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P17

December 2013

T

he Grand Canyon University Learning Lounge,

the crown jewel of an innovative private-public

partnership in education, provided an estimated

800 hours of instruction to dozens of high school

students during its first 10 weeks.

The Lounge, as it is known by the 30 GCU

student tutors working there and the Alhambra

High School students receiving free one-on-one

help in math, reading and writing, is part of the

University’s K-12 outreach program. Since the

Lounge opened on Sept. 16, more than 130

teenagers have come through the doors to study,

read, listen to music, and make friends in a safe

and welcoming environment.

“It’s a true ministry and wonderful opportunity

to help our neighbors,” said

Dr. Tacy Ashby

,

vice president of GCU’s strategic educational

alliances. “It was important to us, as we

aligned this project with the Phoenix Union High

School District’s mission of college and career

readiness, that this wasn’t a separate entity

planted on top of the district, but one that works

alongside the district.”

In November, the Lounge expanded to include

nearby Bourgade Catholic High School and

Faith Christian School in Mesa, participants in

GCU’s Canyon Christian Schools Consortium.

The Lounge is open afternoons to students of

the three schools, and tutors also visit the Faith

Christian campus weekly.

Ashby credited

Dr. Joe Veres

, director of K-12

outreach, and program manager

Arlin Guadian

with hiring GCU students who are natural

teachers and role models.

“The rallying behind this has been amazing,”

Veres said.

Other components of GCU’s K-12 outreach:

Concurrent enrollment

– Nearly 50 Alhambra

students take classes at GCU, the most popular

being Crime and Criminology, Philosophy and

Ethics, and a Saturday course in public speaking

for Alhambra’s Academic Decathlon team.

Professional development

Dr. Ted Coe

of

the College of Education meets quarterly with six

Alhambra master teachers on strategies to fulfill

new math standards. These teachers then train

the rest of the math faculty.

On-campus opportunities

– From summer

school and Health Sciences Day to the

Fall Festival and athletic events, Alhambra

students come to GCU to check out college life

and careers.

a “C” school. Coria praises the community for going all-in on

educating students, faculty, staff and parents.

“When I came here, I saw an enormous asset of tremendous

people,” he said. “What was needed was a level of

organization where we could harness one another’s talents

and passion and help shape the outcome for students.”

Education for all

Kaiser is among 160 Alhambra teachers who infuse

literacy, vocabulary and numeracy development into their

lessons. Even art and gym curricula have reading and math

components: Students in weight training calculate maximum

repetitions, and volleyball players determine their serving

accuracy. Art students read and create projects mirroring

the content and feeling in Edgar Allan Poe’s writings. They

learn about proportion and enlargement and build large

pieces related to Poe and his work.

Myriad learning opportunities for students exist outside class,

too. There’s tutoring before and after school, during lunch and

on Saturdays, and evening school on weeknights. In October,

more than 200 students spent part of fall break learning

English, boosting their grades or practicing for the AIMS.

GCU, less than a half-mile to the east, is one of Alhambra’s

primary educational partners. Last summer, 900 summer-

school students visited campus to see that college is for

them, too. And since September, when GCU opened

an after-school center called the Learning Lounge, 130

Alhambra students have received free tutoring in math and

English from GCU students.

“GCU students are inspiring Alhambra students with their own

stories and building a motivation within them to grow and

develop their own leadership capacity,” said Rice, who might

not have gone to college but for a basketball scholarship.

Kaiser said the best thing Coria has done is create learning

opportunities for Alhambra parents. They learn English,

attend programs on topics ranging from bullying and illegal

drugs to nutrition and social media, and learn to be involved

and to communicate with teachers.

Nuggets of success

Alhambra is on its way to “A” status, Coria and others say. It’s

a medical magnet school where students prepare for careers

in healing professions, a place where AIMS reading scores

rose 11 points, to 62 percent, in two years. Nine teachers

have gone the extra mile, completing a rigorous certification

and applying for advanced credentials from the National

Board for Professional Teaching Standards.

And in a paying-it-forward example that has Coria beaming,

nearly 30 juniors and seniors have begun tutoring nearby

middle-school students in the basics.

“We’ve got something going here, and we’re building on that

energy,” he said. “But we can’t be mediocre. We have to be

better than that.”

Arlin Guadian and Dr. Joe Veres are the GCU staffers who make the Learning Lounge

happen for Alhambra students. Photo by Darryl Webb

Learning Lounge

symbolizes K-12

outreach ef for t