Lighthouse Community Charter House
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In Our Classrooms - Curriculum Designed for Achievement

GRADUATION "EXIT" OUTCOMES
In order to prepare students for college or a career of their choice, the school must have a vision of what an LCCS graduate knows and can be able to do. Thus, we have developed Graduation "Exit" Outcomes to guide our curriculum. These outcomes are the standards that students must master if they are to graduate from Lighthouse Community Charter School. They detail both content (what they know) and process (what they can do) goals for LCCS students. LCCS teachers reference the Graduation "Exit" Outcomes when developing curriculum, at any grade level, to ensure that coursework integrates the appropriate content and process goals that will lead students to eventually achieving the exit outcomes. Together, faculty, administrators, and board members ensure that school programs are constantly aimed and refocused on student achievement of these outcomes.

School-wide Graduation Outcomes have come from two primary sources: the California State Standards and the New Standards published by the National Center on Education and the Economy and the University of Pittsburgh. The state standards comprise the bulk of our content-based outcomes (i.e. students will understand the cause, major players, and resolution of the Civil War) and the New Standards comprise the bulk of our process-based outcomes (i.e. students will produce a report that develops a controlling idea that conveys a perspective on a subject).

In order to graduate from the Lighthouse Community Charter School, students must achieve mastery of the Graduation Outcomes in eight separate academic areas. The eight academic areas of focus are often integrated as teachers take on the role of generalists, rather than specialists in a particular area. In the middle and secondary grades, although the teachers become more specialized, they continue to integrate the process and content of the other areas as well. The areas of academic focus are:

PASSAGE OUTCOMES
At LCCS, students stay with the same teacher for at least two years. This structure is called "looping." Because students are promoted to the next looped level every two years, we have created Passage Outcomes for each looped level (i.e. K/1, 2/3, 6/7/8, 11/12, etc.).

Grade Levels / Corresponding Loops / Corresponding Passage and Exit Outcomes
K 1
K/1
PO*
2 3
2/3
PO*
4 5
4/5
PO*
6 7 8
6/7/8
PO*
9 10
11/12
PO*
11 12
Exit
Outcomes
K/1
loop
2/3
loop
4/5
loop
6/7/8
loop
9/10
loop
11/12
loop
* PO refers to Passage Outcomes
Figure 1

The Graduation "Exit" Outcomes drive curriculum and assessment at LCCS by defining Passage Outcomes at each looped level. Passage Outcomes define the content and process goals specific to each loop level and content area. The Passage Outcomes follow a scope and sequence that respects the developmental level of students while strategically developing the content and process skills necessary for eventual student achievement of the Graduation "Exit" Outcomes. Students must demonstrate their achievement of content and process goals and standards at each level before they are promoted to the next loop (Figure 1).

Depending on the grade level, Passage Outcomes can be very similar to or different than the Graduation "Exit" Outcomes. To provide a concrete example, we have attached K/1 English Language Arts Passage Outcomes and 6/7/8 Math Passage Outcomes. The K/1 Passage Outcomes clearly illustrates how Passage Outcomes can differ in appearance from Graduation "Exit" Outcomes. This difference is driven by the developmental difference between emerging readers and writers and developed readers and writers. The 6/7/8 Passage Outcomes demonstrate that the relative similarity between Passage Outcomes and Graduation "Exit" Outcomes when the developmental level is similar.

Since LCCS is a K-12 school, students will be afforded and educational experience that is cumulative and strategically designed to ensure that students graduate the requisite content and process skills to be a lifelong learner in the 21st century.

How Exit Outcomes enhance our Mission:

Tenet 1 - Articulated High Expectations

  • Content standards are drawn directly from the California State Standards.
  • Process standards are drawn directly from the New Standards published by the National Center on Education and the Economy and the University of Pittsburgh.
  • The Exit Outcomes are designed to ensure that students learn through challenging, integrated, real-world projects at all looped levels.
  • Students are promoted only when they have achieved the articulated looped level standards, called Passage Outcomes.
  • Student work is organized in Standards Based Portfolios, paralleling the California State Standards and the New Standards.
  • Student progress is displayed in biannual Exhibitions of Work.
  • Annual student goals are set and monitored through student Individualized Learning Plans.

Tenet 2 – Meeting the Needs of the Whole Child

  • Exit Outcomes provide students with multiple outlets for demonstrating the requisite content and process skills. This ensures that students are empowered to accurately demonstrate their content and process skills.
  • Academic Focus areas ensure students are developing their academic, social, and emotional selves.

Tenet 3 – Teachers as Learners

  • Teacher research revealed that the New Standards most aligned with our pedagogical underpinnings
  • Teachers used New Standards to develop Graduation "Exit" Outcomes that incorporated the LCCS school-wide pedagogical methods and the California State Standards
  • Teachers used Graduation "Exit" Outcomes to develop Passage Outcomes specific to each loop. This ensures that students are strategically developing the content and process skills; and will be prepared to demonstrate achieve the Exit Outcomes necessary for graduation.

 

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