Portland 'priority zone' would give seven schools special treatment
By Betsy Hammond, The Oregonian
May 14, 2010, 5:28PM

Among the promises: better principals, a longer school year, more hands on deck and the right to reject teachers offloaded from other schools.
The hope is that Jefferson, Roosevelt and Franklin high schools -- which would receive students who move up from the five elementary and middle schools slated to receive special treatment -- will see a burst of success as more of their incoming freshmen arrive prepared. Jefferson and Roosevelt would also get extra resources and special treatment to help them keep students on a strong trajectory.
The other five schools, from the district's northernmost reaches to its southeastern corner, are George Middle School, Bridger and King K-8 schools, and Kelly and Sitton elementaries. Minority and low-income students make up the bulk of enrollment at all seven.

Even as other schools see cuts in the next few years -- somethingPortland Public Schools expects unless state funding forecasts improve -- schools in the priority zone would get to keep their extras, Smith and school board members say.
Why? Getting students to arrive prepared for freshman year requires more time, coordination