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Success for All Middle School is a comprehensive model for accelerating the achievement of students in the middle grades. It is based on the widely used and extensively evaluated Success for All elementary model, but designed to meet the developmental needs of young adolescents.

The backbone of the SFA Middle School is the reading curriculum, designed for young adolescents at all achievement levels. Reading instruction focuses both on the mechanics of reading and on the strategies by which readers make sense of the written word. Frequent assessments help teachers determine the progress, strengths, and needs of their students, and adjust their instruction accordingly.

Integrated curriculum components are also available for language arts, social studies, science, and conflict resolution. Units of study incorporate a variety of activities to meet the need of different learning styles, and offer opportunities for students to apply and reinforce their reading, writing, and speaking skills in the content areas.

SFAF’s experience and research substantiate the idea that improved literacy skills can empower young adolescents, not only by making them critical thinkers better able to negotiate the many choices that confront them at this pivotal stage in their development, but also by giving them access to the most challenging curricula in the content areas. To fill any gaps and build on strengths, Success for All Middle School provides every student with instruction in reading at his or her instructional level. Students are assessed regularly and moved to a higher level as soon as they are ready. This approach motivates students to achieve by making them aware of their gains, and what they still need to learn to succeed.

Sixty-two schools in urban, rural, and small city locations used the program in the 2003/2004 school year. Data from schools implementing Success for All Middle School show promising effects on state assessments. A third-party evaluator, the National Opinion Research Center (NORC) at the University of Chicago, is collecting student-level data from state assessments to evaluate the program. The subjects of NORC’s research are students in grades 6-8 in six pairs of middle schools located in five districts. Each pair consists of a Success for All middle school and a matched control site. Based on school level data, SFA middle schools gained 26.7 percentage points on their state reading tests, while matched controls gained 3.9 points. Gains in the schools’ respective states averaged 5.7 percentage points. (See the Research page for more information on results of SFA middle school.)

Curriculum

The Reading Edge
The Reading Edge, the middle school reading component, is designed to help students build a strong phonetic skill base and develop fluency, comprehension strategies, study skills, vocabulary, and a love of reading. The reading curriculum is based on recent research which shows that the best ways to help below-grade level readers are phonics-based teaching methods, activities that promote reading fluency, and explicit instruction in comprehension strategies used by effective readers. It makes use of materials that are appropriate to the interests, needs, and developmental characteristics of middle school students, and it employs the power of cooperative learning, putting the intense peer pressure of adolescence to positive use.

*See The Reading Edge page for more information.

Science, Humanities, and the Getting Along Together Curriculum
In the SFA Middle School, science and humanities classes provide students a chance to make practical use of their reading, writing, and analytical skills. Each grade level begins with one or more foundation units that familiarize teachers and students with cooperative learning techniques and focus on concrete skills that students apply throughout the year. The remaining units engage students with a problem to solve or a task to complete related to a particular theme or topic.

All units are designed to ground students in solid content knowledge while helping them connect their learning to the world. Units also offer a much-needed opportunity for students to practice their reading and writing skills in a different, real-world context. Because the science and humanities curricula use the same approach to reading and writing as other SFA components, students have the opportunity to apply their skills across the day, leading to a more powerful educational experience.

The humanities curriculum combines two content areas – language arts and social studies – to offer students opportunities to practice reading and writing skills in real-world contexts. Each humanities unit engages students with a problem, topic-related investigation, or simulation that helps them connect content to authentic experience (in alignment with the standards from the National Council for the Social Studies, the National Council of Teachers of English, and the International Reading Association). The Humanities program can be used in separate social studies and language arts or English class periods, or in one integrated block. In social studies units, students investigate important themes and topics, connecting what they learn about the past with their own lives, and present their findings in various forms including writing. In language arts units, students explore different genres of literature, write original pieces following the conventions of writing, and learn and practice basic grammar skills. In both types of units, students make use of a wide variety of resources including classroom textbooks, primary sources, literature, and experts in the field. Units are provided in a sequence that builds upon mastered skills and prior content knowledge. However, units may be taught at any grade level according to state standards and individual school goals.

The science curriculum prepares students for success in high school science and piques their interest in science-related careers through hands-on activities, simulations, cooperative learning, observation, and research. Constructivist learning approaches are coupled with practice in expository-text reading and writing strategies and other relevant literacy skills from the Reading Edge to give students the tools they need to experience real science inquiry. Science units incorporate authentic opportunities for students to write. They report results in formal and informal ways, make recommendations based on evidence, and present solutions to community problems. Working in teams and relating science learning to significant issues in the world today allows students to experience the debate and argumentation that is the hallmark of scientific research. The science curriculum is aligned with the National Education Standards, and may be used alone or in concert with a science textbook.

The Getting Along Together social problem-solving curriculum (described in fuller detail on the Getting Along Together page) is designed for use in the first two weeks of school, either during the reading block if students have not yet been assigned to reading groups or at some other point in the day if reading groups have already been set. The Getting Along Together curriculum introduces students to the basics of cooperative learning, teamwork, and problem solving, increasing in complexity as students get older and more sophisticated. The goal is to give students a flexible and peaceful model for resolving in-school problems and conflicts, and in the longer term, for students to internalize this problem-solving process and make it their own.

Instructional Materials
The SFA Middle School materials include:

  • Teacher’s manuals with detailed, flexible daily lesson plans
  • All student materials
  • Reading strategy cards
  • Comprehension strategy team study tools
  • Student assessment tools to monitor student progress in vocabulary, word structure, fluency, comprehension, and comprehension strategies.
  • Materials kit, consumable kit, book set, and videotapes included for Humanities and Science units

Professional Development
The professional development provided by SFAF staff is designed to support district and school leaders and teachers as they make substantial changes in their approach to classroom instruction. Your SFAF coach will build a partnership with your school and district through training sessions, on-site coaching, scheduled telephone meetings, quarterly progress reports, and informal telephone support.

Initial Training
Initial training is provided to prepare teachers for a smooth implementation. The training focuses on:

  • Instructional strategies embedded in the lessons.
  • Elements of the lessons that provide engaging images, routines, and practice needed to ensure success for each student.
  • Tools to assess student progress and adapt lessons to meet students’ needs.
  • Cooperative-learning strategies that provide the practice and repetition students need at the middle school level.
  • Social problem-solving skills taught to build a powerful and positive classroom (and school) climate.
  • Support for administrators and district personnel as they prepare to manage the program, monitor student progress, and support a high quality implementation of the SFA Middle School.

Goal-Focused Achievement Planning
Goal-focused achievement planning sets the stage for success. You and your SFAF coach develop specific goals and monitor student progress.

  • Every quarter, the teachers, school leaders, and your SFAF coach review student progress.
  • Goals and interventions for the following quarter are planned based on the data.
  • Your coach prepares quarterly reports on student progress for teachers, schools, and the district office.

Ongoing Coaching and Support
As the year progresses, you will have a variety of ways to work with your SFAF coach to review your progress and refine goals. The schools involved in the SFA Middle School will receive:

  • Quarterly visits by your SFAF coach, who will observe classes, meet with the teachers and administrators, review data on student progress, and set new goals.
  • Follow-up telephone meetings with the teachers. These meetings support implementation of the program by providing teachers with further training, troubleshooting, goal-setting assistance, and help with assessment issues.
  • Unlimited, informal telephone support for all staff members.

Next Steps
Do you want to learn more about the SFA Middle School? Please call and talk to one of our staff members at 1-800-548-4998, ext.2372, or fill out the information request form online.

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