The school day was less than an hour old, but already a fidgety Aydyrus Abdirahman found it impossible to sit still. So Marcus Freeman, a first-year assistant principal at Ramsey Middle School, met the seventh-grader at a stairwell for an "energy break."
As Freeman stood atop the stairs, iPhone stopwatch in hand, Aydyrus scrambled up and down the steps. After a minute of running, Freeman walked a quieter, calmer Aydyrus back to class.
"It's our thing," the former professional football player said of the relationship he's formed with the high-energy boy. "Whatever it takes."
Change has been dramatic in St. Paul's middle schools over the past 18 months, and the fallout from the district's decision to put sixth-graders into middle schools and mainstream more special-education students and English language learners has been messy.
While the goal behind the switch from traditional junior highs to a middle school model — strengthening adolescent relationships — is shared by districts across the state and country, the unruly behavior and disruption it caused in St. Paul caught district leaders off guard and outraged parents and teachers who demanded a fix.
Squeezing 30 percent more students — some with special needs — into the district's 14 middle schools created so much strain in 2013-14, the first year of the change, that middle school suspensions jumped by 63 percent — 141 percent in sixth grade alone.
Perhaps nowhere has the strain been felt more than at Ramsey, home to 650 students in the city's Macalester-Groveland neighborhood. Unruly behavior there caused so much tension last fall that some teachers quit, parents threatened to pull their kids from class and administrators acknowledged that, for some, there wasn't much learning taking place. At one point, parents were so distressed by the district's slow response to their concerns that they packed a school board meeting to demand immediate changes.
Those changes finally took hold in December, when Freeman and new Principal Teresa Vibar — who came to Ramsey in August — were joined by several specialists hired to work closely with disruptive students, restore calm and create a better learning environment.