Charter school for abused,
neglected & troubled
children earns Academically
Acceptable rating
August 2, 2005
KATY, Texas -- Trinity Charter
School, which provides educational services to the Krause Childrens
Residential Treatment Center in Katy for abused and neglected
children, was rated Academically Acceptable by the Texas Education
Agency in its first year of operation.
For this to happen in our
first year of operation, with a startup and the type of kids we
serve, it is just fantastic to have an Academically Acceptable
rating, said Bruce Rockstroh, Director of Educational Services
for Trinity Charter School.
Trinity Charter School, a nonprofit
organization, has campuses at four Texas childrens residential
treatment centers: Krause in Katy, New Life at Canyon Lake, Nelson
in Denton and Bokenkamp in Corpus Christi. The four residential
treatment centers are owned and operated by Lutheran Social Services
of the South, Inc.
The Krause Center in Katy cares
for children ages 11 to 17.
Trinity Charter School was rated
under the TEAs alternative education standards, which takes
into account the unique population served by the school. Most
of the children are placed in the treatment centers by Childrens
Protective Services and juvenile probation agencies. The children
have severe emotional and behavioral problems which prevent them
from functioning in regular foster homes and public school settings.
Since most of the children are in
the child welfare system, their education has been disrupted repeatedly
because of removal from their biological homes where education
is often not a priority, and multiple moves between emergency
shelters, foster homes and residential treatment settings. As
a result of their history, all the children are in special education
classes.
This history of disruption and lack
of focus on academics means that most of the children are two
to three grade levels behind when they are placed at one of the
treatment centers. The goal of the centers, working with the faculty
of Trinity Charter School, is to bring the children up one or
two grade levels by the time they are discharged to less restrictive
settings.
More than two years ago, LSS began
exploring ways to address the educational needs of the children.
LSS entered into a partnership Trinity Charter School, which offers
a year-round, intensive individualized curriculum. Classes meet
Monday through Thursday and Fridays are dedicated to one-on-one
tutoring and self-paced computer curriculum designed to meet the
specific needs of each child.
Given the fragile state of
these children, it made absolutely no sense to address their physical
and emotional needs and not their academic needs before they left
our centers, said LSS Chief Executive Officer Kurt Senske.
If you place such a child in a public school and havent
helped her get up to speed in a classroom, her emotional and behavioral
problems are more likely to return and we will probably see her
back in a more expensive residential treatment setting.
For the sake of the children
and for the good of taxpayers it makes sense to
address all three aspects of their lives, Senske said.
Rockstroh isnt content to
settle for the Academically Acceptable rating.
Our goal is to have Recognized
campuses. We will continue to build to get to the next level,
he said.
The high mobility of the students
at the treatment centers and often inadequate information about
their education when children are placed at the centers makes
it challenging to track students progress. The average stay
at the centers is six months.
To achieve the goal of reaching
the Recognized rating, Trinity Charter School is implementing
a nationally recognized assessment program that will enable the
school to evaluate the students when they are first placed at
the center and then monitor their progress every 90 days in reading,
language arts and math, Rockstroh said.
The Krause Childrens Center
is an affiliated ministry of Lutheran Social Services, the social
service arm of The Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod and the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America. LSS serves more than 23,000 children,
elderly and poor annually. Its affiliated ministries include childrens
residential treatment centers, therapeutic foster care, adoption,
health care and retirement centers, disaster response and emergency
assistance.
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