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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Sisters
students excel in qualifying for CIMs Sixty-one percent
of this year's Sisters High School graduates earned a state Certificate
of Initial Mastery (CIM) in addition to a diploma. That is undoubtedly the
highest percentage in Central Oregon and one of the highest in the state.
Last year, 42 percent of Sisters
graduates received CIMs. The next highest proportion in Central Oregon
was 30 percent at Crook County High. The statewide average was 27 percent.
State figures for the current year are not yet available.
The Certificate of Initial
Mastery is an awkwardly named child of the school reform program adopted
by the 1991 Legislature. A CIM is not required for graduation, which is
one reason it is ignored by many teachers and students alike. But its
achievement is educationally meaningful.
To obtain a CIM, a student
must achieve a proficiency level on statewide tests in reading, writing,
math, math problem solving and science. The student must also complete
eight "work samples" that include three essays, three speeches and the
solutions to two complex math problems.
It's possible to earn a CIM
by the end of the 10th grade, but many students don't do so until their
junior or senior year.
The system encourages students
to re-take the tests and keep working toward other requirements until
graduation, if necessary.
But the degree of emphasis
on earning a CIM varies widely among high schools across the state.
The Sisters teaching staff
is clearly pro-CIM. Sisters Middle School Principal Lora Nordquist, who
heads the district's curriculum committee, said last week:
"We align our instruction
to the CIM standards, and it's good instruction. It's teaching to the
test in the best sense of the word because the work samples are very authentic
assessment tools.
"If teaching to the test means
teaching a student to deliver a great persuasive speech or to write a
fine narrative essay, I don't have any problem with teaching to that test."
She added: "We're really proud.
I'm proud of the kids and of our district because I just feel that it's
our emphasis on the standards that has created this type of success. Plus
our diligence in tracking our students' progress and paying attention
to how individual students are doing."
Those sentiments were shared
by Karen Withrow, a physics and chemistry teacher who is also the high
school's assessment coordinator.
When asked to speculate on
the reason for the dramatic increase in CIM recipients this year, she
noted that three years ago, when the class of 2003 started the 10th grade,
the high school initiated its LINK program.
Through LINK, every student
is assigned a teacher who "travels" with him or her through all four years
of high school. That teacher keeps track of the student's progress toward
a CIM and enters work samples in the student's CIM folder.
The monitoring effort is aided
by a computer tracking system. And several times a year, Withrow sends
teachers a status report on where students in their group stand, and what
tasks remain for them to qualify for a CIM.
Withrow pointed out that the
61 percent is based on 72 CIM recipients out of 118 total graduates.
But the record looks even
better when you consider that 20 of the graduates received 22-credit State
of Oregon diplomas, not standard Sisters High diplomas, which require
a minimum of 26 credits.
The number obtaining a CIM
represents 73 percent of those receiving a standard Sisters High School
diploma.
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