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Main Author: Stewart, Pearl
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ795336
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author Stewart, Pearl
author_facet Stewart, Pearl
Stewart, Pearl
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Thinking about Their Future in a Different Way Stewart, Pearl High Schools Urban Schools Private Colleges Educational Experiments Partnerships in Education College School Cooperation Student Financial Aid "Born out of struggle and the struggle continues" is the motto of Chicago's Social Justice High School, one of four small, autonomous schools on one campus, Little Village Lawndale High School Campus (LVLHS). LVLHS was the result of a 19-day hunger strike in May 2001 by 14 community residents demanding that funds allocated for a new high school be used for that purpose. Officials had reneged on promises to build the school, instead diverting the funds to other priorities. The high-profile community protest was a lesson in social justice, and the success of that struggle spawned the four-school complex, which opened in fall 2005 on the West Side of Chicago. The campus contains Multicultural Arts High School, World Language High School, Social Justice High School, and Infinity: Math, Science and Technology High School. The separate schools share the library, sports facilities, and auditoriums. Adding to its unique origin, SoJo, as Social Justice High is called, is now part of an educational experiment initiated by Roosevelt University president Dr. Chuck Middleton. Middleton, impressed by SoJo students during a school program a few years ago, acted on impulse. So on the spot, Middleton made a decision--and an offer to the students and Social Justice High's principal, Rito Martinez. He pledged that the students in the first two graduating classes who qualified academically for admission to Roosevelt would be admitted, and their families would not have to come up with the money. That first class is now in its junior year, and upon their graduation in 2009, those who qualify will be the first to benefit from this partnership program. Middleton says he expects 35 students out of the 95 in the class of 2009 to qualify for scholarships.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ795336
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2008
record_format eric
spellingShingle Thinking about Their Future in a Different Way
Stewart, Pearl
High Schools
Urban Schools
Private Colleges
Educational Experiments
Partnerships in Education
College School Cooperation
Student Financial Aid
Thinking about Their Future in a Different Way Stewart, Pearl High Schools Urban Schools Private Colleges Educational Experiments Partnerships in Education College School Cooperation Student Financial Aid "Born out of struggle and the struggle continues" is the motto of Chicago's Social Justice High School, one of four small, autonomous schools on one campus, Little Village Lawndale High School Campus (LVLHS). LVLHS was the result of a 19-day hunger strike in May 2001 by 14 community residents demanding that funds allocated for a new high school be used for that purpose. Officials had reneged on promises to build the school, instead diverting the funds to other priorities. The high-profile community protest was a lesson in social justice, and the success of that struggle spawned the four-school complex, which opened in fall 2005 on the West Side of Chicago. The campus contains Multicultural Arts High School, World Language High School, Social Justice High School, and Infinity: Math, Science and Technology High School. The separate schools share the library, sports facilities, and auditoriums. Adding to its unique origin, SoJo, as Social Justice High is called, is now part of an educational experiment initiated by Roosevelt University president Dr. Chuck Middleton. Middleton, impressed by SoJo students during a school program a few years ago, acted on impulse. So on the spot, Middleton made a decision--and an offer to the students and Social Justice High's principal, Rito Martinez. He pledged that the students in the first two graduating classes who qualified academically for admission to Roosevelt would be admitted, and their families would not have to come up with the money. That first class is now in its junior year, and upon their graduation in 2009, those who qualify will be the first to benefit from this partnership program. Middleton says he expects 35 students out of the 95 in the class of 2009 to qualify for scholarships.
title Thinking about Their Future in a Different Way
topic High Schools
Urban Schools
Private Colleges
Educational Experiments
Partnerships in Education
College School Cooperation
Student Financial Aid
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ795336