Mosaica Education


Posts Tagged ‘Ohio public charter school’

Mrs. Karen Kasich, First Lady of Ohio Visits Columbus Humanities, Arts and Technology Academy To Read with Local Students

Tuesday, March 15th, 2011

Students, faculty and staff at Columbus Humanities, Arts and Technology Academy welcome Mrs. Karen Kasich, First Lady of Ohio, on Tuesday, March 15, 2011 to celebrate Read Across America. Mrs. Kasich will be reading to kindergarten, first, and second grade students in the school’s gymnasium at 10:00 a.m. Columbus Humanities, Arts and Technology Academy is located at 1333 Morse Road, Columbus 43229.

Read Across America is a program developed by the National Education Association to build a nation of readers. It is now in its thirteenth year and focuses on motivating children and teens to read through events, partnerships and reading resources.

Columbus Humanities, Arts and Technology Academy is one of the thousands of schools, libraries, and community centers participating in Read Across America by bringing together kids, teens, and books to build a nation of readers.


TEAM MOSAICA NEWS – VOLUME 97

Wednesday, October 20th, 2010

Last Tuesday night, Mosaica, the Ohio Council of Community Schools (authorizer of five of our schools in Ohio), and STAR Academy (the school we manage in Toledo) co-hosted the Ohio premiere of Waiting for Superman, the highly praised film that won the Audience Award for Best Documentary at this year’s Sundance Film Festival.  The movie investigates the crisis in public education and documents our national failure to provide quality schooling to generations of inner city students, which it contrasts with the hope presented by high-performing charter schools.  The capacity audience included most of the STAR staff and board, as well as a number of other local educators and community leaders. There was also a post-screening discussion that gave voice to the raw passions evoked by this movie.

It is an impressive and inspirational movie.  Alternately edifying and heartrending, it is both charming and maddening – a motivational tour de force for what we do.  The topic is admittedly more complicated than can be dealt with fully or in depth in a hundred minutes – this is, after all, an elegantly structured, gripping and empathetic work of art, not an emotionless treatise – but by highlighting some of the issues, it will hopefully function as a catalyst to coalesce forces to create change for the better.

The film, which tracks the families of five students hoping to secure spaces in charter schools, includes interviews with some of our colleagues in the education reform movement, as well as with journalists, school district superintendents, union leaders and others.  It portrays the nation’s public schools as dysfunctional institutions, plagued by inconsistent policies and competing programs from federal, state and local agencies, and ill-served by teachers’ unions focused more on defending ineffective teachers than on enhancing student achievement.  (Variety says the movie makes Randi Weingarten, President of the American Federation of Teachers, look like “a foaming satanic beast.”)  A poignant quote from Geoffrey Canada and vintage clips from the ‘50’s TV version of Superman inspired the title, and John Legend provides a theme song.

The film’s director, Davis Guggenheim, also happened to direct An Inconvenient Truth, the Al Gore documentary on climate change that won an Academy Award.  He is skilled at taking mind-numbingly complex issues and changing the way people think about them.  Mr. Guggenheim undoubtedly has an agenda here – detractors have charged that he twists facts to fit that agenda – but it’s ultimately a captivating and emotional story about people attempting to find excellent schools.  To be sure, there are some factual errors – for example, it implies that Harlem Success Academy is the brainchild of Geoffrey Canada, even though it is actually unrelated to Canada’s Harlem Children’s Zone – and some may object to the hostile manner in which the film depicts relationships in the past between traditional public schools and charters or to the implication that the work at charter schools is magic.  But I don’t think the imperfections should detract from its power.

At Team Mosaica, of course, we know there are no silver bullets.  There is nothing mysterious about our achievements. It’s simply relentless effort by great teachers in a supportive environment, with high expectations and no excuses.  But if this movie is dismissed as polemic, its potential for good will be dead on arrival.  A commitment to transformational change in the way public education is delivered in the United States is fundamental to our future, necessary if the United States is to compete in the global economy, and critical to enable individual human beings be all that they can be.  This movie will serve an important purpose if its call to action motivates opinion leaders to support educational entrepreneurism, if it enhances parental involvement and community participation in schools, or if it refuels reformers’ passion.  At the very least, let’s hope it consolidates the country’s hearts, minds and political will to get the job done.

I urge you to see it and to partake in the conversations it will generate.  It will remind you why we do what we do, and why being allowed to educate children is a privilege we should respect.


Ohio Department of Education, Recognizes Columbus Preparatory School as a “School of Excellence”

Thursday, October 14th, 2010

Columbus, OH. (October 11, 2010) – The Ohio Department of Education (ODE) has recognized Columbus Preparatory Academy (CPA), as a School of Excellence.

According to the ODE, CPA earned this recognition by meeting nine of the 15 state indicators, with a performance index of 91.8. The performance index is a weighted average used by ODE, which reflects the achievement of every student enrolled for the full academic year.

CPA had made great gains; and in just a year, the academy raised their ranking of “Continuous Improvement” to “Excellent,” in all 15 of state indicators. In addition, CPA also earned a 100 percent attendance rate on their State Report Card and met Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) standards.

CPA is located at 3330 Chippewa Street Columbus, Ohio 43204.

About Mosaica Education, Inc.
Mosaica Education, Inc. is a global leader in education reform. Mosaica-managed schools have yielded superior academic results to date by utilizing a unique school design, which combines a proprietary curriculum Paragon®, with state-of-the-art technology.

Mosaica has served more than 40,000 students in the last 13 years. It currently operates  over 80 elementary, middle and high school programs in seven states, the District of Columbia and internationally.  Mosaica is using its years of experience working with schools in the U.S. to develop independent and private schools around the world, that provide quality education programs tailored to their particular needs and cultures.

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Cornerstone Academy Recognized as One of Ohio’s “Buckeye Best Healthy Schools”

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

WESTERVILLE, OH (June 3, 2010) – Cornerstone Academy, a public charter school in Westerville, Oh.,  was recently recognized as one of the Healthy Ohioan’s-Governor’s Buckeye Best (BB) Healthy Schools.

BB Healthy Schools demonstrate a commitment to the health and wellness of their students and staff through the establishment of programs and policies that foster these goals. The program is sponsored by the Ohio Department of Health in partnership with the American Cancer Society – Ohio Division, as part of the Ohio Department of Health’s Healthy Ohioans campaign.

“We were awarded at the Bronze level this year and have a goal of being Gold next year,” said Jamie Scott, Chief Administrative Officer of Cornerstone Academy.

Each fall the BB Healthy School Program accepts applications and ranks schools based upon their progress. All winning schools achieve a “gold” standard in the areas of tobacco, nutrition and physical activity. Ms. Scott is encouraging parents and the community to increase physical activity and involvement in nutrition and activity-based programs.

“We would love to purchase a fitness station that could be used for both physical education classes and the community surrounding the school,” Ms. Scott said.

Cornerstone Academy’s parent advisory committee is working with the school’s lunch director and vendor, to create an even healthier food program. More whole grains, fresh fruit and vegetables will be incorporated into the menu for next year. The school is also researching grant opportunities to build a greenhouse and garden. The garden will give the health food program a big boost by giving students the opportunity to enjoy fresh produce grown on the school grounds.