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'Renaissance Beach': A KNKX News Special On One Southeast Seattle School's Turnaround

Kyle Stokes
/
KPLU
Rainier Beach High School seniors wave to the crowd watching their graduation ceremony in the stands of Memorial Stadium at Seattle Center in June 10, 2015. The district reports more than 84 percent of the Class of 2015 graduated on time.

Jocelyn Alexander Shaw wants her students to stop settling for less than their best work.

 

 

Credit Kyle Stokes / KPLU
/
KPLU
Rainier Beach language arts teacher Jocelyn Alexander Shaw reads a student's name at the high school's graduation ceremony on June 10, 2015.

 

Sometimes that means prodding her students to re-do an assignment. Sometimes that means holding firm when parents ask her to change a grade. Sometimes that means shutting down her English class at Seattle’s Rainier Beach High School with a bracing, come-to-Jesus style rant.

 

A few former students even called her “Shawshank,” she recalls with a chuckle. It’s a moniker Shaw may deserve only in jest — she’s not playing prison warden in her classroom; Shaw’s quick to laughter and easygoing with her students.

But the stakes are high. Nearly all of Shaw’s students at “Beach” are racial minorities. Three out of four students are poor. For a significant number, English is not their first language. If Shaw’s “fussing” and nitpicking rubs students the wrong way, she hopes they’ll thank her later.

 

Credit Kyle Stokes / KPLU
/
KPLU
Rainier Beach High School teacher Jocelyn Alexander Shaw interjects during a book discussion in her IB Language & Literature class for seniors. 'I'm able to look at the rosy side of it here at Beach. I'm also able to see where we need work,' Shaw says.

  “I know what they’re going to be faced up against,” Shaw says. “They’ve got to be better than mediocre.”

Shaw has brought this tough love mindset to a school-wide effort to reverse historic trends that crippled Rainier Beach as recently as 2011, when state figures showed barely 53 percent of the senior class graduated on-time.

The turnaround effort — fueled by a $4.3 million federal grant; and centered around a rigorous college-prep curriculum, the International Baccalaureate or “IB” — is still a work in progress.

But the numbers suggest it is paying off. District officials reported an 84 percent graduation rate to the state for Rainier Beach last year, KPLU has learned. If the state officially confirms those numbers next spring, that would mean the school’s graduation rate will have rebounded more than 30 points in just four years.

 

 

I visited Rainier Beach more than 40 times during the 2014-15 school year, and I can attest the work is not over. Getting students to show up regularly and on-time, especially during first period, has been a challenge. Students who have embraced the more rigorous curriculum have found it difficult to keep up with the added workload. Some teachers have admitted to being soft on deadlines for even important assignments.

 

Credit Kyle Stokes / KPLU
/
KPLU
Rainier Beach High School earned the certification as an International Baccalaureate school before the 2013-14 school year. Often referred to by its initials, "IB" is a rigorous, writing-intensive college prep curriculum. By the 2014-15 school year, Rainier Beach staff required almost all juniors and seniors at the school to take at least one IB course.

Rainier Beach teacher Jocelyn Alexander Shaw is just as unsparing in her assessment of her own efforts as she is on her students.

“I’m able to look at the rosy side of it here at Beach,” says Shaw. “I’m also able to see where we need work, where we need to push our kids more and how much more we have to do.

“We’re only in our first couple of years. We’re only going to get better.”

 

 

Credit Kyle Stokes / KPLU
/
KPLU
Desks are set up in the Rainier Beach High School gym on May 4, 2015, the first day of IB Language & Literature testing.

 

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EDITOR’S NOTE: KPLU will broadcast an hour-long documentary about Rainier Beach’s turnaround effort at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Dec. 12. At that time, check back on this post to find audio.

Kyle Stokes covers the issues facing kids and the policies impacting Washington's schools for KPLU.