Published
7 years agoon
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Myles BarkerFresno Unified is widely known as the fourth-largest school district in the state, but many may not know that its students come from the poorest families in California.
In fact, Fresno Unified is not only the most impoverished, large, urban school district in California, it is second overall in the United States in terms of concentrated poverty in an urban area, Fresno Unified Superintendent Bob Nelson said Monday.
Nelson spokes about the district’s challenges and successes at the annual State of Education Luncheon at the DoubleTree Hotel in downtown Fresno.
Nevertheless, Nelson said he is “militantly positive” about the future of Fresno Unified and its students.
“In our most recent assessment, students scored proficient in nearly every subgroup as well as students in nearly every grade made progress,” Nelson said. “This is an incredibly healthy growth trend for the system, particularly over a three-year span.”
The district’s Design Science Middle College High School is a shining star of what’s possible. Last year, the specialty school had a 100 percent graduation rate, and 100 percent of its graduating students were accepted into four-year institutions.
Also, the district’s Tenaya and Yosemite middle schools saw double-digit growth in English Language Arts last year.
In addition to completing a shop at Duncan Poly to train students to be certified as diesel mechanics, Nelson said the district wants to convert the old juvenile hall on Ventura and 10th Street into a state-of-the-art education center.
The Fresno Unified School Board will vote at its next meeting on a purchase agreement for the building.
“The vision for this new location is to bring our students together in a space that will allow them the freedom to explore educational opportunities that may not have been considered traditional,” Nelson said.
Overall, Nelson said he is happy with the direction the district is moving and excited about its future.
“Is everything perfect with our academic standards? Heavens no. But are things moving in the direction that we want to see? Absolutely,” Nelson said.
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