Linden School

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Linden School is a public school in Malden, Massachusetts with over 750 students. The school has both elementary and middle schools. The principal of the elementary school is Diane D. Buttimer and the principal of the middle school is Camille M. Colantuoni.

Linden School
Location
Malden, Massachusetts, USA
Coordinates 42°26′2″N 71°2′3″W / 42.43389, -71.03417Coordinates: 42°26′2″N 71°2′3″W / 42.43389, -71.03417
Information
School board Malden Public Schools
Superintendent Sidney Smith
Principal (K-4) Diane Buttimer
(5-8) Camille Colantouni
Staff 51
Enrollment

786

Student:teacher ratio 15.4 : 1
Grades K-4, 5-8
Homepage

In 2001, the school used a $250,000 Small Schools Grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to divide Linden School into two autonomous schools. Half of the school now houses kindergarten through Grade 4 and the other, grades 5 to 8. Malden Schools Superintendent Joan Connolly told The Boston Globe that "there's good research to support the theory that kids learn better in smaller school settings," [1]

Linden is a magnet school for Gifted Education and for Communications, Humanities, and Multi-Media. Admittance to the Gifted Education Program is governed by Malden Public Schools criteria, which include rubrics developed by teachers of the gifted program. Once accepted into the program, eligibility is reviewed annually. Programming and curricula are developed according to the students' academic talents.[2]

The Communications and Humanities Multi-Media program concentrates on oral and written communications. Study of the humanities is used as a focus for teaching and learning in language arts, social sciences, geography, art and music. The mathematics and science curricula are enhanced by integration of technology into all areas of teaching and learning.[2]

The teaching of self-esteem at Linden was debated in a 2002 Boston Herald article.[3] The school's 2001 participation in a research and clean-up effort of the local Town Line Brook watershed through the Saugus River Watershed Council was also profiled in The Boston Globe[4]

[edit] References

  1. ^ McCabe, Kathy. "Gates foundation aids local school", The Boston Globe Business Notebook Column, The Boston Globe, 2001-09-17. Retrieved on 2007-12-06. 
  2. ^ a b 2006-2007 Report Card: Linden Middle School. Retrieved on 2007-12-06.
  3. ^ Nissman, Cara. "Self-esteem overload; Critics say teaching worth can be taken too far." The Boston Herald (June 10, 2002): 029. Student Edition. Gale. Document Number:CJ87074949
  4. ^ Capone, Lisa. "Hidden stream reemerges", The Boston Globe, 2001-12-02. 

[edit] External links