Sunday, June 24, 2007

School Board Meeting Monday 6/18/07

Superintendent's Report

  • The graduation on 6/9/07 went well despite the bad weather. The event was moved indoors to the gym, and went well even though we were in cramped quarters. There was a video feed into the cafeteria for the overflow crowd. The administration did their usual fine job with the event, and it went off without any major problems. All the student speakers gave excellent speeches, and Dr. Craven gave a nice speech of his own.

  • The annual scholarships awards night was held, and $126,810 was distributed during the evening. [I'm proud to say that my daughter Jenna won several of the awards. I had never been to one of these events before this year, and I was very impressed with the generosity of the Milford community. I'd like to give a heartfelt thank-you to all that donated in any way to the scholarship programs.]

  • The High School Destination Imagination team placed 4th out of 13 in their category at the Global finals in Knoxville, Tennessee. The Middle School team placed 35th out of 65 in their category. Attending the Global Finals was a rewarding but tiring experience for all that attended.

  • There was an evening for parents of incoming first grade students that were identified by DIBELS testing as perhaps in need of special services. Parents for 58 students attended the event, and they received home packs for use over the summer.

  • The Superintendent issued a press release on several topics including a summer reading program being put on in conjunction with the Wadleigh Library, an announcement that we will be restarting an adult education program this fall with classes in Conversational Spanish, We the People…the Citizen and the Constitution, Digital Scrap Booking with Photoshop, Microsoft Word, and Microsoft Excel, and an announcement that we will be offering night school for high school students that have failed or are struggling with Math and English.

  • All schools are now approved by the state without any qualifications. The Jacques Memorial had a qualified approval last year since we did not have an approved homework policy in place. We instituted this policy during the past year, so the qualification was lifted.
ATC Annual Report

The ATC group presented their annual report. Presenting at the meeting were Rosie Deloge, Director of Technical Studies; John Leslie, Committee Chair; and Steve Martin, Computer Technology Chair.

They distributed a nice booklet that described the programs. While nothing is perfect, it seemed as if the program is doing well and is headed in a good direction. They reviewed the various pages in the booklet highlighting areas of interest, including listings of student achievement, awards, State Expo results, Business partnerships, Technical Honor Society inductees, and a review of each program. We had some discussion concerning the possibility of building houses on the two potential lots that may be split off from the Heron Pond School site.

John Leslie is stepping down as Committee Chair after six years in the position. He has done a great job in moving the ATC program forward. Steve Martin will be the Committee Chair this coming year.

Professional Development Master Plan

Chantal Alcox and Laurie Johnson presented the new Professional Development Master Plan that will be submitted to the state by the end of the month. This is the five-year update to the plan, and it contained some significant changes. Most of the changes that were incorporated were dictated by the recent changes in the State requirements. The Professional Development Committee has worked hard over the past year in developing the new plan.


The old method worked well, but the expectation is that the new methods will work even better. The old method was based on obtaining designated clock hours (CEU's, credit equivalency units) for professional development work during the year. This has the benefit of being easy to administer, but does not focus on outcomes and instead just focuses on the process.

There are several methods that can now be used, including the old clock hours (CEU's) approach. The primary method that will be used involves the development of three year goals for professional development, and the creation of portfolios that provide evidence of development. Since District professionals often have multiple certifications, they may decide to use a different approach for their various certifications depending on the suitability for each one.

High School Renovations Committee

We decided to appoint all ten applicants to the Committee rather than try to cull it down to a smaller list. The thought process was that each person provides a point of view and a strength that will add to the group, so having more people will add to the group. Some will be more interested in the track, and others will be more interested in the facility renovations. We also expect that not everyone will attend every meeting, so the meetings should not be too unwieldy despite the large committee size.

We modified the charge to the committee to match the larger size group. We changed the spending approval limits for the committee, set up the emergency approval procedures, and set up the quorum and voting parameters. I was appointed as the School Board representative to the committee.

Policy Proposals

Most were moved on to the next reading. The only one that wasn't was the Computer Software and Hardware policy. The proposed new first paragraph is very restrictive in that it basically bans the use of non-school district equipment from being used in the schools, except for personal printers. I expressed my thoughts that this was too restrictive and asked the administration to review the requirements again to see if it could be toned down. John Leslie had expressed similar thoughts at the beginning of the meeting.

We had a long discussion on this topic at the Technology Committee meeting the next day. The net result is that Matt Ballou will go back and develop a revised version that is somewhat less restrictive. One area in particular that will probably be loosened up is the restriction on PDA's. This will probably be rescinded since many administrators and faculty use PDA's to coordinate their home and work schedules.

Bales Study Committee

This committee will be set up in the fall.

I asked that the district change the sign on the front of the Bales School during the summer, so we will have a fresh start in the fall. Right now the sign says "Bales Elementary School" since that is what the building was used for when the sign was created years ago. The school is only used for the Sage program today, and this is for Middle and High School students. I hadn't thought about it before, but it just struck me a few weeks ago that it must be demoralizing for a Middle or High School student to enter a building identified as an elementary school each day.

The sign is in bad shape and needs to be redone in any event, so it makes sense to do it now before school starts. I think that it should be changed to "Bales Building" since that would allow it to be used as a multi-purpose building, but "Bales School" would be acceptable also since that is what it is right now.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Questions? Suggestions?

Is there anything that you want to know, but you don't know where to go to ask the question? Do you have an idea as to how the Milford School District can improve? If so, then please contact me and I'll try to help out.

You can contact me by email at pauldargie@aol.com, or you can post a question or comment on this blog. Blog postings can be anonymous.

In general I will try to get an answer for you, but there are some things that I won't be able to get into. The School Board is part of the dispute process for the School District, so I can't get involved in any complaints that may eventually require a review by the board. An example of this would be a complaint about a specific teacher. These types of issues need to be addressed through the chain of command to insure fairness to all parties.

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

School Board Meeting Monday 6/4/07

Construction Manager Selection

We started the meeting at 5:30 instead of the usual 7:00 start time in order to interview candidates for the construction manager position for the High School renovation project.

We interviewed representatives from three candidate companies:

Eckman Construction
Hutter Construction Corporation
Turnstone Corporation

All three companies made solid presentations, and I thought that any of them would be able to do a good job for us on this project. We ended up choosing Turnstone Corporation for the job. The principle of the company are Stacy Clark, President; Billy Clark, Vice President; Deborah Clark, Office Manager; Phil Cote, Estimator/Project Manager; and Rick Smock, Project Superintendent.

Superintendent's Report
  • There will be an Orientation night on 6/5/07 for parents of Fifth graders moving up to the sixth grade next year.
  • The High School scholarship night is 6/5/07, with a reception at 6:30 in WOWS for board members.
  • Some parents of very young students were invited to a reception at Jacques on 6/7/07 to learn about summer school activities, and kindergarten and first grade issues.
  • Graduation is 10:00 on Saturday 6/9/07 at the High School Football field.
  • The eighth grade graduation is Wed 6/20/07.
  • The Superintendent passed out the list of graduating seniors that are continuing their education next year. 75% of the graduating class is moving on, with 52% planning on attending a 4 year program and 23% choosing a 2 year or certificate program.
  • A photo of Jacques School Principal John Foss dressed up as the world famous "Book Fairy" was passed around. John had promised the students that if they read 2007 books or chapters during the year, he would be a Book Fairy for a day. He lived up to his word, but he might not ever live this one down...
  • Bert Becker volunteered to be on the RSCC committee.
Milford Athletics Fundraising Committee

Lori Pitsas gave an update of the Family Fun Day fundrainsing event that was held at the Hampshiredome. The event was well attended, and seemed to be a great success. Although final numbers were not available, the event raised something in the neighborhood of $5K for the High School Track project. More fundraisers are planned, with the next one being the golf tournament in August. More information can be found at www.milfordtrackandfield.org.

Bales Committee Charge

The charge to the proposed Bales Study Committee was reviewed and approved for a first reading. The charge to the committee is: "To describe options available to the School Board for the future use of the Bales building, inclusive of the gymnasium and the annex. Such options will detail the educational and economical advantages and disadvantages associated with each option."

The list includes seven items that are specifically mentioned to be included in the review. We discussed item 6 at some length. This item is: "Consideration of the use of the annex to house state-mandated kindergarten." No decision was made as to whether this line item would remain as part of the charge to the committee.

Kindergarten Committee Charge

After a lot of discussion, we decided to not have a Kindergarten Implementation Study Committee. The rationale for the decision is that the main purpose of the committee was to identify the costs associated with implementing a Kindergarten program if mandated by State law, and the administration has the background and capability of obtaining this information without the overhead of a committee.

School Board Chair (and State Senator) Peter Bragdon mentioned that the State Senate had recently modified the adequacy definition that had been established by the House of Representatives. The House version included "half-day Kindergarten" as part of an adequate education. The Senate removed the half-day phrase and just included the word Kindergarten without any modifiers.

With the prospect of perhaps needing to offer full-day Kindergarten instead of the half-day program that we had been envisioning, Bob Willette moved that we add research into full-day Kindergarten to the overall project.

The Administration agreed to provide this information in time for inclusion on a warrant article if deemed necessary.

After some reflection and some research after the meeting, it is my opinion that the current wording of the adequate education definition does not require that we offer full-day Kindergarten. A half-day program should suffice. I expect that there will be some sort of a legal opinion generated when the bill is passed that will clarify this point. This is a critical point, because for Milford, a full-day program will cost a lot more than a half-day program. I expect that we will be able to fit a half-day program into the Jacques/Bales Annex buildings. A full-day program will not fit there and will require the use of a different facility. This changes the start-up costs from perhaps $1.5M for a Bales Annex renovation, to something like $7-8M for construction of a new 10-12 room school.

Policy Proposals

All the personnel policy updates were moved to a first reading.