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Barnard Alumna to Lead Effort to 'Clone' Successful School

NEW YORK, N.Y. - Alisa Berger '94 was astonished by what she witnessed as a student teacher in a New York City middle school during her senior year in college -- her students were scoring off the charts and winning scholarships to some of the nation's most elite private and public high schools.

After graduating Barnard with a degree in English and a minor in education and political science, Berger returned to the school for three years as a full-time teacher and began to wonder why there aren't more schools like Mott Hall. Today, she is working with a former New York City Board of Education official to open a "clone" of the original -- to be called Mott Hall II -- in the Fall.

Berger was profiled in a recent story in The New York Times. (You must be registered with the Times to view the story.)

According to the Feb. 28 article by Anemona Hartocollis, "Alisa Berger was studying English as a senior at Barnard College the first time she set foot inside Mott Hall in West Harlem. She spent a year at the middle school as a student teacher, then three more as a full-time teacher, marveling as poor children from Hispanic immigrant families posted top reading and math scores and went off to selective places like Stuyvesant and Andover.

"She found herself pondering a question asked by desperate parents and students across New York City: If Mott Hall can be so good in a city of many foundering schools, why can't there be more Mott Halls?

"Seven years after that first visit, armed with a master's degree in teaching and another in business, Ms. Berger is back as a principal in training. With the help of John Elwell, a former New York City Board of Education bureaucrat turned impresario of cloned schools, she hopes the answer to their question will finally be, 'Why not?' "

Susan Riemer Sacks, Ph.D., director of the Education program at Barnard, through which Berger earned her teaching certificate, said she was extremely proud of her former student.

"Berger is one of a number of Barnard and Columbia undergraduates who know and care about students, seek options for them, have a broad knowledge of curriculum, are permeated with intellectual curiosity from their head to toes, and stay enthusiastic even in the face of bureaucracy and setbacks," Sacks said.

"They are the teachers who believe that all of their students can and will learn and that they will teach them -- no matter what," Sacks added. "They persist. They find alternatives. They commit themselves to making a difference in the lives of students."

Berger will bring at least one graduate of the Barnard College Institute for Urban Education, which Sacks also directs, with her to Mott Hall II: Ana De Los Santos, a Wellesley College graduate, who participated in the IUE in 1996.

The Institute for Urban Education was founded in 1993 to combat a shortage of skilled teachers in America's urban middle schools. More than 160 students have participated in the program since its inception. Undergraduates from many colleges work with public school teachers in the classroom for hands-on experience, coordinate after-school ecology clubs, and take courses in urban issues and teaching methods, and lead forest ecology projects at Black Rock Forest.

Contact: Laura Whitlock, 212-854-2037

 

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