Kennedy re-certified as a certified school board member
The Florida School Board Association today informed me that I have once again been re-certified as a FSBA Certified Board Member.
The FSBA CBM Program requires at least 96 hours of initial training, and at least 15 hours of additional training annually. Training sessions focus on building a strong foundation in the content areas of School Finance, Policy Governance, Personnel and Bargaining, Advocacy, State/Federal Legislative Processes, and Boardsmanship.
FSBA Executive Director and former CBM recipient, Andrea Messina has shared, “We expect school board members who earn the Certified Board Member distinction to have a positive and lasting impact on their school boards.”
I am grateful to my fellow board member colleagues who have long-standing support and expectation for each Citrus County School Board member to become and maintain their FSBA CBM destination.
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Washington Post: Citrus’s High Schools are AGAIN among America’s Most Challenging High Schools 2018
Citrus County high schools tops again!
While this past year’s report was delayed the news was all the more sweet. Today Citrus County Schools Director of Research and Accountability, Amy Crowell shared that all three of our high schools in Citrus County were once again recognized by the Washington Post as “America’s Most Challenging High Schools”.
Of the 22,000 high schools in the US, near 2,500 are recognized. The Challenge Index is the oldest high school ranking system in the country, beginning in 1998 in both Newsweek and The Washington Post. It is the only list that does not rely on test scores and compares private and public schools. It ranks high schools by a simple ratio: the number of Advanced Placement, International Baccalaureate or Cambridge tests given at a school each year, divided by the number of seniors who graduated that year.
Lecanto High School– Ranked no. 567, which is in the top 3% of America’s 22,000 participating high schools
Citrus High School– Ranked no. 1605, which is in the top 7% of America’s 22,000 participating high schools
Crystal River High School– Ranked no. 1827, which is in the top 8% of America’s 22,000 participating high schools
These types of continual achievements do not just happen. They take leadership, dedicated educators, and willing, motived and hardworking students. Well done to all our students and staff for all their hard work! Well done to all our students and staff for all their hard work!
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Filed under: News & Updates
This week the
Florida Department of Education released the graduation rates for the 2017-2018
school year. We were so excited to learn that Citrus’s rate rose to an all-time
high of 84.1 percent.
In addition,
each of our high schools improved in overall grad rate, grad rate of students
with disabilities, economically disadvantaged, and at-risk. We also narrowed
the graduation gender gap and gaps among races.
Citrus High School increased to 93.5% (a 7.4% improvement),
Lecanto High School increased to 92.6% (also a 7.4% improvement), and Crystal
River High School improved to 90% (the largest with a 9.3% improvement).
The district’s graduation rate of 84.1 is a 6.5% improvement
from last year. The district’s graduation
rate includes the three high schools of CHS, CRHS, and LHS, as well as CREST, MYcroSchool,
Renaissance, and the Cypress Creek Juvenile Detention Facility.
These graduation rates are based on the Florida Uniform Graduation
rate with among other requirements includes only students who graduate in four
years with a regular high school diploma divided by the number of students in
the graduating class. It does not include all the successes from all our
District’s completion programs. For example, these rates do not include students
that received a G.E.D., 5th year graduates, Special Diploma, or
Certificate of Completion (which replaced Special Diploma in 2015). If those rates were included the graduation
rate would be even higher at every school.
I am pleased with these successes but hope in the future to further increase these successes with improved high school career graduation pathway options currently not available in Florida statute, which now require specific state assessments to be passed as part of high school graduation requirements. Our local Florida State Representative Dr. Ralph Massullo also shares a passion for CTE/workforce pathways in our schools along with Florida State Senator Wilton Simpson and many in Florida Legislature. It is my prayer in the very near future that we improve and broaden the Career and Technical Education (vocational/workforce) pathway to graduation options in Florida statute to provide schools with needed flexibility for students so that we can increases these programs and pathways for some of our high school students.
In the meantime, congratulation Citrus County students and
staff on an outstanding job!
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