Visual or Performing Arts Teacher
Company: Summit Public Schools
Location: Redwood City
Posted on: April 1, 2026
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Job Description:
Who We Are What if all students graduated high school with the
knowledge, skills and habits they need to lead a fulfilled life?
This is the question that guides our mission at Summit Public
Schools . Summit is a leading network of public schools that
prepare a diverse student population for success in a four-year
college and to be thoughtful, contributing members of society. We
operate 14 schools serving over 4,500 students in the Bay Area and
Washington state. 100% of Summit graduates are college ready and
Summit graduates complete college at double the national average.
We need exceptional, diverse, and mission-aligned teachers to join
our team to help prepare our students for a fulfilled life. Join
us! The Summit Model Summit’s research-backed model makes teaching
and learning at a Summit school unlike any other. At Summit, our
teachers mentor the same group of students each year in advisory
groups, which allows them to build strong relationships based on
deep trust over multiple years. Mentors meet 1:1 with each student
regularly to coach students toward their personal goals, and meet
daily as a mentor group. During Project Time, teachers teach
universal skills through real-world projects - using their
subject-area expertise to help students apply their knowledge to
the world around them. Through our research-backed curriculum,
Summit gives teachers the tools they need so that they can focus on
teaching and becoming the best project-based teachers in the world.
We are deeply committed to continuous improvement at Summit, both
as an organization and for our individual faculty. With dedicated
days of professional development built into the academic year,
regular coaching sessions with a school leader, and a culture of
honest, actionable, and timely feedback, we equip our teachers with
the tools necessary to improve their practice and tackle
challenging issues. We also prioritize developing leaders from
within and have invested in multiple career pathway programs for
our teachers and school leaders. Summit has intensive collaboration
structures built in to our weekly schedules. Teachers collaborate
at the grade and subject levels, forming regular communities of
practice to support each other in continuously improving as
project-based teachers and mentors. By design, our schools are
small communities where every student is known . They are
intentionally heterogeneous and reflect the diversity of the
communities in which we operate. As a teacher, this will require
being culturally responsive and creating equitable learning
pathways for all students. What you’ll do: See sample teacher
schedules here. A student school day is around 8-8:30am to
3-3:30pm, depending on the specific school. Teachers day’s shall
begin no earlier than 8:00 a.m. and end no later than 5:00 p.m. on
any given workday. Project Time: Teach 90-minute blocks in high
school or four 55-minute blocks in middle school, per day of
project time. Most teachers teach one course for the entire grade
(e.g. 9th Grade Biology), and see each section twice per week.
Teachers work with students on projects that develop cognitive
skills and apply their content knowledge to real-world situations.
Teachers facilitate discussions in the classroom, coach students in
applying their cognitive skills, and give students feedback.
Between teaching blocks, teachers analyze student data, build
lesson plans, support school culture, and other personal
development activities. Summit teachers build lesson plans through
a deep understanding of student progress data, which determines the
group and individual supports needed for their students to succeed.
Mentor Time: Build deep relationships and sense of community when
teachers meet with their small group of mentees daily for their
entire time at Summit. Daily, teachers meet with their mentor
groups, work on habits of success as a group, and check in
one-on-one with their mentees. Mentors coach and advocate for their
mentees both inside and outside of the classroom, and strive to
support them as they develop their sense of purpose as they become
self-directed learners. Self-Directed Learning Time and
Interventions: Facilitate Self Directed Learning time and daily
literacy or math interventions, which don’t involve lesson
planning. During this time, teachers provide student support,
monitor progress, and check in with individuals or groups of
students. Collaboration & Professional Development: Twice a week,
teachers participate in all-faculty after-school meetings where
community decisions are made, professional development takes place,
and faculty collaborates as a grade-level team or subject-level
team. What You Need Commitment to uphold Summit’s values, and the
belief that all children deserve a rigorous and equitable education
that prepares them for college and for life Teaching Credential in
California or another US state Bachelor’s Degree (a Master’s Degree
in Education is preferred, but not required) Clear health and
background check Teaching experience in your subject preferred, but
not required Who You Are You want to be a world-class project-based
learning teacher You thrive while collaborating and are excited to
work with mission-aligned, high-performing colleagues. You find
positivity in shared successes. You’re excited to teach Summit’s
common curriculum and assessment system, which was designed for
teachers and by teachers in partnership with learning scientists.
You care deeply about working in intentionally heterogeneous
schools and are ready to support all diverse students to reach a
fulfilled life You’re eager to engage in professional development
and be developed as a practitioner in a network that is committed
to continuous improvement. You have a growth mindset and see
feedback as a positive You are passionate about serving as a mentor
and advocate for a group of students that you’ll follow year to
year. You’re open to having hard conversations to support students.
Who We Are What if all students graduated high school with the
knowledge, skills and habits they need to lead a fulfilled life?
This is the question that guides our mission at Summit Public
Schools . Summit is a leading network of public schools that
prepare a diverse student population for success in a four-year
college and to be thoughtful, contributing members of society. We
operate 14 schools serving over 4,500 students in the Bay Area and
Washington state. 100% of Summit graduates are college ready and
Summit graduates complete college at double the national average.
We need exceptional, diverse, and mission-aligned teachers to join
our team to help prepare our students for a fulfilled life. Join
us! The Summit Model Summit’s research-backed model makes teaching
and learning at a Summit school unlike any other. At Summit, our
teachers mentor the same group of students each year in advisory
groups, which allows them to build strong relationships based on
deep trust over multiple years. Mentors meet 1:1 with each student
regularly to coach students toward their personal goals, and meet
daily as a mentor group. During Project Time, teachers teach
universal skills through real-world projects - using their
subject-area expertise to help students apply their knowledge to
the world around them. Through our research-backed curriculum,
Summit gives teachers the tools they need so that they can focus on
teaching and becoming the best project-based teachers in the world.
We are deeply committed to continuous improvement at Summit, both
as an organization and for our individual faculty. With dedicated
days of professional development built into the academic year,
regular coaching sessions with a school leader, and a culture of
honest, actionable, and timely feedback, we equip our teachers with
the tools necessary to improve their practice and tackle
challenging issues. We also prioritize developing leaders from
within and have invested in multiple career pathway programs for
our teachers and school leaders. Summit has intensive collaboration
structures built in to our weekly schedules. Teachers collaborate
at the grade and subject levels, forming regular communities of
practice to support each other in continuously improving as
project-based teachers and mentors. By design, our schools are
small communities where every student is known . They are
intentionally heterogeneous and reflect the diversity of the
communities in which we operate. As a teacher, this will require
being culturally responsive and creating equitable learning
pathways for all students. What you’ll do: See sample teacher
schedules here. A student school day is around 8-8:30am to
3-3:30pm, depending on the specific school. Teachers day’s shall
begin no earlier than 8:00 a.m. and end no later than 5:00 p.m. on
any given workday. Project Time: Teach 90-minute blocks in high
school or four 55-minute blocks in middle school, per day of
project time. Most teachers teach one course for the entire grade
(e.g. 9th Grade Biology), and see each section twice per week.
Teachers work with students on projects that develop cognitive
skills and apply their content knowledge to real-world situations.
Teachers facilitate discussions in the classroom, coach students in
applying their cognitive skills, and give students feedback.
Between teaching blocks, teachers analyze student data, build
lesson plans, support school culture, and other personal
development activities. Summit teachers build lesson plans through
a deep understanding of student progress data, which determines the
group and individual supports needed for their students to succeed.
Mentor Time: Build deep relationships and sense of community when
teachers meet with their small group of mentees daily for their
entire time at Summit. Daily, teachers meet with their mentor
groups, work on habits of success as a group, and check in
one-on-one with their mentees. Mentors coach and advocate for their
mentees both inside and outside of the classroom, and strive to
support them as they develop their sense of purpose as they become
self-directed learners. Self-Directed Learning Time and
Interventions: Facilitate Self Directed Learning time and daily
literacy or math interventions, which don’t involve lesson
planning. During this time, teachers provide student support,
monitor progress, and check in with individuals or groups of
students. Collaboration & Professional Development: Twice a week,
teachers participate in all-faculty after-school meetings where
community decisions are made, professional development takes place,
and faculty collaborates as a grade-level team or subject-level
team. What You Need Commitment to uphold Summit’s values, and the
belief that all children deserve a rigorous and equitable education
that prepares them for college and for life Teaching Credential in
California or another US state Bachelor’s Degree (a Master’s Degree
in Education is preferred, but not required) Clear health and
background check Teaching experience in your subject preferred, but
not required Who You Are You want to be a world-class project-based
learning teacher You thrive while collaborating and are excited to
work with mission-aligned, high-performing colleagues. You find
positivity in shared successes. You’re excited to teach Summit’s
common curriculum and assessment system, which was designed for
teachers and by teachers in partnership with learning scientists.
You care deeply about working in intentionally heterogeneous
schools and are ready to support all diverse students to reach a
fulfilled life You’re eager to engage in professional development
and be developed as a practitioner in a network that is committed
to continuous improvement. You have a growth mindset and see
feedback as a positive You are passionate about serving as a mentor
and advocate for a group of students that you’ll follow year to
year. You’re open to having hard conversations to support
students.
Keywords: Summit Public Schools, West Sacramento , Visual or Performing Arts Teacher, Education / Teaching , Redwood City, California