Bellevue SD vs Seattle SD: Who Will Wear It Better?
Many things cross my desk and this one - about a meeting over in Bellevue SD where they are considering closing a middle school (and closing a couple of elementaries) - seemed to touch on both the Advanced Learning program AND closing schools.
This is fascinating because - in real time - we are seeing two large districts moving to school closures. It will be interesting to compare and contrast how each handles the process.
They had 140 participants at this forum about Odle MS. Apparently their Advanced Learning program is sited there. They had six on-line forums. Three of these online forums broke down like this - one Korean forum, one Mandarin forum and one Spanish forum. I give them credit for being so specific. They have also had six in-person forums at other middle schools.
There were many comments on the AL program as well as on consolidation and they had themes for both.
For AL, it was cohort, keeping great teachers together for these students and distance. There is also worry that if you consolidate to another school that some advanced classes will be full from the new students and they won't be able to continue to allow, say, a 7th grader to take 8th grade algebra.
For consolidation, the big item was trust. Do we trust the demographers? Do we trust that the AL program will be as high-level as it is now? Do we trust Bellevue SD?
A couple of people asked a question that I have, namely, is the district going to revisit what happened the last time they closed schools? It would be good to air that out, if only to promise NOT to make the same mistakes.
These comments I'm going to print speak to both the AL program revisions AND closures in SPS. Some comments will be partial. I highlighted some particularly cogent ones.
Responses to Question 1: What aspects of the middle school experience are most important to you/your student?
Overall theme:
They were aligned on their commitment to the Advanced Learning (AL) program and keeping it intact at Odle. They believe the program is successful because of the quality of the teachers there. If the AL program moved, they asked that high quality educators be utilized in providing it. Students’ social, emotional well-being was described often as a priority. Some were interested in finding out more about the budget and how additional money could be raised to support the schools.
Responses to Question 2: If we were to consolidate one middle school, what priorities or factors do you think we should consider?
Responses to Question 3: What questions do you have?
Many of the participants’ questions fell into the following themes:
- What was their methodology?
- Are we too focused on the COVID effects of enrollment?
- How do we know the data are correct?
- If one middle school is closed, can AL be provided at the remaining middle schools?
- If we disband the program, will it be put in the other schools?
- If we close the AL program, people will leave.
- Why are people choosing private schools?
- How can we attract more non-resident students? (Editor's note; if SPS were smart, they would be considering this question.)
- How will the decision be made?
- Will there be more community forums?
- What will happen to community feedback?
- Learn what we can from the last process, talk to parents who went through it.
- What will happen to staff in a school that gets consolidated?
- Competing interests during the decision-making process.
- Understanding how open enrollment works.
- What are the factors that the district is considering?*
- Share the operational savings of closing a school.
- Middle school reimagining.
Comments
But that's the caliber of people that are out there. Those who would use that kind of ugly term about me surely use it about those with neuro disabilities. Very trumpian.
Onward.
So glad you're confident and strong. Anonymous' garbage is really a reflection on their mental capacity.
Thank you as always for all you do for our community.
I've been hoping you would do a comparison of SPS with BSD and LWSD. SPS is bleeding students - I'd love to better understand how much of the bleeding is pandemic-related (which would mean all school districts would be similarly affected) and how much is SPS specific.
SPS is really devolving into a shadow of its former self. Programs and activities are being stripped away - for us, the reason often cited was inequity. If all students can't participate in an activity, then no student can participate.
The stupidity of SPS leadership astounds. New leadership please.
BLUE SKY