Northwest High School - Silvertip Yearbook (Wichita, KS)

 - Class of 1984

Page 14 of 198

 

Northwest High School - Silvertip Yearbook (Wichita, KS) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 14 of 198
Page 14 of 198



Northwest High School - Silvertip Yearbook (Wichita, KS) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 13
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Page 14 text:

Committee makes recommentiatiqns . ' ' ation at R1 k' criticizes pubhc education On August 26, 1981, Secretary of Educa- tion T.H. Bell created the National Com- mission on Excellence in Education and directed them to present a report to the American people on the quality of educa- tion that the American students were receiv- ing. This report, released in April 1983, show- ed that students at the high school and col- lege levels were not being taught the basic essentials needed to secure a future in the working society. The basic essentials ac- cording to the committee consisted of four years of English, three years of science, social studies and mathematics, and one- half year of computer science. Also, for those students who were college bound, two years of a foreign language were recom- mended. Indicators of the risk included studies on the number of people who were functional- ly illiterate, the decline in the number of students demonstrating superior achieve- ment, the lower scores of standardized achievement tests, and the number of students enrolling in the New Basics. These U.S. Secretary of Education Terrel Bell opens the Regional Form on Public Education conducted last july at Northwest. Also participating in the opening session were Governorjohn Carlin and Undersecretary Garyjones. Approximate- ly 1,000 individuals participated in the Regional Forum. Despite recent criticism on the quality of public education, Northwest Advanced Placement English students continue to excell in their educational pursuit. -f , if he Ni Nw 'uxz 10 ' Nation At Risk facts, after being compiled were put together in a report, A Nation At Risk: The Imperative For Educational Reform. It was found that the decline in educa- tional performance was in large part the result of disturbing inadequacies in the way the educational process itself was often con- ducted. The commission expressed its con- cern on the curriculum, or the very 'stuff' of education. The courses a student could choose from was a mere smorgasboard. An astonishing 25 percent of the credits earned by a student were in physical education, work experience, remedial English and math courses, and personal service and development courses such as single survival. Another issue discussed in the report dealt with the amount of time students in the United States actually spent in the classrooms compared with the amount of time students in other countries spent in school. The average American student at- tended school for 180 days a year for six hours each day, while most students in England and other industrialized countries spent eight hours a day in the classroom, 220 days per year. Also, compared to other nations, American students spent much less time on their school work. The time that they did spend on their homework or studies was used ineffectively and therefore, defeated the purpose of outside classroom' work. Recommendations by the committee in- cluded strengthening high school gradua- tion requirements, raising college and university requirements for admission, devoting more time to learning the new basics, and improving the teaching profes- sion so that it might draw better and more qualified college graduates into that profes- sion. It was the hope of the committee that citizens across the nation hold educators and elected officials responsible for pro- viding the leadership necessary to achieve the things that were outlined, and that citizens provide the fiscal support and stability required to bring about the reforms that were proposed. -Anita Zelmer A ESX ii i tt' -f.--. -..ti. I-iz: --,Ii: Being a teacher is more than standing in front of a classroom and lecturing. For Il Strattman, photography instructor. teaching requires much time and patience w working with students on individual projects.

Page 13 text:

'N 3 4 '53 fit We rv Unique Faces Many people compose school Many types of people made up the stu- dent body at Northwest. A touch of foreign flavor from countries around the world such as Sweden, ltaly, New Zealand, West Ger- many, France, and Viet Nam as well as America was present in the daily life of Nor- thwest students and faculty members. Yet the people at Northwest were uni- que. Each person was an individual that made the school a whole. The pride that students exhibited on their faces at winning basketball games or when the results of col- lege entrance exams came back showed the community and other class mates the per- sonal reward felt when things were ac- complished. Some students were extremely involved in extra-curricular activities as well and their school work and outside job while others preferred to go to school for only a half of a day. The unity ofthe three grade levels pro- vided students a chance to get to know one another, to share joys with, and comfort each other in times of defeat. The special friendships that were built throughout the year were treasured and made for an easy living environment at school. No matter what the status of an in- dividual was, he found a place in the school that was especially for them. A Grizzly was accepted for who he was, not what he did. Northwest's reputation grew among the students as well as the community. -Anita Zelmer TLA Faces ' 9



Page 15 text:

'i f f . L in am Wi f Q ,s I -s ,gp vlan-Askvlsaiiafblvok Superzmendem' Moms 5,115-grirjjf retires rom 16-year tenure ' f' 1' I'd like ro report publicly to the Board of Education, to all the employees in our school system, and to the community at large that I will be retiring at the end of this school year. In a calm and even tone, Dr. Alvin Morris announced at a meeting of the Board of Education that he will leave the superintendency at the close of the 1983-84 school year. It was a tone which showed no trace of the emotion that had briefly choked the same announcement to his administrative cabinet. The announcement came almost 15 years to the day after Morris accepted his first contract to be superintendent of the Wichita Public Schools. He originally came to the school district in 1958 as assistant superintendent for elementary education, and later served as deputy superintendent. He was appointed acting superintendent in june, 1968, and became superintendent that August. He is 63. His accomplishments throughout the 16 years that he held that position were many. He developed a school desegrega- tion plan in 1971 that later became a model for the integra- tion of many other systems around the country. Morris secured voter approval, in 1974, of the largest school system bond issue in Kansas history - S30 million that since has helped make possible the construction of Northwest High School, Levy Special Education Center, Colvin and the pre- sent College Hill Elementary Schools. He also led other ex- pansions throughout the state's large school districtg expan- sions of vocational and technical school programs and the creation of a transportation skills center to train truck drivers and the Aviation Education Center. Individual Board of Education members praised his work as superintendent, using terms such as superman and island of stability to characterize his leadership through years which saw the nation and its educational systems shaken by racial turmoil and social revolution. -Anita Zelmer Discussing homework load with friends is one thing, but doing it on television is another. Senior Kim Bulman andjunior Derrick Nielsen participate in a local televi- sion program and discuss student concerns on the amount of assigned homework and the quality of education. 'Hs Taking time to visit with other participants at the Regional Educational Forum arejo Brown, Board of Education president, Dr. Alvin Morris, Wichita superintendent of schools, and joyce Focht, a member of the Wichita Board of Education. Nation at Risk '11

Suggestions in the Northwest High School - Silvertip Yearbook (Wichita, KS) collection:

Northwest High School - Silvertip Yearbook (Wichita, KS) online collection, 1983 Edition, Page 1

1983

Northwest High School - Silvertip Yearbook (Wichita, KS) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 101

1984, pg 101

Northwest High School - Silvertip Yearbook (Wichita, KS) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 163

1984, pg 163

Northwest High School - Silvertip Yearbook (Wichita, KS) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 71

1984, pg 71

Northwest High School - Silvertip Yearbook (Wichita, KS) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 147

1984, pg 147

Northwest High School - Silvertip Yearbook (Wichita, KS) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 196

1984, pg 196


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