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Assault on Learning: Part 5

At Philly disciplinary school, students face a strict day

There are no chaotic class changes at Shallcross Academy.

When it's time to move from one room to another, students walk quietly, in single file, arms stiff behind their backs. Multiple teachers and administrators step into the hallways, making sure no one acts up.

"One line!" a teacher called out recently. "No voices!"

Shallcross is one of the Philadelphia School District's 19 so-called transition schools or programs, places where students who have committed serious disciplinary infractions are educated after being removed from traditional public schools.

 

Since 2004, the sprawling campus for fifth through 12th graders on Woodhaven Road has been operated by Camelot Schools, a for-profit company that specializes in alternative education and runs four schools for the district. Camelot's 2010-11 contract with the district is $9.1 million to serve 883 students at several schools.

Altogether, the district is spending $19.4 million this year on its disciplinary programs.

At Shallcross, routine is crucial. Supervision is constant.

And while some parts of the day look just as they would at any other school - a spirited game of pickup basketball in gym class, talking about the potential pitfalls of credit cards in personal finance - others are decidedly different.

Adults eliminate or control situations where students might be tempted to misbehave, from the highly structured class changes to dismissal, when youths are released one bus at a time. Students may not carry backpacks (too easy to smuggle in pills or small weapons, administrators point out) or bring supplies from home. They do not use lockers - no chance to hide contraband.

"It's a strict school," said Jamire Warner, an 11th grader who two years ago was expelled from Kensington Culinary High School for beating a fellow student so badly that the boy required hospital treatment. "You have to follow directions and do the stuff they tell you to do."

But sometimes, strict is a good thing, said Warner, a talented artist whose sights are now set on college.

At his old school, Warner said, "you could do whatever you wanted. Nobody cared what you did. Here, they want you to succeed."

Students regard their infractions as part of the past. They talk about them matter-of-factly.

Sixto Rivera, 16, an 11th grader, was removed from Washington High in the Northeast "for smoking weed," he said.

Seventh grader Saintiler Saintil, 12, was "fighting a lot" at Ziegler School in Oxford Circle.

Kristie Higginbottom, 15, an eighth grader, left Harding Middle School in Frankford "because I wasn't going to school."

Damar Alexander, 12, a sixth grader from Clymer Elementary in North Philadelphia, was removed "for fighting. I was always getting suspended. It was a bad school, I was bad all the time."

The school's population is about 350, but it fluctuates throughout the year as youths enter as their disciplinary cases dictate or leave when eligible.

Students, each of whom has an "individualized learning plan," wear uniforms - khaki pants and white shirts. Some wear black shirts, the mark of a youth whose good behavior and grades has earned him or her the right to be a "bulldog" - a member of the school's student government.

Shallcross' student-to-teacher ratio is low, about 20 youths to one adult, as compared with 30 or more students to one adult in traditional schools.

But not all students are success stories. Shallcross' daily attendance rate hovers around 70 percent. Some students say it is too strict, too much like jail.

In a math class, one boy takes notes but talks constantly, frequently interrupting the lesson, insisting on leaving the room twice to speak with an administrator outside. Another boy keeps his head down, eyes stubbornly fixed on the floor, ignoring the lesson.

But Shallcross specializes in second chances - and sometimes third, fourth and fifth chances. Students often arrive with low academic skills, low self-esteem, and behavioral issues that haven't been addressed by previous schools, said Cory Thames, the school's executive director.

"I've been in mainstream schools," Thames said. "Kids do one thing wrong and they get rid of them. They come here already feeling defeated."

In rare cases, a disruptive student is transferred out, but more often, the young person stays, and the staff works out a new strategy.

"We're going to work with every student," said Thames. Often, administrators said, that includes finding services for students.

"A lot of the time, we have IEPs [special education plans], paperwork that's out of compliance," Thames said. "I don't know how they're getting away with that at other places, but we comply."

Take the case of Angel Reyes, an 11th grader who is hearing-impaired. He has needed a sign language interpreter for years, but didn't get one until he came to Shallcross, officials said.

What Shallcross does is a matter of life and death, administrators say.

"We have to train them to be successful. Some of them don't really even understand how to act in a classroom," said Milton Alexander, a Camelot executive.

"They are teenagers," added Thames. "They can make choices to rob, steal, kill, sell drugs. We have to teach them to make good decisions."

 


Contact staff writer Kristen Graham at 215-854-5146 or kgraham@phillynews.com.

Search our unique database for schools by name, zip-code or school type. Find detailed data about each school including totals for violent incidents, totals by crime type and how each school compares to other district schools in its violent crime rate.

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How this series was reported

Five Inquirer reporters devoted a year to examining violence in the Philadelphia public schools, conducting more than 300 interviews with teachers, administrators, students and their families, district officials, police officers, court officials, and school violence experts.

The Inquirer created a database to analyze more than 30,000 serious incidents - from assaults to robberies to rapes - that occurred during the last five years. That information was supplemented by district and state data on suspensions, intervention and 9-1-1 calls. Reporters also examined police reports, court records, transcripts, contracts and school security video.

The Inquirer also enlisted Temple University to conduct an independent survey of the district's 13,000 teachers and aides. More than 750 teachers and aides responded to questions about violence and its impact on students' education.

The newspaper also obtained internal district documents detailing violent incidents during the past five years. On specific cases, reporters interviewed victims, perpetrators, police, attorneys, witnesses, and attended court hearings.

One reporter had regular access over nearly six months to students, teachers and administrators inside South Philadelphia High School, one of the city’s most dangerous schools.

School Violence Definitions

Persistently Dangerous
The Pennsylvania Department of Education labels a school persistently dangerous if it has student arrests for dangerous incidents in the most recent school year and in one additional year of the two years prior to the most recent school year. The number of incidents is based on enrollment. Schools with more than 1000 students must have 20 or more dangerous incidents. Dangerous incidents include both weapons possession and violent incidents such as homicide, kidnapping, robbery, sexual offenses, and aggravated assaults.

Serious Incidents
The School District of Philadelphia labels incidents as serious or nonserious. Serious incidents include assault, robbery, morals, shooting, stabbing, weapon, abduction or attempt, setting fires, and drug or alcohol offenses. Other crimes considered nonserious include disorderly conduct, threats, bullying, and extortion.

Violent Incidents
To study school violence The Inquirer included all serious incidents except setting fires and drug or alcohol offenses.

Crime Rate
As is typically done to study crime uniformly, The Inquirer calculated the rate of crimes to control for differences in enrollment. For schools the rate is per 100 students. For the district, the rate is per 1,000.

Public School
The series focuses on 268 public schools operated by the district in 2009-10. Not included are charters or schools run by private operators.

Focus 46
In the fall of 2010 the district identified 46 troubled schools. The list includes the 19 persistently dangerous schools plus 27 others with similar characteristics. The program tracks violence, daily attendance, chronic truancy, out-of-school suspensions and the number of students facing expulsion, transfer or referral to hearing officers. These schools receive safety audits, training and additional scrutiny.

Recent Reports

Philadelphia Commission on Human Relations report on Philadelphia School District’s response to violence and intergroup conflicts

Pennsylvania Auditor General’s Audit of the Philadelphia School District (Pa. Auditor General)

Zero Tolerance in Philadelphia (Youth United for Change and The Advancement Project)

Pushed Out: Youth Voices on the Dropout Crisis in Philadelphia (Youth United for Change)

The African American and Latino Male Dropout Taskforce Report (Philadelphia School Reform Commission) – September 2010

Platform of the Campaign for Nonviolent Schools (Campaign for Nonviolent Schools)

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