To be an International Baccalaureate (IB) student requires one to be a risk taker, an inquirer, a communicator, and so it was that a Mahtomedi third-grader learning about city governance decided to get the mayor on the phone.
The mayor, Jud Marshall, said he could tell by the boy's voice that "it was probably the first time he'd done anything like that," but he welcomed the call and accepted the student's invitation to speak with his class at St. Jude of the Lake Catholic School.
The resulting visit -- informal in nature -- included some good back-and-forth discussion. "It was something that was fun for me -- and it seemed fun for the kids," he said.
For 60 years St. Jude has been in operation, and while it has long prided itself on turning out leaders, the school finds itself focused on a new kind of learner -- one it hopes will retain his or her youthful curiosity while leaving with technology skills required to keep digging for answers.
The K-8 school, which has seen enrollment fall from 300-plus kids about seven years ago to 112 students this year, is determined to compete. It is in the process of becoming an authorized IB school for its K-5 program. And it has invested $100,000 in iPads, laptops and Smart Boards -- all the tools of a modern classroom.
The technology investment, which also includes teacher training, was made possible by $50,000 in donations and a $50,000 matching grant.
Principal Jennifer Cassidy said the school has worked closely, too, with Lake Area Discovery Center, a Christian-based preschool, to develop a feeder system of sorts. Early signs are favorable. Kindergarten enrollment increased from 11 students in 2011-12 to 16 this year, Cassidy said.
On a recent Wednesday, 10 students worked on laptops in a third-grade classroom. There was enough space for twice that many kids.