<p>The charter school was born because a group of parents took up the challenge to create a different type of school as an option for Vineyard families.</p>
The Martha’s Vineyard Public Charter School (MVPCS) is 20 years old. Most public schools exist out of necessity, in response to growth in population. The charter school was born because a group of parents took up the challenge from the state to create a different type of school as an option for Vineyard families.
This winter the charter school received the results of its five-year Charter Renewal Inspection Report from a state review committee who visited us this year. We passed with flying colors, our finest review to date. We were especially gratified that the committee praised us for “actively build[ing] a sense of community.” That sense of community strengthens everything we do.
This year the state administered the PARCC test, a new standardized assessment of academic progress. As the Vineyard Gazette put it, among Island schools, MVCPS “led the pack.”
That achievement was strengthened by community. On the day of standardized test-taking, the whole school supports the classes who are taking the test by creating an atmosphere of calm support to ensure focus and low anxiety. Students who know that the entire school community supports them will do their best work.
We build community not just on test days, but every day. Each morning students, faculty, parents/guardians and administration get together at Morning Meeting for general announcements and to share personal discoveries and achievements that range from a Kindergartner describing a butterfly emerging from a chrysalis to a senior being accepted to college.
We build community on the playground. Throughout the day kids are playing outside in informal mixed aged groupings, and we all know how much learning goes on in playgrounds. A high school may be helping a middle-schooler with his jump shot. A first grader’s day is made by kicking a soccer ball to a ninth grader. And both older kids begin to see themselves as people who have something to give.
We build community in the classroom. Our mixed-age classes include fifth graders in the same room as sixth graders which allows for a give and take of ideas, skills, and modeled behavior.
It’s all about community and community builds character.
The Martha’s Vineyard Public Charter School celebrates its 20th year envisioning what the school could look like in the future, based on a hard look at our past and retooling with an eye to what we could do next. One thing we are certain to hold on to is this core combination: helping Island students build character while they achieve academically, thanks to a strong, supportive community.
Robert Moore
Vineyard Haven
The writer is director of the Martha’s Vineyard Public Charter School.

Comments
So good to hear Bob describe
Lara O'BrienSo good to hear Bob describe all the success of the Charter. I have three happy, successful, girls that are nurtured, lived and supported by the Charter community. Not sure I could do it all, without them. Thank you MVCS.
I was lucky enough to to be a
Bella Bennett New Zealand (Chilmark resident)I was lucky enough to to be a part of the first kindergarten class at MVPCS, and I still find myself bragging about how inspired my teachers and classes through eighth grade were. Outside of class, I learned so many things without knowing - from what good, healthy, food tastes like (thank you endlessly, Krystina), to how to act with integrity, do my share within my community, and, how to properly approach a dispute and talk it over from Bob. I am so incredibly grateful for the nine years I got to spend at the charter school and within the special community that it fosters/that fostered it. It brings me great joy to hear that the school continues to be recognized for its outstanding work, shaping the lives of so many wonderful young Vineyarders. Thank you Bob, for all that you do.
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