An Urban School District’s Approach to Equitable Opportunities Across Communities

AIA Continuing Education Provider

1 LU

Room: E143-144

Audience: Architects

Call to Action: The four schools, used as case studies, examine the comprehensive architectural process of ensuring educational equity from conception to construction. The session extends beyond abstract conceptualizations and instead implements proven strategies and methods that promote educational equity.

  1. Participants can employ the non-economic indicators of equitable schools established in the session as a means of evaluating existing schools and learning environments to identify areas where improvements are needed.
  2. Participants can employ different rehabilitation strategies in existing facilities to improve accessibility and promote inclusivity. These strategies can include altering entry sequences, rearranging program, and incorporation of art.
  3. Participants can engage in the development or modification of districtwide standards for education facilities, similar to DCPS’ Educational Specifications, that will promote equity across neighborhoods with inherently varied conditions.
  4. Ranging from efficient HVAC systems, reduced carbon footprints, and biophilic designs that utilize vegetation, plants, and natural materials, participants will learn how to incorporate an array of sustainable strategies into their schools.

Abstract: The goal of providing educational equity across diverse communities is shared by urban school districts across the country. Through its ongoing school modernization program, Washington, DC has become a model for how to accomplish this goal in an urban system that serves a range of student demographics, opportunities, and abilities. DCPS’s systemwide process bridges community divides both physically and programmatically by successfully combining four primary objectives:

  1. Rehabilitation of Aging Structures and Thoughtful Additions
  2. A Robust Public Art Program
  3. Districtwide Educational Specifications
  4. A Commitment to Sustainability

To accomplish this, the city has developed a unique process that involves parents, staff, and community members alongside formal reviewing agencies to integrate the broadest range of community perspectives. Utilizing a set of recent school modernizations as case studies, this session will explore the degree of these primary objectives play in bridging community divides. Capitol Hill Montessori at Logan and The Adams Education Campus are situated in two of Washington DC’s most renowned neighborhoods and both have rich and complex histories rooted in the city’s desegregation efforts. Additionally, their adjacent communities have witnessed significant investment, resulting in new community perspectives that have created challenges between long term and new residents. Whitlock Elementary and Kenilworth Elementary are similarly located within established neighborhoods but differ from these in their respective community’s lack of recent growth. While Whitlock Elementary and Kenilworth Elementary have not experienced the same significant neighborhood evolution as Capitol Hill Montessori at Logan and Adams Education campus, their similar historic significance positions the four modernizations as ideal case studies to examine educational equity amidst varying situational challenges. The juxtaposition of these schools offers valuable insights into how a system-wide approach to modernization can benefit a diverse audience, equipping attendees with strategies to address similar challenges in their own districts.

Learning Objectives:

  1. Understand how architects can sensitively combine rehabilitated structures with contemporary additions while providing equitable opportunities for a range of students.
  2. Gain perspective on how a properly managed and robust public art program can assist in the transformation of historic schools by visually representing a community’s heritage to facilitate connections between schools and their surrounding neighborhood.
  3. Provide specific examples of how districtwide educational specifications can incorporate distinct community perspectives into common teaching methodologies.
  4. Illustrate the role of sustainability in creating buildings that represent the highest educational ideals for an urban school district.
Marquisha Powell
Marquisha Powell
Senior Associate, StudioMB

Marquisha, a graduate of the University of Houston, has more than a decade of experience designing and implementing an array of projects ranging from higher education, multi-family residential and complicated special use projects such as embassy’s and specialty structures such as Pier 4. With an infectious enthusiasm for design at any scale, she enjoys working with clients to deliver thoughtful and highly crafted residential, interiors and adaptive reuse projects.

Sasha Petersen
Sasha Petersen
Associate, StudioMB

Sasha, a graduate of the University of Maryland, has 10 years of experience in residential and educational architecture with added capability in restaurant and office design. In recent years, she has worked extensively on schools, specializing in design for Montessori programs for both public, private and charter groups.

Core Competency

Community Engagement
Leads the internal and external communities through a discovery process that articulates and communicates a community-based foundational vision, forming the basis of a plan for the design of the learning environment. The vision is achieved through a combination of rigorous research, group facilitation, strategic conversations, qualitative and quantitative surveys and workshops. Demonstrates the skill to resolve stakeholder issues while embedding a community's unique vision into the vision for its schools.

LearningSCAPES 2024

October 16-19 | Portland, Oregon

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