61°F
weather icon Clear

Through teams, schools aim to put students’ needs first

This year brought a new resource to the schools in Boulder City — school organizational teams.

These teams are the result of the Legislature creating a committee to research and create a plan that would allow the Clark County School District to provide better service to students and their families.

“They wanted to break up the school district because it was too big,” said Boulder City High School Principal Amy Wagner.

The committee did this by essentially making each school its own precinct with its own school organizational team. With this setup, individual schools in the district can make site-based decisions on how to use their research to meet their goals through their school organizational team.

Each school organizational team is responsible for providing assistance and advice to the principal in developing and carrying out the school’s plan of operation, assisting in the discussion of any additional authority to be transferred to a local school to carry out responsibilities, and assisting with the selection of the next principal when a vacancy occurs.

The team consists of voting members, which includes three to six parents, two to four licensed staff and one to two non-licensed staff. Each team also includes nonvoting members, who are the school principal, student representative for secondary schools and an optional community member.

Going forward each member’s one-year term runs Oct. 1 through Sept. 30.

Mitchell Elementary School Principal Benjamin Day said the process is still very new for him and his team, but they are making progress with their goals to increase early enrollment.

“We had a low projection for enrollment and would have had to lose some teachers,” he said of the 2017-2018 school year budget. “I found a way to create a teaching position within the new budget.”

In order to keep the teaching position, Day said Mitchell’s school organizational team canvassed the families of rising kindergartners to find how many were planning to enroll in the coming school year. They determined the incoming kindergarten class would be larger than the state’s estimate.

To change the projection and increase the budget, which would allow the school to keep all its teachers, as many incoming kindergartners as possible need to sign up through early registration, which begins April 17.

King Elementary School Principal Tony Gelsone said his school’s school organizational team was just an extension of the current relationship between the school and parents.

“We’ve always communicated with our parents and included them in decisions … Now it’s just a formality of forming that committee,” he said. “The communication helps with transparency.”

Gelsone said the school organizational team has been making decisions with spending the strategic budget, specifically with the EnVision math program and the Leader in Me curriculum.

School operations at Garrett Junior High School in Boulder City are similar to how the school organizational team does things.

“The only difference is that it has a different name and a more formal process with scheduled meetings. … I think it’s a great experience … because it allows anyone to come those meetings,” said Principal Jamey Hood.

“We have three great parents who are active members of the community at all the schools,” she added.

All school organizational team meetings are open to the public. To find out when they meet, check each school’s website.

Contact reporter Celia Shortt Goodyear at cgoodyear@bouldercityreview.com or at 702-586-9401. Follow her on Twitter @csgoodyear.

MOST READ
LISTEN TO THE TOP FIVE HERE
THE LATEST
Hardy feted by League of Cities

Anyone who has been around the Boulder City political world for any stretch of time already knows that Mayor Joe Hardy is a pretty humble guy and not one to toot his own horn.

Utility director Stubitz takes new job with state

When Utilities Director Joe Stubitz briefed the city council on the status of Boulder City’s Dark Sky initiative, which involves replacing hundreds of street light fixtures with modern versions that aim light onto the ground and not into the sky, it was notable for reasons beyond spending and how soon the program would be finished.

Feeling the Fall Fun

Photos by Ron Eland/Boulder City Review

Relaunched annual Airport Day set for Nov. 8

Aircraft enthusiasts will want to head to the Boulder City Airport on Saturday, Nov. 2, to check out a variety of planes and helicopters.

Mays: Retail vacancies running against trend

Sometimes the good stuff in a public meeting is kind of buried. Or maybe just mentioned as an aside. Such was the case with the annual report given to the city council by Deputy City Manager Michael Mays wearing his secondary hat as acting community development director.

BC man dies in e-scooter accident

Boulder City Police responded to a serious injury accident in the area of Buchanan Boulevard near Boulder City Parkway on Tuesday, Nov. 4, around 5:25 p.m. When officers arrived, they found a 22-year-old Boulder City man with life-threatening injuries.

Capitol Tree at Hoover Dam Thursday

The 2025 Capitol Christmas Tree is scheduled to be at Hoover Dam today, Nov. 6 from 9 – 11 a.m. While it will be in a box and not visible, people can sign the box that the tree is in and take pictures of it with Hoover Dam in the background. The current plan is to place the tree on the Arizona side of the dam. The 53-foot red fir nicknamed “Silver Belle” was harvested from the Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest in Northern Nevada.

Council tees up leash vote — again

In an otherwise quiet meeting this week, the city council, with Mayor Joe Hardy absent due to attendance at the meeting of the Nevada League of Cities, with Mayor Pro Tem Sherri Jorgensen presiding teed up a possible vote on two of the most contentious items on the council’s plate in to past couple of years.

Council approves allotments for Liberty Ridge

When the story from last week’s issue of the Boulder City Review concerning the approval of a temporary map for the coming Liberty Ridge development hit social media, the outcry was swift.