Lakewood Public Schools score well

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Thomas J. George
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Joined: Wed Jun 01, 2005 4:47 pm

Lakewood Public Schools score well

Postby Thomas J. George » Tue Aug 16, 2005 9:27 am

Lakewood Public Schools scored well in the most recent Ohio Department of Education District Local Report Card.

In the ever changing ODE ratings system, Lakewood scored an "Effective" along with Berea, Fairview Park, Independence, Parma, Richmond Hts., Shaker Hts., and South Euclid-Lyndhurst.

Scoring below Lakewood with a "Continuous Improvement" were: Bedford, Brooklyn, Cleveland Hts.-University Hts., Garfield Hts., Maple Hts., and North Olmsted.

A notch below, scoring "Academic Watch" were: Euclid and Warrrensville Hts.

Rating "Academic Emergency" were: Cleveland and East Cleveland.

Cuyahoga County public school districts rating "Excellent" were: Bay Village, Beachwood, Brecksville-Broadview Hts., Chagrin Falls, Cuyahoga Hts., Mayfield, North Royalton, Olmsted Falls, Orange, Rocky River, Solon, Strongsville, and Westlake.

Most of these school districts are considerably smaller than the Lakewood City School District. None of these schools are located in a city that approaches the size of the city of Lakewood.

Among those cities comparable to Lakewood in size, the following scored: Cleveland Hts.-University Hts. (Continuous Improvement), Euclid (Academic Watch), Elyria (Continuous Improvement), Lorain (Academic Watch), Cuyahoga Falls (Effective) and Mentor (Effective).

Private schools are not rated.

Public schools are an important part of community life and good schools, among other things, are a important economic development criteria.

The success of the Lakewood Public School system is critical to the success of our community.


TJG


Jeff Endress
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Joined: Mon Apr 04, 2005 11:13 am
Location: Lakewood

Postby Jeff Endress » Tue Aug 16, 2005 11:51 am

Mayor:

Great news for the schools. Another point showing that this is "Lakewood's Time". And soon, we will have modern facilities to match up with an effective schools system.

I find one element in the reporting interesting. As we all know, Lakewood through the Westshore Academy, takes in a good many marginally achieving students. Among those systems that contribute their educationally challenged students to Lakewood schools (and likewise to our score results) are several systems that ranked "excellent" (River, Westlake, and Bay). The results are therefore, even more compelling when one considers that in addition to educating our substantial numbers of ESL students, etc., we are also taking a load off of other systems (which might be why they got the "excellent", and we didn't).

Jeff


john crino
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Joined: Wed May 18, 2005 4:26 pm

Postby john crino » Tue Aug 16, 2005 2:53 pm

Would Lakewood benefit from advertising itself as a place to move to because of the new schools,new YMCA,library expansion,and hopefully some WIFI program for the city, plus other attributes that a newer"less cultured" suburb may not have? All these "improvements" might make for good marketing to people outside of Lakewood that do not realize the positives that are occurring in the city.


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Jim O'Bryan
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Location: Lakewood
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Postby Jim O'Bryan » Tue Aug 16, 2005 3:14 pm

john crino wrote:Would Lakewood benefit from advertising itself as a place to move to because of the new schools,new YMCA,library expansion,and hopefully some WIFI program for the city, plus other attributes that a newer"less cultured" suburb may not have? All these "improvements" might make for good marketing to people outside of Lakewood that do not realize the positives that are occurring in the city.



John

You have hit on the key term for 2005/06 "Building the Lakewood Brand" we will be exploring various ways that the Lakewood Brand is built, maintained, and put out there.

The Observer is all about building the Lakewood Brand through intellectual capital and artistic capital.

Some of the Observer just finished an interview with people from Sherrod Brown's office about just how innovative the Lakewood Observer is, and how great Lakewood is.

Look for this in upcoming issues.

Jim


Jay Foran
Posts: 58
Joined: Tue Aug 02, 2005 1:18 pm
Location: Lakewood, Ohio

Postby Jay Foran » Tue Aug 16, 2005 3:15 pm

Congratulations to the people that made it happen....(in no particular order)

Lakewood School Teachers, Volunteers and Students (Who do the heavy lifting and are accountable for their effort)

Parents (Who model the curiosity to learn and create the discipline and importance for education for their children)

Lakewood School Administrators (Who create the direction)

Lakewood City Administration and Council (Who keep education high on the public agenda and clear the path)

Lakewood Public Library (Who support the curriculum)

Lakewood Taxpayers (Who provide the dollars that make all the rest worthwhile)

Simply a team effort. Everyone has to share in success and failure of their schools. The Mayor is right...schools are a huge economic driver.

Thanks to all.


The future does not belong to the strong and powerful, but instead to the swift and agile
Stephen Calhoun
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Postby Stephen Calhoun » Wed Aug 17, 2005 7:33 am

Thanks Ken for your view here and, as always, your dedication to Lakewood.

Morrison's comment about 4th graders and about the incredible no brainer payoff, firstly to economic well-being, and by implication, secondly, to adulthood civic engagement, (among many payoffs) was very cherry in a discussion full of fruit.

all need to keep refreshing our place by dipping into our time banks and building a coherent civic practice


What kinds of partnerships exist now and could exist between schools and vehicles, venues, at the practical civic level?

(Incidentally, the time bank issue is very challenging at the level of intrinsic motivation. Just as one would hope children understand the value of education so they might prioritize their time in accordance with the valuations which make the most sense to them, this holds just as much for adults in their valuation of civic engagement and practice.)



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