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Interdistrict Transfers Included In TPS Interest-Based Education

By TERRELL LESTER
Editor at Large
03-25-2009

SPECIALTY EDUCATION: Chris Johnson, Nathan Hale High School Principal and Janice Bayouth, Director of Magnet Schools for Tulsa Public Schools meet at the Hale High School of Restaurant, Lodging and Health Management, which caters to all aspects of management and operations in the hospitality industry. It is one of four interest-based programs now offered by Tulsa Public Schools.


LESLIE GREGORY for GTR Newspapers


Tulsa Public Schools is offering innovation along with education in this age of specialization.

Students in the district and in other districts are being given choices.

And they are responding.

With the aid of $12 million in federal funding that arrived last year, TPS has been transforming four high schools, Central, Hale, McLain and Webster into enhanced learning environments.

“Enrollment is going very well,” Janice Bayouth, director of the four magnet schools, said during spring break.

The four-school alignment with the diverse training fields is the first in Oklahoma.

Magnet schools have been in place in Tulsa for several years.

Washington High School is an academics-based magnet school. Edison and Memorial high schools offer limited magnet programs.

The four schools in Bayouth’s charge are interest based.

“If you have the interest, you’re getting in,” she likes to say.

Applications are available throughout the school year for students with an interest in areas that range from fine arts to journalism to science and technology.

Construction of classrooms at each of the four high schools is continuing as students take advantage of the multiple “strands” of study, each similar to a college major.

Unused classroom space is being converted to accommodate the new learning centers.

At Webster, the vacated basketball field house has been transformed into a broadcast center.

Webster offers direction in all aspects of communication, from the digital television industry to print journalism.

At Central Academy of Fine Arts, students can specialize in visual art, arts production and management, theater and dance interpretation and vocal/instrumental music.

Hale High School of Restaurant, Lodging and Health Management caters to all aspects of management and operations in the hospitality industry.

A restaurant that is being stocked and finished at this time will be open to the public in the fall. Bayouth says students “are cooking away in a state-of-the-art kitchen” this semester, in preparation of the restaurant’s debut.

The curriculum at McLain High School for Science and Technology has been designed for students who excel in science and mathematics. Students can prepare for careers in aerospace, aviation maintenance, meteorology, among other areas.

These are “career-path” schools, Bayouth said. “If kids are more interested in what they want to do, then they’re going to show up.
“You still get the core subjects – math, science, history, English – but at the same time, we have changed the curriculum to integrate the theme of each school.”

Next school year, Bayouth said, juniors and seniors enrolled in the magnet fields will be eligible to take part in community internship programs.

The four magnet schools are open to students throughout the Tulsa Public Schools district and other districts. Transportation is provided by TPS.

Students at the magnet schools can begin gaining college credits in addition to the knowledge about their prospective careers while still in high school.

It’s innovation in education.

For more information, call (918) 746-6800.

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