Tag Archive | "Pottsgrove elementary school redistricting"

20120221-StowePA-StopTheCentersSign

Bright Yellow Signs Flag Pottsgrove Centers’ Opposition

One of the signs in West Pottsgrove

POTTSTOWN PA – In hopes of bringing more public pressure to bear on the Board of School Directors, as its mulls choices for redistricting in the Pottsgrove School District, lawn signs began popping up last week to reinforce opposition to a proposal that would create grade-level education centers in its elementary schools.

The signs appear on front lawns and at curbside of properties along Kauffman Road, North Pleasant View Road, East High Street, and North Charlotte Street in Lower Pottsgrove (PA) Township; and in West and Upper Pottsgrove along Maugers Mill Road, Farmington Avenue, and Glasgow Street, Rick Rabinowitz of the “Pottsgrove Residents Against Centers” group indicated Monday (Feb. 20, 2012) in a Facebook post.

The group is fighting a plan, introduced by Superintendent Dr. Bradley Landis, to balance student population across Pottsgrove’s elementary classrooms by creating two kindergarten-through-second grade centers, and a third-through-fifth grade center. They would replace the current K-5 attendance at West Pottsgrove, Ringing Rocks, and Lower Pottsgrove elementaries.

The only other alternative discussed by the board is to re-draw attendance boundaries that wold shift students from one school to another.

Directors have said they will consider voting on the matter during their Feb. 28 meeting. The board last week (Feb. 14) confirmed the meeting would be moved from the administration building on Kauffman Road to the auditorium at Pottsgrove High School. It starts at 7:30 p.m., and is open to the public; a large audience is expected.

The group also is circulating petitions to gather signatures that it intends to demonstrate the centers’ plan is opposed by families without children in the district and those whose children have already completed their education, and not by parents of current students alone.

Related (to Pottsgrove School District redistricting):

Related (to the Pottsgrove Board of School Directors’ Feb. 14 meeting):

 

Photo by Tracy Swanson Romig via Facebook

Posted in Education, Lower Pottsgrove, Pottsgrove SchoolsComments (16)

The Case Against Centers in the Pottsgrove School District

The Case Against Centers in the Pottsgrove School District

Editor’s Note: This following article was written by Pottsgrove School District residents Rick and Cheryl Rabinowitz. It was offered Feb. 9 (2012) to The Post for potential publication, and Managing Editor Joe Zlomek agreed to publish it given the continuing controversy over the proposal to create educational centers within the district. It does not conform to The Post’s usual publication standards. It does not reflect, represent or constitute an opinion of The Post. Its publication is part of The Post’s Sunday Contributor series, begun during 2009, for which guest authors are invited to offer submissions. If you’d like to become a Sunday Contributor, please e-mail The Post.

By Rick and Cheryl Rabinowitz

Reconfiguring the K-5 elementary schools of the Pottsgrove School District into grade-level centers would be a massive, radical undertaking which would impact every family and every community within our school district.  The magnitude of this proposal, particularly in the hurried and unsupported manner in which it has been presented to those outside of the central administration, cannot be overstated.  All of the elements of a well conducted, community-driven effort have been lacking. There has been a lack of planning, preparation, collaboration and foresight.  There is no evidence that substantial thought and consideration were given to the idea of merely redistricting versus reconfiguring to address the issue of the overcrowded elementary schools.  Despite the district’s push for expediency in making the decision, there are too many questions and concerns that remain unanswered and unaddressed to the satisfaction of parents, teachers, and members of the community.

The Centers model for redistricting K-5 elementary schools, while on the surface presented as a collaborative effort, actually began as a series of preset agendas during a Budget Task Force meeting.  At the initial meeting in Feb. 2011, The Centers model was floated to a group of volunteers comprised of parents, teachers, administrators, and board members.  The purpose of the Budget Task Force was to find ways to cut costs across the elementary schools as well as the district as a whole.  While the goal of the collaborative teams was to propose ideas, the Centers model was one that was provided by members of the administration during the meetings and has proven to be the initial salvo in a concentrated effort by the administration to make the case in favor of a K-2 and 3-5 configuration.  (see Feb. 2011 minutes, here).

Six months later in August 2011, a team of parents, board members, teachers, and administrators were solicited by the administration to collect information and offer feedback and evaluations as part of a Redistricting Committee.  Some of the committee members joining the team believe they were misinformed about the intention of the group as they were presented with the Centers approach and encouraged that this was the best choice available.  The alternative of redistricting and keeping elementary schools intact was presented as a less viable option, or in later meetings, completely ignored. No other options were explored.

One parent volunteer for the Redistricting Committee who as an administrator has extensive experience in the field of education spoke for the group of redistricting members and members of the community in commenting that he was “disappointed and concerned” by what transpired during the course of the four meetings.  He went on to state that “With each successive meeting of the Elementary Redistricting Committee, it became increasingly evident that consideration of a reconfiguration of our kindergarten through 5th grades into two K through 2nd grade and one 3rd through 5th grade Centers was THE predominant charge of the committee, far outweighing the time and conversation allotted for the other charges outlined at the first meeting of the group.”  In contrast, the initial invitation from Dr. Bradley Landis, Pottsgrove Superintendent, soliciting interested constituents to join the formative Redistricting Committee clearly stated that the Redistricting Committee would study elementary enrollment patterns across the townships, evaluate attendance borders for the current K-5 configuration and “make recommendations to the School Board regarding attendance borders and whether they should be adjusted to balance enrollment numbers across the three schools.”

Following the final report of the Redistricting Committee, the concern of parents and teachers became overwhelmingly strong given the “bait and switch” method of proposing the Elementary Centers approach along with the lack of supporting evidence to ensure its viability and success.  In addressing the issue of transparency and communication, many commented that information, including the dates and times for the board meetings, was not presented in a manner that encouraged parent involvement and representation.

The first of the board meetings was held in early December.  It was during this and subsequent meetings that it became clear that there was overwhelming parent opposition to the idea of the Centers model as the one and only option to cut costs and rebalance class sizes.  Parent questions and concerns included numerous areas, many of which had not been considered by the administration.  Parents reported that the Pros and Cons list, while paying lip service to consideration for both options (Centers and Current Configuration), was designed to sell the community on the Elementary Centers approach by minimizing the importance of the stated cons.  Ironically, the cons carried far more weight than the pros.

Additionally, parent concerns included overlooked and yet pivotal issues such as the following questions asked and still unanswered, or unanswered adequately:

  1. How would dividing up students across various school buildings affect parent volunteer efforts that currently are an area of strength due to proximity and K-5 grouping?
  2. How would parents handle drop offs or pickups at two buildings at the same time, when those two buildings could be West Pottsgrove and Lower Pottsgrove—nearly 20 miles apart?
  3. How would a parent of kids in both of the above schools handle the drop off when they miss the bus?  Won’t one kid end up being late for school?  Which one should they choose?
  4. How will parents decide which family-oriented events to attend when they will inevitably be held on the same day at different schools?

Pottsgrove administration has answered these concerns in a manner that ignores the effect on families in their community. The response of administration officials is that these critical, day–to-day issues is not an area of concern for the district. They seem to miss or ignore the difference between a 7th and 4th grader in distant buildings and a 4th and 1st grader in the same situation.  7th graders are old enough to be left alone (at least for short periods of time).  1st graders are not!  In responding, the district has pointed to another school district that does have a Center, Springfield Township School District, to indicate that they have been able to make this system work despite similar problems.  The devil is in the details, however, the Springfield Township K-1 and 2-5 are located on the same campus rather than nearly 20 miles apart.

Additionally, unanswered questions include the following:

  1. How would teacher communications across grade levels be handled?  There is an immeasurable benefit for teachers who have knowledge of students to act as a resource to later teachers in future years.  Additionally, wouldn’t teacher training be less effective as the 2nd to 3rd gap was created?  Wouldn’t materials be less available for sharing?
  2. What if a child were held back in the 2nd grade?  How would that affect him/her by remaining in the K-2 school building? (This issue evolved into a lawsuit in the Springfield Township School District—between administrators)
  3. What if a child in 2nd (or even 1st grade) were capable of handling higher grade level challenges (very common)?  Wouldn’t they be limited in terms of access to materials and other teachers who could provide more advanced opportunities?
  4. Would library resources for overachievers be available in 1st and 2nd grade?  What about library resources for underachievers in 3rd through 5th?
  5. What about the gap between 2nd and 3rd grade created by physical distance?  How will information be shared about medical needs, IEP goals, accommodations, etc?
  6. Wouldn’t students in lower grades miss opportunities (lack modeling) to view works/performances of students at a higher level? Concerts? Art displays? Performances?
  7. What about the mutual benefits to younger and older children that comes from the Safety Program?  The district handled this question at the second meeting by suggesting that 2nd graders could be Safeties.  This caused 200 parents to erupt with laughter.  But it wasn’t funny at all!
  8. Gifted programming is now offered to 2nd graders.  Wouldn’t this be eliminated entirely to save on transportation costs?
  9. Wouldn’t school wide events be less enriching for the students?  Parades? Plays? Concerts? Field Day?
  10. What about the stress for 3rd graders starting school in a new building with older students who they’ve never met before?  Again, the district answered this by saying the same thing happens now when 6th graders go to the middle school, ignoring the differences in ages.
  11. What about the effects of creating a “little middle” school, given the drop off in behavior and academics that frequently begins in middle grades?
  12. What about the security that younger siblings feel going to school/riding the bus with older siblings?
  13. What about the sense of community and security a child feels knowing the teachers through multiple grade levels?

One consistent answer to many of the questions from the administration is that “children will adapt”.  This is specious.  Kids will adapt to anything, but the adaptation is often far from positive.  Different kids adapt differently.  The kids most likely to be harmed from this change in grade level grouping and buildings are the kids that can least afford it!

Further, Pottsgrove elementary teachers who presently oppose the Centers model by over 80% with 10% undecided have received communications from the administration to keep their opinions private. Elementary teacher groups received visits from members of the administration where they were informed that the Centers model was a “done deal.”  Additional information provided at the time suggested that the end result of keeping the current configuration would be more cuts than the Centers-pushed configuration.  It was strongly suggested by the members of administration that they support the Centers model.  When I (Rick) confronted Shellie Feola, Assistant Superintendent, at the January 10th meeting about the “muzzle” placed on the teachers, she sharply denied such claims.  Nonetheless, these bullying tactics, sanctioned and used by members of administration, have been confidentially confirmed by teachers from all three schools. One teacher said, “Isn’t Pottsgrove Middle School a Center?  Isn’t the High School a Center?  These results were far below AYP this year in most subcategories!”

She concluded, “Why would we replace a system that is working with a model that is not?”  Another teacher, when told that Ms. Feola theorized at the last board meeting that teacher opposition results from “fear of change” and Ms. Feola’s claim that teacher opinions are becoming more accepting of the Centers model, became indignant, saying, “Almost every teacher in my school is against the Centers.  We believe that this change is not in the best interests of the children.  And, no teacher I know has changed his or her minds; we’ve just been forced to keep quiet!”

In defense of the Centers model, the Pottsgrove School District Administration has cited a number of positive instructional impacts that Centers would provide for our students.  Among others, these include “increased consistency in feeder schools to the next level”, “development of a literary focus in K-2 schools”, “opportunity to expand subject area expertise in a 3-5 school” and “greater opportunities to match teachers to student learning styles”.  The educational jargon here has no direct research associated with it, and there is certainly no basis in current data or research to lend credibility to the claim that they will in fact contribute to a greater end result in our elementary classrooms.  Essentially, what has been put forth as the upside to a Centers approach is characterized by fuzzy explanations and presentations by the Pottsgrove administration as opposed to anything of merit or substance. Indeed, we already have a literary focus in K-2 as the curriculum was changed several years ago to accommodate that focus.  For example, the district dropped science as a subject in the early grades in order to put more emphasis on reading.  Finally, all of these so called positives are rendered meaningless by virtue of the word “opportunity” that describes them.  In this context, “Opportunity” means it won’t get done.

Countering this lack of supportive evidence for a Centers model, concerned parents have turned out at meetings to object to this takeover by the administration and supplied research articles to the Board and public that clearly indicate the need for further study, if not complete rejection of the Centers model.  While the Centers model is a relative rarity in PA, it has been investigated more commonly by districts in various states in recent years as schools look for cost cutting measures given tight budgets from the State.  Most, if not all, have rejected the idea of a Centers model when confronted with the evidence that this type of narrowly configured model comes with its own set of costs including an overall negative effect on student achievement and performance at the elementary level.

Other studies have yielded results that have been the same. As grade span configuration increases, so does achievement.  The more grade levels a school services, the better students perform.  The more transitions a student makes, the worse a student performs (Wren, 2004).

The task of restructuring elementary grades throughout a school district is a monumental undertaking requiring many, many months of research, surveying, analysis, discussion and planning and resident involvement if the goal is to ascertain feasibility and practicality before pursuing implementation.  This is evidenced by the numerous school districts throughout our State and nation over the past decade which have devoted the necessary time and carefully and thoughtfully carried out the requisite steps before making recommendations for significant change.

In contrast, the presentation of the Centers concept to the Redistricting Committee and subsequently the Pottsgrove Board of School Directors has been hurried, shallow, research-deficient, and consequently ill-advised.  It has been rife with pre-set and hidden agendas, subterfuge, collusion, and deliberate attempts to thwart opposition to the Centers plan by whatever means are possible.  The weakly supported reasons for quality improvement to the educational program finally presented as an afterthought at the January 24th  board meeting has left parents of children in the elementary schools questioning who is at the helm of the Pottsgrove School District. Born out of a preset Budget Task Force meeting agenda, the decision by all counts is a cost cutting measure, pure and simple.

A member of the central administrative team felt compelled to point out to the Redistricting Committee during the final meeting that she and her colleagues are employed by Pottsgrove School District to make decisions that are in the best interests of students, not teachers.  We, the parents and community members of the Pottsgrove School District say that what is best for a child’s teachers, what is best for a child’s community, what is best for a child’s family IS, in fact, quite often what is best for the child! As members of the Pottsgrove community, we have a shared responsibility to work together to make sound budgetary decisions in good faith without compromising the quality of education and welfare of our students.

PGSD PowerPoint Rebuttal

With questions left unanswered at the first January meeting, parent frustration running high, and the lack of supporting information for the rationale behind the Centers approach, President of the Board, Michael Neiffer, urged the school administration to present reasons for the aggressively unprecedented change to the current grade configuration.

The PowerPoint slideshow (below) presented by Dr. Brad Landis, Superintendent of Pottsgrove School District, at the Jan. 24th meeting, emphasizes this one-sided view.  While originally received with some positive feedback for simply supplying a rationale for the radical move to Centers, the information presented at the meeting when carefully examined provides no credible data to support the notion that the move to this new configuration is advisable or will be successful.

The first slide is typical of the administration’s methods; in this slide, this year’s K-5 class size numbers are compared with next year’s proposed numbers for centers using two different districting models.  In other words, they are comparing apples with oranges.  Still, the most important thing to note on this slide is the reduction from 11 sections to 10 in the fourth and fifth grade.  The district calls this “balancing class size”.  However, that is simply doublespeak for increasing class size for 2/3 of the district in the fourth grade and all of the classes in the fifth grade.  This doublespeak pervades the slideshow, and contradicts the very reasons the Redistricting Committee was formed: reducing overcrowding (class sizes) at West Pottsgrove.

As Mr. Nester and Dr. Landis admitted at the last board meeting, one component of the Centers Model to the administration is the ability to cut more sections from these and other grades with only incremental changes to class size.  Realistically speaking, the result of the move to Centers will be future cuts.  While some in the district might believe that anything that cuts costs is a positive, the reality is that increases in class size will have an inverse effect on our property values, creating a vicious cycle of decreased property values and decreased tax revenue leading to further cuts!

During the same Jan. 24th meeting, Dr. Landis also pointed to two purposes behind the rationale for Centers (K-2 and 3-5): cost and improvement in quality of education for students.  Perhaps the most compelling selling point was the ability of the district to provide full day kindergarten to all students in a Centers model.  The bar graph presented at the Jan. 24th meeting by Dr. Landis is designed to present the case for full day kindergarten (FDK) and, therefore, (to afford this option) a Centers model.  Assessments of those initial FDK students’ achievement levels (in blue on the chart below) taken during 2010 (third grade) and 2011 (fourth grade), according to Dr. Landis showed they had made significant progress in catching up to achievement levels of their peers across grade level (in red).  Landis concluded that the evidence presented so far shows the value and worthiness of the FDK’s program expansion.

At first glance the FDK option appears to be an effective offering.  However, it was pointed out at the meeting that the graph is misleading as it is currently presented.  The FDK students represented by the blue bars are compared against the entire grade (so they are being compared against themselves).  This is an excellent example of how to use statistics to evade the truth.  Obviously, if they had provided a more valid comparison of the FDK against the Half Day Kindergarten (HDK), the delta between the bars on the chart would have been significantly wider.  Furthermore, there could be countless other reasons to explain the improvements by the FDK students, including: changes in curriculum, the existence of a pre-K program in the previous year, staff turnover, and student relocations in or out of the district, just to name a few.  Additionally, one has to wonder why only one year’s worth of data was presented.  Perhaps subsequent years didn’t look nearly as attractive?  Essentially, no valid conclusions can be drawn from the graph as it is presented here.

Given the wealth of data available to the administration, it speaks to an underlying aim as to why this was the only graph available in support of a FDK program for all students. In short, this bar graph does nothing to support the positive effects of the FDK program.  Parents urged that data separating the cohort be offered for the purpose of seeing the actual effect given the extra expense for this FDK program.  To date, no follow up information has been made available.  Meanwhile, Dr. Landis informed the board and audience that 3.5 new teachers would be needed to attain FDK if we stayed in the current configuration, and 1.5 new teachers would be needed if we moved to the Centers model (the other two teachers would come from “repurposing” the two lost sections from fourth and fifth grade).  In other words, the only way to have FDK, even in the Centers Model, is to add cost!  Dr. Landis admitted to one questioner that there was no guarantee that we would be able to add any teachers at all.  In other words, FDK might not happen even if we did move to the Centers Model.

Further evidence presented to support the full time kindergarten (FDK) model was new standards for kindergartners.  Dr. Landis presented the matrix (below) to demonstrate these new standards required of kindergartners by 2013.


The PA State Board of Education adopted the Common Core Standards on July 1, 2010.  PA’s Learning Standard’s for Early Childhood (Kindergarten) are in the process of ensuring alignment to the national Common Core Standards.  Currently, the “New Reality 2013” standards are incorporated in the kindergarten curriculum of the Pottsgrove School District.  In short, our students are already receiving instruction and provided with assessments aligned with the 2013 standards.  This too, is another example of using data in a misleading manner.  The administration’s argument that our teachers need instruction that can only be provided in the Centers environment in order to meet these new standards has no validity at all, because the teachers are already meeting these standards in the current configuration!

In determining the benefits versus costs of FDK, most school districts weigh these effects by going out about 5 years to see and compare results with HDK.  Then most districts look at the cost to get FDK. Schools offering FDK, based on the results of performance levels of grade level students over time, generally extend this programming to students most in need. What most studies say is that the effects of FDK, though initially positive in the first year, level out by about 3rd grade.

Therefore, Pottsgrove is using the FDK to lure residents into supporting the move to Centers instead of basing the decision on need as determined by comparative data. If we could SEE the results of the cohorts broken into the two groups over a series of years, we would likely see that the FDK kids leveled out anyway—even after offering them the full day program.

Finally, here is a chart that shows the percentage of Full Day Kindergarten in nearby districts.  Notice that the highest performing districts based on PSSA results have the lowest percentage of FDK!

The Centers model was also emphasized as a means to provide more specialized classes in the new configuration.  The goal in this regard was to enable the district to return special education students from out of district placements.  One important consideration, even acknowledged by Dr. Landis during the meeting, is the potential lack of interest for out-of-district students to return to Pottgrove.  While the desire of centers model proponents may be to lure back students placed elsewhere, the likelihood of these students returning is slim. Transitioning for special needs students is especially difficult and often unpredictable.

The district has provided no information to indicate that the THREE families of students receiving the out-of district services have been contacted to determine whether they might move back if the Centers model existed. This question may have been resolved in the 20 minutes it would take to survey this group, despite the fact that the costs associated with these out of placement students amounts to $88,000.

Finally, since Dr. Landis acknowledged that the district was able to bring back two students this year in the current configuration, this suggests that, if possible, more such children could be brought back without radically changing how our children are educated!

In the next two slides, the district spoke about the limitations put upon it by Act 1, rightfully saying that the amount of money they can raise through tax increases is limited.  At the last meeting, one parent in favor of the centers suggested that our taxes will go up if we don’t go to centers.  However, it was pointed out by another parent that our taxes will go up either way. The board agreed with this.  I (Rick) pointed out that all the districts in our area are facing the same problems, and yet the very large majority of them, including the most highly rated (OJR, Great Valley, Treddyferin, Lower Merion, Downingtown, and 98% of the top schools in PA as rated by SchoolDigger.com), are NOT considering this option. I asked Dr. Landis what these schools are doing to cope with Act 1 and with reductions in grants from the state and federal governments.  He said he didn’t know.  I asked why other options than the two on the table hadn’t been considered, and received no answer.

There is no arguing against the reductions in subsidies.  Indeed, the decision on Centers was delayed until 2/28 because the district anticipated yet another reduction from the state and had this happened, Full Day Kindergarten would not be possible, even with Centers, given the need for an additional 1.5 staff.  Mr. Nester said, in answer to a question I asked about this, that we may need centers just to keep the current number of FDK sessions.  Despite the so called proof that FDK is critical, many districts in the state, including some of the best, are dropping FDK.  What do they know that Pottsgrove doesn’t?  Furthermore, as previously stated, the only way the move to Centers can do this is by increasing class sizes.  Though the educational benefits of Centers are unstudied and unproven, it has been very well established that the lower the class size, the better the results.  Furthermore, despite reductions in state subsidies, other subsidies exist.  Indeed, just this past week, Pennsylvania schools were awarded $41 million in the federal “Race to the Top” program.  Our district might be eligible for a share of these funds; however, since transparency at schools is a key criterion, it is unlikely that we will earn a share!

Quoting from this article: “As a result of the Race to the Top Grant award, funds will be allocated to increase transparency at Pennsylvania’s public schools,” Tomalis said. “Ultimately, the goal is to provide parents with the information necessary to make informed decisions regarding their child’s educational future.”  Meanwhile, our district, as it relates to Centers, has been anything but transparent, setting up sham committees with no vote, putting forth specious slide shows that lack substance and mask the real reasons behind their plans, telling teachers that the Centers are a “done deal” and intimidating them into keeping quiet about their opposition.  Another example of this “done deal” approach comes from a parent at West Pottsgrove Elementary, who just signed her child up for “Jump Rope for Heart” online and was surprised that her school was listed as “West Pottsgrove Elementary Center”.  The school board President has assured us on multiple occasions that this decision has not been made, but our administration either knows something we do not, or is just plain arrogant.  What is clear is that our administration does not think much about the parents of this district!  Despite OVERWHELMING numbers of Parents against these plans, this administration considers it a “done deal.” Our opinions just don’t matter.

Meanwhile, we just learned this week that Pottsgrove’s state funds will not be cut, but they will be increased.  However, there is no doubt that the administration was prepared to argue that whether state funds were increased or decreased, the move to Centers was necessary. Heads they win, tails we lose.

In the below slide, the district points out that costs are going up.  Of course, those costs are increasing everywhere, and we’ve already pointed out that other districts are finding other ways to deal with these problems.  And, the district is not sharing the fact that we have had unexpected surpluses ($500k) in recent years due to taxes from the new shopping “Giant” shopping center.  What was done with this money?  It went into a “general purpose fund” the district maintains with a balance in the millions.  Perhaps we could have 3.5 new teachers by actually using a small percentage of that money? And, if we do have to cut, why would we cut class size in the elementary schools to save money?  Why not cut programs that are not critical to academic performance?  Why not cut administrators?  Why not cut money for administrator travel to conferences held in choice locations throughout the country?  Indeed, the administration does not share how much money they spend for this!

The administration pointed out in the below slide that they, along with the teachers, froze salaries last year to save jobs and money.  While admirable, they did not mention that Dr. Landis and Ms. Feola have recently been provided 5 year extensions on their contracts, while our teachers are still working without a contract.  They did not indicate what increases Dr. Landis will get to his $173k salary but we are quite certain the freeze was not extended!  The administration also ignores the fact that the cuts to fund operations need not come from the elementary schools alone.  We believe that the district could find the money for 3.5 new teachers in other ways without imposing this radical change on a community that does not want it!  Or, they could add the same number of teachers (1.5) as the centers plan calls for, put those extra sections at Ringing Rocks, redistrict enough children to fill those extra classes, and continue to measure the impact of FDK without turning our whole elementary system inside out.

Dr. Landis presented information regarding the music program and gifted programming as benefitting in the Centers model.  While it is understood that travel time does figure some inconvenience and lost time for these groups, it should be noted that they are a small portion of the total student body affected by the potential move.  One might estimate that the gifted students account for 2-3% of all students.   An estimate for music students might be somewhere around 8%.  Given the small portion of students in these groups compared to the student body as a whole, it seems that the majority of students should determine the most logical choice for configuration.

As for the statement regarding the benefit of the entire staff together in one building, there is no research to justify or prove any benefit to program delivery.  In fact, the research that does exist proves otherwise with local school districts extending grade level ranges rather than narrowing them.

The below slide is the only one that has some modicum of truth to it. But the idea that Centers will magically increase teacher quality is not supported by the facts.

The below misleading slide regarding teacher meetings and in-service days appeared to read as additional times provided for these purposes. The slide didn’t say that the daily common planning, 18 one-hour meetings before school, early releases and in-service days already exist. These are being carried out right now in the current configuration. There is no additional training or grade meeting days in the Centers model.

In fact, with the Centers model, teacher groups will be larger.

The research on group size is clear: “Performance gets worse as group size increases. Groups of nine generate fewer and poorer ideas than groups of six, which do worse than groups of four.”

Right now teachers work in groups of three, however, in the Centers model teacher will be meeting with entire grades.  With excessively large groups, less information will be shared; the groups will be less effective.

Further, the 18 meetings are designed to examine student data; this has no effect on improving teacher quality.

And, what adult reading this article did not have poor teachers at some points during their schooling?  The one thing I know about poor teachers is that no training will make them good.  The reasons teachers are poor and less effective have little to do with their knowledge of curriculum, and everything to do with teaching style, temperament, classroom  management skills, flexibility, intelligence and probably ten other factors that will NOT be affected by 18 one hour meetings with everyone in their grade.  The idea is absurd and is just another red herring thrown out by the administration in a desperate attempt to move our attention away from the real goal: cutting teachers and increasing class size

None of the parents in opposition to Centers believe that the longest bus run, when buses will need travel (in some cases) from Lower Pottsgrove to West Pottsgrove, will be 42 minutes.  Mr. Nester says they have run computer models that prove this to be the case.  But computer models are not the real world.  Computer models do not know when traffic jams up; they do not know when a slow driver will get in front of a bus, etc.  If you think a bus with 15 or so stops can make it from West to Lower in this time, try it yourself at 8am in the morning or at 3:30pm in the afternoon without any stops!

Meanwhile, here is a link to an article that was produced by the State of Vermont (and was presented to the board and parents at the last board meeting).  It shows the physical dangers of long idling time and long bus rides to the health of our children caused by Diesel exhaust.  Every state in the Northeast has enacted strict regulations as a result.  All, except for, of course, Pennsylvania.

The concluding slide below is incorrect on all counts.  Cost savings is the primary goal, Mr. Nester admitted this himself.  Balanced class size means increased class size for most, if not all.  More resources allocated to primary program, I presume, means FDK.  And, as we have shown, this is not the wisest way to invest extra resources if they were available.  And, as the district has admitted, once we move to centers, there is no guarantee those resources will be invested into FDK.  Teacher quality will not improve from this change, but most likely will get worse as the research shows with larger classes.  And the enhanced special education programming will get cut too when the parents of the 3 children the district intends to bring back don’t agree and/or when future budgets require cutting.

The parents and teachers of this district are not convinced; they do not want to lose their neighborhood schools.  Petitions from the community will soon be delivered to the Pottsgrove School Board. The petitions will illustrate just how widespread the opposition to these plans really is. This district will lose doubly if they impose this plan over our objections.  They will lose the support of parents in the district, they will lose many students to private and charter schools, they will reduce motivation in their teaching staff, and they will ultimately lose the faith of their local community. EVERYONE in the district will lose based on the interests and decisions of a few.

The fact that the administration communicated that this decision is a “done deal” to its staff despite the overwhelming evidence and public opposition against the centers model shared here and at the school board meetings speaks to the callous arrogance of an administration out of touch with its constituents. The administration feels confident that their agenda will be executed via the board. As Courtney Quinones Glass, lifetime Pottsgrove resident, former Ringing Rocks student and current Ringing Rocks parents posted on the Facebook group Pottsgrove Parents Against Centers: “How will the public react if the Centers Model is implemented? How will the community feel about Pottsgrove? Will the anger eventually wear off and will complacency set in? Is that really what we want?? A bunch of irate or even complacent parents? Do we want parents feeling helpless and without a voice (because if this is true that the decision is made, then frankly our opinions don’t matter)? How does that move Pottsgrove FORWARD??

If you agree with us, please go online and sign our petition.

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20120211-SigningPetitions-GoogleImages

Pottsgrove Ed Centers’ Opponents Launch Petition Drive

POTTSTOWN PA – Opponents of a Pottsgrove School District administration plan to create grade-level education centers at its three elementary schools say they are collecting signatures this weekend and during the next two weeks, on hard-copy and online petitions, to show the Board of School Directors they’re not the only ones who think the centers’ proposal should be abandoned.

Rick Rabinowitz, an opposition organizer, said Friday (Feb. 10, 2012) the group is not limiting itself to district parents. “We’re just getting started (with the petitions), but several parents have reported to me that many residents of the district who are not parents are enthusiastically signing,” he claimed.

Pottsgrove homes with individuals age 18 and younger comprise less than 39 percent of all district households, federal Census Bureau 2010 statistics show. Households with children in the elementaries represent an even smaller percentage. Directors have publicly acknowledged the opinions of the majority without children also must be weighed in whether they approve, discard or delay creating centers.

The centers are one of two options – the other is to redraw school attendance boundaries – being discussed as Pottsgrove seeks to redistrict and better balance student populations across available classroom space.

Superintendent Dr. Bradley Landis advocates grouping students in two buildings for grades K-2, and one for grades 3-5, to increase efficiency, improve teaching quality, and reduce costs. Opponents doubt those benefits can be realized, and further believe creating centers introduces too many stresses for students and families alike.

Their paper petitions are being made available Saturday (Feb. 11) from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday (Feb. 12) from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the front counter of the Bikeline/Stowe Ski Shop store, 1386 State St., Pottstown PA; and Sunday from noon to 5 p.m. in the lounge of Cutillo’s Restaurant, 2688 E. High St., Sanatoga PA.

Rabinowitz expected to present petitions to directors when they meet next Tuesday (Feb. 14) at 7:30 p.m. in the cafeteria of Pottsgrove Middle School, 1351 N. Hanover St., Pottstown. However, that meeting is planned to further discuss the district’s 2012-2013 budget in light of Gov. Tom Corbett’s recent legislative address on the state budget.

Board President Michael Neiffer has said directors won’t act on redistricting until at least Feb. 28. Rabinowitz said his group will be busy during the interim, using “the time between the 14th and the 28th to get to as many people who want to sign as possible,” he said.

During the weekend of Feb. 18 and 19, the group hopes to collect signatures “at one or more grocery stores,” and may also seek signers at schools’ events, according to Rabinowitz.

Petitions signers should be adults age 18 or older (high school students qualify, Rabinowitz noted) who are district residents (generally within Lower, Upper or West Pottsgrove townships), as well as any district teachers. Non-resident teachers are being asked to identify themselves as such.

“The idea,” Rabinowitz added, “is to show the board that a large number of the voters in the district are against this plan.”

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Pottsgrove Principals Distribute Redistrict Info Letters

Pottsgrove Principals Distribute Redistrict Info Letters

POTTSTOWN PA – All three Pottsgrove School District elementary principals have distributed messages to parents of their students during the past 10 days, letting them know – just in case they didn’t already – that redistricting is a hot-button issue now being considered by the Board of School Directors.

Ringing Rocks Principal Michelle Bozzini, on Tuesday (Feb. 7, 2012), and Lower Pottsgrove Principal Ruth Fisher, on Wednesday (Feb. 8), both sent single-page letters home and via e-mail that briefly outline choices being discussed by directors to balance class sizes across the district’s three elementary schools.

West Pottsgrove Principal Theresa Koehler included a similar message in her Feb. 1 (Wednesday) newsletter to parents.

Neither Bozzini or Fisher offered an opinion or advocated a position in the redistricting controversy that has developed during the past 12 weeks. Both sought to assure parents that, no matter what board members decide, the welfare and education of their children remains their top priority.

The district supports changing all three schools from their current kindergarten through fifth grade configurations to ones in which Ringing and West Pottsgrove each would house K-2 students, and Lower would cater solely to grades 3-5. The only alternative to centers would alter boundary lines that determine which students attend which schools, and align student populations with available classroom space.

Superintendent Dr. Bradley Landis contends a shift to grade-level centers would maximize efficiency, improve teaching quality, and lower costs. A board decision is not anticipated until Feb. 28.

“Our commitment at Ringing Rocks has always been to provide a safe, positive and fulfilling educational experience to all of our students,” Bozzini wrote. “This will continue to be our commitment regardless of the decision the School Board makes.”

“Regardless of the decision, the time, effort and learning from bringing together parents, community members and school personnel will strengthen the change process to be recommended,” Fisher’s message added. “PGSD personnel will be resilient and responsive in supporting the children, parents and community through the Board of School Directors’ decision.”

A large number of parents, many of them with children at Ringing, stridently oppose the centers concept. Bozzini’s message recognized all parents’ involvement in “heated exchanges” during recent board meetings on what she described as the “very emotional topic.” Their “participation and contributions” were “noted and appreciated,” she wrote.

Fisher, too, noted that “much time and discussion were invested in arriving at recommendations to promote the quality of instruction within a child-safe and friendly environment while alleviating over-crowding of certain classes.” She echoed directors’ comments that “the recommendation will need to be fiscally sound and yield positive long-term benefits for all elementary school-aged children within PGSD.”

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20120124-PottstownPA-PgsdRedistrictingHsAud (18Edit2)

Pottsgrove’s Case For Education Centers, Take Two

Superintendent Landis presents the district's reasoning

POTTSTOWN PA – In promoting the creation of grade-level education centers as a means to balance elementary student population in the Pottsgrove School District, Superintendent Dr. Bradley Landis explained Tuesday (Jan. 24, 2012), his administration has two goals: it hopes to improve educational programs, and it hopes to save money.

And, Landis repeatedly indicated, the two are not mutually exclusive.

Landis, the district’s chief operating officer, used that premise for his own 20-minute explanation of Pottsgrove’s reasoning behind its favored choice for redistricting. His talk and slide show, which followed one that was similar but less detailed and presented two weeks earlier by Director of Education and Assessment Todd Davies, opened public discussion of the subject during this week’s Board of School Directors’ meeting.

The district proposes to reorganize grade structures at its Lower Pottsgrove, West Pottsgrove, ad Ringing Rocks elementary schools. Rather than all cater to kindergarten through 5th grades, Ringing and West would teach only K-2, and Lower would teach only 3-5. The district’s only proposed alternative, so far,  is to re-draw boundary lines that keep the K-5 structure and make minor population shifts.

As with the Davies’ presenation, however, Landis’ slides again lack descriptions to help make them understood. In an attempt to provide that understanding, The Post is reproducing 17 key slides of 23 presented (the first two slides are a combination of four originals), and is supplying them with captions that offer a second nutshell interpretation of the district’s case for the centers.

  • The Post invites reader comments on these slides. It also invites the district to provide a written transcript or audio commentary to augment the presentation, or for separate download, so the slides can be interpreted in the way the district prefers.

There is a “large disparity” (above) between classes sizes across the elementary schools. The chart’s green section, which represents  current school configurations, shows some classes in Lower hold between 20 and 24 students each. Some classes in Ringing and West range from a low of 20 students to a high of 26. The administration wants to reduce class sizes and even the numbers out by redistributing students; to do that, it favors creating grade-level centers. Depending on which streets (yellow section, Charlotte Street; and blue, Hanover Street and Orlando Road) are chosen as boundary lines for the centers model, class sizes in K-2 Ringing and West could vary between 18 and 22 students, and in 3-5 Lower between 23 and 25 students.

The district also wants to expand its full-day kindergarten (referred to by Landis as the “FDK program”), which it believes could help all Pottsgrove students learn to read by age 3. FDK currently is limited by space and finances. The centers model under either boundary would provide at least the space, if not the money, to offer full-day sessions to every kindergartner, he said.

Pottsgrove’s first FDK opened in 2005, Davies said. Its students (the “cohort”) were specifically chosen in part because of learning difficulties they exhibited in reading and math. Assessments of those initial FDK students’ abilities (in blue on the chart above), taken during 2010 (third grade) and 2011 (fourth), showed they had made significant progress in catching up with the abilities of their peers across the grade levels (in red). In fact, Landis said, by fourth grade the reading “gap” (far right) had almost closed entirely. While not conclusive proof, Landis contended the evidence so far shows the value of FDK and its worthiness to be expanded across the district.

Federal education standards for kindergarteners are changing, Landis said. By 2013 they will be expected to accomplish, at the school year’s end, what was once demanded of first-graders. This matrix (above) compares the current and future standards.

Moving to a centers model would allow the district to bring back to its schools special education students for whom it must now pay to be educated elsewhere, Landis said. Bringing these students back, he added, also ensures the district complies with federal mandates that special ed students learn in the least restrictive environment available: their home schools.

Landis argued the centers model would help create more (above), and more specialized, special ed classes to which students could return.

Like all school districts in Pennsylvania, Landis said, the state’s Act 1 index limits the percentage amount by which it can raise taxes without calling for a public referendum. Because property owners want to pay as few taxes as possible, most such referendums fail; districts, therefore, are loathe to try them. The index itself represents a combination of two figures: the statewide average weekly wage, and the employment cost index for elementary and secondary education.

Four and five years ago, when the economy was booming, Pottsgrove’s Act 1 index allowed it to raise taxes by as much as 4.4 percent. The economy fell, and so did the district’s percentage. During the next school year, 2012-’13, it would normally be forced to cap a tax hike at 1.7 percent. Because Pottsgrove is a comparatively poorer district, however, the state adjusted the index somewhat, to a maximum 2.2-percent tax increase.

During the same boom years, and even before, according to Landis, the state also was raising the amounts of money it gave to schools districts as subsidies. Pottsgrove did very well (above) in receiving state cash. In 2009-’10 and 2010-’11, though, the state was hit with its own financial problems as the boom petered out. Pennsylvania took federal money meant to supplement the economy, and instead substituted it for the subsidies. Now that the fed funds are all gone, Pottsgrove’s subsidy from the state dropped in 2011-2012, and likely will drop once more in 2012-’13, Business Manager David Nester anticipates.

Things get worse, Landis claimed. Pottsgrove must negotiate a new labor agreement with its teachers; right now it has budgeted an extra $683,000 for the cost. Its state mandated retirement costs will rise; add another $986,000. Keeping up with rising costs for its self-insured health care plan will add $685,000 more, Nester said. Combined, the new expenses represent $2.35 million. Pottsgrove’s Act 1 index (and some exceptions it might claim), on the other hand, allows it to take in only an additional $1.23 million. Without cost-cutting, Landis said, Pottsgrove starts next year $1.12 million in the red.

The district has already eliminated some staff positions to save money, Landis said. It may have to cut even further. All district employees, but primarily the teachers and affiliated staff, agreed to a wage freeze for the current budget year that saved big money, but there’s no guarantee the same level of savings is possible for 2012-’13.

Grade-level enters, Landis believes, will increase the district’s educational efficiency, and it should save some money.

Moreover, Pottsgrove already has in place the basics of programs to improve teacher quality, Assistant Superintendent Shellie Feola claimed. The better the teachers become, she said, the more students improve.

Centers would allow teachers to work together on education plans, to collaborate on instructional practices, to more quickly assess student needs. All those factors, Landis said, also improve instruction.

Pottsgrove parents have openly worried that centers would cause their kids to be on buses longer, and that transportation for centers would cost more. Yes, Landis agreed, bus run times would lengthen slightly, but not significantly. There would be no need to buy more buses, he added.

Bus runs for the centers would cost more in fuel, too, but again, Landis argued, not significantly.

Here’s the bottom line, Landis concluded: 1) although centers could help the district save some money, 2) the centers also could ensure students would be better educated by a high quality, collaborative teaching staff. Pottsgrove will still need to raise taxes. It hopes for, but cannot guarantee, an expansion of full-day kindergarten. It may need to make further staff cuts, or trim other expenses. But it will be better positioned in the long run, Landis said, for both student improvement and whatever economic troubles still await.

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Slide illustrations from the Pottsgrove School District, with combinations by The Post

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20120125-Megaphone-GoogleImages

Pottsgrove Says It Will Work To Improve Public Notice

POTTSTOWN PA – With a pair of mea culpas, Pottsgrove School District directors and administrators conceded Tuesday night (July 24, 2012) they have failed so far to adequately notify and inform the public and their own employees about meetings on – and the prospects, benefits, and potential impacts of – creating grade-level education centers to balance student population across the district’s three elementary schools.

“We’ve done a poor job,” President Michael Neiffer acknowledged during the Board of School Directors‘ meeting in Pottsgrove High School’s auditorium, where a discussion of redistricting was conducted for a third consecutive session. “We’re trying to solve that,” he said.

“We take it on as our fault that we didn’t communicate better to teachers at large,” Assistant Superintendent Shellie Feola later added.

Neiffer, Feola, and Superintendent Dr. Bradley Landis all pledged the district would use various tools and forums at its disposal to get the word out on future meetings.

The twin admissions followed claims by a few of the 125 people attending the meeting, and others posted online at Facebook pages and elsewhere, that the district purposely downplayed discussions over the proposed centers to avoid greater public controversy or outrage. Those associated with the district strongly denied the allegations, as well as a report from leading centers’ opponent Rick Rabinowitz of rumors that Pottsgrove “tried to put a muzzle on teachers on this issue.”

The ire raised over communication, or a lack of it, began innocently enough with a compliment from board member David Faulkner. He thanked those in attendance for caring enough to come out, and wondered why the meeting didn’t attract a larger crowd. The politely delivered response probably wasn’t what Faulkner expected.

“The information’s not being distributed among families at the schools,” one woman said. “I was told some people got a phone call. I never got called,” another noted. “You know, I get tons of paper brought home by my kids about this going on in the school and that. I didn’t get any sheet on this meeting. I had to hear about it from somebody else,” said a third.

Landis explained the district relies on several methods of communication.

  • Topping its choices is what he described as “The Big List,” a computerized service (in geek parlance, a “list serv”) that sends e-mails about district activities to subscribers based on their selected preferences. District residents can sign up for The Big List here.
  • Pottsgrove also uses an automated telephone notification system called “Global Connect” to let parents know of events requiring their attention. Registration for it is part of Pottsgrove’s PowerSchool web portal, here. An online student-and-parent system, PowerSchool was established by the district several years ago to meet both communications and safety needs. Parents must have a username and password combination to access the system; they can obtain one by calling the office at their student’s school.
  • Each of Pottsgrove’s schools, and particularly its Lower and West Pottsgrove and Ringing Rocks elementaries, regularly send brochures and other printed material home with students. Landis indicated that system may also be used to announce future meetings on redistricting.

Both The Post and The (Pottstown PA) Mercury, which provide news coverage of the district and the board, usually publish stories ahead of its meetings to let readers know when they will be held. As one parent noted, however, not all district residents read them. “I’m told I was on the front page of the paper” following the board’s Jan. 10 meeting, she said, “and I don’t even get it, so I’ve never seen it.”

Feola rejected the suggestion the district made any attempt at keeping employees from speaking out on redistricting. “We have not done that, and we would not do that,” she said. She added the administration plans to also re-examine how it keeps teachers and others abreast of news from the district office.

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20120124-FeaturedRedistricting

Pottsgrove Centers’ Talks Subdued; Decision Delayed

Pottsgrove Superintendent Dr. Bradley Landis talks to parents Tuesday about redistricting

POTTSTOWN PA – Pottsgrove School District administrators made what even their critics agreed Tuesday (Jan. 24, 2012) was the most thoughtful and well-explained case yet to support the district’s advocacy for reorganizing its elementary schools into grade-level education centers.

They won few if any converts during the exercise, both sides admitted. Most of about 125 people who attended the Pottsgrove Board of School Directors’ meeting, for a continued discussion of potential redistricting to balance the elementary student population, said they remained unconvinced the “radical change” represented by centers was in the best interests of their children or district finances.

Many expressed relief when board President Michael Neiffer said directors would postpone, at least until their Feb. 28 meeting, any redistricting decision. They want to gain a better understanding, he said, of how Pottsgrove education subsidies will be affected by next month’s state budget address from Gov. Tom Corbett.

  • Editor’s Note: The board meeting ended after 11 p.m. This is only the first of several stories The Post will offer as its coverage in coming days.

Neiffer’s announcement marked the second time in recent weeks that the board has pushed back its proposed date for a redistricting vote. He cautioned, however, that its willingness to wait and gather more information should not be construed as hesitation. “We’re committed to making a decision,” Neiffer said. “We’re not going to be sitting on this for years. We need to be looking to move the district forward.”

Some speakers countered that, in considering a change of such magnitude, the board should instead conduct a referendum to determine taxpayers’ will. Directors offered no public reaction to the suggestion.

School directors (above) and the audience agreed information given Tuesday by Pottsgrove administrators in the redistricting discussion was better than that of previous meetings

At issue is how Pottsgrove will deal, next year and in the future, with population shifts among its estimated 1,550 students in kindergarten through fifth grades. They currently attend three K-5 school buildings: Lower Pottsgrove and Ringing Rocks, both in Lower Pottsgrove (PA) Township; and West Pottsgrove, in Stowe. Classroom space is tight at West, and plentiful at Lower and Ringing.

To deal with past imbalances, the district has redrawn attendance boundaries on a map, using the new lines to shift students from one school to another. Pottsgrove’s administration contends recreating the schools as two K-2 centers, and one for grades 3-5, provides improved education at potentially lower cost. Rather than disrupt fewer than 150 students, however – as a boundary change would – centers could affect several hundreds.

Tuesday’s presentation in the Pottsgrove High School auditorium was quieter and more subdued than earlier discussions. The crowd was significantly smaller. Almost all of the rancor and invective that marked previous meetings had disappeared.

Several in the audience complimented Superintendent Dr. Bradley Landis and the board for offering more factual and statistical content. “This was far more constructive than anything you’ve done previously,” district resident and centers opponent Rick Rabinowitz noted; others agreed.

Tuesday's conversations were quieter and more polite, but no less intense. Assistant Superintendent Shellie Feola reacts to questions posed by a parent on student performance among minorities

Public questioning of the administration’s reasoning, on the other hand, was no less intense.

Much of the talk focused on Pottsgrove’s plans to provide all kindergarteners with full-day classes if centers were implemented; parents demanded a guarantee they would be scheduled. Given the still struggling economy, Neiffer replied, the board would not make such a promise. “We may have to go to centers just to keep the full-day kindergarten classes we already have,” he observed.

The meeting, which began at 7:30 p.m., lasted for more than 3-1/2 hours.

Other coverage:

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20120122-FeaturedPottsgroveCrowd

It’s Official: ‘Grove Meeting Moved To High School

Pottsgrove High School, Kauffman Road, as seen from the north.

POTTSTOWN PA – A bigger-than-usual public turn-out is expected by the Pottsgrove Board of School Directors for its scheduled meeting next Tuesday (Jan. 24, 2012), beginning at 7:30 p.m. The event, which was to have been held at the Kauffman Road offices of the Pottsgrove School District and normally draws only a handful of people, has been moved to the spacious auditorium at Pottsgrove High School, the board announced.

That’s because the prime and continued topic of discussion is likely to be Pottsgrove’s controversial redistricting plans.

An initial meeting on a proposal to create a grade-centers model for three buildings, which has the potential to relocate hundreds of elementary school students if adopted, attracted a vocal crowd of about 200 people Jan. 10 to West Pottsgrove Elementary School in Stowe. Next week’s meeting could be bigger still.

District representatives, who have promised the public will be fully heard on the issue, said well in advance it was probable they would change the meeting location to accommodate a large crowd. That’s now official.

A copy of the board meeting agenda was not available from the district as of 6 a.m. today (Thursday, Jan 19). When publicly posted, both board agendas and minutes can be found here on its website.

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20120110-StowePA-PottsgroveRedistrictingMeeting (15Edit)

Pottsgrove’s Case For Ed Centers: A Nutshell View

Todd Davies during Tuesday's meeting

STOWE PA – Think of coming changes in education, Todd Davies suggests, as akin to climate change.  Events in both are moving rapidly. The needs in both are great. The costs of meeting those needs are rising, while financial resources are dwindling. And every one wants the problem solved but no one’s quite sure what will work best, or fastest, or first.

Davies, director of education and assessment for the Pottsgrove School District, used that analogy Tuesday (Jan. 10, 2012) as the basis for a 20-minute explanation of why the district administration favors using grade-level educational centers in redistricting, the process of balancing its elementary student population across available classroom space at West Pottsgrove, Lower Pottsgrove, and Ringing Rocks elementary schools. His talk opened a discussion of the subject during the Board of School Directors’ meeting.

The district proposes to reorganize grade structures at the schools. Rather than all cater to kindergarten through 5th grades, Ringing and West would teach only K-2, and Lower would teach only 3-5. The district’s only proposed alternative is to re-draw boundary lines that keep the K-5 structure and make minor population shifts.

Both a video and Adobe Acrobat document of Davies’ slide presentation are available for download at the district website, here. However, they lack descriptions; neither is accompanied by Davies’ commentary to help make them understood. In an attempt to provide that understanding, The Post is reproducing 15 key slides of 25 presented, and supplying them with captions that, if nothing else, offer a nutshell interpretation of the district’s case for the centers.

  • The Post invites reader comments on these slides. It also invites the district to provide a written transcript or audio commentary to serve as a soundtrack to the presentation, or for separate download, so they can be interpreted in the way the district prefers.

The nation is moving toward "common core standards" in what must be taught and learned in all schools. The district has begun "common core assessments" of student performance in grades 3-8 that correspond to its learning goals. The state will require graduating students to pass a new series of "Keystone Exams" to prove they know what they should know.

It's Pottsgrove intent to ensure students are ready to move up in grade levels with appropriate knowledge; to meet proficiency standards that will satisfy state and federal requirements; and to be ready for their careers.

Since 2008, Pottsgrove told board members and the publc its plan for expanding Ringing Rocks was to provide more resources for students, and have a path to balance class sizes across the district.

Pottsgrove's greatest disparity in enrollment is between West and Ringing. Both began with roughly the same number of students. Over the years West has grown; Ringing, not so.

Ringing's expansion also allows the district to shift students from building to building while maintaining programs, including its emphasis on literacy, it deems as greatly beneficial.

Pottsgrove's plan for improving student performance is based on practices adopted by schools elsewhere that have proven to be high performers.

Pottsgrove says the literacy program is paying off. It acknowledges it can do better still. Meanwhile, federal requirements are raising the profiency level through 2014.

Here's a reading list of effective practices Pottsgrove has relied upon.

Some research has been conducted on whether or not educational centers are effective. The results aren't yet significant enough to draw any conclusions.

The research does offer two observations: the less time kids spend on a bus, the better. And the fewer transitions kids must make in changing schools or teachers, the better.

In the current grade configuration, Pottsgrove says its students make two transitions.

In selected surrounding districts, students make between 2 and 5 transitions. The number of transitions have not seemed to affect student achievement. If centers were implemented, Pottsgrove says its students would make three transitions.

Selected surrounding districts (they were not identified by name) have one-way bus runs of between 44 and 75 minutes in length. With centers, Pottsgrove says its longest run would be 42 minutes (although this was later restated as 46 minutes).

Pottsgrove tried to address specific concerns raised by parents during its December board meeting. Here are eight (in the left column) and its plans or responses (in the right).

Pottsgrove tried to address specific concerns raised by parents during its December board meeting. Here are six more.

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Illustrations from the Pottsgrove School District

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In ‘Horse Race’ Of Opinions, Pottsgrove Serves As Track

In ‘Horse Race’ Of Opinions, Pottsgrove Serves As Track

 

STOWE PA – “It is not best that we should all think alike,” humorist Mark Twain, author of classics like “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn,” once said. It’s “a difference of opinion,” he noted, “that makes horse races.”

Within that literary framework, suffice it to say the ponies were running hard and fast Tuesday night (Jan. 10, 2012) at West Pottsgrove Elementary School in Stowe.

What began at 7:30 p.m. as a thoughtful, polite and organized display of opinion – offered by about 200 people to the Pottsgrove Board of School Directors on competing proposals to balance attendance at the district’s three elementary schools – degenerated hours later into a hot-tempered shouting match that involved audience and board members alike.

It prompted board President Michael Neiffer to call an abrupt but temporary halt to the discussion of redistricting. “The dialog (was) tremendous until the very end of the meeting,” Neiffer said Wednesday (Jan. 11) in a comment to The Post. “And that disruption was really due to one person inciting others, in my opinion. It clearly was not representative of the larger audience in attendance.”

“I had no choice but to suspend public comment until the next meeting as the disruption made it impossible to continue with meaningful input from all sides,” Neiffer added. That session is scheduled for Jan. 24, and would normally be held at the district offices on Kauffman Road. It probably will be moved to a location that can accommodate more people, such as the high school cafeteria.

Tuesday’s meeting was intended to collect opinions on how and where Pottsgrove should re-distribute and teach students in kindergarten through 5th grade during coming years at its West Pottsgrove, Lower Pottsgrove, and Ringing Rocks buildings.

Directors currently are considering two choices. They can adjust attendance boundary lines to more evenly spread student populations across available classrooms, while the grade structure remains unchanged. Or they can alter the structure so students in K-2 attend “centers” geared to their needs at West and Ringing, while those in grades 3-5 attend a similar center at Lower.

Pottsgrove Superintendent Dr. Bradley Landis favors centers, describing them as a way to improve educational programs while better using district resources and controlling costs. The consensus reaction to his administration’s advocacy has so far amounted to “prove it.”

“When I try to delve into what’s going on here,” speaker Danielle Walsh said, “there is no information … You haven’t done the work.”

“I don’t have any data, and I don’t have any numbers,” speaker Kellie Bean agreed. “That’s the one thing I asked for to make an educated decision to support this, and I don’t have it.”

“You’re not giving us anything to sink our teeth into,” speaker Ryan Gibson added, his voice rising. “I can’t look at my daughter and say, ‘this is why we’re doing it. This is the reason.’ … Let us see the train wreck you’re trying to avoid.”

Speaker Tracy Romig also pleaded to make the information understandable. “You need to dumb it down for us,” she said. “You’re throwing us information and information … give it to us simple. How’s this going to benefit us? How’s it not going to benefit us?”

Even board members, following a break in the discussion, charged Landis, Business Administrator David Nester and others to come up with more. Director Philip Keogh wanted comparative statistics on busing. Neiffer and fellow board member Nancy Landes questioned how students would be made to feel comfortable in a transition if centers were adopted.

The majority of the public in attendance was vocal, and sometimes passionate, in its objections.

  • Many found the estimated times of student rides on buses carrying them to and from the centers – the district projected a maximum of 46 minutes one way – too lengthy.
  • Some contended centers would deny their children the opportunity to attend a neighborhood school, a calculation they said weighed heavily in their home-buying decisions.
  • Others decried what they perceived to be disruptions to family lives the centers might cause. Cited as examples were the inability for some siblings to be together in the same building, and increased parental “shuttling” to extracurricular activities.

Watch a video (above) with public comments from the meeting, or see it at The Post’s YouTube channel. An earlier and different video, also of public comments, can be found here.

Related (to Pottsgrove School District redistricting):

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