Interview with Elana Karopkin. Transcripts included.
LISTEN [2 minute, 57 seconds]
What do you think the partnerships at your school bring to your students?
LISTEN [2 minute, 48 seconds]
What are the challenges you face as a principal in
developing and sustaining partnerships?
LISTEN [54 seconds]
If another school were to start to look for partners, what would be the one thing you would tell them to do?
A partnership that includes a prestigious law firm, a law school, a community court complex, and a high school is creating a dynamic educational experience for students in Brooklyn.
Maria, a member of the first class
of students at the Urban Assembly School
for Law and Justice (SLJ), had gotten off
to a rocky start.1 Unlike most of her peers,
she did not attend Accepted Students'
Night in June or any of our orientation
meetings over the summer because her
mother did not intend to send her to the
school. Maria had had a difficult time in
middle school frequently cutting school,
getting into fights, and being, by her own
description, generally disrespectful and
disruptive. Her mother had reached her
wit's end and had made plans for Maria
to relocate to Puerto Rico, where she could
start fresh with her strict grandmother.
When we finally met Maria in early
September, she expressed a seemingly
authentic interest in coming to SLJ. Maria
felt that the school's structured atmosphere
and focus on law would help her be
more successful than she had been in her
previous school. Because she had accumulated
over thirty absences in eighth grade,
Maria was significantly behind, particularly
in math. Together, Maria, her mother, and
the school made a commitment to Maria's
success in high school. Six months into
the school year, Maria is on the honor
roll, has been in the school's productionof
Antigone, participates in several school
clubs, and has only been absent once.
She says she loves high school and looks
forward to being on the Mock Trial team
next year.
Jessica is another one of the founding
students at the SLJ. Before coming to
SLJ, Jessica had been in self-contained
special education schools with classes of
no more than nine students. When she
found out about a high school opening in
Brooklyn with a focus on law and justice,
Jessica was determined to attend. SLJ has
no self-contained classes; our school is
inclusive and all of our classes are completely
heterogeneous.
After extensive conversations with
Jessica and her family about the services
SLJ could and could not provide, we all
decided that we wanted to try it and give
Jessica this opportunity. Six months into
the school year, Jessica is achieving her
goals in completely mainstreamed classes
and has had perfect attendance this year.
Jessica was selected by her peers to be on
Student Council and was chosen by the
staff to be a representative of the school
when we were visited by Bill Gates, Sr.,
who came to New York to see small
schools that are succeeding. Even though
Jessica is entitled to an IEP diploma, she
is well on her way to earning a regular
New York State high school diploma.
Maria and Jessica are only 2 of the
108 students who entered the Urban
Assembly School for Law and Justice
in September, each with an individual
history and an individual story of
accomplishment since arriving at SLJ.
SLJ is a college preparatory public
high school with a focus on law.We
provide our graduates with the tools
essential to a legal professional strong
reading and writing skills and the ability
to think critically, question, and work
collaboratively. Graduates of SLJ must
be able not only to get into the competitive
college of their choice, but also
to succeed once they get there.
SLJ opened in Brooklyn, New York,
in September 2004, with a student
body as diverse as the city itself. Almost
70 percent of our students live in homes
that are at or below the poverty level,
and most of our students are below or
significantly below grade level in English
(60 percent) and in math (75 percent).
Already we have had impressive
levels of success. Though the student
populations are identical, SLJ claims
93 percent attendance rates, compared
to the citywide average of 83 percent,
and course pass rates at SLJ are at
92 percent, far higher than the 68 percent
across the rest of New York.
How has this happened? Certainly,
there is no substitute for exemplary
teaching, strong leadership, and systemic
support. But SLJ's incredible network
of partnerships is a major factor in the
school's success. This network is the
force that makes learning authentic and
meaningful, while bringing resources
and attention to a little school that is
making a big difference in the lives of
New York City's kids. We all know the
famous proverb "It takes a village to
raise a child." But there is an important
corollary: Entire cities must unite to
build a school.
Why Have Partners?
As Vito Perrone (1991) said in his book
A Letter to Teachers, and as we at SLJ
believe, school is not a rehearsal for
life it is life. Students need to understand
the relevance of what they are
learning either because they see its
value in their own lives, because they
understand its utility in the professional
world, or, most abstractly, because
they realize it is part of the process of
"becoming successful."
Through the partnerships our
school has developed, our students
interact with the professional world
around a topic of interest, and all of
those connections become clearer and
more attainable. For example, both
Maria and Jessica have mentors who
help them to unpack their own desires
and map out their own paths so that
they have an explicit understanding
from someone they have a relationship
with about what they need to do in
order to be successful. Simple conversations
about college options and SATs
raise expectations and consciousness.
People in the professional world
can give students access and opportunities
that simply would not be available to them at school. Our students,
for example, have dozens of summer
internship opportunities earmarked
for them because of the relationships
we have developed. These internships
imbue our students with confidence
and a sense of what is possible for
them if they work hard. When students
enter high school far below grade level,
these two messages are equally important.
Our partnerships allow us to say
to our students: "You can do it. See,
there are lots of important people who
care about you and believe in you."
Our partnerships allow us to say to
our students: "You can do it. See, there
are lots of important people who care
about you and believe in you."
Just walking into Cravath, Swaine
& Moore, the law firm that is our partner,
for example, is an experience. When the
staff of SLJ went for the first time, we
confessed to each other that we felt a
bit intimidated and out of place. In the
ninth grade, our students are learning
how to navigate these feelings and they
are finding their confidence and voice.
SLJ students won't have to wait until
a job interview to have a conversation
with a partner in a law firm. When
they go to Cravath or to Brooklyn Law
School, there is a palpable sense that
they can and will succeed.
Just as importantly, our partners
help us show our students why it's
worth it to work hard. Students sometimes
don't have a vision of what the
future can hold for them; they don't
always have an awareness of the options
available to them or the unawakened
passions or interests they have. Partnerships
can help give underserved students
the tools of access and exposure more
readily available to their middle and
upper-class peers.
Public schools need friends and
advocates in order to stay committed
to their mission. Partners can help
schools raise capital both financial
and political that can be a vital support
in troubled times when budgets are cut or
when schools are asked to
accept more students than they can
serve. Time after time, we have been
in need of assistance and someone
from our network of partners has come
through. We knew that we had a network
of friends who wouldn't let us
down when we received a donation of
eighty boxes of law books from a partner
but didn't have a way to get them
to the school. We broadcast an e-mail
request for assistance and, for the next
several days, responses poured in offering
to lend a hand or a car or a dolly.
This type of grassroots commitment
is just as essential as the institutional
support we have received.
Finding Our Partners
SLJ was founded by the Urban Assembly,
a small nonprofit organization in New
York City that starts and supports small,
theme-based schools. It was loosely
modeled after the Urban Assembly's
first school, the Bronx School for Law,
Government and Justice, founded in
1997. The Urban Assembly understood
the importance of connecting schools
with outside organizations that could
help infuse the theme into the daily
life of the school. They also understood
the importance of having someone at
the school who would be responsible
for developing and maintaining these
partnerships once they were identified.
Joseph Pinto, SLJ's partnership coordinator,
is the direct liaison between the
school and our partners.
Working closely with Richard
Kahan, the founder and president of
the Urban Assembly, and with Saskia
Levy, its executive director, we identified
SLJ's three main partners that would
represent diverse segments of the legal
professional world. Cravath, Swaine &
Moore, one of the world's most prestigious
law firms, introduces our students
to the world of corporate law. Brooklyn
Law School is a strong academic partner
whose leaders have articulated a
commitment to civic involvement. The
Red Hook Community Justice Center,
an innovative national court-complex
model, melds the nonprofit and governmental
sectors for the benefit of the
community it serves. These important
partners have come together to create a
rich and layered educational experience
for some of New York City's most historically
underserved students.
The partners join us for various
reasons. For some, it's about giving
back. For some, the work we do directly
coincides with their own articulated
mission; partnering with SLJ just helps
them to do it better. Red Hook's Youth
Court, for example, functions especially
well when many of their members are
SLJ students, because we can support
the work they're doing with our kids
and vice versa. The Boys and Girls Club
next door is another great example
of a mutually beneficial relationship
(though they're so good to us, we
benefit most!). They get our great kids
and we get their wonderful after-school
programs, use of their gym, use of their
camp in upstate New York for student
field trips and retreats, and a great
sum connection to the community. These
partnerships also allow for clear and
streamlined systems of communication
in case a problem arises.
A Look at Partnership at SLJ
A visitor spending a day at SLJ would
see dozens of examples of partnership
in action. But because these partnership
activities are so seamlessly woven into
our school life, visitors might not even
realize it. A visitor might see the
Leadership and Government Advisory
working with a member of the Red
Hook Community Justice Center on
the development of the school's Youth
Court or watch a Brooklyn Law School
professor mentor our students. Or, the
visitor might wander into Lunch with
Lawyers, where our students meet with
lawyers from all sectors of the profession
every two weeks for an informal
lunch and discussion.
A visitor spending a day at SLJ would
see dozens of examples of partnership
in action. But because these partnership
activities are so seamlessly woven
into our school life, visitors might not
even realize it.
Cravath, Swaine & Moore is one of
the school's most committed partners.
Their involvement shows how our partners
have dramatically contributed to
our students' success. From the school's
inception, two Cravath partners, Jeffrey
Smith and Katherine Forrest, have committed
themselves to involving the full
firm in all aspects of SLJ. I knew that
Cravath had incredible resources at its
disposal and that our students were
bound to benefit from a firm of
Cravath's stature. What I didn't know
was how quickly and completely the
entire firm would become invested in
SLJ. Our challenge then became making
sure that all of those who were willing
to give had ways to contribute.
Some of our needs and their talents
were an obvious match. Cravath
was able to help us, as a new school in
a new facility, to establish our school's
identity and professional culture. We
share a building with an elementary
school, for example, and Cravath's staff
helped us make our space distinct by
working with us to create a school
logo and branding our school with it.
Cravath's staff also worked to make
sure that the school was technologically
equipped by not only donating and
setting up dozens of computers and
printers, but also by bringing in electricians
at their own expense to make
sure the building had enough power to
support these gifts. On June 30,members
of the firm from every department
headed to Brooklyn with logo-decorated
balloons, welcome banners, and an
ice cream truck to help throw a literal
gala for incoming students. From the
beginning, Cravath gave SLJ's students
a sense of community, identity, excitement,
and hope for the future.
It became clear, however, that
there were others who wanted to get
involved with curriculum development
and with direct interactions with SLJ
students. This enthusiasm and dedication
were too good to pass up. But how
could we design programs and activities
that would meet the needs of the school
and use the talents of our partner?
This is a question that we continue
to return to as we seek new ways to
work together, but our first collaboration
helped set the tone. Over the summer,
SLJ's teachers and planning team
members worked closely with Cravath's
associates to create a fictitious trial,
affectionately known as "The Dog Bite
Trial," about a pit bull in Brooklyn.
During the first two days of school, our
first graduating class opened the school
and began working on the trial as part
of their acclimatization to their new
high school. Instead of attending regular
classes, students met in their advisory
groups of fifteen to eighteen students
each and, in addition to learning the
policies and procedures of the school,
students tackled the Dog Bite Trial. Our
six advisories took the side of either the
prosecution or defense. Their charge was
to prepare an opening statement that
they would present at the law offices of
Cravath, Swaine & Moore on the third
day of school.
For the first two days of school,
students worked vigorously and cooperatively
to study the genre of the
opening statement, deconstruct the
witness statements they were given,
analyze videos for qualities of strong
public speakers, and create their own
persuasive statements based on the
textual evidence they had been given
(witness testimony and stipulated facts).
On their third day of high school, every
SLJ student traveled to the forty-eighth
floor of Cravath, Swaine & Moore,
where they collaboratively presented
their opening statements to a panel of
professional lawyers.
The students were incredible.
Though most had barely met one
another, the students stood up in a
large wood paneled room packed with
their peers, teachers, parents, and
lawyers and presented statements that
were at once logical, clever, funny, bold,
and persuasive. When each group
finished, they received feedback from
the panel of lawyers specific comments
that helped them to understand
what they had done especially well. The
day ended with students observing a
professional lawyer deliver both opening
statements and being rewarded
when she incorporated some of the
students' concepts into her own arguments.
This experience set the tone for the
year. Students felt impressed by what
they had accomplished in such a short
period of time. Teachers experienced
the power of authentic, high-stakes
instruction and the planning needed to
produce high-quality outcomes. Teachers
and partners had worked together to
design the documents and lessons that
led to these incredible products and
students worked together to produce
and perfect their arguments. The power
of community and collaboration was
clear to all; we were ready for our inaugural
year.
Lesson Learned
SLJ is not even a year old, but we have
already learned a number of lessons
about partnerships that will help us
work more effectively in the future.
Less is more.
Developing and nurturing partnerships
takes time and energy the most valuable
commodities of any organization.
Looking for depth, rather than breadth,
in partners helps create long-term commitment
to the school and makes the
management of partnerships more feasible.
A challenge to schools is to find
partners that have significant capacity
and then to mine for the various levels
of connection and compatibility.
Capacity means that there are
both institutional, high-level support
for the partnership and many potential
layers of partnership and exchange.
In our work with the Red Hook Community
Justice Center, for example, the
partnership is endorsed and supported
by everyone from Adam Mansky, the
director of operations of their parent
organization, the Center for Court
Innovation, to their presiding judge,
Alex Calabrese, to their own project
director James Brodick.
This extensive commitment has
meant that the school can benefit
from all the services of the Red Hook
Community Justice Center, not only
the ones we originally articulated in our
partnership agreement. Not only have
students benefited from their involvement
in Red Hook's Youth Court
program, but they have also had Red
Hook's team of conflict resolution
specialists at the school, been able to
apply for special summer internships,
have full access to the resources at Red
Hook, and take advantage of other
opportunities that we discover every day.
Partnerships can't be add-ons;
they must be integrated into the existing structure of school.
If school partnerships are to be successful,
they must serve a necessary function
of the school and must be seamlessly
woven into the fabric of life at the
school. In addition to our three main
partners, for example, SLJ has six collaborating
partners.Working with an additional
six organizations would be a lot to
manage if it were not for the way they
are built into the structure of our school.
Each of these partners is linked
with one of our six themed advisories.
The partner and the advisor work
together to define and execute a Cornerstone
Project, which has the multiple
purposes of bringing the advisory
together around a theme of common
interest and exposing students to an area
of interest through their interactions
with an expert in this area.
Our Media Advisory, for example,
is working closely with DC-TV, an organization
that believes that expanding
public access to the electronic media
arts invigorates our nation's democracy.
Together, the advisor, the members of
the advisory, and DC-TV's professional
filmmakers have selected foster care as
a topic of interest and importance and
are working on the development of a
documentary that will eventually be
shared with the entire school community.
The expertise that DC-TV brings to
this endeavor is essential to its success.
In addition, working with public school
students is an articulated part of DCTV's
mission. The goals, therefore, of both
organizations are interdependent. As a
result, doing the things that make a partnership
work working collaboratively
and communicating frequently are in
the best interests of everyone involved.
Take it slow, define clear goals,
and build from year to year.
When passionate people who are
invested in improving the lives of New
York City's most underserved kids get
together, ideas can flow quickly and
idea after idea for projects can emerge.
Areas of intersection and opportunities
to collaborate can seem limitless, and
they probably are. But it is important
for the school leader to make sure that
the initial purposes of the partnership
are fulfilled before moving on to other
projects. Clearly and collaboratively
defining the parameters of the partnership
is a good way to start. Clear benchmarks
for success should also be developed to
help avoid misunderstandings and false
expectations on all sides.
When passionate people who are
invested in improving the lives of New
York City's most underserved kids get
together, ideas can flow quickly and
idea after idea for projects can emerge.
Once the school and the outside
organization have developed a strong
relationship based on a limited, but
successful, project or event, other
opportunities can be explored. As both
organizations have successful experiences
with one another, trust will be
built and people on both sides will be
willing to invest more time and energy
in the collaboration. People in outside
organizations who have had positive
experiences with school administrators
and students will become champions
for the partnership, pulling in the organization's
resources and doing much of
the legwork that might have otherwise
fallen, less effectively, to school personnel.
In addition, having a slew of small
but positive interactions means that
both sides can have a bit of a cushion
with the confidence they have developed
should there be a miscommunication
or slip-up.
Honest and frequent communication
is essential for continued partner
commitment and investment.
Though our partners are incredibly
committed to our school and to our
students, we must maintain their investment
and enthusiasm so that the work we've done bears fruit for years. One
of the most effective ways that we are
able to connect and expand our network
is by the newsletter that the
partnership coordinator puts out every
month or so. This newsletter highlights
the triumphs of our students and of
the school and reminds people how
important it is to get involved and how
simple it can be. The newsletter includes
updates and all kinds of ways that
interested people can get involved
from curriculum development teams
to ushering at the school play.
Another thing we did that was
extremely important was that we had
midyear conversations with each of our
main partners and, together, we took
stock of the partnership. These conversations
and our partnership surveys
have helped us to engage in a dialogue
with our partners. From the outset, the
school's planning team was clear that
we were not interested in having partners
for partnership's sake; these relationships
would have to directly benefit
our students and our school.
Making sure that the partnership
has concrete benefits to the school
requires everyone's vigilance and honesty.
Organizations need to develop
systems of communication so that the
administrators of the partnerships have
a great deal of information about how
the people in their organization feel
about the way the work is going. It can
be difficult for people on both sides to
bring concerns to the table. But unless
schools and partners are honest, problems
cannot be fixed and people will
opt out of participation in these programs
rather than address the issues at
hand. Once issues are identified, both
parties need to have enough information,
or must bring the right people
around the table (students, teachers,volunteers) so that solutions can be
developed collaboratively.
Our partnership at SLJ has worked
well because the goal is clear: the mission
of all of us is the success of our
students. For this reason, we do not see
the need to "manage" the partnership.
Our partners have never clashed, nor
do I expect they ever will. The three
partner organizations complement each
other rather than compete: one is
corporate, one is academic, and one is
nonprofit and governmental. They all
have their own clearly marked areas of
expertise within the school community,
so we are able to manage these varied
partnerships well. No one steps on anyone's
toes.
And, most of all, our partners
understand what the partnership is
really about. Each partner knows its
contributions are invaluable. But our
partners are prepared, in the event of a
disagreement, to defer to the school's
vision and mission. They know that,
ultimately, what unites us is the hard
and rewarding work we do together of
making a difference in the lives of our
city's young people.
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FOOTNOTE
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