Students at Eden Prairie's Forest Hills Elementary School navigated an early-morning cafeteria line, found seats and ate during one of the final days of the school year.
It's a common scene. Except that here, unlike other Eden Prairie schools, more of the kids navigating, sitting and eating were students of color.
Minorities make up 43 percent of Forest Hills' student population. Meanwhile the range is 16 to 27 percent at other elementary schools in the largely affluent suburb.
For months, Eden Prairie school leaders considered redrawing elementary school boundaries to better balance diversity, despite opposition from residents. In the end, the Eden Prairie school board decided against boundary changes last fall, in part because of a Supreme Court decision last year about school programs in Louisville and Seattle.
Even so, school officials vowed to adopt plans to improve achievement among low-income and minority students at Forest Hills.
"There was a time in Eden Prairie when all of our schools were similar. But now we need to invest differently in our schools," said Forest Hills Principal Connie Hytjan.
Earlier this month, a team of Forest Hills parents and district staff members released a plan that includes instructional and cultural initiatives aimed at minority and low-income students. They'd been meeting since January.
Their plan includes an extended school day program, increased math and literacy instruction, new classroom technology such as interactive whiteboards, a family resource center, more math and literacy specialists, and smaller student-to-instructor ratios.