Posts Tagged ‘Mosaica’

Student Success is Propelled by Paragon

Why test? The Student: • To identify starting points for monitoring year-to-year academic development • To help develop a personalized learning plan • To determine how best to adapt materials and instructional practices to address each student’s needs • To identify academic strengths and weaknesses in order to guide the learning process toward achievement of curriculum goals, including possible […]


The Paragon Curriculum- Propels Student Achievement

The Paragon Curriculum is a pillar to our student’s education at Mosaica.  The word paragon means “a model of excellence,” and that is exactly what we strive for with our college liberal arts education that begins in Kindergarten and continues to build depth in successive layers through the grade levels. Paragon teaches to the whole […]


Celebrating National School Choice Week – January 23-29th

Atlanta, GA. (Mosaica Education, Inc.) January 21, 2010-On January 24-29, 2011, Mosaica network schools across the country will be hosting events to commemorate “National School Choice Week.” National School Choice Week provides a unique opportunity for parents, students, policymakers, advocates and concerned citizens to raise awareness about the importance of education reform and school choice […]


February Celebrations

African American History Month   During February, students will learn about and celebrate African-American History through the implementation of Mosaica Education’s African-American History Guide.  In the first section, students learn why African Americans are honored in February, and are introduced to the genre of biography.  Students will learn the features of a biography and carry out […]


The Role of the Private Sector in Education

Mosaica Education, Inc. and Atlanta Preparatory Academy were featured in a Huffington Post article written by Tom Vander Ark. The article dicusses the role of the private sector in education. Vander Ark contends, Mosaica is “offering a service that is clearly superior to near by public schools and doing it for less money”. He futher contends, ” private sector investment and innovation should play a more important role in American education”.