Here's a blog entry from Kate Fratti. Do you think the Emperor is simply chock full of waste products? Is Farrell a complete coward or just unwilling to be linked with a premature plan? Why is the Emperor backpedaling like a frightened deer? Is it time to replace the Emperor with someone else? Why is the Emperor excluding Reithmeyer and Kemp? (Do I smell fear in the water?) Why does the Emperor fear Reithmeyer and Kemp so much? (More fear! Are they strong with The Force?) What lapdog toadie is the Emperor's handpicked successor to the community minded Ed Frankenfield? These and other questions to be answered on the next episode of "As The Bulldog Turns"
As for a formal proposal? Let's make one and let it sit exposed to public scrutiny. The Emperor is unwilling to let anything he does be exposed to public scrutiny.
This Emperor? He is not clothed at all. He is a feeble mockery of a man.
Not so fast, Fratti
Last week, I met with Morrisville School Board President Bill Hellmann and members Al Radosti and Bill Farrell to understand better what changes they propose for the school district. The status quo, won’t cut it, they say. Morrisville is drowning in the cost of it all.
As I was leaving, the arrival of a representative for Delaware Valley High School was announced. I asked Bill Hellmann why he was meeting with DVH. He declined to comment.
You’ll recall that earlier this year DVH president Dave Shulick a Philadelphia attorney proposed privatizing MV High. Said he could do it for a fraction of the cost and could educate kids right in town. The school is best known for educating at-risk kids, but I was assured the school is accredited and experienced in regular education. Parent reaction to the offer was swift and negative. Prematurely negative, I think. I’d have like to have heard a formal proposal by DVH, but it wasn’t to be.
Intrigued by the meeting at Hellmann’s office now, I blogged about it to you. Looked like the presentation would be made not-so-formally first.
My blog turned up on Savethemorrisvilleschoolblogspot.com and comments from parents were fast and furious. They were ticked off.
That may have led to an email from Bill this morning, copied to all the majority board members, but not to Robin Reitmeyer and Joe Kemp, that he’d only met with DVH to learn more about how alternative schools work indicating that I’d jumped the gun and signaled to parents a worry where there shouldn’t be one. No talk of privatizing, says he.
No one knows if that’s true but Bill and Al Radosti. Farrell didn’t stay for the meeting. We’ll have to take the first two at their word.
More about my meeting with the fellas in my column on Monday.
Posted by Kate Fratti at 1:47 pm | |
Friday, June 13, 2008
Rendell Budget Plan
While the merry maulers of Morrisville are busy dismantling the school system, let's take out a moment to imagine how we could lower our taxes AND keep this a K-12 district. Answer: Change the funding formula.
So what are you doing about getting things changed? Let's keep the kids here and lower our taxes. Is there any Morrisville resident who DOESN'T see this as a win-win situation?
Rendell's school-funding plan is creditable
Carl M. Buchholz is CEO of Blank Rome L.L.P.
David L. Cohen is executive vice president of Comcast Corp.
Joseph A. Frick is CEO of Independence Blue Cross
The future of our region's economic success depends on many factors: competitive tax rates, upgrades to our infrastructure, and high-quality schools that prepare every student for success in the workplace or college.
On the education front, the General Assembly and Gov. Rendell are working now to formulate a new plan to equitably distribute additional state funding to Pennsylvania's 501 public school districts.
The good news is that, over the last five years, Pennsylvania has seen an excellent return on its historic investments in full-day kindergarten and pre-kindergarten, smaller classes, more challenging high schools, and other improvements.
Pennsylvania is one of only nine states to make significant gains in elementary-school reading and math since 2003, which shows we are moving in the right direction.
Yet, even with these gains, a stunning 30 percent of the students who graduate in the school districts in the four suburban Philadelphia counties cannot read and do math at the 11th-grade level. The region's employers pay the price for this skills gap in unfilled jobs, increased employee-training costs, and lost economic opportunity.
The problem is that too many of our region's school districts lack the adequate resources necessary to deliver a high-quality education.
The 2007 Costing-Out Report found a $4.6 billion shortfall. This means students in the majority of the state's school districts are missing out on the educational opportunities proven to boost students' achievement levels.
Why? Because schools lack sufficient funds to provide quality education.
To this end, Rendell has proposed a $2.6 billion plan to move school districts across the state toward the adequate funding targets determined in the costing-out report. The proposal places the state on a pathway to a more reasonable school-funding model, where the state appropriately shoulders 50 percent of public education costs.
In addition, this proposal mandates that a large percentage of these new state funds be spent to expand the proven programs that result in student success, especially for struggling learners.
This targeted funding is to be spent on early-childhood education, extra support for struggling students, more classroom time for teaching and learning, quality training for educators, improved curricula and courses, and smaller classes.
In our region alone, the costing-out study found that our school districts need at least $1.4 billion to ensure our students get the quality of education necessary to meet the expectations of our colleges and employers. Two examples of the shortfall in funding are:
The Norristown School District in Montgomery County is $3,000 per pupil short. Under the governor's proposal, this district would receive nearly $10 million in new state aid, cutting their funding gap more than a third.
The Bristol Township School District in Bucks County is $2,100 per pupil short. The governor's proposal pumps $9 million into the district, cutting its funding gap in half.
For the last few years, this region has seen solid economic growth. However, just like every region in the nation, we are dealing with the impact of a national recession, increased competition, and deteriorating infrastructure.
But there is one economic challenge that is of our own making - poorly prepared high school graduates from underfunded school districts. In large part, this problem is a result of the gradual decline in the percentage of state funding to our schools.
Our region's vitality and prosperity depend in large part on successful deliberations by state leaders to boost funding for schools in a fair and equitable manner and help close the school-funding gap within the next few years.
The governor's proposal is a significant step in the right direction.
So what are you doing about getting things changed? Let's keep the kids here and lower our taxes. Is there any Morrisville resident who DOESN'T see this as a win-win situation?
Rendell's school-funding plan is creditable
Carl M. Buchholz is CEO of Blank Rome L.L.P.
David L. Cohen is executive vice president of Comcast Corp.
Joseph A. Frick is CEO of Independence Blue Cross
The future of our region's economic success depends on many factors: competitive tax rates, upgrades to our infrastructure, and high-quality schools that prepare every student for success in the workplace or college.
On the education front, the General Assembly and Gov. Rendell are working now to formulate a new plan to equitably distribute additional state funding to Pennsylvania's 501 public school districts.
The good news is that, over the last five years, Pennsylvania has seen an excellent return on its historic investments in full-day kindergarten and pre-kindergarten, smaller classes, more challenging high schools, and other improvements.
Pennsylvania is one of only nine states to make significant gains in elementary-school reading and math since 2003, which shows we are moving in the right direction.
Yet, even with these gains, a stunning 30 percent of the students who graduate in the school districts in the four suburban Philadelphia counties cannot read and do math at the 11th-grade level. The region's employers pay the price for this skills gap in unfilled jobs, increased employee-training costs, and lost economic opportunity.
The problem is that too many of our region's school districts lack the adequate resources necessary to deliver a high-quality education.
The 2007 Costing-Out Report found a $4.6 billion shortfall. This means students in the majority of the state's school districts are missing out on the educational opportunities proven to boost students' achievement levels.
Why? Because schools lack sufficient funds to provide quality education.
To this end, Rendell has proposed a $2.6 billion plan to move school districts across the state toward the adequate funding targets determined in the costing-out report. The proposal places the state on a pathway to a more reasonable school-funding model, where the state appropriately shoulders 50 percent of public education costs.
In addition, this proposal mandates that a large percentage of these new state funds be spent to expand the proven programs that result in student success, especially for struggling learners.
This targeted funding is to be spent on early-childhood education, extra support for struggling students, more classroom time for teaching and learning, quality training for educators, improved curricula and courses, and smaller classes.
In our region alone, the costing-out study found that our school districts need at least $1.4 billion to ensure our students get the quality of education necessary to meet the expectations of our colleges and employers. Two examples of the shortfall in funding are:
The Norristown School District in Montgomery County is $3,000 per pupil short. Under the governor's proposal, this district would receive nearly $10 million in new state aid, cutting their funding gap more than a third.
The Bristol Township School District in Bucks County is $2,100 per pupil short. The governor's proposal pumps $9 million into the district, cutting its funding gap in half.
For the last few years, this region has seen solid economic growth. However, just like every region in the nation, we are dealing with the impact of a national recession, increased competition, and deteriorating infrastructure.
But there is one economic challenge that is of our own making - poorly prepared high school graduates from underfunded school districts. In large part, this problem is a result of the gradual decline in the percentage of state funding to our schools.
Our region's vitality and prosperity depend in large part on successful deliberations by state leaders to boost funding for schools in a fair and equitable manner and help close the school-funding gap within the next few years.
The governor's proposal is a significant step in the right direction.
Labels:
budget,
Philadelphia Inquirer,
Rendell,
state funding
Thursday, June 12, 2008
Farming Poll: Part II
As you can see, I have a new poll entered and I encourage you to vote. The Emperor still doesn't "get it". Please vote and make sure that he and his accomplices know that you are tired of his egotistical ways.
If you vote one of the "do what's right for the kids" options, that's fine, but why don't you let us know what you think is the "right" thing to do.
If you vote one of the "do what's right for the kids" options, that's fine, but why don't you let us know what you think is the "right" thing to do.
The 110th and Next to Last Graduating Class
Last night the next to last (penultimate, for those sesquipedalians out there) graduating class from Morrisville High School was presented with their diplomas. Apparently the class of 2009 will be receiving walking papers.
Kudos to Superintendent Yonson and the institution of the Edward H. Frankenfield Memorial Award. A good man like that deserves to be remembered by the measure of a student's service to others. It's too bad that his memory is being trampled upon by the likes of the Emperor and Angry Al as they seek to dismantle the community they claim to be protecting.
Congratulations and best wishes to the Class of 2008.
Take a look at the statistics from these young women and men. Why is this school board trying to push them away? Why aren't their achievements and successes being celebrated?
Taking lessons into the future
“As we leave here, we should remember the lessons we learned and use them to the best of our ability,” one speaker said.
By MANASEE WAGH
While Morrisville High School’s graduating class was small, its seniors truly enjoyed the close-knit community they formed.
That was the consensus of many of the 73 graduates at Wednesday evening’s commencement ceremony on the high school grounds.
“It’s nice. You get to talk to everyone and you know everyone,” said graduate Ashley Woodhouse.
This year marked the 110th commencement of a high school in which teachers could connect with a small student body on a more personal level, said several students. Salutatorian Lauren Ramos, who’s planning a career in forensics, thanked several of her teachers for guiding her through the trials of four years of high school and for making learning fun.
“As we leave here, we should remember the lessons we learned and use them to the best of our ability,” she told her classmates.
The speaker giving the commencement address this year, sportscaster Don Tollefson, garnered much applause from listeners for his words of inspiration.
“Never let a single human being tell you there’s something you cannot do,” he told students. Tollefson brought up the Democratic election as an example of how minorities Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama bucked tradition to run for the White House.
He also advised them that failure is “a stepping stone,” and that they should never give up.
As a tribute to the graduates’ community involvement, Morrisville Superintendent Elizabeth Yonson introduced an award in honor of recently deceased school board member, Edward Frankenfield.
“He contributed to the community in so many ways,” said Yonson. With Frankenfield’s wife and son, she presented graduate Sarah O’Connor with the honorary Edward H. Frankenfield Memorial Award for many hours of volunteer service with a variety of community services and organizations.
Presenting one graduate with the award plaque and a monetary gift will become an annual tradition, said Yonson.
This year’s class earned nearly 6,000 hours of community service altogether.
Senior class President Justin Howell said that the community and the schools are closely connected in Morrisville.
“I’ll always feel I’m part of the community here,” he said. “We can move on with the knowledge that we can be proud of our hometown and we have a hometown that’s proud of us.”
Morrisville High School
Graduates: 73
National Honor Society members: 3
Valedictorian: Matthew Miller
Salutatorian: Lauren Ramos
Student speakers: Justin Howell (President of Class), Brittany Caldwell (Vice President), Christina Doan (Secretary), Andrew Brake (Treasury)
Percent going on to higher education: 81
Percent going into the military: 1
Percent going to the workforce: 18
Amount of scholarship money offered (to entire class; not just the amount accepted; this is the total amount offered) $257,734
Number of community service hours (by the entire class of "08): 5,933 hours
Noteworthy accomplishments of the graduating class: The seniors organized a charity Powder Puff Football Game for a local family whose daughter had cancer; Bicentennial Athletic League Championships in softball and baseball; 31 seniors earned 197 dual enrollment college credits.
Labels:
BCCT,
farming,
Frankenfield,
MSD students in action,
Yonson
Student Farming Plan Back on the Agenda
It looks like last night's Morrisville High School class of 2008 is shaping up to be the next to last MHS class.
What is it with these two and what do they have against the Morrisville school system? Here's two bitter and angry men out for destruction. Remember the January board meeting where the Emperor even conceded that "he got it" and the community did not want the high school students tuitioned out?
Private Morrisville High?
Posted in News on Wednesday, June 11th, 2008 at 3:57 pm by Columnist Kate Fratti
Continuing their investigation into privatizing Morrisville High School, school board directors Bill Hellmann and Al Radosti met with a Delaware Valley High School representative Tuesday afternoon.They seem to have given up hope of any merger with neighboring Pennsbury. So, by September 2009, some board members hope to have closed at least one grade school, maybe two, and consolidated all grades in the middle/senior high school building. That is unless, by then they’ve been able to tuition high-schoolers out to another district or to Delaware Valley High School at substantial reductions in cost per student. In that case, the current high school building would hold just K-8.
DVH is best known for educating at-risk kids, but President Dave Shulick has said it is accredited and experienced in regular education that could be provided in or near Morrisville.
What is it with these two and what do they have against the Morrisville school system? Here's two bitter and angry men out for destruction. Remember the January board meeting where the Emperor even conceded that "he got it" and the community did not want the high school students tuitioned out?
Private Morrisville High?
Posted in News on Wednesday, June 11th, 2008 at 3:57 pm by Columnist Kate Fratti
Continuing their investigation into privatizing Morrisville High School, school board directors Bill Hellmann and Al Radosti met with a Delaware Valley High School representative Tuesday afternoon.They seem to have given up hope of any merger with neighboring Pennsbury. So, by September 2009, some board members hope to have closed at least one grade school, maybe two, and consolidated all grades in the middle/senior high school building. That is unless, by then they’ve been able to tuition high-schoolers out to another district or to Delaware Valley High School at substantial reductions in cost per student. In that case, the current high school building would hold just K-8.
DVH is best known for educating at-risk kids, but President Dave Shulick has said it is accredited and experienced in regular education that could be provided in or near Morrisville.
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
PA Statewide Tests Unlikely
It looks like the proposed statewide graduation testing plan in Pennsylvania is not going to be gaining any traction any time soon now. The politicians want the power to institute testing, taking it away from the state board of education.
Pa. senators advance bill to block graduation testing
MARTHA RAFFAELE, The Associated Press
HARRISBURG, Pa. - A state Senate panel has advanced a bill to effectively block a proposal to require new state graduation tests for Pennsylvania high school students.
The Senate Education Committee voted 10-1 Monday to approve a measure that would give the Legislature the sole authority to impose any new statewide high school graduation requirements.
The State Board of Education has proposed creating a series of 10 final examinations covering math, science, English and social studies. Students would have to pass six to graduate, starting with the class of 2014.
Education Committee Chairman James Rhoades opposes the new tests. The Schuylkill County Republican says money the state would spend on developing the exams would be better spent on other strategies to boost student achievement.
Pa. senators advance bill to block graduation testing
MARTHA RAFFAELE, The Associated Press
HARRISBURG, Pa. - A state Senate panel has advanced a bill to effectively block a proposal to require new state graduation tests for Pennsylvania high school students.
The Senate Education Committee voted 10-1 Monday to approve a measure that would give the Legislature the sole authority to impose any new statewide high school graduation requirements.
The State Board of Education has proposed creating a series of 10 final examinations covering math, science, English and social studies. Students would have to pass six to graduate, starting with the class of 2014.
Education Committee Chairman James Rhoades opposes the new tests. The Schuylkill County Republican says money the state would spend on developing the exams would be better spent on other strategies to boost student achievement.
Tuesday, June 10, 2008
Leadership Lessons
It only takes one. One person's leadership can make a difference.
This commentary appeared in the Sunday BCCT and brought back a lot of memories about those days in June when we started to ask the question, "Which Kennedy assassination?" and stood at the side of the train tracks to say goodbye to another political leader taken too soon.
The issue here is not if you agree or disagree with playing baseball on the Sunday following RFK's assassination, but the instructive example of one man who had a vision. The vision became a collaboration and then a reality.
You can protest all you want. "I'm just a...", and fill in the blank with ditch digger, french-fry cook, office worker, refuse-collection artist, or stay at home parent. That doesn't change the fact that you can exert leadership in your own little corner of the world in your own way. Position alone does not define leadership. Leadership is the measure of the person in the position.
You just need to be ready to step up to the challenge.
During tragedy, playing games took precedence
Jerry Jonas’ column appears in the Life Section every Sunday.
It’s often been said that games like baseball and football are basically children’s games played by grown men. Sometimes these grown men take their games far too seriously. A classic example of this occurred 40 years ago this weekend following the assassination of Sen. Robert Kennedy.
Shortly after midnight on Wednesday, June 5, 1968, after celebrating his victory in California’s Democratic presidential primary at Los Angeles’ Ambassador Hotel, Kennedy was shot by a 24-year-old gunman. He succumbed to his wounds early the next morning.
Saturday morning, Betty and I and our then-young children, watched the live telecast of Kennedy’s Funeral Mass from New York’s St. Patrick’s Cathedral. At its conclusion, we headed to the Levittown railroad station to stand alongside the tracks with hundreds of others and watch the senator’s funeral train pass on its sad journey from New York to Washington, D.C.
That afternoon, after listening to President Lyndon Johnson declare that the next day, Sunday, June 9, would be a national day of mourning, it suddenly occurred to me that the Phillies were in Los Angeles, the city where RFK had been killed, and, despite the president’s request, they would be playing a ballgame with the Dodgers.
Two months earlier, after Martin Luther King, Jr. was murdered, all Major League Baseball clubs had been asked to postpone their games on the day of his funeral. At that time the Phillies were in Los Angeles to play the Dodgers — the only major league team unwilling to postpone their game. To their credit, and despite facing a fine and forfeiture, the Phillies refused to play.
Following King’s death, there had been rioting, looting, even killing in many major league cities, and there was good reason to fear what might happen had the games been played.
By contrast, at the time of RFK’s death, there was no fear of violence, and with the exception of two postponed games on Saturday in New York and Washington (where the funeral Mass and burial took place) all the games were ordered played. In opposition, the Major League Players Association urged the leagues to declare a day of mourning either Saturday or Sunday, but neither baseball’s commissioner William Eckert, nor the leagues’ presidents Joe Cronin (AL) and Warren Giles (NL) would do so.
Eckert released a condescending statement saying that baseball was paying tribute to Sen. Kennedy with no Saturday games to begin before the completion of the funeral, and that appropriate tribute be would be paid by all clubs at the Sunday games.
Not unexpectedly, many players were outraged and a few rebelled. Despite warnings from management, on Saturday all 25 Houston Astros players voted not to take the field against Pittsburgh, and the New York Mets, backed by their board chairman, refused to play the Giants in San Francisco. Since the Giants had sold 40,000 seats in advance, their owner said that he wanted indemnification from the Mets and insisted that they forfeit the game.
In Los Angeles, the Dodgers once again insisted on playing. This time the Phillies did not protest, and both teams announced that they would wear black armbands in respect for the late senator.
At the time, I was regional advertising and promotions manager for Ballantine Beer, then a major TV and radio sponsor for the Phillies. The thoughts of a ball game being played and telecast on a day of mourning depressed me. The thought of our happy-go-lucky beer commercials being broadcast that day disgusted me.
While I couldn’t stop the game, I could do something about the commercials. I would simply cancel them. I informed the TV and radio stations that we were removing our spots from the game and that one of the announcers should read the following statement: “Out of respect for the memory of the late Senator Robert Kennedy, and in keeping with the president’s request that today be a national day of mourning, Ballantine will not be televising any of its commercial messages during the game.” It was a subtle protest of baseball’s decision to play the game.
The station executives were now in a quandary. At first they insisted that it was too late to cancel the spots. Their argument was that there were two others sponsors, and that if we pulled our spots and they didn’t pull theirs, it would make them look bad. And since it was already Saturday afternoon, they weren’t sure that they could reach them. The station personnel also insisted that the three Phillies announcers would have difficulty filling-in the extra time.
A phone call to the announcers Byrum Saam, Bill Campbell, and Rich Ashburn (who ironically were staying at the Ambassador Hotel where Kennedy had been gunned down) assured me that they would manage to ad lib during the extra minutes.
Re-contacting the stations, I insisted that the advertising be canceled. Within 30 minutes another major sponsor agreed to follow our lead and cancel their commercials. Now it was up to the third major sponsor. Although they took some time to reach a decision, faced with being the only major sponsor to run their spots, they also agreed to cancel.
The next day the game went on complete with black arm bands. Our original message became a joint message from the three sponsors informing TV viewers and radio listeners that there would be no commercial advertising during the broadcast.
Although it didn’t completely make up for the lack of respect shown by Major League Baseball that weekend, the protests of many individual players and the cancellation of our commercials did add a small measure of dignity to an otherwise tasteless episode.
This commentary appeared in the Sunday BCCT and brought back a lot of memories about those days in June when we started to ask the question, "Which Kennedy assassination?" and stood at the side of the train tracks to say goodbye to another political leader taken too soon.
The issue here is not if you agree or disagree with playing baseball on the Sunday following RFK's assassination, but the instructive example of one man who had a vision. The vision became a collaboration and then a reality.
You can protest all you want. "I'm just a...", and fill in the blank with ditch digger, french-fry cook, office worker, refuse-collection artist, or stay at home parent. That doesn't change the fact that you can exert leadership in your own little corner of the world in your own way. Position alone does not define leadership. Leadership is the measure of the person in the position.
You just need to be ready to step up to the challenge.
During tragedy, playing games took precedence
Jerry Jonas’ column appears in the Life Section every Sunday.
It’s often been said that games like baseball and football are basically children’s games played by grown men. Sometimes these grown men take their games far too seriously. A classic example of this occurred 40 years ago this weekend following the assassination of Sen. Robert Kennedy.
Shortly after midnight on Wednesday, June 5, 1968, after celebrating his victory in California’s Democratic presidential primary at Los Angeles’ Ambassador Hotel, Kennedy was shot by a 24-year-old gunman. He succumbed to his wounds early the next morning.
Saturday morning, Betty and I and our then-young children, watched the live telecast of Kennedy’s Funeral Mass from New York’s St. Patrick’s Cathedral. At its conclusion, we headed to the Levittown railroad station to stand alongside the tracks with hundreds of others and watch the senator’s funeral train pass on its sad journey from New York to Washington, D.C.
That afternoon, after listening to President Lyndon Johnson declare that the next day, Sunday, June 9, would be a national day of mourning, it suddenly occurred to me that the Phillies were in Los Angeles, the city where RFK had been killed, and, despite the president’s request, they would be playing a ballgame with the Dodgers.
Two months earlier, after Martin Luther King, Jr. was murdered, all Major League Baseball clubs had been asked to postpone their games on the day of his funeral. At that time the Phillies were in Los Angeles to play the Dodgers — the only major league team unwilling to postpone their game. To their credit, and despite facing a fine and forfeiture, the Phillies refused to play.
Following King’s death, there had been rioting, looting, even killing in many major league cities, and there was good reason to fear what might happen had the games been played.
By contrast, at the time of RFK’s death, there was no fear of violence, and with the exception of two postponed games on Saturday in New York and Washington (where the funeral Mass and burial took place) all the games were ordered played. In opposition, the Major League Players Association urged the leagues to declare a day of mourning either Saturday or Sunday, but neither baseball’s commissioner William Eckert, nor the leagues’ presidents Joe Cronin (AL) and Warren Giles (NL) would do so.
Eckert released a condescending statement saying that baseball was paying tribute to Sen. Kennedy with no Saturday games to begin before the completion of the funeral, and that appropriate tribute be would be paid by all clubs at the Sunday games.
Not unexpectedly, many players were outraged and a few rebelled. Despite warnings from management, on Saturday all 25 Houston Astros players voted not to take the field against Pittsburgh, and the New York Mets, backed by their board chairman, refused to play the Giants in San Francisco. Since the Giants had sold 40,000 seats in advance, their owner said that he wanted indemnification from the Mets and insisted that they forfeit the game.
In Los Angeles, the Dodgers once again insisted on playing. This time the Phillies did not protest, and both teams announced that they would wear black armbands in respect for the late senator.
At the time, I was regional advertising and promotions manager for Ballantine Beer, then a major TV and radio sponsor for the Phillies. The thoughts of a ball game being played and telecast on a day of mourning depressed me. The thought of our happy-go-lucky beer commercials being broadcast that day disgusted me.
While I couldn’t stop the game, I could do something about the commercials. I would simply cancel them. I informed the TV and radio stations that we were removing our spots from the game and that one of the announcers should read the following statement: “Out of respect for the memory of the late Senator Robert Kennedy, and in keeping with the president’s request that today be a national day of mourning, Ballantine will not be televising any of its commercial messages during the game.” It was a subtle protest of baseball’s decision to play the game.
The station executives were now in a quandary. At first they insisted that it was too late to cancel the spots. Their argument was that there were two others sponsors, and that if we pulled our spots and they didn’t pull theirs, it would make them look bad. And since it was already Saturday afternoon, they weren’t sure that they could reach them. The station personnel also insisted that the three Phillies announcers would have difficulty filling-in the extra time.
A phone call to the announcers Byrum Saam, Bill Campbell, and Rich Ashburn (who ironically were staying at the Ambassador Hotel where Kennedy had been gunned down) assured me that they would manage to ad lib during the extra minutes.
Re-contacting the stations, I insisted that the advertising be canceled. Within 30 minutes another major sponsor agreed to follow our lead and cancel their commercials. Now it was up to the third major sponsor. Although they took some time to reach a decision, faced with being the only major sponsor to run their spots, they also agreed to cancel.
The next day the game went on complete with black arm bands. Our original message became a joint message from the three sponsors informing TV viewers and radio listeners that there would be no commercial advertising during the broadcast.
Although it didn’t completely make up for the lack of respect shown by Major League Baseball that weekend, the protests of many individual players and the cancellation of our commercials did add a small measure of dignity to an otherwise tasteless episode.
Monday, June 9, 2008
501C-3 Educational Foundation Forming
501C-3 Educational Foundation Forming
The Morrisville School District is seeking individuals to participate in a committee to establish a non-profit educational foundation to enable educators to provide additional educational experiences to enrich students' education. Send letter of interest to Dr. Elizabeth Yonson, Superintendent, 550 W. Palmer St., Morrisville, PA 19067 or fax 215-736-2413.
The Morrisville School District is seeking individuals to participate in a committee to establish a non-profit educational foundation to enable educators to provide additional educational experiences to enrich students' education. Send letter of interest to Dr. Elizabeth Yonson, Superintendent, 550 W. Palmer St., Morrisville, PA 19067 or fax 215-736-2413.
School Board Vacancy Reminder
School Board Vacancy
With last week's death of Ed Frankenfield, the board is advertising for candidates to fill the unexpired portion of his term.
Please keep in mind the deadline is this coming Friday, June 13, 2008, at 9:00 A.M.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, THAT THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
OF THE SCHOOL DISTRICT OF BOROUGH OF MORRISVILLE IS
SEEKING RESIDENT APPLICANTS TO FILL A VACANCY ON THE
MORRISVILLE SCHOOL DISTRICT SCHOOL BOARD.
APPLICANTS MUST BE AT LEAST 18 YEARS OF AGE AND
MUST HAVE LIVED IN THE DISTRICT FOR AT LEAST ONE YEAR.
DEADLINE FOR APPLICATION IS 9:00 A.M. ON FRIDAY, 6-13-
08. IF INTERESTED, FORWARD RESUME AND LETTER OF
APPLICATION TO: MARLYS MIHOK, BOARD SECRETARY, 550
W. PALMER ST., MORRISVILLE, PA 19067-2195. FAX 215-736-
2413.
With last week's death of Ed Frankenfield, the board is advertising for candidates to fill the unexpired portion of his term.
Please keep in mind the deadline is this coming Friday, June 13, 2008, at 9:00 A.M.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, THAT THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
OF THE SCHOOL DISTRICT OF BOROUGH OF MORRISVILLE IS
SEEKING RESIDENT APPLICANTS TO FILL A VACANCY ON THE
MORRISVILLE SCHOOL DISTRICT SCHOOL BOARD.
APPLICANTS MUST BE AT LEAST 18 YEARS OF AGE AND
MUST HAVE LIVED IN THE DISTRICT FOR AT LEAST ONE YEAR.
DEADLINE FOR APPLICATION IS 9:00 A.M. ON FRIDAY, 6-13-
08. IF INTERESTED, FORWARD RESUME AND LETTER OF
APPLICATION TO: MARLYS MIHOK, BOARD SECRETARY, 550
W. PALMER ST., MORRISVILLE, PA 19067-2195. FAX 215-736-
2413.
Reminder of Aged Schools/Heat Closure
It certainly is hot out there, and the school district is closing early today.

Just another reminder of the precarious condition of our schools.

Just another reminder of the precarious condition of our schools.
Schools News Around the Blogosphere
America had the world's best school system.
Keith Baker
Guest Columnist EducationNews.org
Once upon a time, and not so long ago, America had the world's best school system. That may no longer be true, and the reason why will surprise you.
Education reformers typically claim we have a serious problem with our schools because American students do poorly compared to other nations on international tests. They claim our low scores will adversely affect our ability to compete economically on the world stage.
The National Math Panel Report Goes to Washington
Barry Garelick
Columnist EducationNews.org
The National Math Advisory Panel (NMP), which was formed two years ago, released its final report on March 13, 2008. One of the principal messages of the report is that "the delivery system in mathematics education is broken and must be fixed." Such a statement is hard to ignore, so it was only a matter of time before someone on the Hill would look into what it would take to fix the broken system.
Charter oversight hobbled in 2005
Philadelphia Daily News
Rather than risk offending powerful legislators, the School Reform Commission decided to end audits.
The Philadelphia School District's first audits of charter schools up for renewal in 2004 found problems at all seven, including conflicts of interest at a charter founded by the wife of State Rep. John Perzel, the powerful Northeast Republican who was then speaker of the House.
Government's education policy is self-defeating, academics warn
The Independent
The drive to reform Britain's education system, with frequent shifts in policy and the added burden of targets, is self-defeating and "working against the Government's own intentions", leading academics have warned ministers.
In Defense of Testing Series: NIST Assessment of the U.S. Measurement System
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) recently released a new report, An Assessment of the United States Measurement System: Addressing Measurement Barriers to Accelerate Innovation (NIST Special Publication 1048). The report is available at usms.nist.gov and consists of 68 pages for the main report plus nearly 1,000 pages of appendixes. An eight-page "in brief" summary is also available.
Living Literacy: A Cycle of Life to Text and Text to Life
Elliot Washor and Charles Mojkowski
In a December 2007 New Yorker article, "Twilight of the Books," author Caleb Crain laments the decline of literacy in the United States, citing a number of studies indicating, "Americans are losing not just the will to read but even the ability." Crain reports that, "readers are more likely than non-readers to play sports, exercise, visit art museums, attend theater, paint, go to music events, take photos, and volunteer.
Keith Baker
Guest Columnist EducationNews.org
Once upon a time, and not so long ago, America had the world's best school system. That may no longer be true, and the reason why will surprise you.
Education reformers typically claim we have a serious problem with our schools because American students do poorly compared to other nations on international tests. They claim our low scores will adversely affect our ability to compete economically on the world stage.
The National Math Panel Report Goes to Washington
Barry Garelick
Columnist EducationNews.org
The National Math Advisory Panel (NMP), which was formed two years ago, released its final report on March 13, 2008. One of the principal messages of the report is that "the delivery system in mathematics education is broken and must be fixed." Such a statement is hard to ignore, so it was only a matter of time before someone on the Hill would look into what it would take to fix the broken system.
Charter oversight hobbled in 2005
Philadelphia Daily News
Rather than risk offending powerful legislators, the School Reform Commission decided to end audits.
The Philadelphia School District's first audits of charter schools up for renewal in 2004 found problems at all seven, including conflicts of interest at a charter founded by the wife of State Rep. John Perzel, the powerful Northeast Republican who was then speaker of the House.
Government's education policy is self-defeating, academics warn
The Independent
The drive to reform Britain's education system, with frequent shifts in policy and the added burden of targets, is self-defeating and "working against the Government's own intentions", leading academics have warned ministers.
In Defense of Testing Series: NIST Assessment of the U.S. Measurement System
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) recently released a new report, An Assessment of the United States Measurement System: Addressing Measurement Barriers to Accelerate Innovation (NIST Special Publication 1048). The report is available at usms.nist.gov and consists of 68 pages for the main report plus nearly 1,000 pages of appendixes. An eight-page "in brief" summary is also available.
Living Literacy: A Cycle of Life to Text and Text to Life
Elliot Washor and Charles Mojkowski
In a December 2007 New Yorker article, "Twilight of the Books," author Caleb Crain laments the decline of literacy in the United States, citing a number of studies indicating, "Americans are losing not just the will to read but even the ability." Crain reports that, "readers are more likely than non-readers to play sports, exercise, visit art museums, attend theater, paint, go to music events, take photos, and volunteer.
Sunday, June 8, 2008
BCCT Citizen Scholars
Congratulations to all of the Lower Bucks citizen scholars from the class of 2008, but special congratulations to Morrisville's own Matt Miller and Michael Tribbey.
Matthew Miller
Morrisville Middle/Senior High
Class rank: 1 of 69
Achievements: National Honor Society; Rotary Club Student of the Month; perfect attendance award; student government; class officer; 21st Century Interact Club; Ski Club; baseball; football; soccer; student forum; Future Business Leaders of America; chemistry award.
Community service: Nominated for Teen Volunteer of the Year; Earth Day delegate; organized a Powder Puff football fundraiser; organized Love Ashley fundraiser; Dr. Seuss reading program volunteer; Winterfest volunteer; Senior Citizen service; Martin Luther King reading presentation.
Counselor’s comments: Matthew is very active in school and his community. He has taken leadership roles on service projects and athletics.
Michael Tribbey: Morrisville Middle/Senior High Class rank: 6 of 69 Achievements: National Honor Society; student representative to the school board; chorus, Chamber Choir; Drama Club; soccer; bowling. Reading Olympics; 21st Century Learning Club. Counselor’s comments: Michael is very creative.
Matthew MillerMorrisville Middle/Senior High
Class rank: 1 of 69
Achievements: National Honor Society; Rotary Club Student of the Month; perfect attendance award; student government; class officer; 21st Century Interact Club; Ski Club; baseball; football; soccer; student forum; Future Business Leaders of America; chemistry award.
Community service: Nominated for Teen Volunteer of the Year; Earth Day delegate; organized a Powder Puff football fundraiser; organized Love Ashley fundraiser; Dr. Seuss reading program volunteer; Winterfest volunteer; Senior Citizen service; Martin Luther King reading presentation.
Counselor’s comments: Matthew is very active in school and his community. He has taken leadership roles on service projects and athletics.
Michael Tribbey: Morrisville Middle/Senior High Class rank: 6 of 69 Achievements: National Honor Society; student representative to the school board; chorus, Chamber Choir; Drama Club; soccer; bowling. Reading Olympics; 21st Century Learning Club. Counselor’s comments: Michael is very creative.
Saturday, June 7, 2008
Comic Relief
We Didn't Know How Much We DIDN'T Know
From the BCCT this morning. First is a guest opinion on how destroying the school system will only destroy the community. This is something that the people here on this blog have been saying for months now.
Next is a "Thumbs up" from the BCCT on the Tech High School budget mess. I'm not sure I agree completely. Yes, it's great that the logjam was broken, but why does it take international class brinksmanship and public histrionics to force others to the negotiating table simply to do the right thing for the kids AND the taxpayers? There's also praise for the Pennsbury citizens commission and praise for the state House Education Committee's approval of the new school funding formula. If you have not clicked on the green link to the left and registered your displeasure with your elected officials, why are you waiting?
Lastly, there is an article on the Tech School graduates themselves. Here's the heart of the "why" when people ask "why do we have a school system?" Answer: It's an investment in the future.
Destroying our schools will only destroy our community
By WILLIAM S. UMEK
Current Morrisville school board members were elected based on a platform of not raising taxes and doing away with a plan to build a new school, which would have resulted in many more positive results than negative ones for the community.
Now, they are in a position whereby they cannot meet the promise of not increasing taxes without having to tax us double next year (time to start saving money, so they can save face) and they are on the edge of getting Morrisville sued by the state. We went from a board that wanted to improve the borough and the education
we provide our children to one that wants to deteriorate (the borough) to the point that the state would have to step in.
How did we end up here? New schools create a sense of pride, induce homebuyers to move in and generally raise the bar for the community. They also cost money, which is what people generally use to invest in their future.
Morrisville residents have voted to stagnate and deteriorate; the opposite of improving. What pride is there in a rundown school and a community that votes against improving them? Who wants to move into a community that does not invest in the future of their children?
I have seen dozens of nice homes that are still for sale from over a year ago. As for raising the bar and investing in our future, how much more money do I want to invest in my home or would the right move be to get out before it is too late?
If current board members have to eat their words and raise taxes, so be it. I can’t fathom that any one would ever believe that undeliverable promise in this day and age. I am sure that being sued by the state and defending the half-witted decision to not fund education will cost more than the amount our taxes increase. This is not grade school where you get elected to class president by convincing people you will have soda coming out of the water fountains.
At that level there are not any repercussions for this inability to think a plan and a promise through to a feasible conclusion. However, there are repercussions when you are running a school board and while it may not turn out well for the board members, the real issue is the long-term effects this will have on Morrisville Borough, its students and future residents.
We need to find a way to remedy this. Unfortunately, one way has been missed by the board not voting to take advantage of state exceptions to raising taxes. It would be nice to believe and one would expect that the new school board members would know how to do their job. Apparently they do not, hence the situation we are in (unless they planned on creating this mess).
It does seem that there are many experienced, smart and bright people in the district who can guide the board in making timely and informed decisions. Reba Dunford is one such person who has presented a sensible option. But was this suggested before or after the board’s decision in January? If it was after, I wish she could have made it before. And while she is not to blame for the position the board has put us in, it would be a great idea for the people of this community like her, who have the knowledge and understand how a school board should operate, to pitch in and make suggestions in line with improving our school situation. It is not a matter of being paid or not. It is a matter of improving OUR community.
My plea to the residents of Morrisville is that we come together as a community to fix this. We need to offer our experience, regardless of party and preference to the current board.
My plea to the board is to seek out the help they need to make accurate and timely decisions and to be open to the suggestions of those with more experience than themselves. We can come together, show what a great sense of community we have and put ourselves on the right track — or we can begin the process of decline into a borough that the state labels financially distressed.
I would prefer that Morrisville be labeled as a great place to live and to raise a family.
William S. Umek has lived in Morrisville for 10 years and has three boys who attend school in the district.
------------------------------------
Thumbs Up
To the Bensalem school board for finally voting last week to end the logjam that kept the Bucks County Technical High School from implementing its $21.7 million budget for the 2008-09 school year. The board voted unanimously for the budget only after the tech school’s joint board committee agreed to tackle a controversial funding formula this summer.
The agreement to approve the budget means that each sending district’s share of the cost of running the comprehensive tech school will increase 4.4 percent.
The Bensalem, Bristol, Bristol Township, Morrisville, Neshaminy and Pennsbury school districts send students to the tech school for training in about three dozen trades, along with academics. Bristol Township, Bensalem and Morrisville have complained about the cost-sharing arrangement with the other districts.
We hope that representatives of all the districts on the joint board committee will come up with a proper cost-sharing arrangement this summer to avoid this thorny issue in the future.
To the Pennsbury school board’s citizens advisory budget committee and board member Gene Dolnick, who suggested forming the panel.
The idea was to get residents involved in the budget process beyond just commenting (read complaining) after a budget’s been proposed. The goal, in addition to smoothing public reaction to almost inevitable tax hikes, is to take advantage of expertise in the community and, perhaps, forestall a tax increase.
The committee attempted to do that by recommending ways to cut costs and generate revenue. We encourage the board to give the panel’s recommendations serious consideration. And we encourage other school boards to follow Pennsbury’s lead and form their own citizen budget panels.
To the State House Education Committee, which voted in favor of a new school funding formula.
The new formula for supplemental state funding, if approved by the Legislature, would take into consideration enrollment, the number of low-income students and English-language learners, district size and regional cost differences.
This would help ensure that the needs of every district are adequately addressed, thus creating the opportunity for each district to provide every student with a quality education.
We encourage the full House to likewise pass the measure and the Senate to adopt a similar bill.
------------------------------------
Students plotting out their futures
Graduates of the tech school’s civil engineering class, one of just a handful in the U.S., can walk into jobs that pay between $13 and $15 per hour.
By JOAN HELLYER
Sean Gosner said he has been mistaken for a space traveler while working on a project at Bucks County Technical High School.
“One guy said, ‘Hey, that’s a cool jetpack,’” Sean, 17, a tech school junior, said of the global positioning system he carries on his back while collecting data for the civil engineering project.
But don’t think that Sean minds the onlooker confusion. “I like using the GPS unit for receiving information and walking around to get the shots,” the Bristol Township resident said.
Students in Bob Hale’s civil engineering class have fanned out across the approximate 45-acre campus off Wistar Road in Bristol Township for the past several weeks to record data about the property.
The high school juniors use global positioning systems linked to six satellites and data collectors to record information that they bring back into the school and download on their computers. Information collected during the course of three marking periods will be used to create maps of the school property, Hale said.
The GPS instrument provides the students with coordinates and data on the tech school complex including the building and its surrounding driveways, vegetation and boundary lines, students said.
“Come 50 toward us, in a straight line,” BCTHS junior Anthony Schaffer, 17, said Thursday afternoon to project partner Lady Venegas, as they prepared to record elevation information in a corner of the school’s main courtyard.
Anthony, a Middletown resident, said he’s learned some valuable lessons while doing the project at the comprehensive technical high school, which serves the Bensalem, Bristol, Bristol Township, Morrisville, Neshaminy and Pennsbury school districts.
“I’m smarter than I thought I was. We didn’t know how much we know,” Anthony said.
The GPS instruments and data collectors were secured through grants and donations from local engineers, Hale said. The students said they use that equipment and other skills including measurements, geometric equations, field notes and research skills they have developed during the last three years to do their work.
The project is designed to help students understand how to make sure the original project was done according to plan, Hale said. Their completed work will be referred to an “as built plan” if it proves the school complex was built according to plan, he said.
The exercise helps students see what they would actually do if they were land surveyors, Hale said.
The tech school’s civil engineering class is one of just a handful of civil engineering classes across the United States, the teacher said.
Students who graduate from the civil engineering class generally are able to secure land surveying-type jobs that pay between $13 and $15 per hour, Hale said. They can also pursue various careers in civil engineering, land surveying, architecture and environmental protection with additional schooling, the tech school teacher said.
If students earn a two-year degree in any of those backgrounds, they’ll likely be able to secure a $30,000 annual salary, he said. A four-year degree will provide an extra $10,000 in annual income, Hale estimated.
An advanced degree will bring home a $65,000 annual salary, and civil engineers who are licensed can make a six-figure salary, he said.
“We’re beyond high school students,” BCTHS junior Dan Quinn, 17, said. “The kids who have already graduated said it has done wonders for them and they already know what they’re doing when they get to college.”
Next is a "Thumbs up" from the BCCT on the Tech High School budget mess. I'm not sure I agree completely. Yes, it's great that the logjam was broken, but why does it take international class brinksmanship and public histrionics to force others to the negotiating table simply to do the right thing for the kids AND the taxpayers? There's also praise for the Pennsbury citizens commission and praise for the state House Education Committee's approval of the new school funding formula. If you have not clicked on the green link to the left and registered your displeasure with your elected officials, why are you waiting?
Lastly, there is an article on the Tech School graduates themselves. Here's the heart of the "why" when people ask "why do we have a school system?" Answer: It's an investment in the future.
Destroying our schools will only destroy our community
By WILLIAM S. UMEK
Current Morrisville school board members were elected based on a platform of not raising taxes and doing away with a plan to build a new school, which would have resulted in many more positive results than negative ones for the community.
Now, they are in a position whereby they cannot meet the promise of not increasing taxes without having to tax us double next year (time to start saving money, so they can save face) and they are on the edge of getting Morrisville sued by the state. We went from a board that wanted to improve the borough and the education
we provide our children to one that wants to deteriorate (the borough) to the point that the state would have to step in.
How did we end up here? New schools create a sense of pride, induce homebuyers to move in and generally raise the bar for the community. They also cost money, which is what people generally use to invest in their future.
Morrisville residents have voted to stagnate and deteriorate; the opposite of improving. What pride is there in a rundown school and a community that votes against improving them? Who wants to move into a community that does not invest in the future of their children?
I have seen dozens of nice homes that are still for sale from over a year ago. As for raising the bar and investing in our future, how much more money do I want to invest in my home or would the right move be to get out before it is too late?
If current board members have to eat their words and raise taxes, so be it. I can’t fathom that any one would ever believe that undeliverable promise in this day and age. I am sure that being sued by the state and defending the half-witted decision to not fund education will cost more than the amount our taxes increase. This is not grade school where you get elected to class president by convincing people you will have soda coming out of the water fountains.
At that level there are not any repercussions for this inability to think a plan and a promise through to a feasible conclusion. However, there are repercussions when you are running a school board and while it may not turn out well for the board members, the real issue is the long-term effects this will have on Morrisville Borough, its students and future residents.
We need to find a way to remedy this. Unfortunately, one way has been missed by the board not voting to take advantage of state exceptions to raising taxes. It would be nice to believe and one would expect that the new school board members would know how to do their job. Apparently they do not, hence the situation we are in (unless they planned on creating this mess).
It does seem that there are many experienced, smart and bright people in the district who can guide the board in making timely and informed decisions. Reba Dunford is one such person who has presented a sensible option. But was this suggested before or after the board’s decision in January? If it was after, I wish she could have made it before. And while she is not to blame for the position the board has put us in, it would be a great idea for the people of this community like her, who have the knowledge and understand how a school board should operate, to pitch in and make suggestions in line with improving our school situation. It is not a matter of being paid or not. It is a matter of improving OUR community.
My plea to the residents of Morrisville is that we come together as a community to fix this. We need to offer our experience, regardless of party and preference to the current board.
My plea to the board is to seek out the help they need to make accurate and timely decisions and to be open to the suggestions of those with more experience than themselves. We can come together, show what a great sense of community we have and put ourselves on the right track — or we can begin the process of decline into a borough that the state labels financially distressed.
I would prefer that Morrisville be labeled as a great place to live and to raise a family.
William S. Umek has lived in Morrisville for 10 years and has three boys who attend school in the district.
------------------------------------
Thumbs Up
To the Bensalem school board for finally voting last week to end the logjam that kept the Bucks County Technical High School from implementing its $21.7 million budget for the 2008-09 school year. The board voted unanimously for the budget only after the tech school’s joint board committee agreed to tackle a controversial funding formula this summer.
The agreement to approve the budget means that each sending district’s share of the cost of running the comprehensive tech school will increase 4.4 percent.
The Bensalem, Bristol, Bristol Township, Morrisville, Neshaminy and Pennsbury school districts send students to the tech school for training in about three dozen trades, along with academics. Bristol Township, Bensalem and Morrisville have complained about the cost-sharing arrangement with the other districts.
We hope that representatives of all the districts on the joint board committee will come up with a proper cost-sharing arrangement this summer to avoid this thorny issue in the future.
To the Pennsbury school board’s citizens advisory budget committee and board member Gene Dolnick, who suggested forming the panel.
The idea was to get residents involved in the budget process beyond just commenting (read complaining) after a budget’s been proposed. The goal, in addition to smoothing public reaction to almost inevitable tax hikes, is to take advantage of expertise in the community and, perhaps, forestall a tax increase.
The committee attempted to do that by recommending ways to cut costs and generate revenue. We encourage the board to give the panel’s recommendations serious consideration. And we encourage other school boards to follow Pennsbury’s lead and form their own citizen budget panels.
To the State House Education Committee, which voted in favor of a new school funding formula.
The new formula for supplemental state funding, if approved by the Legislature, would take into consideration enrollment, the number of low-income students and English-language learners, district size and regional cost differences.
This would help ensure that the needs of every district are adequately addressed, thus creating the opportunity for each district to provide every student with a quality education.
We encourage the full House to likewise pass the measure and the Senate to adopt a similar bill.
------------------------------------
Students plotting out their futures
Graduates of the tech school’s civil engineering class, one of just a handful in the U.S., can walk into jobs that pay between $13 and $15 per hour.
By JOAN HELLYER
Sean Gosner said he has been mistaken for a space traveler while working on a project at Bucks County Technical High School.
“One guy said, ‘Hey, that’s a cool jetpack,’” Sean, 17, a tech school junior, said of the global positioning system he carries on his back while collecting data for the civil engineering project.
But don’t think that Sean minds the onlooker confusion. “I like using the GPS unit for receiving information and walking around to get the shots,” the Bristol Township resident said.
Students in Bob Hale’s civil engineering class have fanned out across the approximate 45-acre campus off Wistar Road in Bristol Township for the past several weeks to record data about the property.
The high school juniors use global positioning systems linked to six satellites and data collectors to record information that they bring back into the school and download on their computers. Information collected during the course of three marking periods will be used to create maps of the school property, Hale said.
The GPS instrument provides the students with coordinates and data on the tech school complex including the building and its surrounding driveways, vegetation and boundary lines, students said.
“Come 50 toward us, in a straight line,” BCTHS junior Anthony Schaffer, 17, said Thursday afternoon to project partner Lady Venegas, as they prepared to record elevation information in a corner of the school’s main courtyard.
Anthony, a Middletown resident, said he’s learned some valuable lessons while doing the project at the comprehensive technical high school, which serves the Bensalem, Bristol, Bristol Township, Morrisville, Neshaminy and Pennsbury school districts.
“I’m smarter than I thought I was. We didn’t know how much we know,” Anthony said.
The GPS instruments and data collectors were secured through grants and donations from local engineers, Hale said. The students said they use that equipment and other skills including measurements, geometric equations, field notes and research skills they have developed during the last three years to do their work.
The project is designed to help students understand how to make sure the original project was done according to plan, Hale said. Their completed work will be referred to an “as built plan” if it proves the school complex was built according to plan, he said.
The exercise helps students see what they would actually do if they were land surveyors, Hale said.
The tech school’s civil engineering class is one of just a handful of civil engineering classes across the United States, the teacher said.
Students who graduate from the civil engineering class generally are able to secure land surveying-type jobs that pay between $13 and $15 per hour, Hale said. They can also pursue various careers in civil engineering, land surveying, architecture and environmental protection with additional schooling, the tech school teacher said.
If students earn a two-year degree in any of those backgrounds, they’ll likely be able to secure a $30,000 annual salary, he said. A four-year degree will provide an extra $10,000 in annual income, Hale estimated.
An advanced degree will bring home a $65,000 annual salary, and civil engineers who are licensed can make a six-figure salary, he said.
“We’re beyond high school students,” BCTHS junior Dan Quinn, 17, said. “The kids who have already graduated said it has done wonders for them and they already know what they’re doing when they get to college.”
Labels:
BCCT,
Bucks Tech School,
Pennsbury,
state funding
Friday, June 6, 2008
Makes Building in a Flood Zone Look Good!
Thanks to the contributor who sent me links to stories that appeared on KYW3 and Fox29 regarding a new school being built in Chester County.
It's being built on a Superfund site.
Look, Mom! Look what I brought home. I found it in the schoolyard........
Chester Co. School Proposal Draws Opposition
KIMBERTON, Pa. (CBS 3) ―
Phoenixville Township held a controversial school board workshop on Thursday to decide whether or not to begin construction on a new school.
The proposed location for the new East Pikeland Elementary school is on a potentially dangerous toxic superfund site, a location that has local parents up in arms.
"I believe this is a time bomb waiting to happen," Celeste McGilney said. "We have a bed of water that is contaminated and no one can say to me that that water will not come up"
Test wells of the groundwater from a landfill near the proposed location have tested positive for TCE, however the EPA and DEP both say the site is appropriate and poses no health risk.
Despite assurances from the government and Chester County, officials some residents, like Jeff Effgen, still aren't convinced that this decision isn't one they won't soon regret.
"The fact that you can't drink the water, still is a red flag and an alarm to me and I think it might be retroactively something that we're really embarrassed to have not dealt with."
The EPA has made their recommendations, however it is ultimately up to the district to decide whether or not to proceed with the construction.
It's being built on a Superfund site.
Look, Mom! Look what I brought home. I found it in the schoolyard........
Chester Co. School Proposal Draws Opposition
KIMBERTON, Pa. (CBS 3) ―
Phoenixville Township held a controversial school board workshop on Thursday to decide whether or not to begin construction on a new school.
The proposed location for the new East Pikeland Elementary school is on a potentially dangerous toxic superfund site, a location that has local parents up in arms.
"I believe this is a time bomb waiting to happen," Celeste McGilney said. "We have a bed of water that is contaminated and no one can say to me that that water will not come up"
Test wells of the groundwater from a landfill near the proposed location have tested positive for TCE, however the EPA and DEP both say the site is appropriate and poses no health risk.
Despite assurances from the government and Chester County, officials some residents, like Jeff Effgen, still aren't convinced that this decision isn't one they won't soon regret.
"The fact that you can't drink the water, still is a red flag and an alarm to me and I think it might be retroactively something that we're really embarrassed to have not dealt with."
The EPA has made their recommendations, however it is ultimately up to the district to decide whether or not to proceed with the construction.
Not a Tony Winning Performance
The BCCT today again recognized that the Emperor is running a one man show. Unlike the folksy Mark Twain of Hal Holbrook, or the spot on Ebenezer Scrooge by Patrick Stewart, the world of William Hellmann, CPA, Emperor of Education, is far less entertaining. It is a dark and sinister place. His penchant for sharp and divisive activity, especially where none was needed, has been played out time after time.
"Let's speed this up." "Vote now." "I'm tired of all this." "Let's move on." "Your time is up." The schools director who is for the taxpayer. Isn't that a rather ironic slice of life? All through literature, we find the story of the guy on the wrong side of things. Through experiences, they find the right side, move over, and there's a happy ending. Not so here.
I do take issue with the use of the word virtuoso in the editorial below. The connotation of that word is rather exemplary, defining someone with exceptional and unique talents. We're all unique. It's what we do that is a moral issue. It is often an innocent progression, which leads unexpectedly to other, possible nasty, uses.
There's still a way out. A reader already suggested a way that the board members themselves can begin to clean up the mess quickly, quietly, and without a monetary cost.
I can't **RECALL** another way to handle this myself...
While I do not think that the Emperor is capital "E" Evil personified (think Hitler and Stalin), his obvious inability to work and play well with others is a small "e" evil that does need to be addressed.
"He who passively accepts evil is as much involved in it as he who helps to perpetrate it." - Martin Luther King Jr.
"Evil is nourished and grows by concealment." - Virgil
"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing." - Edmund Burke
"When you choose the lesser of two evils, always remember that it is still an evil." - Max Lerner
"Of two evils, choose neither." - Charles Haddon Spurgeon
One-man band
Multiple heads are better than one.
Morrisville school board President William Hellman is very smart and very capable. He thinks big and has lots of ideas.
Problem is he’s a one-man band. Nobody else on the board gets to play along. At least that’s the way it appears.
Thus, a stunning and divisive proposal to simply dissolve the high school and pay for students to be educated in other districts shows up as a formal proposal. No public debate by board members. No input from citizens.
Maybe Hellmann’s plan is the best thing for the struggling district, its overburdened taxpayers and, most importantly, the students. And maybe shutting the borough’s two elementary schools and uniting them at a renovated high school is a great solution, too — another of Hellman’s big ideas.
It’s just that other board members, as elected representatives of the people, and the people themselves, ought to be part of the planning process.
We strongly urge the borough’s virtuoso board president to share the spotlight.
"Let's speed this up." "Vote now." "I'm tired of all this." "Let's move on." "Your time is up." The schools director who is for the taxpayer. Isn't that a rather ironic slice of life? All through literature, we find the story of the guy on the wrong side of things. Through experiences, they find the right side, move over, and there's a happy ending. Not so here.
I do take issue with the use of the word virtuoso in the editorial below. The connotation of that word is rather exemplary, defining someone with exceptional and unique talents. We're all unique. It's what we do that is a moral issue. It is often an innocent progression, which leads unexpectedly to other, possible nasty, uses.
There's still a way out. A reader already suggested a way that the board members themselves can begin to clean up the mess quickly, quietly, and without a monetary cost.
I can't **RECALL** another way to handle this myself...
While I do not think that the Emperor is capital "E" Evil personified (think Hitler and Stalin), his obvious inability to work and play well with others is a small "e" evil that does need to be addressed.
"He who passively accepts evil is as much involved in it as he who helps to perpetrate it." - Martin Luther King Jr.
"Evil is nourished and grows by concealment." - Virgil
"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing." - Edmund Burke
"When you choose the lesser of two evils, always remember that it is still an evil." - Max Lerner
"Of two evils, choose neither." - Charles Haddon Spurgeon
One-man band
Multiple heads are better than one.
Morrisville school board President William Hellman is very smart and very capable. He thinks big and has lots of ideas.
Problem is he’s a one-man band. Nobody else on the board gets to play along. At least that’s the way it appears.
Thus, a stunning and divisive proposal to simply dissolve the high school and pay for students to be educated in other districts shows up as a formal proposal. No public debate by board members. No input from citizens.
Maybe Hellmann’s plan is the best thing for the struggling district, its overburdened taxpayers and, most importantly, the students. And maybe shutting the borough’s two elementary schools and uniting them at a renovated high school is a great solution, too — another of Hellman’s big ideas.
It’s just that other board members, as elected representatives of the people, and the people themselves, ought to be part of the planning process.
We strongly urge the borough’s virtuoso board president to share the spotlight.
Thursday, June 5, 2008
And to Think I Was Worried About PAPA Bear...
There are days when I truly wonder if anyone is reading. Once that "post" button is pressed, do my posts go anywhere? Does anyone read them?
Then one of you go and remind me that, yes, there is someone out there. Thanks, Mother Bear. Thank you for the thoughtful and reflective essay. You have truly made my day. Please make sure that you put in your application for the school board. You would be a worthy successor to Ed Frankenfield.
Parents: Your last opportunity to make a difference in YOUR child's education is here. Remain silent, and Morrisville High School closes its doors for good. The high schoolers are farmed out and we become a K-8 district. Is that what you want?
I've noticed we've all been a bit quiet lately - stunned perhaps? I wrote the following opinion/long rant if you are interested in posting it. I'd prefer to remain anonymous at least for now.
Opinion:
There has been much buzz about what lies in the future for Morrisville students. Parents are worried, young teens working toward future goals are anxious, not knowing what lies ahead, where they will be attending school next year or the year after. The board majority has been nothing but grossly disrespectful of the population it was elected to serve -- the students. [NOTE: This is where the root of the problem lies. The Emperor believes his constituency is the taxpayers, not the students. All of you who voted for the Stop the School people: Do you believe the same thing? The correct answer is that his constituency is MORRISVILLE: Child, Student, Taxpayer, and Seniors. Even if you do not have a child or grandchild in this school system directly, you probably have nieces or nephews or grandchildren in other districts. Would you be comfortable trusting their education to William Hellman, CPA, Emperor of Education? LOL--I didn't think so. So why is it OK for the Morrisville students? Stop concentrating entirely on your wallet and consider the long term effects of what this plan will do.]
Board President Bill Hellmann revealed his "plan" at the latest school board meeting, confirming rumors that high school students will be bused to some other school. Despite this revelation, there has yet to be any real public discussion by the current Morrisville board on the issue of tuitioning out the high school and moving K-8 to that building, so we can't be certain of the board majority's intentions. We can, however, make some educated guesses based on the little drops of information that have been squeezed out.
Research into this scenario might offer board members some insight into how it would actually play out. But the board majority appears to be poised to move forward with a plan, without studied contemplation and in spite of the plain facts and expert advice that is available to them. The educational progress, time and money potentially wasted, without obtaining factual information or even looking to that which has already been provided through past studies, could be devastating to this community and our students.
If Hellmann's scheme is the direction the board chooses -we can be certain of some of the roadblocks. First, that the board will not be able to move the elementary school students to the high school building until a suitable plan is in place for the high school students. What might this be? Didn't the Courier recently reveal that neighboring public schools had been contacted about accepting our students for tuition, but all were either unable or unwilling to do so? And, that two Catholic schools and one alternative school expressed some interest?
To this end, unless the state forces another local school to accept our students, or the board decides to bus them far from home, we might speculate that the board appears to be considering some sort of voucher program. The NEA website has some interesting information about the outcomes of voucher programs in other states http://www.nea.org/vouchers/02voutrack.html. If such a plan is in place the law still requires that districts provide a "Free and Appropriate Education" for all students. This means, those for whom space is not available in another school must still be educated, and that education must be appropriate to the students needs.
Could all Morrisville high school students be sent to Catholic School? I would imagine that the constitutional separation of church and state would prevent such a plan being legal for all students. If I am of another religion or simply not interested in my child attending a religious school, I think I'd have a pretty sound legal argument for not sending my child to a Catholic School. The district might offer me the same tuition in a voucher to opt for another school, but if I cannot find another available school at the same tuition, and I cannot afford the difference, the district is still obligated to provide me with a free and appropriate education.
Is my only alternative, then "Alternative School"? Is alternative school appropriate for all students? How will the district provide free and appropriate education for students who are not Catholic or don't require an alternative school program?
Let's say the board somehow overcomes the glitch of actually having to provide education for all our high school students, and we are ready to move the elementary students in. The district will have to get state approval for the plan and the facilities will have to comply with PDE code for elementary school students. Past research has indicated that major renovations are required in order for the building to be acceptable for elementary school use. In addition, there are the problems with air flow (backwards in case of fire -- see past engineering studies), energy inefficiency and outdated systems to overcome. Has the board studied this beyond the brief walk through personally commissioned by our board president but paid for by the public?
There are numerous sound, reasonable ways we can brainstorm to educate all of our students, but we need to work within reality and with absolute accountability to the children. The board majority, or at least the President and one other "we", seem to have forged a plan without public debate, without research, without regard for the educational program or the needs of the students. This so-called plan is really just a numbers-crunching scheme, and does not reflect responsible school directorship. Nor does the budget for this year, where the board is proposing arbitrary cuts to special and alternative school education in defiance of the professional advice of educators. Perhaps the plan is "Hellmann's Plan", and the budget is "Hellmann's Budget", but where then is the deliberation? Where are the answers to our questions?
(Notable exceptions -- Joe Kemp and Robin Reithmeyer have both worked to provide respectful answers, along with the shining example of respectful board service, the late Ed Frankenfield.)
The board has an ethical and legal obligation to the students of this district. Perhaps the President and others did not know what they were getting into, besides their single minded and unresearched mission to stop the new school. However, as elected officials they are, whether they like it or not, accountable to the laws that protect the rights of our children. Their duty involves due diligence in decision making, along with accountability to Sunshine Laws that require public deliberation and protect the public's right to know of and be heard in board policy and decision making. [Note: Bold is mine]
School board service is serious business with the ultimate outcome of helping to shape the future for our students. Our children cannot be guinea pigs to the board president's unstudied plans. They don't have time for trial and error; childhood is short. If board members are not up to serving our children -- all of our children, renters, owners, children with special needs, and children who require alternative education -- through diligent, studied, responsible decision making, then they don't deserve the honor of this position.
Mother Bear
Then one of you go and remind me that, yes, there is someone out there. Thanks, Mother Bear. Thank you for the thoughtful and reflective essay. You have truly made my day. Please make sure that you put in your application for the school board. You would be a worthy successor to Ed Frankenfield.
Parents: Your last opportunity to make a difference in YOUR child's education is here. Remain silent, and Morrisville High School closes its doors for good. The high schoolers are farmed out and we become a K-8 district. Is that what you want?
I've noticed we've all been a bit quiet lately - stunned perhaps? I wrote the following opinion/long rant if you are interested in posting it. I'd prefer to remain anonymous at least for now.
Opinion:
There has been much buzz about what lies in the future for Morrisville students. Parents are worried, young teens working toward future goals are anxious, not knowing what lies ahead, where they will be attending school next year or the year after. The board majority has been nothing but grossly disrespectful of the population it was elected to serve -- the students. [NOTE: This is where the root of the problem lies. The Emperor believes his constituency is the taxpayers, not the students. All of you who voted for the Stop the School people: Do you believe the same thing? The correct answer is that his constituency is MORRISVILLE: Child, Student, Taxpayer, and Seniors. Even if you do not have a child or grandchild in this school system directly, you probably have nieces or nephews or grandchildren in other districts. Would you be comfortable trusting their education to William Hellman, CPA, Emperor of Education? LOL--I didn't think so. So why is it OK for the Morrisville students? Stop concentrating entirely on your wallet and consider the long term effects of what this plan will do.]
Board President Bill Hellmann revealed his "plan" at the latest school board meeting, confirming rumors that high school students will be bused to some other school. Despite this revelation, there has yet to be any real public discussion by the current Morrisville board on the issue of tuitioning out the high school and moving K-8 to that building, so we can't be certain of the board majority's intentions. We can, however, make some educated guesses based on the little drops of information that have been squeezed out.
Research into this scenario might offer board members some insight into how it would actually play out. But the board majority appears to be poised to move forward with a plan, without studied contemplation and in spite of the plain facts and expert advice that is available to them. The educational progress, time and money potentially wasted, without obtaining factual information or even looking to that which has already been provided through past studies, could be devastating to this community and our students.
If Hellmann's scheme is the direction the board chooses -we can be certain of some of the roadblocks. First, that the board will not be able to move the elementary school students to the high school building until a suitable plan is in place for the high school students. What might this be? Didn't the Courier recently reveal that neighboring public schools had been contacted about accepting our students for tuition, but all were either unable or unwilling to do so? And, that two Catholic schools and one alternative school expressed some interest?
To this end, unless the state forces another local school to accept our students, or the board decides to bus them far from home, we might speculate that the board appears to be considering some sort of voucher program. The NEA website has some interesting information about the outcomes of voucher programs in other states http://www.nea.org/vouchers/02voutrack.html. If such a plan is in place the law still requires that districts provide a "Free and Appropriate Education" for all students. This means, those for whom space is not available in another school must still be educated, and that education must be appropriate to the students needs.
Could all Morrisville high school students be sent to Catholic School? I would imagine that the constitutional separation of church and state would prevent such a plan being legal for all students. If I am of another religion or simply not interested in my child attending a religious school, I think I'd have a pretty sound legal argument for not sending my child to a Catholic School. The district might offer me the same tuition in a voucher to opt for another school, but if I cannot find another available school at the same tuition, and I cannot afford the difference, the district is still obligated to provide me with a free and appropriate education.
Is my only alternative, then "Alternative School"? Is alternative school appropriate for all students? How will the district provide free and appropriate education for students who are not Catholic or don't require an alternative school program?
Let's say the board somehow overcomes the glitch of actually having to provide education for all our high school students, and we are ready to move the elementary students in. The district will have to get state approval for the plan and the facilities will have to comply with PDE code for elementary school students. Past research has indicated that major renovations are required in order for the building to be acceptable for elementary school use. In addition, there are the problems with air flow (backwards in case of fire -- see past engineering studies), energy inefficiency and outdated systems to overcome. Has the board studied this beyond the brief walk through personally commissioned by our board president but paid for by the public?
There are numerous sound, reasonable ways we can brainstorm to educate all of our students, but we need to work within reality and with absolute accountability to the children. The board majority, or at least the President and one other "we", seem to have forged a plan without public debate, without research, without regard for the educational program or the needs of the students. This so-called plan is really just a numbers-crunching scheme, and does not reflect responsible school directorship. Nor does the budget for this year, where the board is proposing arbitrary cuts to special and alternative school education in defiance of the professional advice of educators. Perhaps the plan is "Hellmann's Plan", and the budget is "Hellmann's Budget", but where then is the deliberation? Where are the answers to our questions?
(Notable exceptions -- Joe Kemp and Robin Reithmeyer have both worked to provide respectful answers, along with the shining example of respectful board service, the late Ed Frankenfield.)
The board has an ethical and legal obligation to the students of this district. Perhaps the President and others did not know what they were getting into, besides their single minded and unresearched mission to stop the new school. However, as elected officials they are, whether they like it or not, accountable to the laws that protect the rights of our children. Their duty involves due diligence in decision making, along with accountability to Sunshine Laws that require public deliberation and protect the public's right to know of and be heard in board policy and decision making. [Note: Bold is mine]
School board service is serious business with the ultimate outcome of helping to shape the future for our students. Our children cannot be guinea pigs to the board president's unstudied plans. They don't have time for trial and error; childhood is short. If board members are not up to serving our children -- all of our children, renters, owners, children with special needs, and children who require alternative education -- through diligent, studied, responsible decision making, then they don't deserve the honor of this position.
Mother Bear
Labels:
farming,
Frankenfield,
Hellmann,
integrity,
Kemp,
Reithmeyer
Wednesday, June 4, 2008
I Want My MTV!
Thanks to the contributor who noticed this money for nothing story. Maybe we could apply and use it to climb out of our dire straits.
State Funds Move Classrooms Into The Future
By Peter Ciferri, Advance Editor
Misbehaving students at Council Rock's two high schools won't have to worry about clapping erasers and washing chalkboards as punishment anymore.Today, students say it's "kind of a joke" when teachers use the green, slate fossils of the classroom, as more and more teachers are turning to interactive white boards to deliver their message.
Fueled by over $750, 000 in Pennsylvania Classrooms for the Future (CFF) grant money, 68 classrooms across district high schools are now equipped with technology from laptops and digital cameras to camcorders and Web cams.
But the consensus is that the project's crown jewels are the interactive white boards installed across many core classrooms.
The boards, about four feet tall and mounted overtop existing chalkboards, allow teachers to utilize touch screen technology to draw diagrams, create notes and even make a database of previous lessons. "I embraced it with open arms", Physics teacher Joe Warwick said. "The kids are much more likely to look at the drawings I'm going to make on the board with the different colors, than what I would just draw on a chalkboard."
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Warwick has been using the technology since September. During classes, he navigates through the program - which operates like a PowerPoint and Photoshop hybrid - with ease. "There are times when it makes it much, much easier", Warwick explained. "I can say it but without a simulator, there's nothing like seeing it on the screen." Warwick said he often e-mails students notes or study guides based on the computerized lessons. "It makes it more interactive", student Marissa Custren said. "Instead of just telling us, they can actually show us the notes."
According to a description on state.pa.us, the CFF program "recognizes and embraces the need for high school reform preparing students to enter and successfully compete in the ever-expanding high-tech global marketplace." Council Rock was one of two Bucks County schools (Bensalem) to receive first year project funding in 2006. This year, that number jumped to $742, 000 and the district has applied for a third year grant to equip 41 more classes next year. The state also funds training for teachers not experienced with the technology. "It's really opening up classroom walls", CFF Coach Suzanne Loftus said.
She said the program also allows teachers and students to work together on outside projects, using new digital cameras and camcorders for interactive homework assignments. "These projects teach you how to pace yourself, how to interview people, all those 21st century learning skills you're looking for", Loftus explained. "It's preparing them for the job market that they're going to be exposed to when they're getting through college." Each teacher also has their own Web page, where students can access notes and use blogging tools to hold classroom discussions even when school is out.
One Council Rock South Psychology class even links to a classroom at Council Rock North, where there are no staff members trained in the subject. The South teacher uses a monitor to see and hear the students as they sit in class and students watch their teacher over a projector. They get homework via fax machine and are still under live supervision by a substitute teacher.
"I think [CFF] is going to revolutionize learning", Loftus said. "It's going to be standard eventually." Currently, around 1, 750 students at North an 1, 890 students at South use the CFF equipment in some form every day. Loftus said the students and most teachers took to the technology immediately, and those who were reluctant at first, are now embracing the schools'goal.
"Nobody has said 'I'm sorry I did this.' They all say 'Thank God I'm in the program what are we doing next?'"
State Funds Move Classrooms Into The Future
By Peter Ciferri, Advance Editor
Misbehaving students at Council Rock's two high schools won't have to worry about clapping erasers and washing chalkboards as punishment anymore.Today, students say it's "kind of a joke" when teachers use the green, slate fossils of the classroom, as more and more teachers are turning to interactive white boards to deliver their message.
Fueled by over $750, 000 in Pennsylvania Classrooms for the Future (CFF) grant money, 68 classrooms across district high schools are now equipped with technology from laptops and digital cameras to camcorders and Web cams.
But the consensus is that the project's crown jewels are the interactive white boards installed across many core classrooms.
The boards, about four feet tall and mounted overtop existing chalkboards, allow teachers to utilize touch screen technology to draw diagrams, create notes and even make a database of previous lessons. "I embraced it with open arms", Physics teacher Joe Warwick said. "The kids are much more likely to look at the drawings I'm going to make on the board with the different colors, than what I would just draw on a chalkboard."
Advertisement
Warwick has been using the technology since September. During classes, he navigates through the program - which operates like a PowerPoint and Photoshop hybrid - with ease. "There are times when it makes it much, much easier", Warwick explained. "I can say it but without a simulator, there's nothing like seeing it on the screen." Warwick said he often e-mails students notes or study guides based on the computerized lessons. "It makes it more interactive", student Marissa Custren said. "Instead of just telling us, they can actually show us the notes."
According to a description on state.pa.us, the CFF program "recognizes and embraces the need for high school reform preparing students to enter and successfully compete in the ever-expanding high-tech global marketplace." Council Rock was one of two Bucks County schools (Bensalem) to receive first year project funding in 2006. This year, that number jumped to $742, 000 and the district has applied for a third year grant to equip 41 more classes next year. The state also funds training for teachers not experienced with the technology. "It's really opening up classroom walls", CFF Coach Suzanne Loftus said.
She said the program also allows teachers and students to work together on outside projects, using new digital cameras and camcorders for interactive homework assignments. "These projects teach you how to pace yourself, how to interview people, all those 21st century learning skills you're looking for", Loftus explained. "It's preparing them for the job market that they're going to be exposed to when they're getting through college." Each teacher also has their own Web page, where students can access notes and use blogging tools to hold classroom discussions even when school is out.
One Council Rock South Psychology class even links to a classroom at Council Rock North, where there are no staff members trained in the subject. The South teacher uses a monitor to see and hear the students as they sit in class and students watch their teacher over a projector. They get homework via fax machine and are still under live supervision by a substitute teacher.
"I think [CFF] is going to revolutionize learning", Loftus said. "It's going to be standard eventually." Currently, around 1, 750 students at North an 1, 890 students at South use the CFF equipment in some form every day. Loftus said the students and most teachers took to the technology immediately, and those who were reluctant at first, are now embracing the schools'goal.
"Nobody has said 'I'm sorry I did this.' They all say 'Thank God I'm in the program what are we doing next?'"
If Only I had Said "Morrisville is GOOD for business"
Remember when the Emperor decreed that he would not recommend business investment in Morrisville? We know the borough council backs up that view (remember Gateway?), but did you know that civilized communities know about and use the Pennsylvania Educational Improvement Tax Credit Program.
Giving back for June 3
Bucks County Courier Times
Click Here!
FirstService Bank donated $8,050 to the Lower Bucks Family YMCA to support the YMCA's full- and half-day preschool programs and several programs for teenagers. FirstService is a division of Boyertown-based National Penn Bank, with branches in Warminster, Bristol, Middletown and Bensalem. The money was donated under the Pennsylvania Educational Improvement Tax Credit Program, which gives businesses tax credits for approved education-related contributions.
Freedom Credit Union of Warminster sponsored A.M. Kulp Elementary School's Reading Day, a community-wide literacy project held last month. Freedom's marketing coordinator, Cyndi Cohen, read to second graders at the Hatfield Township school, which is part of the North Penn School District. Freedom Credit Union, which has branches in Philadelphia, Warminster and Lansdale, has been a major sponsor of the event for three years.
Rita's Water Ice hopes to raise more than $580,000 for pediatric cancer research during its latest paper lemon promotion. All Rita's locations will sell paper lemons for $1 during June. Proceeds will go to the Alex's Lemonade Stand Foundation. In two years, the Bensalem-based company has raised more than $1 million for the foundation, which is named after Alex Scott. She died of cancer in 2004.
Giving back for June 3
Bucks County Courier Times
Click Here!
FirstService Bank donated $8,050 to the Lower Bucks Family YMCA to support the YMCA's full- and half-day preschool programs and several programs for teenagers. FirstService is a division of Boyertown-based National Penn Bank, with branches in Warminster, Bristol, Middletown and Bensalem. The money was donated under the Pennsylvania Educational Improvement Tax Credit Program, which gives businesses tax credits for approved education-related contributions.
Freedom Credit Union of Warminster sponsored A.M. Kulp Elementary School's Reading Day, a community-wide literacy project held last month. Freedom's marketing coordinator, Cyndi Cohen, read to second graders at the Hatfield Township school, which is part of the North Penn School District. Freedom Credit Union, which has branches in Philadelphia, Warminster and Lansdale, has been a major sponsor of the event for three years.
Rita's Water Ice hopes to raise more than $580,000 for pediatric cancer research during its latest paper lemon promotion. All Rita's locations will sell paper lemons for $1 during June. Proceeds will go to the Alex's Lemonade Stand Foundation. In two years, the Bensalem-based company has raised more than $1 million for the foundation, which is named after Alex Scott. She died of cancer in 2004.
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