ACE

Connor Quigley, Staff Writer

In a short hallway off of a side stairwell on the second floor sit the ACE classrooms. ACE is a program that promotes diverse learning and provides a tight knit community.

ACE strives to allow an environment that focuses on collaborative student growth and understanding of content rather than grades and amount of content. Students focus on individual comprehension and achieving competency benchmarks, rather than letter grades.

Amy Bayer, the ACE Program Coordinator, said that ACE’s approach to learning is unique in the sense that it focuses on the understanding of a few specific concepts at a time and allows students to showcase their knowledge through many different applications.

“ACE is a small, competency-based program. It is a very different approach to instruction, curriculum and assessment that really allows students to move at their own pace by explicitly showing them what they’re responsible for learning and giving them a lot of flexibility in how they demonstrate their knowledge,” Bayer said.

A unique feature of ACE is that students focus on two classes at a time within the program for a period of around six weeks. This allows students to focus on the topic of learning in much greater depth.

ACE math teacher Julie James said that while the class still teaches the standard Algebra two and Pre-Calculus curricula. The concentrated structure allows students to fully understand key concepts, especially in math, that they will build upon throughout their entire education.

“It is really clear that Algebra two has a six-week moment in which the overriding goal is to understand what a function is and how to manipulate it, which is a big conceptual question that you deal with the rest of your math life. We use those concepts to do lots of things, but we are always coming back to the fact that this is a quadratic,” James said.

Senior Isobella Farone said that ACE provides a safe space for students due to its small community and lots of group engagement.

“In ACE we have the same teachers for sophomore, junior and senior year so you get to know them really well which is really nice. ACE is such a small community, so I’ve made a bunch of friends for it and the teachers are super nice,” Farone said.

Another unique feature of ACE is the student-to-teacher relationships. Within the 2 hour class periods, teachers are able to better understand how their students learn and have more one-on-one instruction when needed, Bayer said.

“The other thing we do intentionally is we take a strengths-based approach to how we do instruction. We look at each student individually and what their strengths are and we really try to play to those strengths and give them choices that will allow them to work from that place of strength rather than a deficit,” Bayer said.

As a whole, ACE provides a non-competitive high school experience in which students are accepted by their teachers and classmates for learning differently and wanting a more flexible structure. Bayer said that the program’s fundamental grading system discourages students from adhering to such rigid standards and helps students view school as an opportunity rather than a burden.

“Ace is really about helping a student get to a place where they know enough of the content. We want students to eventually learn content and it may take them longer. And they shouldn’t get dinged for needing more time. They should get another opportunity. I think the fact that students know that they can’t get a D or an E frees them up to really think about school differently and feel like there’s nothing to lose,” Bayer said.