Tag: Brevard Charter Schools

  • Educational Horizons Charter School to Celebrate National School Choice Week

    Educational Horizons Charter School to Celebrate National School Choice Week

    During the week of January 28-30, 2015, Educational Horizons will participate in National School Choice Week 2015 with an Open House each day.

    National School Choice Week Brevard

    The Open House, which will take place from 9:00-11:00 each day at the school. This is a great opportunity for interested parents to visit the school, meet our teachers, as well as observe students in the classroom working with Montessori materials. You will also have a chance to meet other interested parents, and complete the application form for the upcoming 2015-2016 school year. We hope you will join us!

    National School Choice Week is a non-partisan, non-political effort that raises awareness about the importance of effective education options for students. More than 9,000 events are being planned across the country to celebrate National School Choice Week.


  • 2013-14 ESEA School Public Accountability Report

    2013-14 ESEA School Public Accountability Report

    The 2013-14 Elementary and Secondary Education Act School Public Accountability Reports (ESEA SPARs) are now available. The SPARs meet the ESEA’s requirement for schools and districts to provide parents with an annual status report at the beginning of each year.

    Educational Horizons Charter School reports can be found here.


    Please contact us if you have any questions.

    ESEA SPAR Indicators

    The following list shows the indicators that are required for the annual public disclosure reports under ESEA provisions, as well as additional indicators providing data of interest on the status of Florida’s public schools.

    October Membership
    Kindergarten Readiness
    Federal Uniform Graduation Rate
    Five-year Graduation Rate
    High School Dropout Rate
    Student Test Results (FCAT 2.0, EOCs and FAA) Reading, Math and Science
    National Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP) scores at the state level
    New Teachers and Staff
    Teachers by Professional Degree Level
    Classes Taught by Teachers Teaching In-Field/Out-of-Field
    Classes Taught by Highly Qualified Teachers
    School Performance Grade
    Learning Gains for the Lowest 25% for Reading and Math
    Identified Schools for ESEA Flexibility
    Annual Measurable Objectives
  • 4th Grade Butterfly Garden

    4th Grade Butterfly Garden

    Recently our 4th grade students worked hard to build a butterfly garden in our front courtyard.

    The students chose specific native Florida plants based on factors such as: color, the type of butterflies it attracts, cost, and availability. Students called local nurseries and totaled the cost of their proposed order.

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    Watch the Students Prepare the Garden

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    Make sure to check it out the next time you’re at the school!

  • How and Why Charter Schools Do More With Less

    How and Why Charter Schools Do More With Less

    When most people think of funding for public education, chances are they don’t think about funding for charter schools. There is a widespread misconception in Florida that charter schools are not really public schools. The truth is public charter schools have been a vital part of Florida’s K-12 education system for almost two decades and they are, indeed, public schools.

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    Charter schools are accountable in ways that traditional district schools are not. For example, they are required by state statute to help students make academic gains and because their students are there by choice, not assignment, charter schools must meet the high expectations of the families they serve – providing high quality education, helping students achieve academically and, in many cases, preparing them for college — or risk losing those students to another school. And public charter schools must meet those requirements with significantly less funding than a district-run public school while being fiscally sound and maintaining financial integrity.

    According to a recent study by the University of Arkansas, Florida’s charter schools received 20.7 percent less funding than district schools; that’s $8,047 vs. $10,154 per pupil in 2011. Charter Funding: Inequity Expands reveals the disparity is greatest in major cities and that the funding gap has grown in recent years. If all Florida school districts received the same level of per pupil funding as charter schools, districts would have received over $5 billion less in total revenues.

    “These figures indicate inequity built into our current state education funding policies. However, there are a few who seek fairness for all students. Just this week, on April 29, 2014, the House of Representative took a brave step to protect charter school students and allocated $75 million to facilities funding,” explains Robert Haag, President of the Florida Consortium of Public Charter Schools.

    More than 239,000 families in Florida have chosen public charters as the school for their children, but they didn’t know this choice came with built-in inequity. School districts and charters both receive funding based on individual student needs. The formula also adjusts funding based on school district characteristics, such as size or location in a rural or urban area. Charters do not receive this adjustment, but are given a statewide average instead.

    The formulas may be complex, but the math is simple. Charter schools in Florida receive an estimated 80 cents for every dollar a district school receives. Is it because charter students are worth less than other public school students? No, it is because the state funding priorities have not kept up with parental demand.

    As demand for charter schools from parents around the state grows, and as charter schools continue to help Florida’s children achieve academically, funding and fairness for all children in public education should follow.

    Originally published on the Florida Consortium of Public Charter Schools website.

  • Making and Developing Meaningful Friendships: Ways Parents Can Help

    Making and Developing Meaningful Friendships: Ways Parents Can Help

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    1. Teach your child to be a friend.

      • Repeat these rules often:
      • Be Kind – (Smile. Use good manners with words like “please”, “thank you”, “you’re welcome” and “excuse me.” Listen to understand others.
      • Be respectful to others – Don’t use hurtful works or tease others. Don’t kick, bite or push others. Include others by not leaving them out when you play.
      • Be respectful to others things – Treat others personal belongings with respect by not touching them without asking permission or not throwing or breaking them.
    2. Be a positive role model, ask people that care for your child to reinforce the rules of “How to Be a Good Friend” and acknowledge your child for getting along peacefully with others.

      • Be a good example by being kind to your own friends.
      • Manage your own anger and peacefully work out conflicts.
      • Maintain a close relationship with anyone who cares for your child.
      • Reinforce positive behaviors whenever you observe your child being kind and respectful to others. (Example: “I noticed that you were very cooperative today.”)
    3. Teach your child to share – Know what to expect:

      • Most 2 year olds don’t share well.
      • At age 3, children can begin to learn how to share and work out conflicts.
      • Most children are not able to share well or work out conflicts until they are at least 4 or 5 years old.
      • When observing your child at play with others, suggest that they take turns playing a game or toy.
      • Talk about how to ask for a toy.
      • Provide extra toys to share.
      • Tell your child it’s not OK to grab or hit.
    4. Teach your child to work things out

      • Let children first try to work out their own conflicts without adult help.
      • Ask questions and suggest what to do when you see that they may need assistance.
      • Step in if children start to hit or say hurtful words.
      • Tell your child what’s not OK and why: “Don’t hit. Hitting hurts.”
    5. Help your child to make friends. Some children make friends easily. Others find it harder. Your child may need additional help. Tell your child:

      • It’s easier to play with one other child than with a group.
      • Look for a child playing alone and ask to join in.
    6. Support your child’s friendships.

      • Stay involved. Know who your child’s friends are.
      • Make time for your child to be with friends.
      • Invite your child’s friend to your home. Invite children who are your child’s age or older. Limit the play to no more than 2 hours. Be sure your child is rested and fed. (A child who is tired or hungry may find it hard to play cooperatively). Be close by while the children play and make sure there are appropriate choices of things for them to do.
  • Importance and Nature of the Silent Game

    Importance and Nature of the Silent Game

    Written by Maria Montessori

    Our world today is full of noises. Even music seems to spurn harmony and tend to ‘noisomeness’. Indeed it increases its volume in decibels to the extent of endangering hearing. This was not always so. Until recently the opposite was true. Silence was essential to the human soul; children instinctively sought it, because they loved it. It is interesting to read what Dr. Montessori said about it in one of her courses, in 1930.

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    To eliminate sounds or noise – that is to have silence – only one thing is necessary: that there be no movement. This is a condition. But certainly silence is a very difficult thing, indeed impossible, because to obtain it there must be an absolute lack of movement. There can be grades of it, however, just as there are grades of sounds and noises.

    By silence, the finality at which we can aim as an immediate interest of research, is generally meant the maximum silence which can be obtained; for example in a class or at a gathering (such as ours) where there are many people, they, by being still, little by little provoke a silence which becomes more deep the more the people persuade themselves that they must not move and control all their movements. In other words they repress them, a thing that generally many people, children for instance, supposedly cannot do. But we know that small children are able to inhibit all their movements if they themselves have already had an education of the movements such as ours in which they have received indications in controlling movements, a process which prepares them for this last step: complete inhibition.

    As teachers know, the most difficult thing is not to move. It is more difficult not to move than to move well. For this reason the children must have done long exercises in moving well and in controlling their motions before being able to succeed in this sort of triumph of the will which inhibits every voluntary movement. Then all the noises of children or of people gathered together exist no longer; this accomplished, at the first moment there seems to be silence. But, little by little, we begin to realize that there is not, because – once the loud noises are hushed – the soft noises are revealed and if we abolished these, there would be others finer. So there is a sort of acuteness which follows the finer grades of silence. For there are distant noises and near ones; we can abolish those near but not those far away. Prevalent in cities above all are loud noises but in the country there are soft and far away ones, a bird flying, etc… Among us, for instance, the ticking of a clock, which we do not usually perceive, would become perceptible little by little if we were silent. Flying insects which we do not hear generally, might be heard if we were silent.

    So then there is an interest to discover those things which generally we do not perceive in ordinary life and it would almost seem as if we put the equivalent of a microscope to our ears because the microscope makes the eye see things imperceptible to the naked eye, and it is as if we put on the ear a sort of “lense of silence” which makes it easy to discover things to which otherwise we might not pay any attention. Children are so sensitive to this that many times I have found children of two years trying to find more occult noises by being silent.

    Today silence has become a public rite, a manifestation of remembrance or a salute to those gone by. This experience can be done well or badly. For us it is possible to have it done well, because we were able to place this fact of inhibition in the will of small children before it became used in public demonstration.

    The child loves silence in itself; however, there is something to add: that silence disposes the soul of the immobile being to something special, in other words silence does not leave us as we were before. This something special is certainly not an acquisition of culture because complete inhibition is an external state, but it acts upon an internal state. All thinkers and mystics are said to have sought silence because it predisposes to the interior attitude of meditation. As a beautiful environment with light, color, perfume can have an influence on poetical inspiration, so silence gives us above all the surprise of possessing within us something which we did not know we had, spirituality, and the little child tends to feel this interior life, because he is by excellence the interior being. No doubt the child who has experienced it is no longer the same child, but a soul expecting something.

    The satisfaction we give to this state of the soul is to call by name the child who is waiting and he comes to us; we call them all and they all come to us one by one; they move, they get up and come, seeking to make the least possible noise. The child who waits and hears himself called has accomplished a kind of cycle of satisfaction; he comes walking quietly on tip-toe so as not to make a noise. So the teacher must call by name all the children who are in silence, one after the other without forgetting anyone, because we cannot make a soul remain anxious to be called and then not call it. The one who is last and has waited the longest must be truly satisfied. Those teachers are cruel who do this exercise as a sort of luxury for they lead all the children to put all their efforts and energies to this exercise and then leave them disappointed; as if the teacher did not believe that in that soul there is a need to which it is our duty to correspond. Therefore we must call all the children who are waiting.

    The voice of the teacher must not disturb, it must be a voice without sound, a voice which is difficult to hear and one must be in silence to hear it. The teacher must do exercises to pronounce the names of the children with a soft voice, pitching it in the most indistinct manner possible. Often people visit one of our schools and see this silence exercise, they believe that the teacher is silent and ask themselves for what reason certain children all of a sudden get up and go to the teacher and why only those children and not others. This is because the visitors hear nothing but the child who is in suspense hears the voice which calls his name, even from afar, thus for instance stretching out the syllables the children hear as if it were a voice from far away which calls them.

    It is not the movement of the lips which reveals to the child his name pronounced without sound; indeed the teacher should place herself behind the children or outside the room, in such a way as not to be seen, because it is the voice that calls that must be heard by the child; the name must not be read upon the lips. With the exercise we must put in evidence, emphasize this characteristic and we must not come to falsify it. For this, I say, the teacher must put herself behind, far away.

    Often the children, to abandon themselves to this delight, close their eyes, because they are accustomed to blindfold their eyes in order to perceive better the sensations: this closing of the eyes sharpens the hearing and we see children closing the eyes to hear purely the voice.

    Thus, this exercise and others bring little by little a discipline composed of calmness and interior beatitude.