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Eastern School District School Organization Plan Public Presentation

Eastern School District School Organization Plan Public Presentation. Bluefield Family of Schools Feb. 12, 2009. Impact of Declining Enrollment. Eastern School District 2001 2008 15,173 13,111 6 Years – Loss of 2,000. Impact of Declining Enrollment.

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Eastern School District School Organization Plan Public Presentation

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  1. Eastern School DistrictSchool Organization PlanPublic Presentation Bluefield Family of Schools Feb. 12, 2009

  2. Impact of Declining Enrollment • Eastern School District 20012008 15,173 13,111 6 Years – Loss of 2,000

  3. Impact of Declining Enrollment • 20 elementary schools have lost between 30% and 50% of students in the past decade • 10 schools with 90 or fewer students • 35 of our schools will lose students in the next decade • 14 will lose up to 25% more of their students

  4. 20012008% Change Bluefield 850 844 -- Englewood 239 187 -22% Central Queens 264 182 -31% Gulf Shore 331 218 -34% East Wiltshire 581 556 -4% Westwood 435 408 -6% Eliot River 439 411 -6%

  5. 20082013% Change Bluefield 844 657 -22% Englewood 187 172 -8% Central Queens 182 211 +16% Gulf Shore 218 203 -7% East Wiltshire 556 528 -5% Westwood 408 403 -- Eliot River 411 441 +7%

  6. How has this development impacted our students? • 1. The breadth and depth of specialist programming • Physical Education • Music • Resource-based learning • French

  7. 2. The scope of student support services • Guidance • Special Education • Resource • Reading Recovery

  8. 3. Teaching – Learning Process • Teachers “stretched” across grades • Teachers “stretched” across subject areas • Teacher isolation • Lack of administrative direction and support

  9. 4. Student Diversity • Children’s social and emotional development may be affected by split classes and soon, triple-graded classes

  10. Why are we concerned about these factors? • PEI’s performance on Canadian tests of reading, math and science • 2005 ESD survey of all teachers • Results of 2007/2008 provincial tests of grade 3 reading comprehension and writing, grade 6 reading comprehension, grade 9 mathematics

  11. Why are we concerned about these factors? (Cont’d) • Significant number of our grade 3 boys not reading at grade level • Significant gaps in our students’ grade 3 writing skills • Significant gaps in mathematics skills of our grade 9 students • About 1/3 of our students struggling with some aspect of the curriculum

  12. Why are we concerned about these factors? (Cont’d) • Any child not reading at grade level by the end of grade 3 is clearly at risk • Any student finishing high school with poorly developed reading, writing and/or mathematical skills will find it difficult to gain entry and complete a post-secondary program (university, college, apprenticeship, other training) • Any student entering labour market directly without these skills will have trouble finding and keeping meaningful employment

  13. Standards are rising • Typical adult student without high school credential • Step 1 – Complete GED • Step 2 – Then acquire further skills • 521 – 621 English/math/science • Foundation Program at Holland College

  14. What should we do? • Focus on the teaching – learning process • Emphasize structured and explicit teaching methods aimed at specific skill development in reading, writing and mathematics

  15. What is the best way to do it? • At least 2 teachers per grade • Single graded classrooms • 15-20 students grade 1-3, 20-25 students grade 4-6 • Strong student support and specialist programs • Within grade teacher collaboration and administrative leadership and support

  16. Bluefield Schools • Westwood – 408 students – Grades 1-3 • Soon to be K-3

  17. Bluefield Schools • Englewood – 187 students: • Grades 7-9 (58 students) • Gulf Shore – 218 students: • Grades 7-9 (71 students)

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