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Friday, December 21, 2012
A Season of Unreasonable Hope
Friday, November 30, 2012
Flipped Classrooms and Broken Silos
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Trick or Treat?
Sunday, September 30, 2012
So all students can learn at high levels
Not just some of them, or even many of them—but all of them.
Friday, August 31, 2012
Newman is ready!
Auditorium (more Pictures below!) |
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Summer Reading
One of my summer reads includes Harvard professor Tony Wagner’s Creating Innovators: The Making of Young People Who Will Change The World (Scribner, 2012). It’s a good book, and Wagner does a decent job talking about the role of innovation in the economy and in our schools. He shares the stories of several young people from various backgrounds who are innovators and who Wagner believes represent a new generation of social and business entrepreneurs
Some of my takeaways from the book include:
• Young people need play, purpose, and passion in their lives and as part of their educational experience to be successful innovators and contributors to the world. These elements offer the structure and space children—and adults?—need to create and thrive.
• Parents play an integral role in the development, as Wagner refers to them, of the “innovation generation.” Parents provide time, latitude, encouragement, risk taking, and attention to the young people described in the book.
• Young innovators, often inspired by a neighbor, teacher, or parent, are increasingly committed to STEM and social change fields and opportunities where they commit to deep and experiential learning that is hands on, action-oriented, and based on solving real problems and seeking authentic solutions.
• Often educators and parents may treat students and young people who exhibit creative problem-solving, risk taking, questioning, failure, and quirky (ADD? ADHD?) behaviors as problematic and peculiar. I liked this quote on page 98: “And it is precisely this kind of adult behavior that stifles curiosity, creativity, and imagination. Some of us respond in this way in the belief that we are being helpful and saving someone from wasting his or her time on ‘silly’ ideas.”
• The role and purpose of the middle/high school and university teachers and schools should include ample opportunity to encourage collaboration among students; break down academic silos and promote interdisciplinary learning; provide space for mistakes and failure; and ensure lots of time for making, seeking, and creating.
I like that Wagner recognizes the critical importance of parents and caring adult mentors in the lives and education of young people. He also acknowledges the dissonance that exists between Federal/State policies and the promotion of innovation: Race to the Top goals and creative learning are not in synch and will not inspire a pioneering generation of learners. At the same time, he does not offer a prescription for success for public schools and seems to focus more at the collegiate level.
But his book is an important reminder that without regular and consistent opportunities for young people to express themselves, find a voice to share their ideas and creativity, and work on real problems in authentic situations, they can endure schooling—but their education, and our country’s future, will languish and suffer.
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Go Ahead, Get Lost!
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
School Volunteers: Bringing to life our core value of Community
Sunday, May 6, 2012
School Space Planning: Next Up, Hillside and Mitchell
Saturday, March 31, 2012
Checking in on the District's Goals
Sunday, February 26, 2012
The Power and Promise of Needham's Teachers: Learning and Serving with Students in Florida
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
The 2012-13 Needham Schools Budget Proposal: The Resources we need to Support Teaching and Learning
January not only marks the beginning of a new calendar year, it is also a critical time for the Needham School Committee as it considers and votes a budget for the 2012-13 (FY ’13) school year. I appreciate the School Committee members’ advocacy around the development of a budget plan that will provide appropriate resources for the 5,500 students in our schools. The task ahead of them is difficult, and I know they will certainly appreciate feedback from the community at the FY13 Budget Public Hearing scheduled for Tuesday, January 17, 2012 at 7:00 p.m. at Broadmeadow.
In the past few years, the School Committee, Selectmen, and especially the Finance Committee have worked diligently with us to bridge the revenue and expense gaps that have resulted from a shaky economy and diminished resources. Everyone has tightened their belts and the schools are no exception. Together we have pared back programs, reduced staff, and postponed improvements in order to adapt and to balance budgets. The schools have reallocated and repurposed available funding, increased class size, decreased funding for supplies and materials, and as part of the collective bargaining process, cut health care costs in a significant way.
This year the loss of Federal stimulus funds, growing secondary enrollment, and stagnant local and state funding has resulted in a sobering budget development process and discussion. We simply cannot bridge the revenue gap with further cuts, reduced services, and higher class sizes.
Instead, this time around, I proposed a 5.7% overall increase in the FY13 budget, which I think is a reasonable, prudent, and balanced plan that will have a positive impact on teaching and learning in the Needham Public Schools. It addresses contractual obligations, enrollment growth, state mandates (mostly unfunded mandates), and allows a tiny amount for program improvement. It is a responsive plan and one that meets the community’s high expectations for its children.
FY13 Budget highlights include:
• The total requested budget is $51,264,825, a 5.7% increase of $2.8 million over the current school year.
• 85% of the total budget proposal is for level service, which maintains existing programs and staffing levels. Level service meets ongoing contractual obligations, mandated special education services, increased transportation costs, and enrollment growth. Only 15% of the total budget proposal increase is for program improvements, and of that amount, over half is to improve mandated services (e.g., English Learner Language instruction) or to strengthen our technology infrastructure.
• In order to meet growing enrollment, especially at the secondary level, 13.5 new teachers and staff are included in the $2.8 million budget proposal.
• Special Education improvements in the budget plan also include an expansion of the Preschool and a reorganization of the PreK through Grade 12 special education program to meet student learning needs and to ensure special education services are more efficient and the costs more sustainable into the future.
Members of the School Committee and central office administration have been working closely with the Finance Committee to review the school budget plan in anticipation of a presentation to the full Finance Committee on January 18th. While supportive of identified needs in the schools, members of the Finance Committee are concerned that the proposed school budget exceeds available resources and may require reductions in Town services to fund the requests. They have asked the School Committee and school administration to reconsider some worthwhile budget requests. However, as your superintendent I am worried that reductions in this plan will further erode services parents and students have come to expect.
Through additional consultation with Town officials, I remain hopeful the Town will support this plan. I continue to believe this budget supports our district values and goals in a fiscally responsible way and in a way that strengthens student learning. And I am confident Town officials, school administrators, and parents, working together, are up to the challenge of finding a way to meet the critical needs of our children as they learn and grow in a community that cares deeply about them.
Please attend the School Committee’s FY13 Budget public hearing at 7:00 p.m. on Tuesday, January 17th at Broadmeadow to learn more about the budget proposal and voice your ideas, concerns, and support. You may also email the School Committee at: schoolcommittee@needham.k12.ma.us .