Just over a year ago, state education officials determined that Sheridan Hills Elementary wasn't quite cutting it. They didn't label the Richfield school a failure, but it was implied.
"It was absolutely devastating to the teachers here," Principal Jodi Markworth said. "They give their heart and soul to the job, and they knew we were better than that."
On Tuesday, the Minnesota Department of Education agreed. It lifted failing designations from Sheridan Hills and 26 other schools that have shown significant improvement under the state's new school-ranking system.
That system, now in its second year, is the product of Minnesota's waiver from No Child Left Behind, the federal law that many educators despised because it forced states to label schools as actual failures. Under that system, almost half of Minnesota's 2,200 schools were considered failures.
The latest data will allow 17 schools to come off the "Priority" list and 10 schools to leave the "Focus" list. The former are considered lagging in overall student achievement; the latter are cited for failing to close the achievement gap between white and minority students.
At Edison High School in Minneapolis, which shed its Priority label, Principal Carla Steinbach said, "I have no labels now. I feel free."
Since the first round of new designations last year, the department has funneled extra help to struggling schools, and those efforts seem to be paying off. Of the state's 25 Priority schools, 78 percent experienced improvement, while 71 percent of the 74 Focus schools saw gains.
"Today's release is about the hard work taking place every single day in our schools to ensure the success of each child," said Education Commissioner Brenda Cassellius.