THE ENCE _j r1 r r ON THE COVER MT- MIMS 11.111; I ( WE WEL CO r/ Metro '['0 0 U r- Ob LE J et omen) isu GE ,,i1-1:11.1, 1 1_171'101`1 -) LOW P itlaS 2008 CTS Instilling Hope from page A16 +GM Employees Z4 Month Smart Lease 69504C Mo. $2,979 Due at Signing One Time 24-Month $n 0 firr UAW I Lease Payment rinkecadillac.comicadillac_CTS_specials.aspx +GM Employees 24 Month Smart Lease $3,200 Due at Signing Stk. #102582 One Time 24-Month Lease Payment rinkecadiliaccom CadillacSRkspecials.aspx Visit our $11 768* ,ecadillac.corn for all our specials N Kit, AD I Li LA. C Expect More. We Deliver! 1-696 & VAN DYKE • 1-866-385-9871 Showroom hours: Mon. & Thurs. 8:30 am - 9pm.; Tues., Wed, & Fri. 8:30am - 6:00 pm OA LIBERTY AN THE PURSUIT. *Payments based on 24 or 39 month QMAC Smartlease. One time payments based on 24 months. 10,000 mile per year. 25 cents per mile over. Subject to approved credit. Plus tax, title. and regis- tration. Pictures may not represent actual vehicles. Programs expire 4/30/08 Quality time with the Kids! Cookbooks for children are the perfect way to create hours of fun in the kitchen! Easy-to-follow recipes for all meals and desserts, is specially designed for kids 3 8, up. r mot VA1't Hap A dotArka, -tor (±r,IL.cii w ,artVlrod nr.”^ Books come with if cookie cutters that can be used with each recipe! ' A18 • 8tudTo8 April 3 2008 Fine Designer Furniture • Stunning Accessories Uniqpe & Unusual Gifts Always 30% Off most rnfrs 66'fif Orchard Lake Rd just S of Maple West Bloomfield 218.855.1800 Mon & Thor 10-9 Tue-Wed-Thor-Fri 10-6 Sun 11-if Complimentary Gift Wrapping "We knew the problem was big, factory-like schools." Doug Ross Making the rounds of classrooms, Ross introduces Amanda Rosman, a Birmingham Temple member who teaches third grade. "Doug is really inspirational:' says Rosman, who lives in Detroit and plans to enroll her own young son at UPA when he is old enough. "He really inspires everybody to work really hard." 'Like A Neighborhood' Throughout the grade school, two classes share a set of bathrooms and coat rooms located between them. "It's like a neighborhood:' Ross explains. That's what he's tried to achieve at the middle and high schools as well — small clusters of students who spend at least three hours a day with their adviser — a certified teacher responsible for directing each stu- dent's learning process based on his or her abilities and interests. Middle and high school students spend part of their school week interning at Detroit businesses, from architectural firms to restaurants to newspapers. "It's the best way to teach the mainstream culture:' Ross says. Asked to recount a memorable student, Ross brings up "a kid named Patrick:' "He was pretty much homeless. When he didn't show up for school, we went looking for him. We found him in an abandoned house on the east side." Patrick graduated in 2007. "He's completed firefighter training at Henry Ford Community College and has an offer of a full ride at Oakland University, which I don't know if he'll take;' Ross says. "There are a lot of stories ..." And Ross has a story of his own. He has come full circle since he taught for a short time in the Detroit Public Schools after graduating college. Discovering that his social stud- ies students couldn't read or write at grade level, he discarded the text and wrote a serial that he thought would teach the material and engage stu- dents. When he was evaluated, Ross says, "The person was appalled. And shock- ingly, I got fired." Forty year later, he again is discard- ing old standards and creating new ways to teach and engage Detroit stu- dents.