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Part 1: Welcome to Western Guilford

Series: Daily Lessons: Inside Western Guilford High School
From: WUNC
Length: 00:08:13

We begin a series to better understand the challenges facing all high schools by looking closely at one school. Western Guilford High School in Greensboro, North Carolina is a "typical" public high school, and it's dealing with the pressures of growth, economic and demographic change, and high stakes testing. In this piece, Deborah George has an introduction to the people and the sounds of the school, and the challenges the school is facing. Read the full description.

Default-piece-image-2 "Daily Lessons: Inside Western Guilford High School" is a ten part documentary series about a public high school in Greensboro, North Carolina. A team of reporters spent six months at the school to document how a ?typical? high school is dealing with some daunting new realities. Schools across the country are facing similar challenges: ? Expanded testing requirements: Complying with the federal ?No Child Left Behind Act? and the North Carolina ?ABCs of Public Education? means tests, tests, and more tests. The result is a radical shift in the traditional rhythms of high school and big changes in what students are learning and how teachers are teaching. ? A worsening teacher shortage: North Carolina needs 10,000 new teachers annually to fill classroom vacancies, yet the state?s teaching colleges are only turning out 3,000 a year. At the same time, many new teachers burn out quickly, and veteran teachers are increasingly frustrated with the direction of public education, and wondering whether they?ll stay. ? Demographic change: NC has one of the fastest growing immigrant populations in the nation, meaning schools have to figure out ways to teach thousands of students whose first languages can be Spanish, Tagolog, Urdu or Arabic. Supporting those students, helping them learnEnglish, and making sure they pass standardized tests, is a challenge for high schools. ? A radically changed economy: The manufacturing and agriculture jobs that once fueled the North Carolina economy are fast disappearing, replaced by jobs that require more skills and higher education. Some educators say high schools must prepare all students for college. Others say high schools can?t forget students who might not be headed for higher education. ?Daily Lessons: Inside Western Guilford High School? was produced for the series ?North Carolina Voices: Studying High School? on North Carolina Public Radio ? WUNC. The series originally aired in May 2006. For more about the series, please visit http://wunc.org/voices A script for each radio piece, including a suggested host introduction, is attached here. Please feel free to edit intros.

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Also in the Daily Lessons: Inside Western Guilford High School series

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Five Promos for "Daily Lessons: Inside Western Guilford High School" (00:02:31)
From: WUNC

Five 30 Sec promos for high school series
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Part 2: Freshman Academy (00:08:16)
From: WUNC

More students drop out in the 9th grade than any other year of school. At Western Guilford High School in Greensboro, North Carolina, school leaders took a hard look at the ...
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Part 3: The Home Team (00:07:59)
From: WUNC

A ball game at Western Guilford High School was once the "only" place to be on a Friday night. Western was the heart of a tight-knit community that turned out in force for ...
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Part 4: What Are Kids Learning? (00:08:07)
From: WUNC

Do you remember what you learned in high school? Much of what is taught stays the same, year after year, from generation to generation. Homer's Odyssey for example, or ...
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Part 5: What Are You Going to Be When You Grow Up? (00:08:02)
From: WUNC

In Greensboro, North Carolina the textile and manufacturing industries once provided good jobs to generations of people with little or no education. But those jobs are fast ...
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Part 6: Tests, Tests and More Tests (00:07:54)
From: WUNC

There has been a dramatic change in education and it?s all about numbers. State and federal laws now require schools to measure just about everything that can be measured ...
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Part 7: AP or Not AP? (00:07:35)
From: WUNC

In the past five years, at Western and high schools around the country, there's been a big push to increase the number of students taking higher level courses. To its ...
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Part 8: The Future of Teachers (00:08:03)
From: WUNC

Schools across the country are scrambling to fill a teacher shortage. In Greensboro, North Carolina, the school system is offering new teachers free rent for a month, ...
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Part 10: The Meaning of High School (00:07:54)
From: WUNC

We conclude our series from Western Guilford High School in Greensboro. A team of reporters visited Western over the course of six months?. getting to know students, ...
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Part 9: Card #10 (Sue) (00:08:09)
From: WUNC

Every year, hundreds of thousands of teenagers in the United States drop out of school. The reasons are many and each story is unique. Today, as we conclude our series from ...

Piece Description

"Daily Lessons: Inside Western Guilford High School" is a ten part documentary series about a public high school in Greensboro, North Carolina. A team of reporters spent six months at the school to document how a ?typical? high school is dealing with some daunting new realities. Schools across the country are facing similar challenges: ? Expanded testing requirements: Complying with the federal ?No Child Left Behind Act? and the North Carolina ?ABCs of Public Education? means tests, tests, and more tests. The result is a radical shift in the traditional rhythms of high school and big changes in what students are learning and how teachers are teaching. ? A worsening teacher shortage: North Carolina needs 10,000 new teachers annually to fill classroom vacancies, yet the state?s teaching colleges are only turning out 3,000 a year. At the same time, many new teachers burn out quickly, and veteran teachers are increasingly frustrated with the direction of public education, and wondering whether they?ll stay. ? Demographic change: NC has one of the fastest growing immigrant populations in the nation, meaning schools have to figure out ways to teach thousands of students whose first languages can be Spanish, Tagolog, Urdu or Arabic. Supporting those students, helping them learnEnglish, and making sure they pass standardized tests, is a challenge for high schools. ? A radically changed economy: The manufacturing and agriculture jobs that once fueled the North Carolina economy are fast disappearing, replaced by jobs that require more skills and higher education. Some educators say high schools must prepare all students for college. Others say high schools can?t forget students who might not be headed for higher education. ?Daily Lessons: Inside Western Guilford High School? was produced for the series ?North Carolina Voices: Studying High School? on North Carolina Public Radio ? WUNC. The series originally aired in May 2006. For more about the series, please visit http://wunc.org/voices A script for each radio piece, including a suggested host introduction, is attached here. Please feel free to edit intros.

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Review of Part 1: Welcome to Western Guilford

"Welcome to Western Guilford" serves up a day in the life of a changing North Carolina High School, buffeted by the waves of immigrants and a shifting economic reality. The locally addressed issues are common across the country many urban centers, so this segment might make a good kick off for panel discussions on social upheaval and schools.

But the scenes portrayed are a bit at a frentic pace, barely giving the listener time to take in a scene before they are whisked away by another scene setting sound.

I hope the rest of the pieces in this series allow a bit of breath in between its parts, other wise the audience may find themselves tunnig away to give their ears a break

Broadcast History

This series was designed to fit into the local broadcast of Morning Edition (D segment). It could work in ATC as well.

Additional Files

Related Website

http://wunc.org/voices/highschool/studying-high-school