Robert F. Smith creates the STEAM Academy in Denver, based on principles of HBCUs

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https://denver.cbslocal.com/2020/12...-weekend-closure-i70-brighton-boulevard-i270/
New Robert F. Smith STEAM Academy Provides HBCU Experience In Denver
December 18, 2020
https://denver.cbslocal.com/live/cbsn-denver/
DENVER (CBS4)– A new high school in the Montbello neighborhood is the creation of Denver-native and East High School graduate, Robert F. Smith. The Robert F. Smith STEAM Academy will embrace science, technology, engineering, arts and math. It’s founded on the principles of historically Black colleges and universities.

“When I think about what it took to create the STEAM academy, it occurs to me it wasn’t actually about starting a school. It was about building a village,” said Smith.

The school’s principal and HBCU graduate, Shakira Abney-Wisdom, hopes students will experience the same sense of community that she felt at Florida A&M University.

“From the time I was in pre-K through graduate school I went to predominantly white institutions. Just stepping on the campus at A&M, it felt like I belonged, just seeing students who looked like me, professors who looked like me. It’s something that’s difficult to articulate if you haven’t experienced it, but it’s just that sense of community and family,” said Abney-Wisdom.

ROBERT-F-SMITH-SCHOOL-6PKG.transfer_frame_547.jpeg

(credit: CBS)

According to Denver Public School, the STEAM Academy is grounded in three central components; Blackness, inclusion and interdisciplinary focus. This high school experience will honor students’ history, individuality and cultural experiences.

“We get excited about the places where we belong. When we feel that me matter in space and what we bring is valuable, we show up as our full selves. That’s the piece for me that’s so important. It shows up in engagement and course performance,” said Abney-Wisdom.

She says that sense of community and belonging can make all the difference in a student’s school experience. HBCUs offer all
students, regardless of race, a chance to develop their skills. According to DPS, students of color feel more at home and perform better in schools where they feel supported and safe. Black representation is missing from many classrooms and many workplaces.

“The demographics of people who make up the majority of the STEM professions are not people of color. HBCUs are the number one producers of black professionals in STEM fields. The hope is that the access piece would give students the opportunity to test out and see if they want to be an engineer, or researcher or scientist,” said Abney-Wisdom.

ROBERT-F-SMITH-SCHOOL-6PKG.transfer_frame_255.jpeg

(credit: Forbes)

The Robert F. Smith STEAM Academy will begin enrolling its founding class during the 2020-21 school year. Rising 9th graders can enroll during SchoolChoice Round 1, which will begin in January 2021.

The founding class will start in August 2021 for the 2021-22 school year.

LINK: Robert F. Smith STEAM Academy


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Mr Smith continues to give back.

Expecting this school to produce many young black engineers, scientists, researchers, etc in the future. STEM, in particular the E of STEM, has been real good to me, and for those young black men and women who have an interest, it can be good to them
 

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Salute.

I have a lot to speak on regarding this topic, maybe I'll come back to it later.
 

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straight to business no

ParchedExhaustedAcornbarnacle-size_restricted.gif


he even got real opening and enrolment dates :mjcry:
Hehe

One thing people should make note of, though. Even with his unlimited financial resources, Smith is starting this out as a SWAS, a school within a school.
Many of us pointed out that some magnet and specialized schools started off this way. It's a pilot program that allows the founders to gauge interest and performance.

When even billionaires test the waters first, it confirms what many are saying about the impractical way that YTers are going about starting schools.

Pryor said the academy will share a campus with the Montbello Career and Technology High School. Having STEAM education in Black and brown neighborhoods is crucial in creating a pathway to success for students, Pryor said.

"Those fields are taking off — science, technology, engineering — and we want to get our kids involved in all of those fields," Pryo
Pryor said the academy will share a campus with the Montbello Career and Technology High School. Having STEAM education in Black and brown neighborhoods is crucial in creating a pathway to success for students, Pryor said.

"Those fields are taking off — science, technology, engineering — and we want to get our kids involved in all of those fields," Pryor said.

The Robert F. Smith STEAM Academy will be a district-run high school modeled after historically Black colleges and universities.

"A STEAM focus is particularly important as we look for the ways that our cultures are shifting, our societies are shifting. It’s global and, so the impact the computer and technology has is not going to go away. It will only become more integrated as time progresses," said Shakira D. Abney-Wisdom, principal of the academy.

Although they are a Denver Public School, there are plans to change their status in the long run.

"We plan to apply for innovation status and we also plan to create an innovation zone," Pryor said. "With that we will have our own board to govern the group of schools that exist within our zone."

It will give them the autonomy they’ve been searching for.

"Our kids are brilliant and they should be graduating school knowing how to code. They should be graduating school just being the brilliant mathematicians that I already know that they are," Jackson said.

They anticipate a bright future for many Montbello students, slated to begin August of next year.

Copyright 2020 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
r said.

The Robert F. Smith STEAM Academy will be a district-run high school modeled after historically Black colleges and universities.

Although they are a Denver Public School, there are plans to change their status in the long run.

"We plan to apply for innovation status and we also plan to create an innovation zone," Pryor said. "With that we will have our own board to govern the group of schools that exist within our zone."

It will give them the autonomy they’ve been searching for.
 
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UPDATE 8/23/21



An “HBCU-style” high school opens in far northeast Denver





It’s the first day of school at Robert F. Smith STEAM Academy and Jessie Matthews isn’t excited about his electives.

“Choir?” he balks.

Don’t worry, an administrator tells him, he’ll have a chance to change classes in a couple of days. Then his mother, Carmen, herds him and his friends against a wall. She makes them pose for a few last photos before they wander into the building for the first time.

Matthews is part of the high school’s inaugural class, a group exclusively made up of 9th graders who will begin a curriculum never seen before in Denver Public Schools. Smith Academy was set up specifically to help students of color achieve in school by mirroring experiences they might find at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (or HBCUs).



Principal Shakira Abney-Wisdom said she and her colleagues based their lessons on Black History 365, a curriculum meant to infuse stories about people of color in every class they offer. She also said her administration is working on partnerships with HBCUs to facilitate connections between her students and college alumni, both to provide academic support and establish “intergenerational relationships” in students’ formative years. All of this, she told us, is meant to erase systemic obstacles that these students might face elsewhere.

“There is a persistent erasure of the Black experience, of Latinx and indigenous experiences in this nation and world. Our focus is to really center the experience of those of us who have been marginalized and minoritized. We are not, by nature of our existence, ‘less than.’ But our stories have not been valued in the same ways,” Abney-Wisdom said as she paused for a moment in the hallway. “Our school’s existence is just an act of resilience and resistance to oppressive structures in society. This is a sanctuary, really, a safe space for our scholars to be all that they are, and to grow, to challenge themselves, to challenge one another, to accomplish the goals that they have.”


Principal Shakira Abney-Wisdom speaks to her students during a first-day-of-school assembly at Robert F. Smith STEAM Academy. Aug. 23, 2021.




Before introductory classes began, Abney-Wisdom gathered all of her new students in the gym. She made sure everyone knew they were here to chase excellence.

“I have high expectations for you,” she shouted to the room.

“We have high expectations for ourselves,” they boomed back.

Smith Academy sits in the middle of “far northeast” Denver, which has long been embroiled in conflicts over education.
After the assembly, Matthews settled in with his homeroom class – they’re called “prides” at Smith, because their mascot is a lion – and listened as his instructor introduced himself. Najja Shakir Al-Islam is a math Ph.D who decided to focus on teaching high school kids. After some icebreakers, he asked if any students had any questions for him. Matthews raised his hand.

“Why did you decide to come and teach here?” he asked.

“Because I love you,” Al-Islam responded to the classroom of Black boys, not missing a beat.

“The way that we’ve been cordoned off as a group, most of us come from the same ethnic line, meaning that the chances of your great grandparents being chattel slaves is really high,” he told them. “So all of us share that. Just because of that, I have to love. Because if I don’t, if your elders don’t love you, how are you going forward in life?”


Najja Shakir Al-Islam speaks to his homeroom class (called a "pride" here) on the inaugural first day of school at Robert F. Smith STEAM Academy.
This is the kind of environment Smith Academy’s founders felt they needed in the city’s northeast corner, which is home to many residents of color. The new school shares a glass-walled building in an industrial park with the Montbello Career and Technical High School, just between Montbello to the west and Green Valley Ranch to the east. Equity in education has long been a topic of discussion here.

The neighborhoods haven’t had a comprehensive high school in a decade. In 2010, Colorado’s Department of Education identified Montbello High School as one of the lowest-performing schools in the state. Denver Public School’s board agreed to shutter it as a result. While some parents have been happy with the collection of charters and smaller schools that have sprung up in Montbello High’s place, many people who lived in the area ten years ago saw its closure as a blow to these neighborhoods’ very social fabric.

Samantha Pryor, one of Smith’s co-founders, was one of those long-time residents who felt like something needed to be done.

“We wanted to create a high quality option in our neighborhood, because a lot of our kids were going outside of our neighborhood, traveling long distances across the city, to find quality options,” she said.


Principal Shakira Abney-Wisdom (right) embraces Robert F. Smith STEAM Academy co-founder Samantha Pryor on the school's inaugural first day.
The school’s name, Pryor said, was their second choice. She and her colleagues first tried to name the school after Michelle Obama, but the former first lady’s foundation politely declined their request. But “Robert F. Smith” still evokes the high level of achievement that they hoped to communicate. Smith, who grew up in Denver, worked as a chemical engineer and investor on his way to becoming the richest Black man in America. In 2019, he famously announced he would pay off all tuition debts for the graduating class at Morehouse College, an HBCU in Atlanta.

Pryor and her fellow co-founders – her husband, Brandon Pryor, and Gabe Lindsay, who both coach the football team that pulls from all of the high schools in the area – were also deeply involved in an effort to resurrect Montbello High. In February, the Denver Public Schools board voted unanimously to do just that. The school will reopen in its old space in 2022.

Lindsay told us both Smith Academy and a revitalized Montbello High are needed right now.

“It wasn’t ‘either or.’ It was both, because both fill a gap that’s needed in our community,” he said.


Robert F. Smith STEAM Academy co-founders Brandon (from left) and Samantha Pryor and Gabe Lindsay take a selfie on the school's inaugural first day.
Smith Academy, Brandon Pryor added, provides an outlet for smart kids who want to be challenged while Montbello will offer a “community option” that might once again stand as a social and civic center in these neighborhoods.

Matthews’ mother, Carmen, graduated from Montbello High before it closed in 2010. While she said it was a painful moment for her neighborhood, she prefers not to dwell on the past. Instead, she said she’s saved her energy to support efforts that will pave a better future.

“When this opportunity came about for our children, it was something that we just couldn’t pass up. We think that coming to Robert F. Smith STEAM Academy is going to give them what they need to have a good sense of self,” she told us. “We have to let our children know that it’s important, and we want others to come and be a part of it. It is a wonderful community that’s had a very bad rap for so many years.”



The students were excited, if not a little anxious.
It wasn’t the high-achieving standards that had some kids feeling jittery. More so: many just hadn’t been in a classroom in a very long time.

“I’m nervous because I haven’t been in a school building in a year and a half,” Alexis Weddington told us as the first day began. On the other hand, she was looking forward to seeing classmates again: “I like staying at home, but then it’s like, I like getting to know people.”

Emmanuel Paris said his mother attended an HBCU, so that’s where his eyes are set four years from now. He said “everything, honestly,” about the school attracted him to Smith Academy’s inaugural class, but he and his parents most liked the idea that Smith Academy could set him on a track towards the kind of college he wants to attend.

And Aza’rayah Shorty said she was most looking forward to “the fact that we don’t have to wear uniforms,” though the academic possibilities are a big deal to her too. She plans to be the first member of her family to go to college.



Principal Abney-Wisdom, an HBCU graduate herself, lingered in the hall as her students found their way to their new teachers.

“I joined the work in June of 2020, and so it’s been exciting to go from being the only staff member on the school-based team to then recruiting nationally and internationally for our educator positions,” she said. “And now they’re here. So it’s really surreal and special.”
 
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