A small rural high school in California’s Central Valley has spent two decades quietly revolutionizing education while most districts struggle with outdated teaching methods. Minarets High School in O’Neals, which opened in 2008 when the local district faced dissolution, has become a nationally recognized model that challenges everything we think we know about effective learning environments.
The school’s success stems from its radical departure from traditional lecture-based instruction, implementing student-centered approaches that align with modern brain science research. According to child development expert Laura Lurns, “What Minarets has created is essentially a laboratory for optimal learning conditions. Their approach activates multiple neural networks simultaneously, supporting the kind of deep learning that prepares students for real-world success.”
When the Chawanakee Unified School District was told to “build a high school or be dissolved” 20 years ago, school founder Jon Corippo and the district leadership saw an opportunity to create something completely different. “We needed to create something that the surrounding high schools didn’t offer,” said Board Member Barbara Bigelow. “We wanted to be as digital as possible, while also offering a student-driven, project-based program.”
From its start with just 27 ninth graders, Minarets has grown to serve over 500 students while earning recognition as a multiple-time Apple Distinguished School and California School Board Association Golden Bell winner. The school’s 75% proficiency rate in English among 9th graders and its API score of 772 place it among the highest-performing schools in Madera County.
Breaking Traditional Learning Barriers
The school’s signature programs demonstrate a sophisticated understanding of how teenagers actually learn best. Every freshman through junior participates in Personal Brand Equity (PBE) presentations, year-end portfolios that showcase learning from all eight classes plus personal growth and career development. Seniors complete the Legacy Experience, multi-year passion projects that connect classroom learning to real community impact.
“The PBE demonstrated what students are doing and where they are going,” said Corippo. “We need to ask students to show how they’ve grown – a report card is not gonna get that done.”
Laura Lurns emphasizes the neurological benefits of this approach: “When students engage in these comprehensive presentations and long-term projects, they’re not just learning content – they’re building executive function skills, strengthening memory pathways, and developing the kind of sustained attention that will serve them throughout life.”
The school’s unique course offerings include Singer/Songwriter, Show Band, a business course called Kickstarter, and even a math course called Freakonomics. This creative approach to curriculum design reflects a deep understanding of student engagement and motivation.
Student Voice Drives Innovation
Perhaps most significantly, Minarets established a Student Bill of Rights in its inaugural year, along with quarterly surveys that give students direct input into their learning experiences. Current Principal Rhonda Corippo maintains an open-door policy where “students can bring us any of their thoughts.”
“If we don’t know what our consumers like…how can we grow?” said Jon Corippo. This student-centered philosophy creates what researchers call “agency” – the sense that students have control over and investment in their own learning.
Brain Science Supports Rural Innovation
The school’s 9 a.m. start time reflects current neuroscience research showing that teenage brains aren’t fully alert until later in the morning. This attention to circadian rhythms and optimal learning conditions demonstrates the kind of evidence-based decision-making that sets Minarets apart.
“Rural schools often have advantages that urban districts miss,” notes Laura Lurns. “The smaller size allows for more personalized attention, and the community connections create authentic learning opportunities that can’t be replicated in larger settings.”
Research from the Christensen Institute confirms that rural schools often lead in innovative approaches like blended learning and makerspaces, with flexibility that larger systems struggle to achieve.
National Implications
The success at Minarets offers hope for rural communities nationwide that face school closures and population decline. Rather than accepting diminished expectations, the school proves that rural settings can be incubators for educational innovation.
“We originally housed this philosophy with a general question to all teachers,” said Jon Corippo. “If The NY Times showed up to review our school…what class would we send them to? What’s unique or different they would see?”
For parents seeking to help their child develop stronger focus and attention skills, our ‘Focus Foundations’ resource provides evidence-based strategies and practical exercises. Download the Focus Foundations guide.
The question rural educators across America might ask is simpler: If a small district facing dissolution can create a nationally recognized model school, what’s stopping the rest of us?
According to child development expert Laura Lurns, parents seeking similar innovation for their children should look for schools that prioritize student voice, project-based learning, and respect for adolescent brain development. Learn more about supporting your child’s optimal learning at Learning Success.
