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  • 2012-2013 Academy VIP Tours Give Leaders an Inside Look into Metro High Schools

    Over the past 18 months, the Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce has hosted a series of VIP Tours for community leaders to see firsthand the transformation of Metro’s 12 zoned high schools into the Academies of Nashville. Four of the six scheduled VIP Tours for the current school year have taken place, with a March tour of Overton High School and an April tour of Hunters Lane High School completing the series in 2013. For this year’s tours, we’ve issued a special invitation to principals of elementary schools, middle schools and optional schools. So far, 31 MNPS principals have participated in the four tours this school year.

    In addition, Nashville business leaders shared the details of their academy partnerships with tour participants. Bill Lee, CEO of Lee Company, and Dawn Rudolph, CEO of St. Thomas Hospital—both members of the Chamber’s CEO Champions—talked about their work with Cane Ridge High School and Maplewood High School, respectively. Danielle Taylor of Warner Music talked about the country’s first student-run record label at Pearl-Cohn High School. Faith community leaders as well as elected officials were visible tour participants, with 11 Metro Council members, five school board members and three state legislators attending the fall 2012 tours. If you are interested in participating in one of the final two Academy VIP Tours at Overton or Hunters Lane, contact Rita McDonald at 743-3000.

    To view a quick video or download pictures from each of the 2012 tours, click on the links below.
    Hillwood High School: Photos | Video
    Cane Ridge High School: Photos | Video
    Maplewood High School: Photos | Video
    Pearl-Cohn High School: Photos | Video



    Cane Ridge academy ambassador Mazi Byrd leads a tour while CEO Champion Bill Lee listens.


    District Lead Principal Elaine Fahrner talks with Pearl-Cohn students Gerald Harris and Treasure West.

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  • Academy VIP Tour No. 6: Glencliff High School

    More than 50 community leaders participated in the final Academy VIP Tour of the school year at Glencliff High School on March 14. Increasingly, Metro’s academies are garnering national—and international—recognition. Earlier this month, 60 school district leaders from around the country spent two days in our city learning about Nashville’s academy model, and a team from Nashville has been asked to make a presentation at an international conference in the UK this June. The purpose of the Academy VIP Tours is to make sure our own community leaders in Nashville are familiar with what the Academies of Nashville are, how they work, and the results to date.

    The touring group visited Glencliff’s four academies: the Ford Academy of Business, the Academy of Environmental & Urban Planning, the Academy of Medical Science & Research, and the Academy of Hospitality & Marketing. Student ambassadors led four different touring groups around the school, explaining the various offerings. In an added twist to this tour, students from Hillwood High School’s Academy of Art, Design & Communication were on hand to videotape the tours, which you can watch below.

    We’d like to thank the following elected officials for participating in the Glencliff tour:
    Metro Council member Buddy Baker
    Metro Council member Chris Harmon
    Criminal Court Clerk Howard Gentry
    School Board member Ed Kindall
    School Board member Gracie Porter

    We were also pleased to be joined by two candidates for the state legislature, Harold Love, Jr., and Jason Powell. Also touring were CEO Champions Peggy Cooning (Trevecca Nazarene University), Bill Lee (Lee Company), and Ron Samuels (Avenue Bank), as well as Chamber board member Kent Adams (Caterpillar Financial Services). Members of the PENCIL Foundation board of directors were in attendance, as was Cheryl Carrier of the Ford Motor Company Fund.

    We’d like to thank the 30 members of the Metro Council and the nine members of our state legislative delegation who attended a VIP Tour this school year. In addition, special recognition goes to all nine members of the Metropolitan Board of Education, each of whom attended at least one of the tours at Antioch, Glencliff, Hillsboro, McGavock, Stratford, or Whites Creek. We’re excited about plans for Academy VIP Tours at Cane Ridge, Hillwood, Hunters Lane, Maplewood, Overton and Pearl-Cohn during the 2012-2013 school year. To view photos from the tour, click here.


    Teacher Deborah Crosby explains what students are working on in the Ford Academy of Business.

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  • CEO Champions Experience the Academy Approach to Learning with Glencliff Students

    The CEO Champions, a Chamber committee focused on the successful implementation of the academy model in Metro’s 12 zoned high schools, held their fall meeting at Glencliff High School on September 7. Co-Chair Steve Turner welcomed two new members to the group: Bill Lee, CEO of the Lee Company (partnered with Cane Ridge High School), and Dawn Rudolph, president & CEO of St. Thomas Hospital (partnered with Maplewood High School).

    The CEO Champions received a report from the PENCIL Foundation on the status of academy partnerships between schools and businesses. In a remarkable affirmation of the academy partnerships, 95 percent of the 140 partners chose to renew their partnership agreement for the 2011-2012 school year. Most of the handful of non-renewals were due to academy or pathway changes in the schools. In addition, academy partners contributed more than $1.3 million in community investment -- volunteer time, in-kind donations and cash -- during the 2010-2011 school year. As part of their "dashboard" report, the committee also learned that 27 academy teams participated in teacher externships during the summer of 2011, making rapid progress toward the goal of all 43 academy teams participating in an externship by the year 2015.

    The highlight of the meeting involved the CEO Champions working with Glencliff students on an interdisciplinary curriculum unit in the Ford Academy of Business. The group broke into five “loan committee” teams and were given the scenarios of several applicants who were seeking a loan. The teams had to evaluate the creditworthiness of each applicant and explain the rationale for their loan decision. Teacher Deborah Crosby led the exercise and showed how the curriculum unit cut across academic disciplines and helped develop 21st-century skills.


    David Klements, CEO of Qualifacts Systems, leads a conversation at the most recent CEO Champions meeting.


    Shoney’s CEO David Davoudpour congratulates a student, with fellow CEO Champions Steve Turner and Peggy Cooning.

    Click here for more photos from the meeting.

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