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(Very interesting article on PASCHAL from the Saturday, June 7, 2003 Star
Telegram)
“FORT WORTH NEEDS MORE HIGH SCHOOLS LIKE PASCHAL”
by Bud Kennedy, Star Telegram Writer
PASCHAL High School, Fort Worth’s oldest, is now ranked in Newsweek
as one of America’s best. Great. So how long will Fort Worth put up with
having only one national-caliber high school?
Paschal's winning academic record is remarkable. This
year’s seniors on Forest Park Boulevard included 11 National Merit
Scholarship semifinalists. Based on advanced placement tests,
Newsweek ranked PASCHAL No. 3 regionally, No. 12 in Texas and
No. 200 nationally.
Among nearby schools,
only Colleyville, Heritage and Grapevine ranked higher. Carroll in
Southlake is the only other local school among 804 on the list. Isn’t it
time other cities and neighborhoods expected better schools?
Money is no excuse. On average, Arlington Heights, Southwest, Western
Hills and most suburban schools serve wealthier families than PASCHAL.
Their children have more resources. The nine other Fort Worth high
schools serve families with less money than PASCHAL. Yet those children
also need the most attention – because their education and training will
decide the future wealth or poverty of Fort Worth.
Almost 20 years after a PASCHAL math teacher set out to build the
district’s best Honors program, other schools are closer to competing.
Arlington Heights, on the West side, had the city’s second-best SAT scores
last year, although nearly 70 points behind PASCHAL. The PASCHAL
Honors students – almost half the senior class - average a 1310
score!!
Dunbar, in east Fort Worth, is second in Merit Scholar
semifinalists. Western Hills in Benbrook consistently ranks high.
Trimble Technical, near downtown, earned an “exemplary” state rating for a
high passing rate on the state achievement test. In a more comprehensive
rating last fall, Texas Monthly ranked Tech and Southwest as the
district’s most effective high schools for students at all achievement
levels. (PASCHAL fell to 10th of 13 and also trailed suburban
schools at the same income level, including Brewer, Springtown and
Haltom.)
Yet no other city school and almost no Texas public school can come close
to Paschal's success rate with the very smartest students. At the recent
“Radio Shack Scholars Dinner” rewarding Fort Worth’s best students
citywide, close to one third were students from PASCHAL. The
cheers of 389 Panthers overwhelmed any for the other 12 high schools
represented at the Amon G. Carter Jr. Exhibits Hall.
PASCHAL is not one of the district’s “special interest” schools
marketed to draw transfer students – formerly called “magnet” schools.
It is simply a school with an academic championship history that is
attractive to both transfer students and selective homebuyers. About a
third of Paschal's top honor students chose to transfer from their
neighborhood schools.
John Hamilton, the 40-year math teacher who launched Paschal’s
intensified program in 1984 to compete with magnet schools, is the
academic version of Dunbar’s Hall of Fame boys’ basketball coach, Robert
Hughes. He said Paschal’s success with high achievers is no secret. “It
takes continuity,” he said this week, preparing to teach another summer of
SAT preparation classes – sort of an academic summer camp for competitive
scholars. “Most of all, it takes a pro-academics attitude in the building
and in the entire community. What makes my day is the academic success of
PASCHAL students…..Some schools don’t have the same person pushing hard
year after year. You have to really value academic success. It’s the
reason we have school.”
Ultimately, that’s the reason we need to strengthen all our public
schools in Fort Worth and Texas -- to teach the next generation and to
build a more successful community, city, and state.
A sociology professor at Texas A&M University has the official title of
Texas’ “state demographer.” His is the loudest voice warning that Texans
must improve the academic performance of all public schools now –
particularly for the growing numbers of minority and low-income children.
“It’s a question of what we want for the future of Texas,” Steve Murdock
said by phone Friday from a conference in Austin. “It’s the difference
between having a state of well-educated, productive citizens – or of less
well-educated citizens. The difference statewide will be billions of
dollars in socioeconomic needs, billions of dollars in total income,
billions of dollars in tax revenue.”
The future of Fort Worth and Texas depends on how well we educate all our
children. This city needs more than one showcase high school.
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