“The first three years were definitely a challenge,” said Mary Cullinane, Microsoft's liaison to the school. “They're hitting they're groove now. I'm excited to see what's in store.”
From the beginning, everything about the $63 million School of the Future was designed to be different.
Built in the city's rough Parkside section with district money, the school partnered with Microsoft on new approaches to curriculum, instruction and hiring. It attracted reform-minded teachers and students bent on avoiding traditional high schools.
The vision was for a paperless, textbook-less school that embodied the motto “Continuous, Relevant, Adaptive.” Each student would get a take-home laptop on which to keep notes, do homework and take tests.
But learners are chosen by a lottery of public school students. Most are low-income and without home computers, yet they are expected to manage their high school careers on a laptop.