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WELCOME TO EXTENDED LEARNING
OPPORTUNITIES SESSION C5
Presented by Thayer Central Community Schools of Hebron, NE
The Cast for This Session
• Deb Craig – School Board Member (2 years)
• Jane Dodes – Elem. Teacher/Summer Program Leader
• Kurk Wiedel – Elementary Principal
• Tom Kiburz – High School Principal
• Drew Harris – Superintendent
Today we will share information regarding programs we have in our school; maybe you’ll see something you’ll like, but no guarantee.
• “Jump Start” – a summer program
• MS/HS After-school Tutoring
• Odysseyware Courses
• ASP – the After School Program
• Summer Learning Camps (our next endeavor?)
To Begin: A short educational history review
The Industrial Model of Education
Time is the constant
The Industrial Model of Education
Time is the constant• 180 Days
The Industrial Model of Education
Time is the constant• 180 Days• 7.5 Hours per day
The Industrial Model of Education
Time is the constant• 180 Days• 7.5 Hours per day• 55 minute class periods
(or possibly a longer block)
The Industrial Model of Education
Time is the constant• 180 Days• 7.5 Hours per day• 55 minute class periods
(or possibly a longer block)
• Bells to move students down the line
The Industrial Model of Education
Time is the constant• 180 Days• 7.5 Hours per day• 55 minute class periods
(or possibly a longer block)
• Bells to move students down the line• All students have similar needs and abilities
The Industrial Model of Education
Time is the constant• 180 Days• 7.5 Hours per day• 55 minute class periods
(or possibly a longer block)• Bells to move students down the line• All students have similar needs and abilities
WELCOME TO THE 1950’s
Thayer Central Schools
Help Desk
OUR QUEST
To find a way to make LEARNING the CONSTANT and TIME the VARIABLE.
So we asked ourselves:How do we provide more learning opportunities, not to
punish kids because they didn’t learn it as fast as some of their peers, but to provide them with an
education without holes in it?
How do we motivate kids to try and to want to succeed the first time so they don’t just fail due to
their own apathy?
How do we provide opportunities for our best students to continue to grow academically?
Traditional Summer School
• Held in early June
• Majority of kids hate it
– Sick of school, they just got out
– Identifies them, only poor students attend
– It feels like a punishment
• Still have a month off for regression
Our Solution: JUMP START
JUMP STARTJane Dodes
JumpStart Enrichment Program1.pptx
JUMP START RESULTSClass of 2019, 3rd grade 09-10.
Mathematics Reading Language Usage
Name Spr 09 Fall 09 Change Spr 09 Fall 09 Change Spr 09 Fall 09 Change
J. H. 215 209 (6) 196 200 4 197 201 4
M. H. 216 207 (9) 210 218 8 211 209 (2)
E. W. 200 207 7 201 194 (7) 200 210 10
D. C. 192 205 13 206 208 2 207 194 (13)
J. G. 205 204 (1) 197 186 (11) 194 197 3
G. S. 198 203 5 210 200 (10) 203 202 (1)
H. T. 207 203 (4) 216 210 (6) 217 213 (4)
S. H. 192 202 10 199 202 3 203 185 (18)
A. R. 197 201 4 194 202 8 204 204 0
Y. W. 195 201 6 178 182 4 182 200 18
Z. K. 197 200 3 194 182 (12) 195 185 (10)
M. J. 188 199 11 195 192 (3) 195 194 (1)
K. C. 193 199 6 195 193 (2) 206 189 (17)
S. S. 197 199 2 196 182 (14) 199 195 (4)
K. R. 194 197 3 200 204 4 204 203 (1)
O. D. 195 196 1 204 195 (9) 198 197 (1)
K. H. 205 196 (9) 197 197 0 199 201 2
W. D. 194 193 (1) 186 200 14 188 196 8
S. H. 196 193 (3) 201 192 (9) 201 200 (1)
L. L. 200 192 (8) 188 185 (3) 179 188 9
B. L. 194 189 (5) 203 191 (12) 197 202 5
M. D. 181 188 7 171 188 17 175 185 10
C. M. 190 188 (2) 154 160 6 198 181 (17)
D. F. 182 187 5 174 180 6 192 184 (8)
K. K. 183 186 3 188 172 (16) 192 186 (6)
A. W. 183 186 3 182 185 3 186 196 10
M. W. 182 185 3 181 191 10 188 193 5
B. D. 180 182 2 181 185 4 195 190 (5)
R. E. NA 182 NA NA 185 NA NA 182 NA
I. K. 189 181 (8) 182 180 (2) 185 176 (9)
J. P. 180 181 1 154 158 4 167 182 15
J. M. 186 179 (7) 179 174 (5) 176 179 3
T. K. 175 177 2 168 170 2 173 168 (5)
T. W. 183 175 (8) 193 192 (1) 202 198 (4)
Average 192.8 193.3 0.8 190.1 189.3 (0.7) 194.2 193.1 (0.8)
Ave for JS Attendees 190.00 190.57 0.57 187.43 187.79 0.36 190.21 191.00 0.79
Ave for None Attendees 194.95 195.89 0.95 192.05 190.58 (1.47) 197.11 195.21 (1.89)
Class of 2019, currently in 3rd grade.
Given the NWEA-MAP (Measures of Academic Progress) assessment in the spring of 09 at the end of 2nd grade and again at the beginning of 3rd grade.
Disaggregated by Jump Start attendance.
JUMP START RESULTS
•In Reading, JS attendees scored an average of .36 pts higher, while non-attendees regressed 1.47 points.•In Language Arts, JS attendees scored an average of .79 points higher, while non-attendees regressed 1.89 points.•In Math, JS attendees scored an average of .57 points higher, while non-attendees scored .95 points higher. ???? We noted a need to change our format.
Class of 2019, 3rd grade 09-10
Mathematics Reading Language Usage
Name Spr 09 Fall 09 Change Spr 09 Fall 09 Change Spr 09 Fall 09 Change
Avg for JS Attendees 190.00 190.57 0.57 187.43 187.79 0.36 190.21 191.00 0.79
Avg for None Attendees 194.95 195.89 0.95 192.05 190.58 (1.47) 197.11 195.21 (1.89)
JUMP START FINANCESummer School (Minimum of 12 days for 3 to 6 hours/day) 0.0049 0.0034 (.0765+.07353)
Name Position Hours Rate Salary LTD Wrk Cmp FICA+Ret Total Emp. Cost
Teacher A (lead teacher) Teacher 74 24 $1,776.00 $8.70 $6.04 $266.45 $2,057.19
Teacher B Teacher 66 22 $1,452.00 $7.11 $4.94 $217.84 $1,681.90
Teacher C Teacher 66 22 $1,452.00 $7.11 $4.94 $217.84 $1,681.90
Para 1 Para 46 14 $644.00 $3.16 $2.19 $96.62 $745.96
Para 2 (student) Para St 46 8 $368.00 $1.80 $1.25 $55.21 $426.27
Para 3 (student) Para St 46 8 $368.00 $1.80 $1.25 $55.21 $426.27
Driver 1 Driver 40 14 $560.00 $2.74 $1.90 $84.02 $648.66
Driver 2 Driver 40 14 $560.00 $2.74 $1.90 $84.02 $648.66
Totals $7,180.00 $35.18 $24.41 $1,077.22 $8,316.81
Check $8,316.81
Summer Program 3 weeks (12 days) M-Th from 8:30 to 11:30 (3 hrs/day)
Position Daily Prep Daily Instr. Days Instr. Time Prog Prep Total Hrs
Lead Teacher 0.5 3 12 42 32 74
Reg Teacher 0.5 3 12 42 24 66
Para 0.5 3 12 42 4 46
Driver 3 12 36 4 40
Salaries $8,316.81
Transportation $1,500 Transportation Expense for school Vehicles, mileage and depreciation, 12 days x 250mi/d x $.50/mi
Supplies, Materials, & Equip $1,500
Program cost $11,316.81
We utilized General Fund Poverty Money for our program; however Title Funds would be another possible partial funding source.
After School Tutoring & Odysseyware
Tom Kiburz
NASB Kiburz.pptx
After School Tutoring & Odysseyware Finance
After School Tutoring
daily rate Est # days Total
Teacher 1 $20 48 $960
Teacher 2 $20 16 $320
Transportation $45 32 $1,440
$2,720
Odysseyware
3 slots $1000/slot $3,000
Poverty Funds, could use some Title
ASP
Kurk Wiedel
NASB Thayer Central Afterschool Program.pptx
ASP FINANCE• The cost of this program had previously been paid
for through community grant funding; this is the first year the program has been funded through the district.
• We estimate the program expense for staff, food, and supplies at $12,500.
• Student fees should cover nearly the entire cost of the program.
• $2,500 was budgeted in the poverty account of the general fund.
Summer Camps(on the horizon)
• Week-long learning camps in:– Reading– Math– Science
• Six-week stretch learning clusters– 2 days per week for 6 weeks
• Book study groups– Weekly book studies
Summer Camp FinanceSummer Academic Camps1 week camp (4 days) M-Th 8:30-11:30 (3 hrs/d)
Position Daily Prep Daily Instr. Days Instr. Time Prog Prep Total Hrs
Camp Instr. 1 3 4 16 16 32
Camp Para 0.5 3 4 14 4 20
Position Hours Rate Salary LTD Wrk Cmp FICA+Ret Total Emp. Cost
Reading Camp Teacher 32 22 $704.00 $3.45 $2.39 $105.62 $815.46
Reading Camp Teacher 32 22 $704.00 $3.45 $2.39 $105.62 $815.46
Math Camp Teacher 32 22 $704.00 $3.45 $2.39 $105.62 $815.46
Math Camp Teacher 32 22 $704.00 $3.45 $2.39 $105.62 $815.46
MacGyver Camp Teacher 32 22 $704.00 $3.45 $2.39 $105.62 $815.46
MacGyver Camp Teacher 32 22 $704.00 $3.45 $2.39 $105.62 $815.46
Reading Camp Para Para 20 14 $280.00 $1.37 $0.95 $42.01 $324.33
Math Camp Para Para 20 14 $280.00 $1.37 $0.95 $42.01 $324.33
MacGyver Camp Para Para 20 14 $280.00 $1.37 $0.95 $42.01 $324.33
Reading Camp Student Para Para St 20 8 $160.00 $0.78 $0.54 $24.00 $185.33
Math Camp Student Para Para St 20 8 $160.00 $0.78 $0.54 $24.00 $185.33
MacGyver Camp Student Para Para St 20 8 $160.00 $0.78 $0.54 $24.00 $185.33
Driver 1 Driver 42 14 $588.00 $2.88 $2.00 $88.22 $681.10
Driver 2 Driver 42 14 $588.00 $2.88 $2.00 $88.22 $681.10
Total Cost $6,720.00 $32.93 $22.85 $1,008.20 $7,783.98
check $7,783.98
Cost per camp $2,594.66
Salaries $7,783.98
Transportation $1,500 Transportation Expense for school Vehicles, mileage and depreciation, 12 days x 250mi/d x $.50/mi
Supplies, Materials, & Equip 1200
Program cost $10,483.98 Poverty Funds, could use some Title or HAL
Board Perspective
• Quality• Quality Indicators• Learning Styles• Retention of knowledge• Business/Community Partnership
QUESTIONS?
CONCLUSION• Kids are not all the same
– All kids can learn, but they probably won’t learn it on the same day– Not all homes are created equal
• Some kids need more learning opportunities just to keep up
• Some kids want more learning opportunities to excel • Most kids will regress, given an opportunity• If it’s truly important, you can find the money
– You just have to decide what your local priorities are
Thayer Central Schools
NASB Presentation.wmv
Contact Information• Deb Craig – [email protected]
• Jane Dodes – [email protected]
• Kurk Wiedel – [email protected]
• Tom Kiburz – [email protected]
• Drew Harris – [email protected]
Please feel free to contact any of us if we can provide
any additional information. Thanks for being here!