BUSINESS COUNCIL TO HONOR BRONX SCHOOL WITH 'PATHFINDER AWARD' RECOGNIZING MOST IMPROVEMENT IN A YEAR

STAFF CONTACT :

Director of Communications
518.465.7511
05
Apr
2001

ALBANY-The Business Council of New York State will present a "Pathfinder Award" to Public School # 19 of the Bronx Friday, April 6, at the school.

The Business Council created the Pathfinder Awards in 2001 to recognize schools that show the most improvement from one year to the next as measured by the state's new academic standards. The Council began presenting the awards early in November 2000; all told, 27 schools around the state, including P.S. 19, are Pathfinder Award recipients in the first year.

How schools become eligible for Pathfinder Awards: To be chosen for the award, a school must meet two criteria. First, at least half of its students must meet or exceed state standards on the fourth-grade English Language Arts test. Second, a school must also have shown more improvement over its record the previous year than other schools in the region.

The English Language Arts test results were used to determine this year's awards because this measure was the first statewide assessment available that provided data on each elementary school's improvement compared to the year before. As broader test data become available in future years, these results will be added to the award criteria.

Each year for the next three years, Pathfinder Awards will be given to at least two public schools in each of 12 different regions across the state. These regions are the state's judicial districts; the awards are being made by district because appointments to the state Board of Regents are based on those regions.

In some regions, if more than two schools show nearly identical levels of improvement, more than two will be recognized. This year, four schools will be honored in one region and three in another. In the other 10 regions, two schools will be honored.

Schools that attain this honor receive $1,000 for the school's programs and a trophy in recognition of their achievement. Awards will be presented in local ceremonies organized by The Council along with local chambers of commerce and/or local businesses.

Companies that have contributed to date to support the Pathfinder Awards include Corning Incorporated, Texaco, Con Edison, Fleet Bank, the Pike Company, Frontier Communications, the Golub Corporation, KeyBank, and Michael D. Marvin, chairman of the board of MapInfo Corporation.

Background on The Business Council's advocacy on education: The Business Council in recent years has forcefully advocated policies to strengthen the performance and accountability of the state's public schools.

For example, The Public Policy Institute used state data to design the prototype for the state's school report cards. Today school report cards are released annually to give schools, teachers, parents, and students a sense of how their schools are doing compared to schools in similar circumstances and their own performance of the previous year.

The Council has also been a strong proponent of the state's new, tougher academic standards, as well as tests based on those standards to measure the performance of students, teachers, and schools.

-30-