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V

irginia

C

apitol

C

onnections

, F

all

2016

13

B

ERNIE

H

ENDERSON

President

Funeral Celebrant

Bernard.Henderson@dignitymemorial.com

Associate Since 2010

PARHAM CHAPEL

1771 N. Parham Road

Richmond, VA 23229

(804) 288-3013

HUGUENOT CHAPEL

1020 Huguenot Road

Midlothian, VA 23113

(804) 794-1000

ATLEE CHAPEL

9271 Shady Grove Road

Mechanicsville, VA 23116

(804) 730-0035

Kristen Bailey-Hardy

Kristen@CapitolSquare.com

804.643.5554

D

AVID

B

AILEY

A

SSOCIATES

Capitol Square Group

WWW

.D

AVID

B

AILEY

A

SSOCIATES

.

COM

1001

E

AST

B

ROAD

S

TREET

S

UITE

215

R

ICHMOND,

V

IRGINIA

23219

804.643.5554

I

NTEGRITY

…E

XPERIENCE

R

ELATIONSHIPS

I have had the honor of serving

as Virginia’s Secretary of Education

since late July. In that short time, I have

met hardworking students, committed

educators, and I have become even more

convinced that the lessons I learned as a

child in Southside Virginia are now more

relevant than ever.

I grew up in Halifax, Virginia,

surrounded by a family full of educators

and academics. In fact, Mrs. Faustina Mae

Trent was both my grandmother and my

first-grade teacher.

She taught for over forty years in Halifax County Public

Schools, impacting the lives of thousands by providing students

from impoverished backgrounds with a sound education, a positive

influence and a helping hand.

Even when things got tough, when the students struggled,

when she saw the impacts of entrenched, intergenerational poverty,

she kept the faith in the transformational power of education.

This lesson has stayed with me throughout my career, first as

Deputy Secretary of Education under then-Governor Tim Kaine,

and later as Deputy Secretary of Education under Governor

McAuliffe.

And today, my grandmother’s life-long belief that every

student deserves a world-class education continues to inform my

work as Virginia’s Secretary of Education.

Over the past month, I have had the opportunity to gain a deeper

understanding of all the amazing work taking place on behalf of

the students of the Commonwealth. There are a lot of exciting

initiatives underway from pre-K through higher education, but the

one I am most excited about is our effort to redesign high school

and prepare students to succeed in the new Virginia economy.

As Governor McAuliffe is often fond of saying, our high schools

have not changed a great deal since the 19th century. Indeed, the

underlying structure is still based on goals and expectations rooted

in the Industrial Revolution. We are all convinced that students

deserve better.

That is why policy makers and educators across the state

are working together to fundamentally change the high school

experience, providing a variety of rigorous pathways for students

to earn their diplomas and bridge the gap between the classroom

and the workforce.

The SOL Innovation Committee, a bipartisan a group made up

of educators, advocates and lawmakers, recognized the need for

this sort of reform and made a recommendation in November of

2015 to redesign high school for the 21st century.

Governor McAuliffe heard the same thing during his statewide

education roundtable tour last year. Our students want more hands-

on experience, our teachers want more creativity in the classroom,

and our parents want more emphasis on practical skills.

That is why the Governor and the General Assembly worked

together in a bipartisan manner in the 2016 session to pass

innovative legislation to address these concerns.

Based on this legislation, the Virginia Board of Education is

working to establish a “Profile of a Virginia Graduate,” articulating

the skills every student should have upon graduation.

The Board is also developing new graduation requirements to

align our education system with these skills; remove the pressure

of high-stakes testing; and ensure that students gain exposure to

21st century careers. Additionally, the board recently hosted four

public hearings in different parts of the Commonwealth to hear

from citizens regarding this proposal.

Under the new model, the first two years of high school will

focus more on core classes while the next two years, will allow for

experiential learning, internships, externships, on-the-job training,

and other opportunities that will help students adapt to the demands

of the 21st century.

According to the annual education poll from the Commonwealth

Educational Policy Institute at Virginia Commonwealth University,

72 percent of those surveyed supported the idea of using 9th and

10th grades to develop basic skills and reserving 11th and 12th

grades for career preparation.

If we aren’t looking at these results seriously, then we aren’t

fulfilling our responsibility to prepare our students to be productive

citizens for decades to come. Our current system has been slow to

embrace the importance of hands-on skills. We can do better.

By adding experiential learning opportunities, expanding how

credits can be earned and developing a variety of rigorous new

pathways to graduation, high school redesign will finally unleash

the full potential of our teachers, our students and our schools.

High schools should be places where students can earn hands-

on experience in emerging fields like cybersecurity and bioscience.

They should be incubators of innovation where students have the

flexibility to learn how academic knowledge translates into real-

world experience. They should be providing our young people with

the resources they deserve and the rigorous pathways they need to

become successful, thriving citizens.

Years ago, my grandmother Faustina Mae Trent instilled in me

the importance of giving every student a chance to succeed. By

implementing this bold new redesign, we are well on our way to

achieving that lofty goal.

Dietra Trent is the Secretary of Education for the Commonwealth

of Virginia.

High School Redesign

By Dietra Trent

V