ChronicleOnline: Board chooses new chariman 11/12/2013

“It was such an honor that Mrs. Deutschman would nominate me and that the other board members unanimously agreed ~Thomas”

ChronicleOnline: Board chooses new chariman

11/12/2013

Chronicle_11-14-2013

Click here to see article on ChronicleOnline…

Citrus Schools state of the District Part III

State of the District IIICitrus Schools state of the District Part III

This past week’s school board workshop was the last of a three part series report on the Citrus Schools state of the District.  During these presentations staff gave updates and reports on Clinic Procedures, professional development, the district Wellness Center, SRO curriculum and some student safety statistics.

Last year due to new legal opinions the school district found it necessary to no longer carry Epinephrine pens (a.k.a. EpiPen) that did not have a specific prescription for a specific student.  In the past the school health clinic would keep on hand EpiPens in case a student or staff member had an unexpected allergic reaction. EpiPens can be an important lifesaving tool to have.  The school board, preferred to have them in the clinic and we were disappointed when we could not.  This past legislative session Senate Bill 284 was passed and signed into law permitting schools to have on hand EpiPens. Citrus School’s Student Services department worked out an arrangement with our Wellness Care Program here and their physician to have the new necessary paperwork on hand at each school.  Student Services also obtained a grant through the “EpiPen 4 Schools” program to pay for the pens.  Now our schools have all of these important tools on our school campuses and in our clinics should they be needed for our students and staff.

Director of Professional Development, Belinda Woythaler, shared information with us about the Professional Development Department Mission.  The mission of the Professional Development Department is to foster academic and social growth of all students through promotion, support, and communication of continuous improvement strategies and the facilitation of high-quality professional development for all staff.  Ms. Woythaler explained that High Quality Professional Development includes a focus on content that Develops pedagogical knowledge and skill.  Those skills then align with standards, curriculum, and assessments. Teachers become active learners through participation and applying the context of teacher practice with participatory and collaborative skills.

The Citrus County Sherriff’s Office and the Citrus County School District have an important working arrangement for student safety through the use of School Resource Officers (SRO) at our schools. This is done through the critical curriculum they teach and the safety they provide at our schools. The SRO supervisors Sgt. Ron Frink and Sgt. Scott Farmer gave a presentation explaining the SRO program and curriculum.   An SRO is a law enforcement officer who is assigned to elementary, middle, and/or high school.  The main goal of the SRO is to prevent juvenile delinquency by promoting positive relations between youth and law enforcement. The SROs programs include the FOCUS, Junior FOCUS, Child Lures, Explorer Program, Teen Driver Challenge and more.  These officers are one of the first lines of defense in protecting and helping our students.

Student Services director, Regina Allegretta, shared some positive information about the Citrus County School Board’s bullying policies and procedures, as well as some encouraging district statics. Ms. Allegretta shared that the Florida Department of Education: Office of Safe Schools (OSS) recently performed an audit on Citrus’s bullying policies and procedures.  Following that we were notified that CCSB was in full compliance of all mandatory items.  The Office of Safe Schools complementary letter of commendation CCSB by saying, “…you on your extensive outreach, trainings, promotions, etc. to parents, teachers, students (Compliance Item #6). You compiled quite a comprehensive list of bullying-related activities and trainings going on at the district. This should be shared with other districts.”  Afterwards Ms. Allegretta updated the board on the district’s bullying policies reporting process and reviewed the annual ‘Reported Incidents’ for Citrus schools which is sent to the state. While any number of inappropriate behaviors by one students towards another is one too many it is encouraging to learn that of the approximately 15,600 plus students in 23 schools in Citrus School Districts that this year (2013-2014) to date, 4-Substantiated and 8-Unsubstantiated bullying cases have been reported in all Citrus schools. During the 2012-2013 school year, 12-Substantiated and 8-Unsubstantiated, and in 2011-2012 school year, 8-Substantiated and 0-Unsubstantiated bullying cases have been reported in all Citrus schools. For additional information on the district’s bullying policies can be reviewed CCSB Student Code of Conduct, and the CCSB policy 5.321: Bullying and Harassment.

I always encourage the State of the District workshops as it gives board members and better opportunity to learn about the detailed working of our districts and its programs.

Two Articles on Common Core Worth Reading

myths or factsTwo Articles on Common Core Worth Reading

Here are two recent article that I feel helped to talk about some of the misinformation going around about the Common Core State Standards.

  • Florida charter & private school groups: So much misinformation about Common Core – http://www.redefinedonline.org/2013/10/florida-charter-school-group-much-misinformation-common-core/#sthash.hF5jvcJH.ARyDcKEz.dpuf“An advocacy group for charter school parents in Florida is warning its parents about widely circulating myths regarding Common Core State Standards. While the recent newsletter from Parents for Charter Schools doesn’t endorse Common Core, it does attempt to dispel what it says are a few misleading statements – and in tone, its language echoes that of Common Core supporters.”
  • Distortions on Common Core – http://www.tampabay.com/news/education/k12/politifact-rumors-blacken-common-core/2148256“As Florida surges toward full implementation of Common Core State Standards for its public schools, the din is rising from some fronts to pull back. Gov. Rick Scott, whose tea party base offers perhaps the most strident opposition, is listening. In open forums Scott requested last week, people stepped forward to give their views. Criticism ranged from what’s taught in English class all the way to conspiracy theories involving iris scans.”

Vote for you Favorite Art Outside the Box

Art in a Box 2013Vote for you Favorite Art Outside the Box

As part of the Citrus County Chronicle‘s partnership with The Festival of the Arts, local high school students decorated 8 newspaper boxes that will be displayed during the Festival of The Arts scholarship social and festival. You can vote for your favorite painted newspaper box. Voting runs from October 21 through November 3, 2013. On November 4, the first, second and third place winners will be announced.

Please follow this link to vote for your favorite Box: http://chronicleonline.upickem.net/engine/Welcome.aspx?contestid=107924

Update on Florida Education State Standards

I am shocked...Update on Florida Education State Standards

 “I’m shocked, shocked to find that gambling is going on in here!” ~ Captain Renault from Casablanca

There have been times as both a school board member and public school parent that I have been frustrated with the educational decisions made by Florida’s policy makers and leaders. Most recently was about two week ago (October 15, 2013) when the Florida State Board of Education, at the urging of Gov. Rick Scott, voted 5-1 to reject the new state standard’s “Appendices”.  Why was this a big deal? Because the Language Arts appendices are supportive references that guide teachers on text complexity, move the teaching to higher levels of thinking, and model practices for English Language Arts and Literacy in history, social studies, science, and technical subjects.  In addition, the appendices provide exemplars of reading text complexity, text quality, and the range and sample of performance tasks related to the common core standards.  Another appendix provides the teacher and student with samples of student writing that have been annotated to illustrate the criteria required to meet the common core standards.  The appendices also include guidelines on how to structure math classes as well as provide sample units that help teachers create coherent groupings of content for Algebra I, Geometry, and Algebra II.  In short, this 5-1 rejection of the appendices means that  none of the work that the teachers and school leaders have been working on to implement usage of the legally required Common Core State Standards (CCSS) in Math and ELA (English Language Arts) passed by the Florida legislators in 2010 and 2013, will now have Florida’s official support.  The only Florida State Board member to vote against the rejection of the Appendices was Board Member Kathleen Shanahan.  She said, “Isn’t that sad that we are sitting here voting on something that is going to have no integrity?” The Tampa Bay Times reported in their article, “Florida Board of Education rejects parts of Common Core associated with benchmarks”, that Shanahan voted against Gov. Scott’s suggestions, “saying the appendices were already in use.” Florida Education Commissioner Pam Stewart said that despite the Board’s rejections of the appendices, local school systems would still have the option to use the appendices.  I suppose this was meant to be our silver lining. However, it should be noted that the appendices were immediately removed from the Florida Department of Education’s web site and are no longer available for school districts to download.

So let’s recap on the Common Core issue.  In 2010 the Florida Legislators, at the behest of “educational reform” special interest groups, passed several educational laws including transitioning to Common Core State Standards. That meant that Florida would transition to the Common Core Standards and  move from the Florida’s Comprehensive Assessment Test (FCAT) to a new Common Core assessment, Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College (PARCC).  Furthermore, because of these new laws, the Florida Department of Education mandated that school districts purchase curriculum and resources and provide professional development consistent with that transition. In 2011 legislation was passed overhauling Florida’s teacher evaluation system. Students’ scores from the FCAT and later, PARCC, must be used and counted towards 50% of a teacher’s evaluation.  On August 20, 2012, Governor Scott released a statement called, ‘Student Testing: “No More Teaching to the Test”’ expressing his support for Common Core and the PARCC.  In that statement Governor Scott says, “I’ve heard the frustrations teachers and parents have with the current FCAT system”. He references the PARCC was a test developed in part by Florida educators and says, “That’s why, next year, our schools will move to a ‘common core’ system, developed in part by Florida teachers, that emphasizes analytical problem solving over memorization and simple recitation of facts.”  Governor Scott continues, saying, “unlike the FCAT, PARCC will allow comparison of education performance across the country and will provide a consistent, clear understanding of what students need to learn to succeed in college and careers.  Teachers in Florida have been active in major parts of the development of this new system.” Then, last month (Sept. 23, 2013) Governor Scott seems to have done a 180 degree turn by signing an executive order and releasing a statement, ‘Path Forward for High Education Standards & Decision to Withdraw from PARCC’ where he outlines a six step process to, as Gov. Scott now says, “Remove the state from federal intrusion in education policy”.   He went on to say, “I (Scott) told the federal government we are rejecting their overreach into our state education system by withdrawing from PARCC”. Finally, on October 15, 2013 the Florida State Board of Education voted, at the urging of Gov. Rick Scott, to reject the new Common Core State Standard’s “Appendices”.  Is your head spinning now?

As the 2014 Legislation begins you will probably hear political leaders say that they want to give local school boards, “more control”, and “more options”.  They might say “Those concerns are local school board decisions.”  What you are not likely hear these political leaders and lawmakers say is “Give local school boards the autonomy to create our high stakes assessments.”  See, the bottom line is whoever controls the assessments truly controls the standards, appendices/ exemplars, and curriculum.  The state has put many penalties on ONLY public school districts, public schools, and their teachers and students.  As a district, we do not really have discretion over standards, appendices or curriculum until we have control over assessments.  It is time that those in our state that claim to believe in “local governing” remember that local governing does not stop in Tallahassee.

 

CSMS is an “A”

CSMS an 'A' SchoolCSMS is an “A”

Congratulations to Citrus Springs Middle School who received notice today from the Florida Department of Education that their school’s grade of an “I” (incomplete) was change to an ”A”! When the other schools grades came out this fall CSMS’s was held up as their 8th grade math scores were so high that DOE wanted them to verify they were correct. What is interesting is that while this year’s 8th grade scores were high, last year’s 7th grade scores (yes, same kids) were even higher.

GREAT WORK CSMS!!!!!