International School (Bellevue, Washington)

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International School
Location
445 128th Ave. SE Bellevue
Flag of Washington Washington
Flag of the United States USA

Information
School district Bellevue School District
Principal Peter Bang-Knudsen
Enrollment

501 in 2006-07[1]

Faculty 23
Type Public Middle School and High School
Grades 6-12
Campus Suburban
Mascot Titans
Color(s) green & silver         
Established 1991
Information (425)456-6500
Homepage

International School (IS) is a 6-12th grade school in the Bellevue School District. The mascot for Bellevue International School is the Titan, and the logo is a Greek tripod with an ascending flame. International school is not a "true" international school with students from across the globe, but rather challenges students to think globally. Admission is based on a lottery of all incoming 6th graders who apply. International School is not affiliated with the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association (WIAA), and students participate in sports at their home school within the district.

Contents

[edit] History

International School was founded in 1991 by Bellevue teachers Rick Hart, Patricia McLean, Rita Lowy, Bruce Saari, Terry LaRussa Banton and Karen Kurle[2]. Founded with a competitive $300,000 grant from the "Schools for the 21st Century" Commission, the six were granted a half year of release time to develop and recruit for the program. International School opened with 150 sixth and seventh graders in the fall of 1991, housed in an old elementary school. Later the school was moved to its current location in an unused junior high[3].

[edit] Academics

Bellevue International offers a seven year, seven subject curriculum, in which students take seven years of humanities (language arts), international studies, math, science, PE/health and fine arts. Additionally, students study a foreign language, French or German, for seven years, with the intention of achieving fluency, and ultimately studying subjects such as literature, history and social studies in that language .

As seniors, students are required to complete a "Senior Project", which according to the school website, they must complete through "integrating, demonstrating real-world application"[4]. One class is dedicated to this project senior year.

Students of the International School, none of whom are enrolled in occupational education classes, also participate in a "Week of focused study outside formal classroom structure"[5]. This Focus Week was designed as a way for students to earn their Occupational Credits or elective credits required to graduate high school. Many of the Focus Weeks involve going on overnight trips to other parts of the state such as Washington Pacific Ocean beaches, to other states, and sometimes outside of the country, including a three-week long exchange program to either France or Germany. Although Focus Week is required, students must pay a fee that varies based on the specific activity chosen.

As of the 2006-2007 school year, IS had an enrollment of 501 students[6]. Because of the limited enrollment, students are chosen from applicants from Bellevue School District's 6th grade class by lottery.

[edit] Achievements

The International School ranked 12th in the nation on Newsweek Magazine's list of the best high schools for 2007[7] in which rankings are determined by the number of AP tests taken by all students at a school divided by the number of graduating seniors. International School was also selected as a Blue Ribbon National School of Excellence in 2004 by the U.S. Department of Education[8].

Bellevue's International School has received a top grade in U.S. News & World Report Gold Medal Schools list. The weekly American newsmagazine ranked high schools nationwide based on college readiness and quality-adjusted exams per test taker. The International School ranked fifth best high school in the country. [9]

The School is also well known for its FIRST Robotics team, the Titan Robotics Club.

[edit] Curriculum

The school has had two new principals in the last four years[citation needed]. In addition, International School offers a wide range of only Advanced Placement courses that are available to all students.

A few of the changes that have been made in recent years by the new principals include, but are not limited to: The implementation of a tardy policy, the implementation of warning bells before certain classes, forced AP classes[citation needed]. The original "Student as Worker" phrase supported the idea that it was the students responsibility to learn, to write down their homework, and to be to class on time, which means no necessity for bells reminding students to be to class on time. This concept has been discontinued and removed form the school mission, and is now replaced with focusing on creating "global citizens", and partially due to this, warning bells are now used in the school to go off 3 minutes before a class starts[citation needed]. As of 6/4/08 several key staff members have left or have been transferred. Very few staff meetings have been held and, when held, little input from teaching staff was requested. IS started on the European model as a school that ran itself with no administrator. It has now evolved to the same teaching methods as other schools in the District, top-down administration thus, the constant change of principles. Teachers used to collaborate regularly about the needs of individual students, now the teachers are no longer doing so. The premise under which IS was founded on which has brought IS to be one of the Top 10 schools in the Country is no longer in play. the Bellevue School District has begun deployed Standardization at IS. The premise that every student should be challenged as much as possible every day and that every student receive the appropriate instruction that s/he needed every day has been ignored. Now, every instructor is [forced]to teach the daily scripted lesson regardless of the needs of the students in the classroom.[citation needed]

[edit] References

[edit] External links