GEO Media Contact
Contact: Rick Myers
Office: 317-524-3772
Cell: 317-557-1111
Charter
School Will Open This Fall
BY SHARI CHANEY - [THE GAZETTE, COLORADO SPRINGS, CO
- JULY 2, 2005]
In two months, a vacant lot
southeast
of downtown will be transformed into a school for
hundreds of students and an educational resource center.
The 21st Century Charter School of Colorado Springs will
open Sept. 6 in a new building at 525 E. Costilla St.
The Greater Educational Opportunities Foundation, which
will run the charter school along with a local board of
directors, is paying $4 million for the land and
construction of the new 30,500-square-foot building,
said Kevin Teasley, GEO’s chief executive officer.
The school’s lead teacher, Greg Cope, said roughly 230
students have applied to the school for the coming
school year. The school is approved to accept 270
students.
The building will have two octagon-shaped ends connected
by a middle section that will include a gymnasium and
“community empowerment center.”
The center will offer information about school choice,
magnet schools, charter schools, tutoring options, No
Child Left Behind and how to be more involved in
schools, Teasley said. It will be open to the community,
not
just parents of students at 21st Century Charter School.
“We’ll be in the business of sharing that information,”
Teasley said. “Our mission is to get children quality
education.”
The octagons on either end of the school will have
classrooms around the edge with walls that have glass on
the top half. Teasley
said observers can be in a center area and see into each
of the classrooms.
Elementary-aged children will be at one end of the
school, and middle and high school students will be in
the other, Teasley said. The school will open this year
to students in kindergarten through eighth grade and add
a grade each year for four years.
In a classroom of roughly 30 students, there will be one
teacher, one aide and 10 computers, Teasley said.
Students work in small groups, either with the teacher,
the aide or at the computer work stations.
The idea of small groups and individualized learning is
key for parents when they hear about the school, Cope
said.
Once built, the school will have a longer school day —
from 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. — and a longer school year.
Robert Sheets, chairman of the school’s board, said the
philosophy behind the longer day is that schoolwork is
done at school and isn’t homework.
GEO Foundation will open three charter schools this
fall, including the one in Colorado Springs.
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