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Today Show Hosts Take Over as Teachers at Newark鈥檚 North Star Academy and Can鈥檛 Quite Believe What They See

Today show host Hoda Kotb leads North Star Academy students in a “Today is going to be a great day!鈥 chant in the cafeteria. (Today)

When the Today show hosts decided to be teachers for a day for this year鈥檚 Back to School feature, they swept into the classrooms 鈥斅燼nd the playground and cafeteria 鈥斅爋f a school that has seen a remarkable academic turnaround.

鈥淎 few years ago, it was one of the schools that was faltering. Many of the kids there were struggling to read, struggling to write,鈥 co-host Craig Melvin says, opening the Sept. 12 segment.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 right, but in 2014, it was taken over by the charter school network Uncommon Schools,鈥 Al Roker chimes in, 鈥渁nd today, North Star is one of the highest-performing schools in the entire state.鈥

The school they visited 鈥斅爓here Roker took over a science class, Melvin oversaw a gym class, Savannah Guthrie coached the debate team, Carson Daly led an orchestra and Hoda Kotb became the happiest lunch lady in America 鈥斅爓as Newark鈥檚 Alexander Street Elementary School.

The Today show stars and their crew and producers spent two and a half days in the school filming. Principal Na鈥橨ee Carter said the kids didn鈥檛 quite get the magnitude of the star power in their midst 鈥斅燼lthough they were excited to have them as teachers 鈥斅燽ut the adults definitely knew Al Roker was in the hallway. What was most exciting, though, he said, was seeing Guthrie and the rest bring 鈥渟o much great energy 鈥斅爐hey brought love and joy, and that鈥檚 what our teachers bring every day.鈥

鈥淭hese famous TV hosts 鈥 got to see what we do every day and why we love it so much,鈥 Carter told 麻豆精品. 鈥淭here was a moment when Savannah made a reference to 鈥渙ur kids,鈥 and that鈥檚 how we feel. They鈥檙e all our kids and we love them all.鈥

麻豆精品鈥檚 Richard Whitmire has also spent some time in Alexander Street, first reporting on the school鈥檚 transformation in 2016 and then returning in 2017 to delve deeper after Carter became principal.

Whitmire noted that Alexander Street had gone from having 28 percent of its students score proficient in math and 22 percent in English in 2014 to 80 percent scoring proficient in math and 77 percent in English in 2017 鈥斅爓ay ahead of the statewide average and even better than New Jersey鈥檚 affluent districts. By that point, Alexander Street was sharing its reading curriculum with district schools in Newark, and Uncommon Schools had decided to try its turnaround strategy at a failing school in nearby Camden.

Uncommon’s North Star Academy encompasses 14 elementary, middle and high schools in Newark that are known for their high performance, strict behavior expectations and college-going culture. The Today show hosts came away a little amazed.

鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 believe how they could take, like, a raucous room full of kids in the cafeteria and literally the principal walked in there and went like this 鈥斅燾lap, clap 鈥斅燼nd you could have heard a pin drop,鈥 Kotb said. 鈥淚鈥檇 never seen anything like that before.鈥

鈥淚鈥檝e got kids in school 鈥 and no knock on their schools 鈥斅燽ut I don鈥檛 think I鈥檝e ever been more impressed by walking into a school,鈥 Daly said.

Hearing those accolades on national TV reverberated , Carter said.

鈥淚t was so rewarding for our teachers and our staff and everyone in our building 鈥 from the janitor to the nurse to the front office. They were all filled with so much pride and joy to hear them speak so highly of the work they do every single day,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat moment was really special.鈥

So was the moment when all the students and staff gathered in the cafeteria at lunchtime Thursday to watch the segment 鈥斅爐hey were in class when it aired. Carter said he wasn鈥檛 prepared for how ecstatic the kids would be, screaming at the first mention of North Star, leaping out of their seats at the opening shot of the building and pretty much losing their minds at seeing themselves on the screen.

In closing the segment, Melvin touched on another aspect of Alexander Street and the Uncommon network.

鈥淲e should also point out that, by the way, that school has one of the highest college graduation rates of any school out there,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey pride themselves on getting kids 鈥斅爈argely low-income 鈥 to college.鈥

Julie Jackson became president of the Uncommon network, which runs 54 schools in three states, in July after overseeing their K-8 schools for four years.

鈥淲e loved seeing the Today hosts celebrating what they saw at our school, and especially calling out our students鈥 college graduation success,鈥 Jackson said in an email. 鈥淭he college graduation rate for students in the lowest income quartile is only 13 percent, compared to 54 percent for Uncommon鈥檚 alums. It鈥檚 great to have a national television program honor that. Students from low-income neighborhoods can and deserve to succeed in college. It is vital to our nation鈥檚 future.鈥

In his book published earlier this year, , Whitmire reports extensively on Uncommon’s success in getting its low-income students of color to and through college.

鈥淎t Uncommon Schools, the software program that tracks the progress of their alumni through college predicts that within six years, 70 percent of Uncommon graduates will likely earn a bachelor鈥檚 degree,鈥 Whitmire writes. 鈥淭hat exceeds by several points the national college graduation rate for well-off students.鈥

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