Kent Lake are hard working,
intelligent and informed in the latest educational ideas that will help children
learn. Each year, our teachers attend at least thirty hours in professional
training and meet weekly on school improvement and staff development issues.
They are available to parents by phone, voice mail, and email. We have an
excellent blend of experienced and newer teachers who collaborate with each other
in a variety of teaming concepts that help children.
Guidelines for decision making at Kent Lake are
set by the Board of Education policy called the Shared Involvement Process.
Important financial, organizational, and school policy issues are considered at
monthly meetings composed of four parents, four teachers, one support staff, and
the principal. The SIP committee makes a strong home-school connection. Meeting
times and minutes are placed on the back of the weekly newsletter, the Wave.
Accreditation Status
Kent Lake Elementary is involved in an accreditation process designed to
help us improve student learning. Accreditation is a process whereby staff,
district personnel, and the Board of Education, commit to a set of
preconditions, or standards, identified as necessary for a quality education.
These standards are identified by an external
source such as the North Central Association, and the State of Michigan. The
accreditation process originally gave standards to college prep high schools,
but that process has been extended to include middle and elementary schools. The
process fosters school improvement through requirements for data collection,
self-study and evaluation of school programs and services. All South Lyon
elementary schools have received accreditation by NCA as well as
"interim" accreditation by the Michigan Department of Education. South
Lyon high School is accredited through the University of Michigan and North
Central Association.
North Central Accreditation
Kent Lake Elementary currently has begun the next cycle of their NCA process.
Through the Performance Accreditation Framework Kent Lake will reflect the NCA
CASI Standard, "to maximize the proportion of promoted or graduated
students who are self-directed learners and are prepared to make successful
school-to-school or school-to-career transitions." The NCA CASI Performance
Accreditation Framework focuses on designing and implementing a quality school
improvement processes and on documenting enhanced student performance. The
performance accreditation framework is based on three assumptions:
- Schools are at differing stages as they
progress through the school improvement framework.
- The school improvement process promotes
continuous growth.
- Building upon certain capacities within the
school will enhance its ability to implement quality school improvement
activities that lead to improved student performance.
Currently, Kent Lake is in Phase VI of Performance
Accreditation. Members of the learning community have completed the Kent
Lake School Profile and chosen the three goal areas. The three NCA
approved goals are:
- All Kent Lake learners will demonstrate an
improved ability to comprehend a variety of genres across the
curriculum.
- All Kent Lake learners will demonstrate an improved ability to
utilize higher order thinking skills to solve real world problems.
- All Kent Lake learners will improve their ability to write
purposefully in order to effectively communicate to an audience.
Kent Lake had its first peer review
revisit on December 15, 2005.
Kent Lake completed the third year
of implementation of the intervention strategies set forth in their NCA
plan. Data collection has begun regarding the success of those
intervention strategies. The staff will schedule the Quality Assurance
Review (QAR) during the 2010-2011 school year.
Michigan Adequate Yearly Progress
In Michigan, Adequate Yearly Progress is a measure of year-to-year
student achievement on the MEAP test. Schools are required to test 95% of all
students. AYP is calculated separately for reading/language arts and mathematics
by comparing our scores to the percent proficient threshold scores set by the
State of MI. All of the South Lyon Community Schools made AYP with MEAP results
exceeding the State established threshold scores in both reading and math.
School Improvement Goals
The School Improvement Goals were based on the
alignment of curriculum/instruction with the guidelines and benchmarks of the
State Mandated Core Curriculum. The focus of improving student achievement is
reflected in the AYP (Adequate Yearly Progress) plans. Baseline data used in
developing the Kent Lake AYP plans was based on the analysis of 2009 MEAP
scores, district assessment scores, classroom assessments and student work. Kent
Lake, in adopting its School Improvement plan, has remained committed to
increasing student learning for all students. The AYP plans were developed by
all grade level teachers who met regularly throughout the year to analyze
assessment data and evaluate and implement strategies. The School Improvement
Plan continues to work toward Goals 2000 National Education Goals and South Lyon
District goals.
Target Area Goals-Instructional Focus Summary:
Language Arts:
Students will utilize “learning to read” and “reading
to learn” strategies (i.e. Word Study, FQR sequencing. predicting.
making corrections) for better comprehension of narrative writings.
Mathematics:
Students will improve their ability to
analyze and interpret data. Students will improve in their problem
solving strategies and their ability to justify their reasoning.
Social Studies:
Students will improve their ability to
draw deep conclusions based on accurate interpretations from graphs,
charts, and maps.
Science:
All students will improve their ability to
use scientific vocabulary appropriately and data as evidence to justify
reasoning.
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