WEBVTT 1 00:00:00.690 --> 00:00:07.170 Regan Molatore: And. All right. Well, welcome to this October 5 regular board meeting and 2 00:00:07.470 --> 00:00:14.190 Regan Molatore: We're very excited to have Joe Walters here with us tonight, on behalf of the Westland Wilson, though. Education Foundation. 3 00:00:14.700 --> 00:00:25.620 Regan Molatore: As well as our high school students who get to speak to us for the year and but before we get to that, Kelly and would you take role and 4 00:00:25.950 --> 00:00:33.300 Regan Molatore: I do know that unfortunately I don't is not going to be with us this evening he just asked that I share that I'm 5 00:00:33.900 --> 00:00:45.870 Regan Molatore: Burying quarantine. They were exposed to to covet. And while they're asymptomatic. They're, they're all at home, which means he's there with his three children, and there is no babysitter, who can come and help out. 6 00:00:46.350 --> 00:00:51.390 Regan Molatore: And on top of it. It's his son's birthday, so it's not really what his son was anticipating and 7 00:00:52.890 --> 00:01:00.780 Regan Molatore: Into please be home and put his family first and just enjoy their time together. So Kelly with that we do take take roll. 8 00:01:01.680 --> 00:01:03.450 Regan Molatore: Regulatory here. 9 00:01:04.410 --> 00:01:05.280 Kelly Douglas: Chelsea King 10 00:01:05.820 --> 00:01:08.130 Kelly Douglas: Here Christie Thompson. 11 00:01:10.260 --> 00:01:11.220 Kelly Douglas: Ginger Fitch. 12 00:01:11.670 --> 00:01:12.120 Here. 13 00:01:13.200 --> 00:01:13.710 Kelly Douglas: Thank you. 14 00:01:14.940 --> 00:01:28.770 Regan Molatore: All right. And now to the part of the meeting all night. I have personally been looking forward to is, I know Dr downs, you were going to introduce our high school principals and who then get to introduce our students who speak to us this year. 15 00:01:29.610 --> 00:01:40.890 Aaron Downs: That's correct. So chair monitor and our school board just want to say welcome and good evening. I think I can safely say for all of our panelists. We just want to say thank you to our students. 16 00:01:41.700 --> 00:01:50.640 Aaron Downs: For volunteering and for spending time not only preparing and working with your principles and assistant principals and teachers. 17 00:01:51.300 --> 00:01:55.740 Aaron Downs: But just for for making an effort to make it here for Monday nights I know our 18 00:01:56.430 --> 00:02:08.190 Aaron Downs: Board and all of our panelists just are so thankful and appreciative of your time and energies. And honestly, it's a lot of our. It's what chair monitor just mentioned, it's kind of a highlight for us. So we just want to welcome you 19 00:02:08.910 --> 00:02:15.120 Aaron Downs: On most board meeting nights chair, Malta, we're just actually invite you to start speaking, but tonight. 20 00:02:15.420 --> 00:02:24.570 Aaron Downs: Your principles would love to do like this, you know, great introduction for for you. So what I'm going to do is just introduce the principles and then when it's 21 00:02:24.930 --> 00:02:35.100 Aaron Downs: Your turn your principal introduce you. So with from arts and technology high school principal Saskia Dressler will join us from Wilson Middle High School principal Kelly Schmidt. 22 00:02:36.120 --> 00:02:52.950 Aaron Downs: And from Westland high school principal Greg Newman, so just on behalf of your teachers of your fellow administrators, we just say welcome and thank you so much for joining and spending some Monday nights coming up with us. So thank you to the students. 23 00:02:55.710 --> 00:03:03.720 Saskia Dresler: Hi, it is so wonderful to be here tonight and see everybody together. I'm sauce good wrestler, the principal at arts and technology. High School. 24 00:03:04.080 --> 00:03:11.670 Saskia Dresler: And I am so pleased to introduce our students speaker for this year. Michelle Quinn is a junior at arts and technology. High School. 25 00:03:12.120 --> 00:03:26.220 Saskia Dresler: And she has been a leader within our student leadership group planning student activities and your book and was a key planner of our prom which sadly didn't happen last year, but we are thinking about how it might happen this year. 26 00:03:27.180 --> 00:03:37.950 Saskia Dresler: She's very serious student and is working ahead of the pace to graduate from high school, but she's also a very fun person to be around. 27 00:03:38.700 --> 00:03:50.880 Saskia Dresler: A very kind person and she wants to go into nursing because she is a person who takes care of others. And so I am very honored to introduce Miss Michelle Quinn. 28 00:03:54.210 --> 00:04:03.030 Michelle Quinn: Good evening my name is Michelle Clint, and I'm a junior at arts and technology high school. I'm glad to be here tonight to update you on what's going on at your school 29 00:04:03.750 --> 00:04:09.390 Michelle Quinn: Well, as you all know it's been a very different start to the school year. I'm happy to say that classes are going well. 30 00:04:09.900 --> 00:04:16.650 Michelle Quinn: Teachers are creative and how they're using zoom and google classroom as well as how they're supporting students to active an experiential learning 31 00:04:17.220 --> 00:04:25.200 Michelle Quinn: Like making art and participating in science exploration labs safely, of course, and P activities outdoors for learning at home. 32 00:04:25.680 --> 00:04:31.500 Michelle Quinn: Here are a few things we have heard from students about the start of school year and distance learning 33 00:04:32.070 --> 00:04:40.470 Michelle Quinn: The structure of the classes in Google Classroom are easy to follow students enjoy having the contact with their teacher through the zoom classes. 34 00:04:40.800 --> 00:04:53.040 Michelle Quinn: And find it really helpful when they have anxiety about speaking up in class because they can do it in a safe and comfortable environment and we are getting better and better each day with communication to keep everyone connected 35 00:04:54.180 --> 00:05:04.620 Michelle Quinn: Our community meeting start next week during the morning break on Tuesday community meetings, it's time for us to connect with each other and our teachers to hear about what is happening across school 36 00:05:04.980 --> 00:05:14.550 Michelle Quinn: To celebrate our successes and the half one together our parent or parents, family group is meeting through zoom and the parents are eager to work together to support our school 37 00:05:15.510 --> 00:05:21.240 Michelle Quinn: Right now they are working on a teacher appreciation event to sacred teachers for all the hard work that they're doing. 38 00:05:21.720 --> 00:05:29.130 Michelle Quinn: The big focus of the starter square has been making sure that everyone is connected to school and has the support that they need in order to be successful. 39 00:05:29.670 --> 00:05:35.040 Michelle Quinn: Before the school year started our school counselor Cheryl Wilson and our student success coordinator, Katie. Katie 40 00:05:35.670 --> 00:05:39.390 Michelle Quinn: Made a personal connection with every student and family in the school. 41 00:05:39.810 --> 00:05:47.340 Michelle Quinn: Our teachers are connecting with students and I had a class through email under reaching out to students who are not in class to make sure that they're doing well. 42 00:05:47.910 --> 00:05:54.360 Michelle Quinn: All in all, the school year has been going very smoothly so far and I can't. And I look forward to seeing you all again next month. Thank you. 43 00:06:03.960 --> 00:06:15.240 Greg Neuman: Good evening, everyone. Nice to see everybody virtually once again it's my pleasure to introduce Mr. Cole Peters Cole is our student body president this year. 44 00:06:16.410 --> 00:06:27.570 Greg Neuman: I had a chance to meet Cole, my first year that's being my third year and close a sophomore. He was effing one of the very first students. I met at Westland high school and he made a immediate impact on me with all of his leadership abilities. 45 00:06:28.710 --> 00:06:39.150 Greg Neuman: Call is currently captain of both the football and wrestling team. He's also a national merit scholarship semi finalists one of only seven students at Western High School. 46 00:06:39.570 --> 00:06:51.720 Greg Neuman: I know he got all of this stuff. And so we're eager to get that all submitted for coal. Coal is applying at john Johns Hopkins MIT and several service military academies. 47 00:06:52.380 --> 00:07:00.990 Greg Neuman: Cole's a great lion, a young man have a lot of respect for and admiration for so it's my it's my pleasure to introduce Mr. Cole Peters call 48 00:07:03.870 --> 00:07:10.890 Cole Peters: Good evening. Dr. London Ludwig and the school board members, as Mr Newman said, my name is Cole Peters and I'm Westland high schools ASP president 49 00:07:11.310 --> 00:07:14.790 Cole Peters: I appreciate the opportunity to be able to share with you what is happening at West Line. 50 00:07:15.540 --> 00:07:22.770 Cole Peters: We just finished the fourth week of quarter one comprehensive distance learning and both students and staff are adapting mode of the online education model. 51 00:07:23.250 --> 00:07:31.380 Cole Peters: While we are definitely missing the social and active elements of our high school experience. We're all coming up with alternative ways to stay connected with each other and involved with the school community. 52 00:07:32.160 --> 00:07:37.920 Cole Peters: We started out the quarter with five drive through distribution this three of which had to be rescheduled twice due to air quality. 53 00:07:38.400 --> 00:07:46.890 Cole Peters: As each student drove through they received a welcome packet that included a couple of small gifts and information that they would have received in person during the first week of classes. 54 00:07:47.190 --> 00:08:00.540 Cole Peters: And then their textbooks supplies and yearbooks were taken out to their vehicles we have additional opportunities for students to drop off and pick up materials at school. Two afternoons each week. And we're already planning the quarter to drive two days for early November. 55 00:08:01.740 --> 00:08:10.620 Cole Peters: The week of September 21 was Westland strong spirit and service week with fun dress up days ways for students to share experiences and gratitude virtually 56 00:08:10.980 --> 00:08:18.660 Cole Peters: And a GoFundMe for the Red Cross cascade region that raised over $1,000 to support their efforts with Oregon families affected by the wildfires. 57 00:08:19.410 --> 00:08:26.730 Cole Peters: We posted a club fair video compilation on the SP Instagram last Tuesday to help some of our Westland clubs advertise that organizations to students. 58 00:08:27.060 --> 00:08:32.910 Cole Peters: And then parents join teachers for both recorded and live class meetings that that evening for virtual curriculum. 59 00:08:33.810 --> 00:08:43.050 Cole Peters: Last Friday, we had a drive thru opportunity for a ninth graders, a kind of one month celebration at which they received the gift bag sponsored by our district student success department. 60 00:08:43.770 --> 00:08:52.050 Cole Peters: Our ASP officers the cheer team and DJ Chrome joined our counselors and administrators mask and distance, of course, to help celebrate our ninth graders. 61 00:08:53.010 --> 00:09:03.030 Cole Peters: We want to let you know how grateful we are to have been given the opportunity to have small groups of students outdoors on campus masked and distanced both training and their sports and making music together. 62 00:09:03.630 --> 00:09:12.090 Cole Peters: We are taking the safety protocols very seriously, and it's really great to have even a little bit of time together, doing the activities we love so thank you for the chance to do that. 63 00:09:13.170 --> 00:09:25.500 Cole Peters: Coming up later this month will be national team driver safety week, the week of October 19 and the drive through breast cancer awareness fundraising event on the evening of October 28 thanks for your time and I'll see you again next month. 64 00:09:34.440 --> 00:09:34.650 That's 65 00:09:36.900 --> 00:09:43.710 Kelly Schmidt (she/her): Good evening. It's so nice to see all of you. It is my pleasure to introduce Kylie hadn't to all of you this evening. 66 00:09:44.370 --> 00:10:03.360 Kelly Schmidt (she/her): Kylie is a senior at Wilson bill high school and I think immediately. You'll be drawn to her energetic and kind disposition. I'm highly is a leader and a member of several groups in our school but but the one that connects her most appropriately to 67 00:10:04.500 --> 00:10:13.920 Kelly Schmidt (she/her): To you representing Wilson mill as our school board rep is that Kylie is a part of web end which is our Wilson bill broadcast network and through that. 68 00:10:14.550 --> 00:10:21.930 Kelly Schmidt (she/her): It'll, it'll match perfectly that she'll be reporting for web and then bringing her reports to you at the school board as well. 69 00:10:22.770 --> 00:10:29.670 Kelly Schmidt (she/her): And she'll tell you a little bit more about it but W bn has been very active this year already 70 00:10:30.540 --> 00:10:43.410 Kelly Schmidt (she/her): Putting together videos and things prior to the school year. They've been working, most recently on some things related to our club fair and also continuing to bring our school community together through their broadcast so Kylie 71 00:10:45.090 --> 00:10:45.330 Kylie Hadden: High 72 00:10:45.540 --> 00:10:50.340 Kylie Hadden: High School Board and Doug Ludwig, thank you for giving me this opportunity to talk to you all tonight. 73 00:10:50.970 --> 00:10:57.990 Kylie Hadden: I'm Kylie hadn't and I'm a senior this year. It was a little high school some activities. I've done in the past was that I was on the dance team. 74 00:10:58.530 --> 00:11:06.540 Kylie Hadden: For two years and was their team manager last year. And I've also been playing on the varsity softball team for the past three years. 75 00:11:06.840 --> 00:11:16.320 Kylie Hadden: And as Miss Schmidt said, I'm also part of web and where I am able to inform my fellow classmates about news and activities going on. 76 00:11:16.890 --> 00:11:27.630 Kylie Hadden: Even though our school year started with video web n n lincou were able to create informational videos that were shown during our virtual freshman orientation that was hosted by elite crew. 77 00:11:28.200 --> 00:11:40.020 Kylie Hadden: They showed an introduction video from freshman teachers and a Virtual School tour web and has also been able to continue writing articles, creating podcasts and posting episodes of 78 00:11:40.530 --> 00:11:51.210 Kylie Hadden: Their online nine sub notice of no show keeping students informed each week sports and activities like band and orchestra have started training or rehearsing on Monday, September 28 79 00:11:51.600 --> 00:11:58.200 Kylie Hadden: It's been a success so far with participants and teachers and coaches, being able to be six feet apart and save 80 00:11:58.920 --> 00:12:09.270 Kylie Hadden: Every activity has their own reserve time to be outside on campus other programs like ISIS and robotics and clubs are starting to connect virtually as well this year to begin their year 81 00:12:09.930 --> 00:12:20.670 Kylie Hadden: Either fear has also recently began to start their fall production of trap the cast was recently announced and they began virtual zoom rehearsals on Friday. 82 00:12:21.240 --> 00:12:30.060 Kylie Hadden: Lastly, fundraising has begun for the class of 2021 SENIOR NIGHT. Our first event was held at AAA on Wednesday night, September. 83 00:12:30.630 --> 00:12:35.100 Kylie Hadden: September 30 and a poinsettia fundraiser is starting soon. 84 00:12:35.760 --> 00:12:48.750 Kylie Hadden: I know and then November night we hope to return to campus soon and resume traditional senior year activities. Thank you all for this opportunity to talk to you all tonight and I can't wait to explain what's going on, more in the future or next month. 85 00:12:54.600 --> 00:12:59.550 Regan Molatore: Michelle Colton Kylie. Thank you again so much for coming and speaking to us and 86 00:13:00.870 --> 00:13:11.580 Regan Molatore: As much as you guys have been missing being present in in our buildings with your peers. We've actually really missed seeing our students as well. So it's just a really special treat. 87 00:13:12.450 --> 00:13:21.360 Regan Molatore: Every year to have students come talk to us, but I think this year, in particular, so thank you so much for giving of your time once a month to come and talk to us. 88 00:13:22.710 --> 00:13:23.640 Regan Molatore: And Dr. Ludwick 89 00:13:26.520 --> 00:13:35.160 Kathy Ludwig: Yeah. Michelle Cole and Kylie. Thank you for signing on to this extra duty in your leadership role this year. 90 00:13:35.520 --> 00:13:41.700 Kathy Ludwig: And it really becomes a highlight for us to start off every evening having you just talk about what you're experiencing. 91 00:13:42.030 --> 00:13:48.600 Kathy Ludwig: And how school is going from your perspective, because the reason all the adults are here is to make sure that our students. 92 00:13:49.410 --> 00:13:57.180 Kathy Ludwig: Are connecting to their learning and connecting to one another. And I just really appreciate hearing so many specific examples of how creative 93 00:13:57.600 --> 00:14:10.200 Kathy Ludwig: You are becoming as students and keeping each other connected and you're going to think of far more creative ways than we could come up with. So continue to do that drive bys electronically. 94 00:14:11.130 --> 00:14:21.810 Kathy Ludwig: Social media. We're here to support you and we're just so thrilled that each of you have stepped into this role, and we look forward to hearing from you, each month. So thank you so much. 95 00:14:27.270 --> 00:14:32.700 Regan Molatore: And as we move on to the rest of our agenda at you guys are more than welcome to stay 96 00:14:32.730 --> 00:14:41.190 Regan Molatore: But if you have other activities that you would like to do, by all means feel free to leave the meeting as whenever you choose. 97 00:14:42.510 --> 00:14:44.580 Regan Molatore: And with that. 98 00:14:45.300 --> 00:14:47.670 Regan Molatore: We get to move on to our recognitions 99 00:14:47.670 --> 00:14:49.320 Regan Molatore: Portion of the meeting. 100 00:14:50.550 --> 00:14:51.150 Regan Molatore: And 101 00:14:52.350 --> 00:15:01.470 Regan Molatore: Dr. Ludwig end up introducing Joe Walters, who's here from the Westland Wilson Ville education found well can do it as well, but 102 00:15:01.950 --> 00:15:16.860 Regan Molatore: Just, just going to catch us up to date on the contribution that the Education Foundation has made to support I'm teaching positions in our district as well as just share us share with us what their plans are for the future and Dr Ludwick 103 00:15:18.270 --> 00:15:24.090 Kathy Ludwig: Did you have anything or I'll just add to that, because I think you've set the stage beautifully chair mala tour. 104 00:15:24.930 --> 00:15:43.770 Kathy Ludwig: Joe Walters, and Laura to do sable who's not able to be here tonight have really been such champions for our school district, and particularly with the Education Foundation holding on to leadership positions well past the sign up date. 105 00:15:44.880 --> 00:15:52.680 Kathy Ludwig: As the foundation continues to evolve during the pandemic and in response to community need and feedback and 106 00:15:53.790 --> 00:16:02.550 Kathy Ludwig: Under typical circumstances, you'd see kind of the passing of the torch and the next group coming and these certainly aren't typical circumstances and 107 00:16:03.240 --> 00:16:20.280 Kathy Ludwig: You know, one of the roles. The Foundation has always played is to be responsive to district need and whether that's been in lean times or unprecedented times the ask of how can we support you and incredibly sensitive also to the community. 108 00:16:21.630 --> 00:16:29.550 Kathy Ludwig: Several times suspending certain fundraisers when they knew that economics was a tight reality for a lot of families and so 109 00:16:30.120 --> 00:16:42.300 Kathy Ludwig: This is a community organization, a nonprofit that really is about connecting members of the community, but about serving the district across all schools and 110 00:16:42.960 --> 00:16:57.240 Kathy Ludwig: Joe and Laura, as I mentioned, stayed on in these leadership roles long past their term in order to provide consistency and they'll provide an update tonight, both financially as well as 111 00:16:58.290 --> 00:17:12.810 Kathy Ludwig: How the foundation is going to continue to manifest during this year and then look forward to the future. So I'm going to turn it over to Joe, thank you again for joining us. Joe and Dan will let you take it from here. 112 00:17:13.620 --> 00:17:14.970 Joe Walters: Thank you, Dr. Ludwig 113 00:17:16.620 --> 00:17:27.180 Joe Walters: I can follow up such an eloquent statement. Thanks, Dr. Ludwig to your school district staff to the school board members and to all the other guests are on the call tonight. 114 00:17:28.020 --> 00:17:43.050 Joe Walters: Tonight I am here to present a check for $70,000 to the Western Wilson Ville school district, on behalf of the many generous donors to the Western Wilson bill Education Foundation during the 2019 2020 school year. 115 00:17:44.640 --> 00:17:52.170 Joe Walters: And I, and it's a wonderful opportunity to be able to do that, but I'm also here for a big ask of the school board. 116 00:17:53.310 --> 00:18:04.080 Joe Walters: The Education Foundation began in the 1992 93 school year when Oregon school districts lost the ability to set their own budgets and became limited by the amount allocated by the state. 117 00:18:04.680 --> 00:18:19.080 Joe Walters: For almost 30 years the Western Wilson Education Foundation has been a mechanism to raise funds specifically to hire teachers and attempt to bridge the gap between state funding and what is needed needed to maintain effective student teacher ratios. 118 00:18:20.010 --> 00:18:28.050 Joe Walters: Last year House Bill 3427 was signed into law by Governor Kate brown to provide added state level funding for public schools in Oregon. 119 00:18:28.500 --> 00:18:38.880 Joe Walters: In November, our community stepped up again to pass a bond measure to fund capital improvements as well as local option levy to fund approximately at teaching physicians 120 00:18:39.390 --> 00:18:50.580 Joe Walters: Their passage was a big show support from our community that education matters and the foundation was proud to support the significant actions to protect the excellence of education in our district. 121 00:18:51.840 --> 00:19:00.420 Joe Walters: That said, in recent years, support for the foundation has diminished financial contributions and Community interest in board membership has decreased. 122 00:19:00.690 --> 00:19:17.010 Joe Walters: As our test scores and graduation rates have gone up the perceived need has faded in response foundation leadership has spent considerable effort to rediscover our purpose and to find innovative ways to support the school districts efforts and then covert 19 happened. 123 00:19:18.240 --> 00:19:28.950 Joe Walters: With limited community support and the new realities of distance learning upon us. We made the difficult decision to put the Education Foundation on hold. At the end of the 2019 2020 school year. 124 00:19:29.460 --> 00:19:42.000 Joe Walters: intention is to pause the operations of the foundation and to take this time to reevaluate reevaluate the purpose of the foundation and reimagine the role the foundation can take in support of our excellent schools. 125 00:19:42.720 --> 00:19:46.260 Joe Walters: I'm asking the school board to take the lead on this effort. 126 00:19:46.800 --> 00:19:57.450 Joe Walters: Community Outreach serving and thoughtful discourse can create a new mission for the foundation that will allow it to exist in better synergy with our PTs and patios 127 00:19:57.960 --> 00:20:04.380 Joe Walters: Offer more targeted support for education in our district and more relevance for our community of supporters 128 00:20:05.250 --> 00:20:12.720 Joe Walters: With the social and economic uncertainties we face in the near future, it is likely that a new cadre of leaders will step forward to take on this charge 129 00:20:13.020 --> 00:20:23.520 Joe Walters: When that happens, there will be a small fund waiting for startup costs and I will assist and Laura sable will assist in any way we can to help get the foundation back up and running. 130 00:20:24.210 --> 00:20:38.490 Joe Walters: In the meantime, we'd like to thank all of the supporters over the years, who have given so generously to the Westland Wilson bill Education Foundation. We'd also like to thank the district staff for your support and thanks to you on the school board for your leadership. Thank you. 131 00:20:45.510 --> 00:20:47.760 Regan Molatore: Joe, thank you so much and I 132 00:20:48.240 --> 00:20:51.840 Regan Molatore: So much of what you say definitely resonates. You know, I, my former 133 00:20:52.680 --> 00:21:01.620 Regan Molatore: Vice President of the foundation so I know the tremendous hard work that all members of the foundation have put in to 134 00:21:02.040 --> 00:21:18.930 Regan Molatore: Raising money to support teaching positions as well as supporting our bond and local option lobbies and for that I am immensely immensely grateful, as well as to the extent that you've asked the board to take this on and kind of run with it and see how our 135 00:21:19.980 --> 00:21:36.120 Regan Molatore: Future Foundation can better you know help support our schools as well as gain Community interest. I'm happy also to take on and serve in that role at to move this mission forward. So thank you so very much. 136 00:21:36.450 --> 00:21:37.110 Joe Walters: Thank you, Ray. Good. 137 00:21:38.850 --> 00:21:41.520 Regan Molatore: And did anybody else have any questions or comments. 138 00:21:43.770 --> 00:21:46.380 Kathy Ludwig: Any other board members before I jump in Christie. 139 00:21:46.710 --> 00:21:53.760 Christy Thompson: Christie. I just wanted to say thank you and I miss Joe, how long have you been on how long have you served on the education, education, 140 00:21:54.900 --> 00:21:58.200 Joe Walters: That's gotta be like three years. My wife was actually the President 141 00:21:59.640 --> 00:22:07.590 Joe Walters: For I think we've been involved with the it's been a few years I've been on the board for about the last two or three years. Okay. 142 00:22:08.070 --> 00:22:17.070 Christy Thompson: Yeah, I thought that it had been a stretch. And so I just want to acknowledge that that is a huge commitment beyond what you do on an everyday basis. 143 00:22:17.370 --> 00:22:25.260 Christy Thompson: You know, being a husband, a father, your full time job all the other stuff and just to say thank you. I think 144 00:22:25.680 --> 00:22:38.040 Christy Thompson: One of the things that makes our district so special is because we have amazing people like you and your wife and other volunteers who stepped into these hard not easy roles that take a lot of time so 145 00:22:38.340 --> 00:22:49.800 Christy Thompson: I just want to acknowledge and just say, thank you so much for what you have given and I personally I don't know what the amounts of the past, but I hate my $70,000. So thank you. 146 00:22:50.100 --> 00:22:52.380 Joe Walters: Well thank. Thank you very much. Those are very kind. 147 00:22:52.380 --> 00:22:55.290 Joe Walters: Words, you know, our whole family. 148 00:22:55.530 --> 00:22:57.390 Joe Walters: owes a lot to the district. 149 00:22:58.110 --> 00:23:06.030 Joe Walters: Our kids have received an excellent education here and you know we've always wanted to give back in any way we could. So thank you so much. 150 00:23:06.120 --> 00:23:06.660 Thank you for that. 151 00:23:08.250 --> 00:23:14.850 Regan Molatore: And then I also just really fast, Chelsea. And then I'll call you wanted to also acknowledge that Laura to say bow is also 152 00:23:15.570 --> 00:23:28.320 Regan Molatore: Present in this meeting Roman on video but available as an attendee and she's been working right alongside Joe here especially this year, and she's a former but she and her husband are former Westland high school graduates. 153 00:23:28.770 --> 00:23:34.020 Regan Molatore: And have also been giving a tremendous amount of their time to get to where the foundation currently 154 00:23:34.470 --> 00:23:37.920 Joe Walters: Yeah, Laura. Laura really is an incredible leader and incredible leader. 155 00:23:39.840 --> 00:23:40.530 Regan Molatore: And Chelsea. 156 00:23:42.990 --> 00:23:51.180 Chelsea King: Yeah, just echoing some of whatever heard Joe, thank you so much for all the time and energy you put into this and I just appreciate 157 00:23:51.600 --> 00:23:58.680 Chelsea King: The way that you talked about where we are as a pivot with the foundation as being one that's largely reflective of 158 00:23:59.400 --> 00:24:08.520 Chelsea King: The amount of Community support that we do have and the good work that the education has done over decades and Education Foundation and 159 00:24:08.910 --> 00:24:16.530 Chelsea King: Just I keep the faith that this time of reflection and reevaluation is one of a pivot. 160 00:24:17.010 --> 00:24:30.930 Chelsea King: And one of just an opportunity to be responsive to what our community needs and it's asking for what our students need. So just wanted to recognize that good work and express my hope for what the future work might look like. 161 00:24:33.210 --> 00:24:33.690 Joe Walters: Thank you. 162 00:24:35.550 --> 00:24:35.820 Joe Walters: And 163 00:24:35.850 --> 00:24:46.980 Kathy Ludwig: Joe. I'll just conclude here to again thanks as everyone's mentioned and just appreciating the wisdom in this moment to take the pause and then 164 00:24:47.700 --> 00:24:57.210 Kathy Ludwig: You know district staff is right there with the board to take a look at what are the trends and needs that surface. Now, I think you did it. You did a great job of revisiting 165 00:24:57.630 --> 00:25:07.470 Kathy Ludwig: Where funding has abdin flowed and house bills and legislation that have come in and filled in some of those niches are gaps where the foundation was 166 00:25:07.860 --> 00:25:17.190 Kathy Ludwig: Advocating at the state level, but then also supplementing over the years. And as those political and fiscal landscapes shift. 167 00:25:18.060 --> 00:25:28.290 Kathy Ludwig: You know, staying nimble as a foundation is is wise, you know, so that we can keep strategizing where now is the support that the district needs. 168 00:25:28.950 --> 00:25:37.650 Kathy Ludwig: And we're now are ways that the community can give and everybody's looking for a place to contribute time, energy, enthusiasm. 169 00:25:38.160 --> 00:25:50.430 Kathy Ludwig: Support and many find it you know nested right in their school and they want to stay pretty localized and others want to kind of broaden and find a bigger scope and look at systems and support across the district and 170 00:25:50.970 --> 00:26:01.470 Kathy Ludwig: Organizations like map in the ED foundation give some of our parents that responsibility that opportunity to respond in that way. And so I don't see this as 171 00:26:01.950 --> 00:26:12.960 Kathy Ludwig: The end of the foundation, just the next pivot as director King mentioned and it's good timing for pause because we are in a unique situation and 172 00:26:13.890 --> 00:26:27.210 Kathy Ludwig: District staff is committed chair mala tour to come alongside board members and support work with the survey and query looking at some other ways other districts use their foundations as things Evan flow. 173 00:26:27.870 --> 00:26:35.670 Kathy Ludwig: And then engaging the community in a reimagining for the foundation so we commit our staff and time to also support in this 174 00:26:37.140 --> 00:26:40.800 Kathy Ludwig: New process. So, and again, thank you Joe. And thank you, Laura. 175 00:26:42.720 --> 00:26:43.440 Joe Walters: Thanks, Laura. 176 00:26:48.930 --> 00:26:50.220 Regan Molatore: All right, well, and I just 177 00:26:50.760 --> 00:26:52.410 Regan Molatore: Checked or what do you mean member 178 00:26:54.750 --> 00:26:55.530 Kathy Ludwig: Here it is. 179 00:26:57.060 --> 00:27:02.100 Regan Molatore: A many, many hands that went into making that possible. So thank you very much. 180 00:27:05.580 --> 00:27:08.580 Regan Molatore: And with that, then we will move into our next 181 00:27:08.610 --> 00:27:15.300 Regan Molatore: Agenda item, which is our board and superintendent reports and I'm 182 00:27:16.320 --> 00:27:18.210 Regan Molatore: Chelsea, you like to start us up. 183 00:27:20.370 --> 00:27:21.540 Chelsea King: Yes, thank you. 184 00:27:24.150 --> 00:27:29.100 Chelsea King: Well, one would think that with not much happening with place based school that the 185 00:27:30.120 --> 00:27:40.020 Chelsea King: The workload of a school board member might be reduced. But everybody in this room knows that that's not true. When the work is grown and complexity and intensity and 186 00:27:40.950 --> 00:27:50.880 Chelsea King: So I've been engaged in that work primarily over several topics focusing the past month on on the digital distance learning 187 00:27:51.390 --> 00:28:02.040 Chelsea King: Program, the return to place based school discussions that are happening. And then just my role as an individual school board member and 188 00:28:02.460 --> 00:28:11.220 Chelsea King: Exploring the school resource officer program. And so what that has looked like for me is just a lot of communicating with my community. 189 00:28:11.880 --> 00:28:20.220 Chelsea King: Reading the local news sources and consuming official reports from our district and from state agencies. 190 00:28:21.060 --> 00:28:37.170 Chelsea King: Meeting regularly with the school board chair and the superintendent and connecting with fellow school board members from surrounding school districts and being in direct conversation and advocating with our state representatives Courtney named Ron and Rachel per sec 191 00:28:38.820 --> 00:28:54.390 Chelsea King: In regards to the school board commitment to have a deeper exploration of the role of our work and disrupting systems of racism and we have the January meeting. And so I've reached out and 192 00:28:54.810 --> 00:29:04.770 Chelsea King: I believe secured a experienced and knowledgeable facilitator for that meeting. Bill de la Cruz has agreed to do the work and 193 00:29:06.060 --> 00:29:15.540 Chelsea King: Also some semi related to that goal. But independent of this particular school board. I've been working to create a 194 00:29:16.200 --> 00:29:35.790 Chelsea King: White anti racist school board members affinity group that will be convening school board members from surrounding districts to meet monthly in the context of an affinity group. So that's just something I'm doing independently in my efforts to work on that district goal number one. 195 00:29:37.710 --> 00:29:53.760 Chelsea King: On a lighter note, I had the joy of attending the Wilson Ville high school curriculum night and just having the opportunity to interact directly with teachers and a classroom setting was 196 00:29:54.510 --> 00:30:00.090 Chelsea King: Just very enjoyable and gave me a taste of what my students and our students are living 197 00:30:00.480 --> 00:30:11.520 Chelsea King: And also watching the videos that were posted for would Middle School. And so it was just a great way to get to know the teachers and have a sense of what's going on in our students lives. 198 00:30:12.030 --> 00:30:17.760 Chelsea King: And much like our student representative from wessling high school communicated I'm observing in my own household 199 00:30:18.480 --> 00:30:31.230 Chelsea King: The renewed vigor that has come from my own high school student with being permitted to go on campus and safely practice some athletics. So that's also been a highlight in the household. 200 00:30:32.610 --> 00:30:33.210 Chelsea King: Thank you. 201 00:30:35.790 --> 00:30:36.420 Regan Molatore: Chelsea. 202 00:30:36.900 --> 00:30:37.980 Regan Molatore: And ginger. 203 00:30:38.940 --> 00:30:40.560 Ginger Fitch: I don't have a board report to me. 204 00:30:41.880 --> 00:30:42.270 Regan Molatore: Excellent. 205 00:30:42.300 --> 00:30:42.960 Regan Molatore: Thanks. Ginger. 206 00:30:43.110 --> 00:30:43.650 Christy 207 00:30:46.050 --> 00:31:02.700 Christy Thompson: Thank you. And so just in my continued endeavored to be a learner constantly about being a school board member I attended the OC as policy, one one webinar. I'm just going over the policies and reminding myself. 208 00:31:03.900 --> 00:31:06.660 Christy Thompson: Of those, and that was right after our last meeting. 209 00:31:07.740 --> 00:31:09.840 Christy Thompson: And then like Chelsea, I 210 00:31:10.920 --> 00:31:19.830 Christy Thompson: Want our representative representative Christine Drazen and I met with her. She is a representative from can be and just spoke with her. 211 00:31:20.310 --> 00:31:34.560 Christy Thompson: Victor bringing it all in school, having to do our legislature and health metrics that and stuff like that and continue to try to make those contacts representatives and stay abreast of what's going on down and say, look, 212 00:31:36.780 --> 00:31:53.070 Christy Thompson: I have listened to almost all of our principles messages from curriculum. I have a few more that I that I still need to listen to and I just appreciate listening to all of those each one of them flavor that each one of our principal spring. 213 00:31:53.640 --> 00:32:05.610 Christy Thompson: And I'm gonna I'm Patrick minor, who is our principal at Willamette primary. I don't know if he's listening or not, but I thought he used a very good to me. He 214 00:32:05.670 --> 00:32:22.050 Christy Thompson: Talked about realistic optimism and that's what I felt like that was the theme that I heard from all of our principles was being realistic about how hard it is, how distance learning is hard. What we're doing is hard, but still having that sense of optimism. 215 00:32:23.520 --> 00:32:24.660 Christy Thompson: You know, putting that optimism. 216 00:32:24.690 --> 00:32:27.360 Christy Thompson: Out in front of our kids in front of our families. 217 00:32:27.360 --> 00:32:31.050 Christy Thompson: And I just really appreciate it. I felt like that was kind of the overall theme that I 218 00:32:31.050 --> 00:32:32.700 Andrew Kilstrom: Heard from all of our principles. 219 00:32:33.090 --> 00:32:36.420 Christy Thompson: And so I look forward to. I have a couple more that I need to listen to 220 00:32:38.940 --> 00:32:39.420 Christy Thompson: That's it. 221 00:32:41.160 --> 00:32:41.400 Regan Molatore: Right. 222 00:32:41.490 --> 00:32:42.690 Regan Molatore: Thank you. Christy 223 00:32:43.260 --> 00:32:55.770 Regan Molatore: And, um, I also attended a couple of the virtual back to school night and I will just say as far as a method goes. I mean, I, I'm not certain how attendance was across schools or how it compared to past years. 224 00:32:56.100 --> 00:33:07.350 Regan Molatore: But it was actually very convenient to not have to fight for parking and, you know, attend to those events, but just sit in the comfort of my own home and just click into the various classrooms. 225 00:33:08.040 --> 00:33:18.600 Regan Molatore: I don't know. You know, sometimes we find changes along the way that we like and really work for our parents. And who knows, maybe some some form of that might stick with us, even after we can return to our classrooms. 226 00:33:19.050 --> 00:33:31.950 Regan Molatore: And I also had the opportunity to attend to principles coffee talk at reading Creek middle school and I like Chelsea had mentioned have still had the weekly meetings with Chelsea and Dr. Ludwig and 227 00:33:32.670 --> 00:33:37.740 Regan Molatore: Talking about the work of the districts and how we as a board can help support that work and move it forward. 228 00:33:38.190 --> 00:33:47.010 Regan Molatore: And and then I just wanted to mention tonight that I am trying a little bit something new with our moving of our meetings. 229 00:33:47.340 --> 00:33:57.330 Regan Molatore: And we'll just have to, you know, play it by ear and you guys will have to give me feedback as to whether or not it does or does not work for you, but we have tried putting our time limits kind of our approximation for each 230 00:33:58.320 --> 00:34:09.630 Regan Molatore: Agenda item back into our agendas, with the hope that we can actually try and maintain those those timeframes and the ideas then tonight as we 231 00:34:10.290 --> 00:34:15.930 Regan Molatore: Introduce You know the subsequent agenda items is I'll roughly be able to just say, Hey, you know, we have 232 00:34:16.290 --> 00:34:24.900 Regan Molatore: 20 minutes we have 10 minutes for this, you know, just kind of set us up. And then as we get close to the end of that designated time 233 00:34:25.320 --> 00:34:34.080 Regan Molatore: I will just kind of share that again that hey, we're getting close, you know, are we ready to wrap this up. But the idea at the same time is not to curtail any of the boards. 234 00:34:35.070 --> 00:34:38.970 Regan Molatore: We don't want to tell the staff sharing information either pertinent information. 235 00:34:39.360 --> 00:34:49.080 Regan Molatore: And we don't want to curtail the board, being able to have meaningful discussion or questions. So if anybody would feel that they're falling into that pitfall with 236 00:34:49.530 --> 00:34:59.640 Regan Molatore: The cues. Just give me that feedback because then we'll adjust accordingly. So, and also I wanted to recognize on real fast, that we have 237 00:35:00.480 --> 00:35:11.550 Regan Molatore: It is Christy Thompson's birthday tonight. So, not only that Dylan son's birthday but it's Christie's as well as I believe Dr. Dr. Jennifer Spencer items. So, um, thank you all for being here. 238 00:35:12.270 --> 00:35:22.620 Regan Molatore: On your birthday, and it's kind of a rite of passage I think both to be here on a kid's birthday, as well as your own. So thank you guys for being here and Happy birthday. 239 00:35:23.940 --> 00:35:29.940 Regan Molatore: And with that, then we will move on to our OH superintendent. So Dr. Ludwig 240 00:35:33.210 --> 00:35:37.080 Kathy Ludwig: Thank you. And I believe I can share screen here. 241 00:35:41.430 --> 00:35:52.380 Kathy Ludwig: Thank you so much. I think it's a great testament to commitment when people share their birthday with their work, family, in addition to their home family. Well, thank you. 242 00:35:55.380 --> 00:36:05.130 Kathy Ludwig: Well, as you've all mentioned school is on in our students talked about how school is on and we've even gotten through curriculum nights and 243 00:36:05.580 --> 00:36:17.160 Kathy Ludwig: Like you Christy. I've been listening to principals messages and and know that this was a unique year where teachers could go right virtually into their classroom and begin to 244 00:36:17.460 --> 00:36:26.490 Kathy Ludwig: Zoom with their, their children's teacher and hear a message and begin to connect for the school year. These are just a few images to capture how 245 00:36:27.270 --> 00:36:37.770 Kathy Ludwig: Teachers are working from home or have set up space in a classroom to really engage during zoom time and connect with students. You've heard a lot about 246 00:36:38.490 --> 00:36:46.920 Kathy Ludwig: Additional connecting points like curbside drive bys to pick up items. Last week we had some students at boons fairy. 247 00:36:47.340 --> 00:37:05.970 Kathy Ludwig: Or do I knew was Lowry who got to pick up pumpkins kindergarten group was they drove by to pick up their learning kits. So anytime we can safely with social distance extend our care and connection outside of our virtual classroom to kids we're looking for those opportunities. 248 00:37:07.680 --> 00:37:15.180 Kathy Ludwig: Here is just another glimpse and and most of our board members are current parents of students. So you're on the receiving end watching your students. 249 00:37:15.810 --> 00:37:31.350 Kathy Ludwig: The top left is a primary PE teacher getting kids engaged in physical activity and showing them how simple items at home can also even spur movement rolling up your socks into a ball and then doing some juggling down below, there's that. 250 00:37:32.370 --> 00:37:40.410 Kathy Ludwig: Choir that I believe this is sold out at Wilson avail high schools. I don't know. Reagan. If you can see, Claudia. There are choosing one of the groups. 251 00:37:40.830 --> 00:37:52.860 Kathy Ludwig: But again, that opportunity for some limited return to campus for our students. Again, you can see they are so surely distance and probably getting some challenge with acoustics there, but they're going to sing loud and strong. 252 00:37:53.880 --> 00:38:02.700 Kathy Ludwig: In a safe way. And then again, just, just some highlight of how teachers are going above and beyond, when they're thinking about even their digital lessons and embedding video 253 00:38:03.900 --> 00:38:13.230 Kathy Ludwig: And helping students connect. So we've got hard working, teachers and staff delivering instruction school is definitely up and running and on 254 00:38:15.120 --> 00:38:24.900 Kathy Ludwig: I thought you might enjoy this. This is a kindergarten classroom. And you can even see prior who got to do a learning walk and get into the classroom with 255 00:38:25.710 --> 00:38:32.130 Kathy Ludwig: Katie Butler, our teacher here at Lowry and he just was so delighted and 256 00:38:32.580 --> 00:38:42.510 Kathy Ludwig: Sharing so many stories of kids actually interacting as kindergarteners they knew what buttons to push. They knew how to raise their hand. They knew how to engage and talk 257 00:38:42.870 --> 00:38:50.850 Kathy Ludwig: And sing along with their teacher. And this was one of their zoom meetings. I think it's great for us to see how even our youngest learners. 258 00:38:51.630 --> 00:39:00.030 Kathy Ludwig: Are interacting and for the most part, pretty independently every now and then there'd be a parent kind of walking by in the distance or checking in. 259 00:39:00.420 --> 00:39:09.720 Kathy Ludwig: But our youngest learners. They're digital natives and they know how to manipulate a lot of these tools even better than ourselves. So we're looking forward to some 260 00:39:10.200 --> 00:39:24.360 Kathy Ludwig: Virtual Learning walks. I'm eager to start them we let our teachers get up and going first without guests in the room, and now we're slowly making our way into some of these zoom meetings and online classes to support instruction. 261 00:39:25.920 --> 00:39:42.870 Kathy Ludwig: We're also delivering support and support can look in a variety of ways, whether it's again, continuing those information nights for parents, but doing it online, whether it's a special event like the curbside ninth grade appreciation or those pumpkins that you saw 262 00:39:44.190 --> 00:39:52.050 Kathy Ludwig: Whether it's support from a specialist who is partnering with a classroom teacher to deliver specially designed instruction or bilingual language support. 263 00:39:52.380 --> 00:39:58.680 Kathy Ludwig: Or whether it's even a study session or virtually students can have another session this what is Wilson bill. 264 00:39:59.520 --> 00:40:12.270 Kathy Ludwig: A few days a week to just connect about homework and work. So this is just a small sample, but almost every school is also considering what are ways that we not just deliver instruction, but we deliver support during this time. 265 00:40:12.630 --> 00:40:18.180 Kathy Ludwig: And the creativity will just continue to flow and also as we get feedback from parents 266 00:40:19.740 --> 00:40:31.080 Kathy Ludwig: And we're delivering meals and as you know families first were asked to come take up at our locations and now we've got our buses up and running to 267 00:40:32.460 --> 00:40:40.620 Kathy Ludwig: Select spots throughout the district. I'm going to let you just quietly read these quotes here and I think they just 268 00:40:41.280 --> 00:40:47.070 Kathy Ludwig: exemplify often the care and connection that even comes through a meal. 269 00:40:48.060 --> 00:40:56.850 Kathy Ludwig: And through another group of not our staff, but certainly our partners, our bus drivers who are there and care so deeply about our children. 270 00:40:57.090 --> 00:41:10.290 Kathy Ludwig: You can see in the Tupperware tubs here those individually prepared boxes that have the meals in and this one fam parent says there's a lot of thoughtfulness and caring packed along with these boxes. 271 00:41:10.860 --> 00:41:21.150 Kathy Ludwig: That my, my child feels every day. It's a connection to normalcy a distant solidarity with other students that are eating the same lunch and a wonderful surprise. 272 00:41:23.010 --> 00:41:35.340 Kathy Ludwig: So I want to thank our partners at first student bus company and our tremendous nutrition staff for adding this service in addition to daytime pickup at school location still 273 00:41:38.070 --> 00:41:48.630 Kathy Ludwig: We're also delivering hands on science experiences. So this is in addition to science that is happening with classroom teachers are amazing staff at crest. 274 00:41:49.290 --> 00:41:54.930 Kathy Ludwig: Elena kills Jerome and Becky Hancock have been assembling more hands on science. 275 00:41:55.410 --> 00:42:00.510 Kathy Ludwig: experiences for our young people, they're putting the units together that supplement the standards. 276 00:42:00.780 --> 00:42:10.110 Kathy Ludwig: Teachers are then informing their students and families and then they're kind of integrating it into their lessons. Hey, if you wanted to use that packet that came from crest. Here's some things you could do. 277 00:42:10.620 --> 00:42:14.640 Kathy Ludwig: Parents pick them up at the curb side. Students can engage at home. 278 00:42:15.060 --> 00:42:25.350 Kathy Ludwig: And then the cross team will also offer some virtual visits as a follow up to these. So you can see all these packets here that were in the boardroom ready to go out to schools. 279 00:42:26.100 --> 00:42:34.560 Kathy Ludwig: Here's a little bit of what's inside. There's the lesson the background for parents and students to read these are optional, but they again they supplement the learning 280 00:42:35.010 --> 00:42:47.250 Kathy Ludwig: And it's an English and Spanish. So the directions come in both English and Spanish. And then this is a sample of what was in that manila envelope. What were the hands on materials. 281 00:42:48.570 --> 00:42:51.750 Kathy Ludwig: Thousands of little microscopes that later purchased 282 00:42:52.950 --> 00:43:08.820 Kathy Ludwig: And so when a student gets their Manila packet. They have a little workbook in their little observation log and some materials to us along with it. This is a sample from fifth grade. So thank you, Elena and Becky for for that delivery. 283 00:43:09.960 --> 00:43:12.420 Kathy Ludwig: Of care and connection and learning for our students. 284 00:43:14.190 --> 00:43:23.970 Kathy Ludwig: We're also delivering library books. So this is a theme of delivering and our schools have gotten up and running this curbside service where 285 00:43:24.450 --> 00:43:41.640 Kathy Ludwig: Students can check out books. They've got the list available to them electronically. There's the QR code that they can easily scan to get into the catalog. Then they place their books on hold. This is a teacher out at Stafford, who was there waiting for students to pick them up. 286 00:43:43.530 --> 00:43:50.970 Kathy Ludwig: They pick up their items they had them for a period of time and then they can return those books on those same days and then the way that we 287 00:43:52.380 --> 00:43:58.560 Kathy Ludwig: sanitize is we actually just quarantine the books because we know that over a period of time that they naturally 288 00:44:00.300 --> 00:44:07.590 Kathy Ludwig: Quarantine themselves in terms of. We don't need to spray anything liquid on those pages just by keeping them separated for a period of time. 289 00:44:08.280 --> 00:44:17.040 Kathy Ludwig: We outlast any of the viral contact. So he said, happened and then they're ready to be checked out again. So we've got 290 00:44:18.000 --> 00:44:23.580 Kathy Ludwig: Students coming up already. And taking advantage of our curbside library. And I want to thank 291 00:44:23.850 --> 00:44:33.750 Kathy Ludwig: Our teacher librarians are getting that organized and are tremendous library peer educators who are actually running that system because some of our teacher librarians have gone back to teaching in the classroom. 292 00:44:34.290 --> 00:44:38.850 Kathy Ludwig: And so it's really our library pair educators that are running this whole system. 293 00:44:39.240 --> 00:44:50.430 Kathy Ludwig: And consulting with a few teacher librarians that are managing this across the district and they're there in the evenings and throughout the day, checking these out packaging them and also taking care of the returns 294 00:44:54.060 --> 00:45:00.600 Kathy Ludwig: We're delivering a message of equity and you've talked about visiting the the principles and their 295 00:45:02.100 --> 00:45:11.490 Kathy Ludwig: Curriculum nights and I just have been so impressed. This is a sample from some primary at principles. I want to thank David for passing these screenshots along for me. 296 00:45:11.730 --> 00:45:21.720 Kathy Ludwig: To assemble. But there's such alignment that I don't know. Christy if you've noticed that you've been watching all of these connected to the board goals that district goals. 297 00:45:22.170 --> 00:45:37.950 Kathy Ludwig: To each other and around a message of equity and disrupting systems of racism and it's really tremendous when that powerful message has a thread across the whole organization and it becomes a commitment that we all 298 00:45:39.180 --> 00:45:53.370 Kathy Ludwig: give voice to and give action to and it isn't just a platitude in a policy or on a wall, but really becomes embedded in our work and proud of our principles for stepping up leading in leading forward. 299 00:45:54.030 --> 00:45:59.700 Kathy Ludwig: With their messages to families that involve that included messages of equity and anti racism. 300 00:46:02.760 --> 00:46:09.570 Kathy Ludwig: And lastly, we're delivering hope and we've been sharing with you about how is it that we take 301 00:46:10.110 --> 00:46:21.210 Kathy Ludwig: Generosity from the community and coordinate it in a way that it gets to our families in need and up until now, we've been doing that through each individual school. It made sense. 302 00:46:21.990 --> 00:46:29.580 Kathy Ludwig: But this year the outpouring has quadrupled. And then there are times when just having a location. 303 00:46:30.180 --> 00:46:38.220 Kathy Ludwig: And a few people managing it seems to be also the appropriate response and coordinating with communities who want to give 304 00:46:38.820 --> 00:46:46.530 Kathy Ludwig: Funds, but also a general donations throughout the district they they're not sure how to connect with an individual school but they want to give to the district. 305 00:46:46.860 --> 00:47:05.910 Kathy Ludwig: And so we have launched our Westland will civil family Resource Center. And I want to thank Cindy linsley Maria Horton, and Dr Matta Gomez, who are championing this they're figuring out the logistics. There were working next week on a purpose statement a mission statement. 306 00:47:07.230 --> 00:47:12.360 Kathy Ludwig: And temporarily, we will be. Thank you, Kelly Schmidt in this small room. 307 00:47:13.710 --> 00:47:21.960 Kathy Ludwig: Off the cafeteria and open common space here at Wilson bill high school. It's perfect. It's also got a side entrance that we can 308 00:47:22.350 --> 00:47:30.780 Kathy Ludwig: Get families into right now there's some robotics equipment. Thank you, robotics team for being willing to move think we actually gave them a bigger room to store things in 309 00:47:31.980 --> 00:47:42.060 Kathy Ludwig: And so we're going to get that location up and going in the meantime Maria Horton has just been a champion. She is our bilingual family engagement specialist 310 00:47:42.450 --> 00:47:54.450 Kathy Ludwig: And has spent all spring and all summer, making sure that we don't lose any families during these difficult times or transition times and this resource center has really been an outcrop of 311 00:47:55.590 --> 00:48:09.180 Kathy Ludwig: Of her connection with community long term, we have our eyes on those portables that Beckman Creek because they're fantastic. They're not your typical kind of single wide mobile 312 00:48:09.750 --> 00:48:14.610 Kathy Ludwig: Portable, these are these are like professional office buildings with high ceilings. 313 00:48:15.150 --> 00:48:24.690 Kathy Ludwig: And we're using them right now because we need that extra space. But once the primary school opens up at frog pond and Beckman Creek does no longer needs the portables 314 00:48:25.050 --> 00:48:29.940 Kathy Ludwig: Our thought is, instead of moving this structure that it's actually in the perfect setting. 315 00:48:30.480 --> 00:48:41.610 Kathy Ludwig: For a family resource center because folks will already be used to traveling over near Wilson to high school. And this actually sits between the two properties. I think it's just 316 00:48:42.570 --> 00:48:48.630 Kathy Ludwig: serendipitous. There's a little playground. I don't know if you can see that and a picnic table. So we can envision 317 00:48:49.080 --> 00:49:01.980 Kathy Ludwig: Family kind of out, you know, outdoor events here with a big tent. And there's a number of rooms here that could be both an office and then adult education classroom spaces as well as places for 318 00:49:02.850 --> 00:49:09.000 Kathy Ludwig: High school youth to take some maybe evening courses and really becoming a connection to the community. 319 00:49:12.270 --> 00:49:13.710 Kathy Ludwig: So let me 320 00:49:15.900 --> 00:49:23.730 Kathy Ludwig: Just end there and just wanted to, again, work with that theme of we're not just delivering instruction with school starting 321 00:49:24.570 --> 00:49:33.240 Kathy Ludwig: But we're really working with that idea of how do we provide care and connection to our families in the terms of additional learning opportunities. 322 00:49:33.780 --> 00:49:47.250 Kathy Ludwig: Still connecting with getting a book to read. Getting the meal that you need and getting hope in the forms of maybe some tangible resources. So I will end there. And if you don't have any comments or questions. 323 00:49:49.200 --> 00:49:50.250 Kathy Ludwig: I'll just exit. 324 00:49:50.850 --> 00:49:52.710 Regan Molatore: I see. I see your hand raised. 325 00:49:53.700 --> 00:50:10.500 Christy Thompson: I was just curious as far as the the Resource Center, which I'm super excited about. If people want to get involved in that and helping community members or others. Is that something that people can get involved with, or is it going to be district staff only 326 00:50:11.550 --> 00:50:17.880 Christy Thompson: Just in case you know for myself and for anybody else who might be watching wondering how they might be able to contribute to that. 327 00:50:18.480 --> 00:50:25.290 Kathy Ludwig: I think that's a perfect question and I think this is an area where it will just continue to grow and evolve and scale. 328 00:50:25.830 --> 00:50:35.070 Kathy Ludwig: And so we're starting it and maybe it's fine that we're in a pandemic, because we have to kind of limit those interchanges right now anyway. 329 00:50:35.370 --> 00:50:43.800 Kathy Ludwig: But we're just trying to actually set a strong purpose and clarity and communicating to the community and that that takes time will continue to get those messages out 330 00:50:44.400 --> 00:50:51.330 Kathy Ludwig: And then most importantly, make sure our families know that in addition to their school. There's also this other 331 00:50:52.110 --> 00:50:58.800 Kathy Ludwig: Location and group of people that they can reach out to and I think every year. We're just going to find new and amazing ways 332 00:50:59.190 --> 00:51:06.840 Kathy Ludwig: That we become a resource to our community and that our community, like you mentioned Christie wants to become part of a health agency. 333 00:51:07.530 --> 00:51:21.450 Kathy Ludwig: And so I think right now, we would overwhelm Maria and and Cindy by signing up volunteers because we're still want to get that purpose and mission honed in but we're, we're getting coats and we're getting backpacks and we're getting 334 00:51:22.500 --> 00:51:34.020 Kathy Ludwig: You know, even monetary donations to take to take care of things like utility bills and rent. And so, Cindy and Maria are making these multi layered Excel spreadsheets, just 335 00:51:34.830 --> 00:51:43.650 Kathy Ludwig: compiling all of our generous donors and our Resource Network and people who have said, Hey, we're here to help. And these are the things that we can do. 336 00:51:44.790 --> 00:51:47.370 Kathy Ludwig: So thank you for that additional question. 337 00:51:52.290 --> 00:51:55.350 Kathy Ludwig: All right, I'm going to stop share and turn it back over to your monitor. 338 00:51:57.120 --> 00:51:58.440 Regan Molatore: All right. Thank you. 339 00:52:00.150 --> 00:52:05.730 Regan Molatore: And now we will move on to our consent agenda. And is there emotion. 340 00:52:11.400 --> 00:52:13.440 Chelsea King: I move that we approve the Consent Agenda. 341 00:52:16.530 --> 00:52:18.360 Regan Molatore: It's been moved. Is there a second 342 00:52:20.160 --> 00:52:20.730 Regan Molatore: Or second 343 00:52:21.960 --> 00:52:22.380 Regan Molatore: Some if 344 00:52:24.810 --> 00:52:25.530 Regan Molatore: You want to call it. 345 00:52:28.890 --> 00:52:29.340 Regan Molatore: Yes. 346 00:52:30.510 --> 00:52:31.380 Kelly Douglas: Nice checking 347 00:52:31.950 --> 00:52:32.340 I 348 00:52:33.390 --> 00:52:34.350 Kelly Douglas: Directed Thompson. 349 00:52:36.210 --> 00:52:37.170 Kelly Douglas: Director Fitch. 350 00:52:39.000 --> 00:52:39.420 Kelly Douglas: Thank you. 351 00:52:43.920 --> 00:52:48.240 Regan Molatore: All right, thank you. And now we will move on to communications from comments. 352 00:52:48.960 --> 00:53:07.080 Regan Molatore: From members of our community. And during this time in which we're having virtual meetings. We've been accepting public comment by email being submitted to Kelly was by 4pm before our meeting. We did receive a letter to the board. It's 353 00:53:07.110 --> 00:53:08.700 Regan Molatore: A little unclear as to whether it was for 354 00:53:08.700 --> 00:53:30.090 Regan Molatore: Public Comment or for the board in general and it came from a group called Westland Wilson, the veil, excuse me var W E bar, we did not our board operating agreement requires like a name of an individual and an address with public comment. In this particular group. 355 00:53:31.650 --> 00:53:40.170 Regan Molatore: While it said it's a group of teachers staff and administrators committed to racial justice. It did not actually save it was wessling most involve 356 00:53:40.860 --> 00:53:48.090 Regan Molatore: Staff teachers at, you know, administrators, and we've reached out to kind of get some clarification on that. But, um, 357 00:53:48.540 --> 00:53:55.410 Regan Molatore: So I'm just going to wait and we can share that. Then at the next meeting. Once we get additional information. We're not required to share out 358 00:53:55.830 --> 00:54:01.590 Regan Molatore: The content of communications in advance or during this time. Anyways, it's just been something I've been doing as a courtesy. 359 00:54:02.130 --> 00:54:16.590 Regan Molatore: But I just want to acknowledge that we have the entire board did receive that letter and we're just trying to ask to team, a little bit more information about the sender, just so that we know as a board. How to weigh the content of that communication. 360 00:54:18.270 --> 00:54:19.140 Regan Molatore: And Dr. Ludwig 361 00:54:19.950 --> 00:54:27.120 Kathy Ludwig: Just to add that that acronym be a RW G stands for building anti racist white educators 362 00:54:28.260 --> 00:54:30.810 Regan Molatore: Thank you. Thank you for adding that 363 00:54:32.640 --> 00:54:54.150 Regan Molatore: So, um, alright and then with that we go on to our general administration or business and first is a policy review and we will have Miss Shiloh Waldron help us through this. There are four policies before the, oh, Chelsea. 364 00:54:55.320 --> 00:55:09.690 Chelsea King: I'm sorry to interrupt. I'm a little slow on the draw here I it does say that it's it does say WL WV in the letter for what that's worth. So I know you're seeking some sort of confirmation, but I am seeing that acronym here. 365 00:55:09.720 --> 00:55:14.760 Regan Molatore: But, but they don't actually in there when they establish who they are. They don't say that their teachers, administrators from the district. 366 00:55:15.060 --> 00:55:17.610 Regan Molatore: Hmm, just a gmail email account. I mean, 367 00:55:18.120 --> 00:55:28.530 Regan Molatore: It doesn't matter. I mean, yeah, it could be verified and and and potentially two and one other troubleshooting as if for some reason they weren't comfortable sharing, you know the identity of their group they are able to reach out to me directly. 368 00:55:28.860 --> 00:55:34.350 Regan Molatore: And just provide that it just helps us as a board way the content of that when you know more accurately. 369 00:55:35.520 --> 00:55:36.990 Regan Molatore: Who the center is and where they came from. 370 00:55:37.800 --> 00:55:52.710 Kathy Ludwig: And just a reminder, they could resubmit it and now that maybe they have some clarity on those conditions for submitting a comment for the next board meeting in the meantime all board members to have a copy of that and they could resubmit it for public 371 00:55:53.880 --> 00:55:57.330 Kathy Ludwig: Recognition of receipt at the next board meeting. 372 00:56:03.240 --> 00:56:19.260 Regan Molatore: Okay. And so with regards the policies and I think we all so do we have anybody from mercereau Law Office on as well. Okay, I'm seeing Dr Ludwick not I just wasn't seeing that 373 00:56:19.980 --> 00:56:34.350 Regan Molatore: Okay, and with the policy review, we have allowed ourselves 25 minutes so sila, I'm gonna hand it over to you for policies 25 minutes 374 00:56:34.740 --> 00:56:40.560 Shyla Waldern: Thank you, Peter. Most world is planning to log in at 7pm. So in a couple minutes each, to be on without 375 00:56:41.100 --> 00:56:47.940 Shyla Waldern: And reviewed all of the policies that were bringing before you as well because they're all due to legislation changes. 376 00:56:49.230 --> 00:57:01.230 Shyla Waldern: But so the first policy that we're bringing across the board for view is Jay H E, the reporting of suspected abuse of a child. And this has to do with new definitions of what 377 00:57:01.890 --> 00:57:17.190 Shyla Waldern: Is considered a child or student as far as the state goes and a new required trainings around electric electronic communication. And so those changes are reflected in this new policy for your with you. 378 00:57:24.150 --> 00:57:26.190 Regan Molatore: Do we have a motion. 379 00:57:35.490 --> 00:57:40.260 Chelsea King: Are you looking for just to handle one policy at a time. 380 00:57:41.040 --> 00:57:42.420 Regan Molatore: Yes, please. Yeah. 381 00:57:43.500 --> 00:57:46.710 Chelsea King: I'll move that we approve the proposed. 382 00:57:47.910 --> 00:57:52.410 Chelsea King: A H E policy as written. 383 00:57:53.610 --> 00:57:55.770 Regan Molatore: Thank you Chelsea. Is there a second 384 00:57:58.860 --> 00:57:59.430 Christy Thompson: I'll second. 385 00:58:00.480 --> 00:58:16.860 Regan Molatore: All right, thank you. It's been moved and seconded. And so then we can have discussion and she said anything in particular are the definitions, in particular, anything you would like to draw attention to, or I know you to give us a very detailed memo and so 386 00:58:18.720 --> 00:58:27.480 Shyla Waldern: One of the main changes has to do with it's no longer just an employee and now includes contractors agents and volunteers of the district. 387 00:58:27.900 --> 00:58:40.170 Shyla Waldern: And then this student definition changed as well, so a student is now any student who's receiving services from the district up to the age of 21 or within 90 days of graduation. 388 00:58:48.000 --> 00:58:48.420 Regan Molatore: Dinner. 389 00:58:50.730 --> 00:59:01.740 Ginger Fitch: Use your memo says it's just a definition of the child. But when I'm looking at all the red lines. What, what am I missing. Isn't there a lot of substantive changes. 390 00:59:02.970 --> 00:59:10.110 Shyla Waldern: Yes. So Peter also made a note that the other action items and changes are consistent with the changes to policy KH 391 00:59:11.160 --> 00:59:23.970 Shyla Waldern: So this piece of legislation changed the definitions in this policy and then also in the other. The next policy that we're going to be reviewing the GB and a dash f H, fm 392 00:59:30.000 --> 00:59:39.330 Ginger Fitch: They're not consistent as my only concern and it's just there. Any chance we could get up on the screen. So it'd be easier to work through 393 00:59:41.760 --> 00:59:45.090 Regan Molatore: And did you just for me when you say it's not consistent. Can you just 394 00:59:45.120 --> 00:59:47.400 Ginger Fitch: What do you find out. Let me find my 395 00:59:47.430 --> 00:59:48.210 Comment here. 396 00:59:49.650 --> 00:59:54.420 Regan Molatore: And welcome, Peter, we've just started our discussion on 397 00:59:55.920 --> 00:59:56.520 Regan Molatore: FB 398 01:00:02.220 --> 01:00:06.630 Ginger Fitch: Okay, it's on the second page. 399 01:00:08.310 --> 01:00:16.950 Ginger Fitch: It is the one to third full paragraph first sentence. 400 01:00:19.260 --> 01:00:33.120 Ginger Fitch: Why under Dan from the other changes is what is really meant is when a designee receives a report of suspected abuse by 401 01:00:34.830 --> 01:00:42.810 Ginger Fitch: A district employee or contractor or age of whatever those lists are I think that's 402 01:00:43.860 --> 01:00:46.350 Ginger Fitch: What you mean there. Am I right. 403 01:00:50.130 --> 01:00:51.270 Curtis Nelson: Here you're muted. 404 01:00:52.560 --> 01:00:53.160 Crap. 405 01:00:55.290 --> 01:00:59.850 Regan Molatore: And ginger. Is it the word designee that you're seeking clarification on 406 01:01:02.100 --> 01:01:16.320 Ginger Fitch: No, I think what happens is, we've switched from just a report of child abuse to a report of child abuse by a district employee or agent or whatever that list is 407 01:01:16.980 --> 01:01:25.440 Ginger Fitch: That there's another procedure that has to occur when that happens. And I think it just doesn't say that in the paragraph that it just applies to that second 408 01:01:26.760 --> 01:01:29.970 Ginger Fitch: Kind of report of child abuse. Am I right. 409 01:01:30.690 --> 01:01:35.250 Regan Molatore: Yeah, but I think we have we have a separate policy that deals with that other instance 410 01:01:35.430 --> 01:01:36.960 Ginger Fitch: Oh, I know. But I think that 411 01:01:37.350 --> 01:01:40.410 Ginger Fitch: This policy is copying without 412 01:01:42.270 --> 01:01:42.930 Ginger Fitch: Saying 413 01:01:43.620 --> 01:01:51.120 Shyla Waldern: So I'm wondering if it's not included in that line specifically because the following paragraph addresses. 414 01:01:52.560 --> 01:02:02.730 Shyla Waldern: Where there is reasonable cost to support the report in it when it's a district employee and then where there was reasonable cause to support the report for a contractor agent or volunteer, um, 415 01:02:03.120 --> 01:02:18.300 Ginger Fitch: So the, the proceeding paragraph is only applying to reports of child abuse, not by a parent, not by a community member, not by another student, but by particular 416 01:02:19.650 --> 01:02:21.030 Ginger Fitch: Person's related 417 01:02:22.200 --> 01:02:24.660 Ginger Fitch: To the school district employment or 418 01:02:25.050 --> 01:02:41.970 Shyla Waldern: What I I'm going to guess that that paragraph applies to all reports of child abuse, in effect, and then where it has to do with the district employee in that next following paragraph or with a contractor. We have to handle those in a specific way. 419 01:02:42.780 --> 01:02:54.480 Ginger Fitch: So I think you're wrong. I think from my reading is everyone who gets a report of child abuse has to report it directly if they're a mandatory reporter 420 01:02:54.990 --> 01:03:07.440 Ginger Fitch: But only when the abuse is suspected to be from a district employee or an agent or such then you have to go also to the designated person in your building. 421 01:03:08.460 --> 01:03:11.640 Ginger Fitch: And is that the correct procedure. 422 01:03:13.920 --> 01:03:21.000 Peter Mersereau: I think it is ginger, that is the correct procedure. It may be that this language could be tightened up a little bit. 423 01:03:21.540 --> 01:03:33.720 Peter Mersereau: But if you look from a four corners approach, starting with the first page that's clearly the intent of the policy. It's meant to cover employees agents volunteers and contractors 424 01:03:36.270 --> 01:03:36.690 Peter Mersereau: And 425 01:03:37.950 --> 01:03:51.150 Peter Mersereau: It is possible that in this policy and some of the others. They happen. Oh SBA has not always included the volunteers contractors and agents language, but that's clearly the intent. 426 01:03:57.870 --> 01:03:58.710 Ginger Fitch: I own. 427 01:04:00.060 --> 01:04:09.930 Ginger Fitch: I think if that's I think there's if there's two separate procedures, one for child abuse generally and one for child abuse by 428 01:04:11.010 --> 01:04:17.730 Ginger Fitch: suspected to be perpetrated by some district employee, there are two different procedures and I think it should be clear. 429 01:04:19.440 --> 01:04:20.760 Ginger Fitch: And I won't be 430 01:04:23.220 --> 01:04:25.350 Ginger Fitch: It just needs to be written clearly in my mind. 431 01:04:29.610 --> 01:04:42.870 Regan Molatore: And we're not under are we under a time constraint with regards to passage. So if we did this as a first Street, and then we may be sent it back to us for some tightening of that language to. We've got time to do that. Correct. Alright. 432 01:04:46.860 --> 01:04:51.060 Regan Molatore: And Peter. If we were to send it back. Is that something you would feel come 433 01:04:52.170 --> 01:04:58.230 Regan Molatore: printable being able to align for us or advise the district as to how to do that if 434 01:04:58.710 --> 01:05:00.630 Peter Mersereau: Yes. Yeah, that's 435 01:05:00.930 --> 01:05:04.290 Ginger Fitch: Probably have that language. Excuse me. 436 01:05:05.370 --> 01:05:08.010 Ginger Fitch: It just is missing from that particular paragraph. 437 01:05:09.570 --> 01:05:09.720 Kathy Ludwig: I 438 01:05:09.750 --> 01:05:09.960 Peter Mersereau: Think 439 01:05:10.200 --> 01:05:30.480 Kathy Ludwig: We would want to do that with our SBA, who has crafted these policies, after a lot of consultation. So I think part of it is just querying oh SBA what went into creating these paragraphs. Is there something we're missing or not missing. And if we added some clarity. 440 01:05:32.190 --> 01:05:36.690 Kathy Ludwig: Does that compromise the policy in any way. And if the school district. 441 01:05:38.100 --> 01:05:41.100 Kathy Ludwig: Gets in the middle of some of these and and add some 442 01:05:43.200 --> 01:05:44.130 Peter Mersereau: Okay, and I might 443 01:05:45.480 --> 01:05:54.450 Peter Mersereau: I might be able to to help clarify. I jumped on a little bit late here and I wasn't able to open gingers attachment earlier this afternoon, so I'm 444 01:05:55.200 --> 01:06:11.100 Peter Mersereau: I'm still not 100% clear on exactly what the concern is here on the second page of this policy, but I think I got the gist of it that it may be that we can harmonize the language in this current draft or if not, 445 01:06:12.480 --> 01:06:19.050 Peter Mersereau: Add some language here and there in a discussion with OSB aided to satisfy these concerns. 446 01:06:21.690 --> 01:06:30.750 Regan Molatore: And then ginger. Just one other question to Ben for my clarification and possibly for the subsequent conversation is you would reference that another policy. 447 01:06:31.560 --> 01:06:42.840 Regan Molatore: As that language what policy is that because that will help Shiloh, or even if you could just send that because maybe what we do this. Hold this. If Chelsea Christie are okay with 448 01:06:43.380 --> 01:07:00.870 Regan Molatore: treating it as a first read I secrecy, shaking her head and Chelsea. Okay, so we're going to go ahead and just delay. We're going to postpone our vote on this and send this back and then ginger just at some point, you could send an email to clarify me the other policy, just the language. 449 01:07:01.980 --> 01:07:07.200 Regan Molatore: But then I think that'll help expedite conversations around this. But that'd be agreeable. Sure. 450 01:07:07.320 --> 01:07:09.360 Ginger Fitch: Yeah, I mean, you're going to see it in the next policy. 451 01:07:09.750 --> 01:07:12.450 Regan Molatore: Oh, okay. Oh, it's okay. Gotcha. All right. Thank you. 452 01:07:14.310 --> 01:07:17.940 Regan Molatore: And anybody else have any comments on this policy. 453 01:07:18.930 --> 01:07:33.180 Chelsea King: shutting off formerly withdraw the motion, just for perceptual cleanliness and it sounds like maybe there won't be emotion. On the next policy if the same feedback is OK, my understanding that right 454 01:07:33.390 --> 01:07:38.130 Regan Molatore: Well, I think the next policy has the language. So we'll be okay. We just want that language in this one. 455 01:07:39.420 --> 01:07:43.260 Regan Molatore: Okay. All right, thank you all and thank you for helping me understand oh Christie. 456 01:07:44.160 --> 01:07:52.410 Christy Thompson: Yeah, only and I'm not the lawyer. I'm going to defer to the course, but my only question is, I read through the policy was 457 01:07:53.880 --> 01:08:10.140 Christy Thompson: That same paragraph, paragraph three, on page two, at the very beginning where it says when there's reasonable cause to support the report and I don't know if there's a way to, I mean, be more specific there or or or what, but I think that's a pretty 458 01:08:11.850 --> 01:08:20.820 Christy Thompson: Arbitrary Arbitrary statements and again I know that's probably a hard thing because you can have a plethora of circumstances, but 459 01:08:23.070 --> 01:08:31.320 Christy Thompson: I don't know, that's just a statement that stood out to me that I would love to see with a little more definition and backbone behind it. 460 01:08:32.790 --> 01:08:33.600 Christy Thompson: Just hang 461 01:08:33.780 --> 01:08:37.770 Regan Molatore: Out too long with your boy your board members. 462 01:08:38.370 --> 01:08:40.740 Christy Thompson: Put lawyer terms to what I just said, please. 463 01:08:40.950 --> 01:08:44.730 Regan Molatore: Oh no, you're totally like you. Yeah, the essence of every lawyers job. 464 01:08:46.230 --> 01:08:51.210 Regan Molatore: These words apart like this. So, okay, Chelsea. 465 01:08:52.590 --> 01:09:08.490 Chelsea King: I do have one question that this policy doesn't address and that is what happens with if a report is made, um, does that go into a personnel file. And what happens with that file. If that person transfers to a different district. 466 01:09:10.980 --> 01:09:17.580 Shyla Waldern: Server report is made. If they're licensed staff member we are required to submit that report to TSP. See, so it will be 467 01:09:18.000 --> 01:09:21.510 Shyla Waldern: Maintained with the teacher Standards and Practices Commission for the state of Oregon. 468 01:09:21.960 --> 01:09:25.950 Shyla Waldern: And then if the person is not licensed. We are required now to report to O. D. 469 01:09:26.280 --> 01:09:39.300 Shyla Waldern: And it would mean maintained with that person's record with Oregon permanent education and new education employers in the state are required to check with both agencies before hiring someone to see under investigation. Another district. 470 01:09:42.990 --> 01:09:45.960 Regan Molatore: These new policies came forth as a result of 471 01:09:47.670 --> 01:09:56.310 Regan Molatore: Legal issues with regards to somebody that worked with the school district and then moving and that not following them so 472 01:09:56.670 --> 01:10:05.880 Regan Molatore: We not new policies establish a procedure so that it could in fact follow those people if they tried to gain employment at another school, at least within this state. 473 01:10:08.520 --> 01:10:17.640 Regan Molatore: Okay, so we're going to first read this one you can do a little work on it and we'll bring it back, and then we're going to move on now to 474 01:10:19.290 --> 01:10:23.430 Regan Molatore: GB na Jay H EF f 475 01:10:25.050 --> 01:10:28.860 Regan Molatore: And Alec Do you want to just introduce that a little bit and then we'll do 476 01:10:29.790 --> 01:10:51.120 Shyla Waldern: So this policy was previously just Jay H and it's now GB and ha ha. It's regarding reporting requirements regarding sexual conduct with students. It expanded the definition of what is considered sexual conduct it again just further expanded. What is the definition of a student 477 01:10:52.830 --> 01:11:04.500 Shyla Waldern: And then it's provided procedures or if an employee is reported as being considered under investigation for sexual misconduct requiring us to put them on paid administrative leave immediately. 478 01:11:05.880 --> 01:11:17.520 Shyla Waldern: District employees contractors agents and volunteers are not able to assist co workers in obtaining new employment if they were if they're under investigation. 479 01:11:18.060 --> 01:11:33.120 Shyla Waldern: And there's guidelines again regarding electronic communications between the staff contractors agents and volunteers in students and then new reporting requirements to O D AMP T SPC 480 01:11:34.140 --> 01:11:51.840 Shyla Waldern: And then it requires this each district to designate a licensed administrator at each site and then an alternate licensed administrator for each site for all of these reports to come to and that person is the person responsible for making it important to SBC and for God. 481 01:11:59.310 --> 01:12:00.270 Regan Molatore: Thank you. Sheila. 482 01:12:01.980 --> 01:12:12.240 Chelsea King: I'll make the motion so we can have this discussion and I move that we approve policy GB and a slash Jay h f f as revised. 483 01:12:15.780 --> 01:12:16.470 Regan Molatore: Second, 484 01:12:20.280 --> 01:12:25.920 Regan Molatore: Ginger working. Okay, thank you. It's been moved and seconded and discussion. 485 01:12:26.940 --> 01:12:27.210 Regan Molatore: Right. 486 01:12:29.040 --> 01:12:29.730 Regan Molatore: Now for Ginger. 487 01:12:30.480 --> 01:12:40.890 Ginger Fitch: Okay, so this is I probably screwed up when I sent my email. So this is the one I actually include the comment. So if you're looking at page. 488 01:12:43.710 --> 01:12:44.610 Ginger Fitch: One. 489 01:12:48.390 --> 01:12:57.420 Ginger Fitch: Where it says any district employee or contractor agent or volunteer who has reasonable cause to believe the student has been subjected to sexual contact 490 01:12:58.350 --> 01:13:08.100 Ginger Fitch: This is apart by another district employee or contractor agent or volunteer. That's the phrase that I think was missing from the other part. 491 01:13:09.660 --> 01:13:10.320 Ginger Fitch: The 492 01:13:11.190 --> 01:13:16.380 Ginger Fitch: Policy conduct by another district employee, contractor agent or volunteer. 493 01:13:23.190 --> 01:13:25.200 Peter Mersereau: You know there's there's some confusion. 494 01:13:25.860 --> 01:13:34.290 Peter Mersereau: Ginger. Some of these when we talk about the reporting party as opposed to the party against whom the report is made. 495 01:13:34.560 --> 01:13:42.810 Peter Mersereau: Right, and that's where some of my, that's where some of the language is not carried forward but 496 01:13:43.860 --> 01:13:55.380 Peter Mersereau: Clearly the attempt as I read these policies is to include those other three categories on both sides of that equation. The reporter and the report he, if you will. 497 01:13:57.180 --> 01:14:00.870 Peter Mersereau: That it may not have come through in each case that can be finished. 498 01:14:06.210 --> 01:14:11.610 Regan Molatore: Yeah, perfect. And I think that that's the ask is online yet both policies so that the 499 01:14:13.110 --> 01:14:17.640 Regan Molatore: We don't have to infer the intent. It's also clear on the face of the policy. 500 01:14:19.200 --> 01:14:31.620 Kathy Ludwig: Director pitch, if, if the first policy that we did the first read had that qualifier when a designee receives a report of so suspected abuse. 501 01:14:32.100 --> 01:14:40.710 Kathy Ludwig: By a district employee or contractor agent or volunteer if it was just that qualifier in there. Would you feel then 502 01:14:41.460 --> 01:15:02.370 Kathy Ludwig: Ready to do it. So I'm wondering, Peter and your expert opinion. Does that qualify or change the substance of that paragraph that we would need to consult with OSB or is that something we could with with your approval actually do tonight and then amend the policy to read that way. 503 01:15:04.860 --> 01:15:07.950 Kathy Ludwig: And I'm just wondering, is there an interest in going back 504 01:15:09.240 --> 01:15:13.770 Kathy Ludwig: And not having it be a first read now that director fishes found the phrase that 505 01:15:15.390 --> 01:15:31.170 Kathy Ludwig: We could drop in. But I'm wondering because director Thompson also still had a concern about reasonable cause. So do we do we still want to keep the first policy as a first read or are we have net. How do we now have a solution to that first one that we could go back and amend it 506 01:15:32.340 --> 01:15:32.700 Kathy Ludwig: With a 507 01:15:34.050 --> 01:15:34.500 Kathy Ludwig: Lovely. 508 01:15:35.040 --> 01:15:42.360 Peter Mersereau: Kathy. What was your proposed solution that you're getting language to that paragraph on page two or four back to the first policy. Yeah. 509 01:15:42.420 --> 01:15:59.430 Kathy Ludwig: The first policy if what I'm hearing from director, which is in the second paragraph, when a designee receives a report of suspected abuse by any district employee, contractor agent or volunteer. 510 01:16:00.690 --> 01:16:01.380 Kathy Ludwig: Comma. 511 01:16:03.450 --> 01:16:06.720 Kathy Ludwig: The designee will follow procedure established by the district. 512 01:16:09.000 --> 01:16:24.330 Kathy Ludwig: So it's inferred in that paragraph and what I hear our director saying is let's not rely on inference. Let's name, who you know where we're designating that report about have suspected abuse about 513 01:16:26.820 --> 01:16:35.880 Kathy Ludwig: And to my opinion, it wouldn't change substantively unless you believe, Peter, we need to double check that that that was the intent of that paragraph. 514 01:16:40.230 --> 01:16:43.770 Peter Mersereau: Yeah, no, I don't think I've what I don't see a problem and adding that 515 01:16:47.370 --> 01:16:48.900 Peter Mersereau: I think it's consistent with 516 01:16:50.520 --> 01:16:53.790 Peter Mersereau: The obligations that are set forth on the first page of the policy. 517 01:17:00.630 --> 01:17:07.290 Ginger Fitch: And here just to respond to. I'm Dr. Thompson's concerned about reasonable 518 01:17:08.340 --> 01:17:09.540 Ginger Fitch: cause to believe 519 01:17:10.590 --> 01:17:17.400 Ginger Fitch: So it's just my experience as a mandatory reporter for The Last any decades that 520 01:17:19.050 --> 01:17:30.360 Ginger Fitch: That's what we're left with. That's what we're what the legislature has given us is that standard. And that's why we get ongoing training. So we can say, hey, 521 01:17:30.720 --> 01:17:38.490 Ginger Fitch: If this happened in the grocery store. This happened in my classroom or this happened at the bus stop that we 522 01:17:39.000 --> 01:17:59.580 Ginger Fitch: We just get trained on trying to sort out what it means to have reasonable cause I think you're spotting, that is, is good. I think it's an ongoing struggle for me as a mandatory reporter, but I do think that's what the legislature has chosen to us and we're stuck with it. 523 01:18:02.700 --> 01:18:02.970 Kathy Ludwig: And 524 01:18:04.230 --> 01:18:04.650 Peter Mersereau: Me. 525 01:18:05.700 --> 01:18:09.990 Peter Mersereau: Kathy and ginger. Let me ask you this, the more I focus on that second paragraph. 526 01:18:11.550 --> 01:18:19.830 Peter Mersereau: Wouldn't it be better in some respects to leave the language, the way it is, which would be when a designee receives a report of suspected abuse. 527 01:18:21.180 --> 01:18:24.180 Peter Mersereau: Really by anyone by any mandatory reporter 528 01:18:25.500 --> 01:18:32.280 Peter Mersereau: The fact is that some volunteers agents and contractors are not mandatory reporters. 529 01:18:33.330 --> 01:18:48.900 Peter Mersereau: And so they're not going to be making reports, what what this paragraph does now is say, look, whenever a report is received, presumably by a mandatory reporter, then the designate will follow procedures. 530 01:18:51.480 --> 01:18:53.130 Peter Mersereau: If you look in the first page. 531 01:18:54.540 --> 01:19:02.160 Peter Mersereau: The basic reporting requirement replies applies to any district employee who has reasonable cause to believe that any child. 532 01:19:03.450 --> 01:19:07.110 Peter Mersereau: With whom the employees come into contact has suffered abuse. 533 01:19:08.190 --> 01:19:12.300 Peter Mersereau: Then there's a lighter reference to mandatory reporters and of the IRS, but 534 01:19:13.560 --> 01:19:14.580 Peter Mersereau: That language. 535 01:19:15.630 --> 01:19:24.660 Peter Mersereau: Of employees contractors agents and volunteers really only applies to potential of users not reporters. 536 01:19:26.310 --> 01:19:38.310 Peter Mersereau: So I think that's why the language on page two, is in fact consistent with page one. But if you want to want me to take some more time to try to harmonize this and look further at it, or certainly can, but 537 01:19:39.660 --> 01:19:40.050 Kathy Ludwig: Yeah. 538 01:19:41.280 --> 01:19:47.100 Kathy Ludwig: I think let's I think that just stick with the first read have a little more time to 539 01:19:48.330 --> 01:19:49.410 Kathy Ludwig: parse this out. 540 01:19:50.700 --> 01:19:57.990 Kathy Ludwig: Get some consultation from OSB a what I thought maybe was now some clarity. Clearly, we want to go back and 541 01:19:59.370 --> 01:20:00.540 Kathy Ludwig: We're going to do this right 542 01:20:01.860 --> 01:20:12.360 Kathy Ludwig: All of our staff in the meantime are getting trained on these new policies. I know I completed mind the languages in there all the new updates are and all of our safe school training. 543 01:20:13.440 --> 01:20:19.410 Kathy Ludwig: Procedures. So we've got good systems in place. And now we just need to make sure that our 544 01:20:20.910 --> 01:20:24.090 Kathy Ludwig: Our policies are there to support that as well and to guide our 545 01:20:25.230 --> 01:20:26.490 Kathy Ludwig: Our processes. So 546 01:20:27.510 --> 01:20:32.400 Kathy Ludwig: I'll retract the wonder about going back to the first policy chair motors. 547 01:20:33.120 --> 01:20:45.510 Regan Molatore: Okay, great. We'll save it for, and we have then emotion before us on GB and a. Is there any further discussion on that policy. 548 01:20:47.370 --> 01:20:56.940 Peter Mersereau: Reagan, let me add one comment before that discussion closes on this. Yeah, just so just so the board is aware of the potential impacts of this policy. 549 01:20:58.110 --> 01:21:03.300 Peter Mersereau: If you look at page two. And I think there was some reference to this language earlier. 550 01:21:04.350 --> 01:21:14.460 Peter Mersereau: In the middle of the paragraph. It states that district employee, contractor or agent will not assist another district employee contract or or agent. 551 01:21:15.090 --> 01:21:27.360 Peter Mersereau: In obtaining a new job if that individual has reasonable cause to believe that the district contractor or agent has engaged in sexual conduct as defined by page one. 552 01:21:28.170 --> 01:21:47.940 Peter Mersereau: I just want to alert the board this this emphasizes one of the themes that runs through all three of these policies which is training and reporting and notifying staff of obligations under these new statutes. And this is a really broad obligation, you realize what this says is it 553 01:21:48.990 --> 01:21:54.120 Peter Mersereau: Prohibits employees if they have reasonable cause that this conduct. 554 01:21:55.140 --> 01:22:14.580 Peter Mersereau: Has occurred from referring or supporting an application for employment by those individuals. And who knows, in a given situation what reasonable cause is or who has it, but yet this is what the statute says now as passed last year and this is what the policy. 555 01:22:15.660 --> 01:22:29.040 Peter Mersereau: Yeah, so this just I guess my point is this underscores the need to make sure that in training at notice that these categories of individuals know what this says, because it's very broad. 556 01:22:33.570 --> 01:22:37.200 Regan Molatore: Thank you Peter for that additional information and clarification. 557 01:22:37.650 --> 01:22:39.510 Ginger Fitch: Sure, I have one more question then. 558 01:22:39.960 --> 01:22:40.170 Regan Molatore: Yeah. 559 01:22:41.010 --> 01:22:42.090 Ginger Fitch: So when I look at 560 01:22:42.120 --> 01:22:42.690 The 561 01:22:43.740 --> 01:23:02.520 Ginger Fitch: On the agenda, the one that isn't supposed to be red line, there is a parent article and read and I'm not clear. Then when we're voting. Are we voting for that parents settle fo to be in the policy or that it was an option. 562 01:23:05.580 --> 01:23:17.040 Kathy Ludwig: Child. Could you clarify that we left one sentence in red. My understanding is for you to see that it's still there, but it was an optional sentence. And so we 563 01:23:18.420 --> 01:23:22.560 Shyla Waldern: Yeah, I should have. I apologize. I should have removed that so I'm 564 01:23:23.610 --> 01:23:40.650 Shyla Waldern: In any event, but a licensed staff member fails to report, there is now a requirement to report them to TSP see so TSP see has the potential now to sanction a license based on failure to report. So, um, so I 565 01:23:41.760 --> 01:23:50.520 Shyla Waldern: We didn't insert this piece because there will be a process through T SPC versus a process to the destruction. That makes sense. I apologize. 566 01:23:52.410 --> 01:23:59.490 Ginger Fitch: So when we're voting we're voting on the policy without the bracketed read language is that right 567 01:23:59.880 --> 01:24:00.840 Shyla Waldern: Yes, that's correct. 568 01:24:02.550 --> 01:24:04.890 Regan Molatore: Thank you. Thank you for that clarify. 569 01:24:06.900 --> 01:24:10.080 Regan Molatore: All right. And with that one call per boat. 570 01:24:12.390 --> 01:24:13.260 Kelly Douglas: Dragon Miller toy. 571 01:24:13.620 --> 01:24:16.320 Kelly Douglas: Yes base checking 572 01:24:17.280 --> 01:24:17.670 Hi. 573 01:24:18.930 --> 01:24:19.950 Kelly Douglas: Tracy Thompson. 574 01:24:22.110 --> 01:24:23.010 Kelly Douglas: Ginger fit. 575 01:24:23.520 --> 01:24:25.170 Kelly Douglas: I think 576 01:24:29.730 --> 01:24:32.280 Regan Molatore: Alright, so the next one. 577 01:24:33.510 --> 01:24:43.170 Regan Molatore: Is proposed word policy G B E A around workplace harassment Shiloh, did you want to just set the stage. 578 01:24:43.530 --> 01:24:47.760 Shyla Waldern: Yes, so maybe a little by my notes here. 579 01:24:49.710 --> 01:24:56.010 Shyla Waldern: Um, has to do with the new legislation passed regarding workplace harassment that is 580 01:24:57.690 --> 01:25:10.950 Shyla Waldern: It has to do with discrimination against an employee based on their race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, national origin, marital status, age or juvenile record. 581 01:25:12.990 --> 01:25:16.620 Shyla Waldern: And including cart conduct that constitute sexual assault. 582 01:25:17.640 --> 01:25:35.640 Shyla Waldern: That's prohibited under an hour a statute and discrimination against persons in uniform service and discrimination based on disability and it were, it is a requires the district to implement our practice for accepting reports of workplace harassment from stuff. 583 01:25:42.720 --> 01:25:43.980 Regan Molatore: And emotion. 584 01:25:47.850 --> 01:25:49.170 Chelsea King: Sure, I'm willing to do that. 585 01:25:50.550 --> 01:25:55.590 Chelsea King: I'm move the way approve policy GB a 586 01:25:56.880 --> 01:25:57.510 Christy Thompson: Second, 587 01:25:58.590 --> 01:26:09.840 Regan Molatore: Moved and second dead and I will just add the comment to this that I do appreciate that it does also hold elected school board members to the same 588 01:26:11.340 --> 01:26:22.830 Regan Molatore: You know, standard that we would hold all of the employees in our district. I just appreciate that alignment. I think we try to hold ourselves there, but it's also nice to have a policy that holds us accountable. 589 01:26:23.970 --> 01:26:26.100 Regan Molatore: Any other additional discussion. 590 01:26:32.520 --> 01:26:34.260 Peter Mersereau: Reagan. Can I add a couple of comments. 591 01:26:34.500 --> 01:26:35.430 Regan Molatore: Yes, please. Peter 592 01:26:36.900 --> 01:26:47.400 Peter Mersereau: This unlike the others is a new policy, although I want to be clear. I think the board would recognize that in reality. 593 01:26:48.300 --> 01:27:02.250 Peter Mersereau: We do have a free standing sexual harassment policy already in place and we do have a free standing policy dealing with Harris went cyber bullying and menacing, that sort of thing. 594 01:27:03.930 --> 01:27:04.980 Peter Mersereau: This policy. 595 01:27:06.120 --> 01:27:27.570 Peter Mersereau: borrows from some of the language from our earlier Paris my policies, but it is as a practical matter, a new one. And you'll remember this policy comes out of the legislation last year that arose out of claims against the legislature itself for Harris. 596 01:27:28.950 --> 01:27:49.800 Peter Mersereau: And it didn't have prior policies. So in many respects this legislation started from scratch and they defined in workplace harassment, but we already have many of these prohibitions in language in earlier policies, but a couple of quick points. If you look at the very first paragraph. 597 01:27:51.120 --> 01:28:08.070 Peter Mersereau: Where it says second sentence. This includes workplace harassment that occurs between district employees or between a district employee and the district now on its face, that's a little confusing, but here's what it means. 598 01:28:09.210 --> 01:28:22.740 Peter Mersereau: The first phrase between district employees is co employees on the same level. The second one between a district employee in the district means between an employee and supervisor. 599 01:28:24.120 --> 01:28:29.970 Peter Mersereau: So the word district. There's borrow from the word employer that is actually in the legislation. 600 01:28:32.670 --> 01:28:46.530 Peter Mersereau: And then secondly, just for background. The real significance of this policy, in our view, and this is different from our earlier policies is on page two, when it talks about the kinds of agreements. 601 01:28:47.610 --> 01:28:54.450 Peter Mersereau: That districts can enter into both with victims of harassment and with the harasser 602 01:28:55.620 --> 01:28:59.730 Peter Mersereau: And so, it deals with this issue about non disclosure agreements. 603 01:29:03.240 --> 01:29:10.110 Peter Mersereau: Non disparagement agreements and that sort of thing. And you just have to read through on page two each category. 604 01:29:11.070 --> 01:29:28.890 Peter Mersereau: Of agreement that you're dealing with. And what terms are acceptable in each agreement, but that is new. That is not in our earlier policies and it clarifies an issue that has been kind of high profile about non disclosure agreements and so forth. 605 01:29:30.600 --> 01:29:49.050 Peter Mersereau: And I think what SBA did was try to take the legislation and then could form the policy language. The legislation as best it could. And I think it did a pretty good job, overall, it's never perfect and frankly I think this particular policy will be 606 01:29:51.600 --> 01:29:57.210 Peter Mersereau: Tweaked or wordsmith a little bit over time as more experiences have changed and dealing with these new clauses. 607 01:30:05.190 --> 01:30:10.440 Regan Molatore: Alright. Thank you, Peter. Is there anything additional you wanted to add as you're looking at that. 608 01:30:13.410 --> 01:30:14.340 Peter Mersereau: I think that's 609 01:30:15.900 --> 01:30:21.510 Peter Mersereau: I think that's it it's it's pretty clear on the second page as to the types of agreements that can be entered into 610 01:30:24.600 --> 01:30:30.510 Regan Molatore: All right, thank you and Kelly. When do you then call it for a vote. 611 01:30:32.190 --> 01:30:33.060 Kelly Douglas: Reagan molecular 612 01:30:33.630 --> 01:30:35.850 Kelly Douglas: Yes, nice checking 613 01:30:36.660 --> 01:30:38.790 Kelly Douglas: I Christy Thompson. 614 01:30:43.530 --> 01:30:44.520 Regan Molatore: You're on mute. Christy 615 01:30:47.460 --> 01:30:48.330 Christy Thompson: I sorry 616 01:30:49.380 --> 01:30:50.220 Kelly Douglas: Jeff it 617 01:30:51.720 --> 01:30:52.230 Kelly Douglas: Thank you. 618 01:30:54.330 --> 01:30:58.890 Regan Molatore: Thank you. And Peter. Thank you, as well, for joining us and helping us through this and 619 01:31:00.300 --> 01:31:07.890 Regan Molatore: Thank you to my fellow board members. We always have robust discussions around policy, but I can never tell which ones are going to stir up the conversation and so 620 01:31:08.880 --> 01:31:22.740 Regan Molatore: But you know policy is a huge part of our job and taking it seriously and it's very clear that, you know, people do do their due diligence, as we're working through amending our policy. So thank you very much. And thank you, Peter. Well, we'll see you again. 621 01:31:23.130 --> 01:31:24.180 Peter Mersereau: Okay. Thanks, Ryan. 622 01:31:25.260 --> 01:31:27.270 Christy Thompson: Can make a quick comment I 623 01:31:27.480 --> 01:31:46.440 Christy Thompson: Guess. And I just wanted to thank Shiloh, I really appreciated how in your memo you laid out each policy with the changes were the action items, the scope. Anyway, I just appreciate it. That. So I just wanted to acknowledge that. Thank you for again us know mines. 624 01:31:47.880 --> 01:31:58.830 Regan Molatore: Thank you. Christy as well, and especially since Shiloh is newer to this role, I'm certain that that positive feedback is probably created by Silas, I thank you for not neglecting to mention that 625 01:32:00.000 --> 01:32:01.380 Peter Mersereau: Thank you. Okay, thanks. Right. 626 01:32:01.440 --> 01:32:16.860 Regan Molatore: Right, thank you all and we will now move forward and and we're now back on time so that that last agenda item took a little longer than I anticipated, but it's 735 and we are moving on to our business report and 627 01:32:18.180 --> 01:32:25.440 Regan Molatore: Dr. Hughes, you have approximately 10 minutes with discussion. But you gave us a fantastic mouse. So hopefully we can do it. 628 01:32:25.920 --> 01:32:39.060 Son Le Hughes: Okay, thank you so much. Good evening, everyone. So tonight I have four updates that I would like to present it to you. The first one status updates on the general fund. 629 01:32:39.600 --> 01:32:50.070 Son Le Hughes: finance or accounting report. The second was the Dead Sea Tambo revenue and economic forecasts that task was a parade for by any of them. 630 01:32:51.120 --> 01:33:03.360 Son Le Hughes: 2021 and 20 2020 and the last item is just an FYI about FYI you on the internet right for the LG it 631 01:33:08.880 --> 01:33:11.250 Son Le Hughes: I will share the screen so you can see it. 632 01:33:17.430 --> 01:33:25.380 Son Le Hughes: So in fun opera house is the general fund finance or accounting report as obscene tember thought as 633 01:33:25.980 --> 01:33:34.770 Son Le Hughes: This general fund finance or accounting, Report Layout under the income statement format that so the total revenue. 634 01:33:35.670 --> 01:33:43.590 Son Le Hughes: And a total expenditure and the different between the revenue and and the expenditure is our end and fund balance. 635 01:33:44.370 --> 01:34:16.890 Son Le Hughes: So in here, when you look at year end project that you will see that the we anticipate to have 129.1 million in our top on revenue for this year and the total expenditure is 123.7 million that different between driver revenues and expenditures. A 5.4 million of 4.18% of our total revenue. 636 01:34:18.030 --> 01:34:18.480 Son Le Hughes: So, 637 01:34:20.250 --> 01:34:28.890 Son Le Hughes: As we wrap up the first quarter our business office, be able to report to you to save in that we have on the following day. 638 01:34:29.340 --> 01:34:44.730 Son Le Hughes: The following day, as we have in July and August, a much less compared to the May and June because of May and June, a combined or SAP in the district but july and august only focus on 639 01:34:45.450 --> 01:35:07.980 Son Le Hughes: Because of the month, we only have administrator and 12 months classifies so total saving honest a 92,000 but we have to send it to a house and do the state of Oregon Department. They are for the next seven we have on the follow be 39,000 640 01:35:09.090 --> 01:35:21.810 Son Le Hughes: I anticipate or decline in tuition fees and rental up buildings do to carve it up 19 but try now's is still too early for me to report test number two you 641 01:35:24.540 --> 01:35:39.390 Son Le Hughes: The second items I have on the agenda of today's is the September 2020 revenue and economic forecast. So, as you recall back in late March, early April. 642 01:35:40.410 --> 01:35:56.130 Son Le Hughes: Do you know we have a very optimistic. This revenue that's coming in for measure 98 and student investment account. So at that time we were so excited to receive 7.6 million for our si K 643 01:35:56.730 --> 01:36:12.270 Son Le Hughes: And then later in mate and tune. We had a tone, it could economic revenue and forecast came out, is say that, you know, with all the deficit net coming best state face in the deficit. So therefore, our 644 01:36:13.440 --> 01:36:42.480 Son Le Hughes: We not going to receive a full amount. So we drop it out. We dropped. Our si pon pon 7.6 million down to 4 million and then late into nice and early August the advice for us if we should move down to 2.5 million in our SBA. But then when September economics and revenue forecast come in. 645 01:36:43.500 --> 01:36:55.140 Son Le Hughes: The revenue for the by any and 1921 as rebounds from the tune forecasts and a projected to increase by to billions. So with that, 646 01:36:55.500 --> 01:37:13.980 Son Le Hughes: Let's say school infant formula measured it as a student investment account will not be reduce any further as men for our electric we still remained 2.5 million file si eight grand and 2.4 million for our measure 98 647 01:37:14.850 --> 01:37:32.010 Son Le Hughes: So even though the September economics part has a coming back the end of June, but a still much lower end of March and April forecast. So therefore we have to be very careful careful and not lose sight as we move forward. 648 01:37:35.370 --> 01:37:47.160 Son Le Hughes: This a charter graph that showed you the Quran working but chat and the actual not the actual year and protection. So for the whole virtual. You can see this information here. 649 01:37:49.470 --> 01:38:03.420 Son Le Hughes: The next items here is the parade for by any of 2123 and you know it's like for a whole year are facing so many challenges. This is one of the good news that we have so far. 650 01:38:04.650 --> 01:38:20.850 Son Le Hughes: So on this table. You can see by any of 1921 and tier one, tier two there, right. A 24 point 25% for the officer or some people call it to to a 18.8% 651 01:38:21.540 --> 01:38:37.200 Son Le Hughes: Moving forward to buy any of 21 2020 there is a decrease of 4% what's a good press the 20 15% and 17.04% for up, sir. 652 01:38:37.950 --> 01:39:05.280 Son Le Hughes: So you know if I'm using the current staffing level that we have right now at addict trick. How many staff that belong to you wanted to. How many staff belong to up, sir, with their dropping rate in biennium 2123 I anticipate that we could save around 1.5 million in our order or P benefit. 653 01:39:09.060 --> 01:39:10.860 Son Le Hughes: Several reason 654 01:39:12.240 --> 01:39:29.820 Son Le Hughes: Why key why we have the CLI or decrease in the parade first reason is purple implement a one time re amortization up the Tier one and Tier two on frontage actuary liability. 655 01:39:31.980 --> 01:39:41.550 Son Le Hughes: With this re amortization, it gives us a significant decrease in the poor rate for biennium 2123 656 01:39:42.480 --> 01:40:04.740 Son Le Hughes: And then the second is member individual or Cal program gray director redirected men effective July 4 of 2020 a portion of 6% salary member contribution to the I aap will redirect it to the EMPLOYEES. EMPLOYEES pension stability account. 657 01:40:05.850 --> 01:40:06.570 Son Le Hughes: Is mean 658 01:40:08.010 --> 01:40:36.270 Son Le Hughes: The Senate bill 1049 required at any member who earn more than $2,500 per month, have a portion of their 6% of their IP contribution redirected into a new employees pensions stability account and apopo will do that money to pay for part or employees pension benefits at retirement. 659 01:40:37.650 --> 01:40:48.540 Son Le Hughes: So remember for tier one, tier two member who hired before August 29 2003 so right now the school district country to sit percent 660 01:40:49.470 --> 01:40:55.500 Son Le Hughes: To do tier one, tier two, actually, to all employees but for Tier one and Tier 661 01:40:56.130 --> 01:41:24.780 Son Le Hughes: Two 2.5% of employees salary is currently contribute to their a IP will start going today employees pension liability account and that remaining to a point 5% of their salary continue to go to a certain IP account and I'll fodder to to a officer anyone higher after August 28 of 2003 662 01:41:25.800 --> 01:41:33.240 Son Le Hughes: Out of 6% point seven 5% OF THIS WILL READ OUR read will continue to their pension. 663 01:41:33.960 --> 01:41:52.800 Son Le Hughes: Employees pension liability account so employees have the option to make up for that different I for sample and Tier two and 2.5% of my set percent redirect, I can make up for that. And I just need to walk to the business office and come up with that. 664 01:41:54.480 --> 01:42:05.100 Son Le Hughes: The last one is the employer right Relief Program is called throw the employee incentive fund last year when I did a presentation on the 665 01:42:05.100 --> 01:42:13.980 Son Le Hughes: Pearl pension I did mention about Russ having the opportunity to participate in to the employer incentive fund. 666 01:42:15.060 --> 01:42:31.170 Son Le Hughes: But at that time, we decided not to move forward currently in 2004 we did went out for the pole barn of 42 million. So we do have the site account for site account, but we did not continue what a second option. 667 01:42:32.400 --> 01:42:47.160 Son Le Hughes: Last but not least for the key reason is that tongue and asthma and perform and dad, we received not way but I'm the Pope or Oregon Oregon received in the 2019 so this reason. 668 01:42:48.570 --> 01:42:57.810 Son Le Hughes: Is contribute and support the decrease in pro rate for by any of 2020 2123 669 01:43:02.130 --> 01:43:04.440 Son Le Hughes: This one, Richard for your FYI. 670 01:43:05.640 --> 01:43:19.200 Regan Molatore: And after us just just doing a time check. I don't want to cut you off. But that was a 10 minutes and we still need time for questions. So if you're able just to highlight some of the more pertinent stuff that's wonderful. 671 01:43:19.500 --> 01:43:36.120 Son Le Hughes: Yes, so this one if do this either link that I provided into the memo. So if you open that link, you will see the Oregon Trail pump on here, you move down here, it will show you the last three years in write that. 672 01:43:37.380 --> 01:43:39.600 Son Le Hughes: Out tip provided to us. 673 01:43:41.490 --> 01:43:42.000 Son Le Hughes: And then 674 01:43:44.490 --> 01:43:54.030 Son Le Hughes: And then on deck right on deck length right here, it will show the laughter does send out to all their governmental agency is say 675 01:43:55.080 --> 01:44:03.120 Son Le Hughes: The money that we put into our tip will not asset 51.1 million. So what's the interest earned 676 01:44:03.480 --> 01:44:08.310 Son Le Hughes: Like for example, right now the current interest on our tip is 1% 677 01:44:08.580 --> 01:44:26.610 Son Le Hughes: Down 1% apply to debt limited station. So if we have 1 million or 2 million that we would like to invest somewhere. We only on the market rate and the market rate right now is a point 2% or less than that. So they say, Jeff for FYI only 678 01:44:27.930 --> 01:44:30.000 Son Le Hughes: That's it. Any question. 679 01:44:33.630 --> 01:44:37.020 Regan Molatore: Any questions from the board, Chelsea. It looks like you might have been wondering 680 01:44:37.650 --> 01:44:45.810 Chelsea King: Yeah, thank you for this report, and I think that the just a general question I have is, I'm thankful that the 681 01:44:47.370 --> 01:44:57.570 Chelsea King: We're receiving the funds that we and originally were promised with the I'm looking for the exact acronyms, but the Student Success act and measure 682 01:44:58.740 --> 01:45:10.380 Chelsea King: Them. It's not going to significantly change any of the moves that we're going to make for this coming year or in what way does that impact decisions that are being made in real time. 683 01:45:11.400 --> 01:45:19.590 Kathy Ludwig: So we're still only receiving the funds. Unfortunately, the reduced funds that we, the latest reduced funds. 684 01:45:20.100 --> 01:45:31.770 Kathy Ludwig: So we're not getting any more money. It's just that based on the September economic forecast the state is not coming back and saying we need to reduce even further. 685 01:45:32.460 --> 01:45:40.200 Kathy Ludwig: They're saying there's there's some stability that they hadn't projected the economic forecast is looking a little better than we thought. And you can keep 686 01:45:40.950 --> 01:45:48.030 Kathy Ludwig: The money that they did give to us, so we don't get the 7 million. We don't even get the four we're still at the 2.5 687 01:45:48.420 --> 01:45:57.210 Kathy Ludwig: But the good thing is we get to keep the 2.5 because there was a possibility that with this September forecast if things had been even more dire. 688 01:45:57.930 --> 01:46:10.050 Kathy Ludwig: The state could have come back and reduced our state school fund further and maybe even those grants further which when you're when you're this far into the school year and you've hired people you're looking at furlough days. 689 01:46:11.040 --> 01:46:20.550 Kathy Ludwig: As as typically one of the only recourses now maybe in CDs, that would mean tightening up even more. When you go to hybrid maybe not hiring back or something. 690 01:46:21.420 --> 01:46:30.960 Kathy Ludwig: As many folks, but it's really hard when the state makes revenue reductions and you're already started the school year. 691 01:46:31.320 --> 01:46:46.200 Kathy Ludwig: But that has happened in the past, and there was a possibility. It could have. So that's it's good news, but it's cautious. Good news, their words they're giving us the mind letting us keep the money they determined to give us after the May and June forecast. 692 01:46:49.980 --> 01:46:50.310 Regan Molatore: Christy 693 01:46:52.680 --> 01:47:08.280 Christy Thompson: Thank you. And thank you for the report and I'm probably the only one that needs clarification on this. So I apologize if I am on your memo. When you talk about the purse rates. Can you remind me that does that percentage refer to 694 01:47:09.540 --> 01:47:10.020 Christy Thompson: So when it 695 01:47:10.230 --> 01:47:22.020 Christy Thompson: Says tier one, tier two and you know biennium 2123 20.15% you remind me what that percent means 696 01:47:23.130 --> 01:47:23.730 Son Le Hughes: Yes. 697 01:47:25.590 --> 01:47:36.600 Son Le Hughes: So that percent. So when for the payroll when we do Payroll, Benefits. So we have salary every dollar that we pay to employees. 698 01:47:37.140 --> 01:47:50.760 Son Le Hughes: We have other Payroll, Benefits actual creation. Go with that dollar so for tier one, tier two to pull Oregon Kobo determine that in by any 1921 699 01:47:51.750 --> 01:48:16.380 Son Le Hughes: It costs is caught employer 24 point 25% out of that dollar to go to pro to contribute for that employees retire later and then beside at 24 or 25 we have Walker calm, we have order on liability insurance for employees. We have 700 01:48:16.710 --> 01:48:19.170 Son Le Hughes: 6% contribution we how 701 01:48:19.560 --> 01:48:37.050 Son Le Hughes: unfunded liability. So, so I would like to sit down with you and as playing the tone percent it add up to call all the payroll actual creation, and I think this will get one will be a good work section for for you and audible member as well. 702 01:48:39.690 --> 01:48:52.350 Kathy Ludwig: So director Thompson in in very simple a men's terms when we go to hire someone, and we we think about their salary. Dr. Hughes reminds us 703 01:48:52.740 --> 01:49:05.820 Kathy Ludwig: You're not just paying the person $75,000 for their salary. It actually is, you know, much more than that. By the time you pay in diapers and Workman's Comp and unemployment. 704 01:49:06.420 --> 01:49:18.900 Kathy Ludwig: That maybe that employee who we would have posted their, their salary at 75,000 really cost the district perhaps 100,000 or 120,000 once you add in those extra costs. 705 01:49:20.160 --> 01:49:20.790 Christy Thompson: Thank you. 706 01:49:27.120 --> 01:49:34.950 Regan Molatore: Question for me. Yeah, I was just gonna say, and I think I know the answer, and basically done but you allude to, you know, kind of an M. 707 01:49:35.370 --> 01:49:50.070 Regan Molatore: For the next biennium that we know we're probably facing a budget deficit and some sort of cut and with the constant changing economic landscape due to the virus itself and you know people's ability to work or not work and 708 01:49:51.540 --> 01:50:07.830 Regan Molatore: Do you anticipate getting that number to become a little bit more concrete, at what point in time next year. Are you thinking, February, March, April, May, June, like when, when do you think you might starting to put an estimate what that's going to be 709 01:50:08.850 --> 01:50:10.860 Son Le Hughes: Well, for the poor rate that's a 710 01:50:12.360 --> 01:50:21.720 Son Le Hughes: Number. Now that number won't change because it already purpose for us. I will start to make with Dr lark, which in 711 01:50:23.280 --> 01:50:27.060 Son Le Hughes: January, but we can, some even earlier than that. 712 01:50:27.270 --> 01:50:33.450 Regan Molatore: Well, and I was just curious. Like, when does the state typically start to release its information on 713 01:50:34.290 --> 01:50:39.330 Son Le Hughes: It, not it, not really release any information into late March or April. 714 01:50:39.780 --> 01:50:40.320 Son Le Hughes: April. 715 01:50:40.710 --> 01:50:58.260 Son Le Hughes: Yeah, so that's why last, last year we wait until the end. So even though, if I have a meeting early with the board member and Dr language, we still do how a lot of scenario play out. So option ABC and so on. 716 01:50:59.760 --> 01:51:01.830 Regan Molatore: You have your work cut out for you. It sounds like 717 01:51:03.360 --> 01:51:12.150 Regan Molatore: Thank you, Doctor. He's very much. I appreciate it. Any other questions. I'm not okay. All right, thank you lord thank you Dr. Hughes. 718 01:51:12.600 --> 01:51:13.560 Son Le Hughes: Anyway, everyone. 719 01:51:14.550 --> 01:51:26.520 Regan Molatore: Move on to our last agenda. I know we're not sorry not last second to last or and is we're moving on to the Department of teaching and learning and Dr Suisse. 720 01:51:27.870 --> 01:51:36.570 Regan Molatore: And Dr. So we think you have roughly 20 minutes to present on two separate objects and allow some time for questions. Okay. 721 01:51:36.780 --> 01:51:47.160 Barb Soisson: Well, the first one I think can be a record quick one. It's the annual division 22. And as you saw in the memo. This year it's abbreviated 722 01:51:48.420 --> 01:52:07.980 Barb Soisson: Because it's for the 2019 20 school year. We're always reporting on the prior one and the list was amended it this year and probably subsequently we submit that we have done this by November 15 we report by November 1 the focus areas during 723 01:52:10.110 --> 01:52:10.680 Barb Soisson: The state. 724 01:52:11.700 --> 01:52:25.650 Barb Soisson: base this on what really had to be focused on as we went into distance learning was diplomas credits and that means provision. So students could earn them providing instructional support for students with IPS 725 01:52:26.250 --> 01:52:30.930 Barb Soisson: Emerging bilingual students talented and gifted students counseling in student safety. 726 01:52:32.100 --> 01:52:46.260 Barb Soisson: Western Wilson Bill has complied in those areas, you know, with providing those those pieces and what we do, then after we are reporting this then submit the form 727 01:52:47.880 --> 01:52:49.800 Barb Soisson: And the minutes are then on our 728 01:52:51.330 --> 01:52:52.020 Barb Soisson: Website. 729 01:52:55.890 --> 01:53:01.950 Regan Molatore: All right. Do we have a motion. Is that that would be appropriate right burbs add our motion now. 730 01:53:02.400 --> 01:53:04.530 Barb Soisson: It's actually this is just a report. 731 01:53:05.520 --> 01:53:06.180 Regan Molatore: We don't have 732 01:53:06.660 --> 01:53:10.800 Barb Soisson: recorded in the Minutes, I see it's listed as an action item, but it's a 733 01:53:11.340 --> 01:53:16.050 Barb Soisson: That you know that we have met this were required to share the 734 01:53:17.070 --> 01:53:18.000 Regan Molatore: Office. All right. 735 01:53:19.350 --> 01:53:20.490 Barb Soisson: And Curtis, if you 736 01:53:20.520 --> 01:53:24.510 Regan Molatore: Could bring up the slides BB one sec, I think Chelsea's got a question as well. 737 01:53:25.320 --> 01:53:36.180 Chelsea King: Chair military just done. This would be the place where I would ask for a little relief on the time constraints, just because it is such an important discussion and we're doing so great. Staying on time and I appreciate 738 01:53:37.290 --> 01:53:43.140 Chelsea King: Driving the time portion, but I just wouldn't want it to be interrupted and curtailed. 739 01:53:44.940 --> 01:53:49.170 Regan Molatore: So on the digital curriculum that was your perfect. Okay, thank you. 740 01:53:52.110 --> 01:53:54.480 Regan Molatore: All right. Thank you, Barbara. We're ready for that now. 741 01:53:55.020 --> 01:53:55.530 Okay. 742 01:53:59.400 --> 01:54:00.270 Give me one second. 743 01:54:01.680 --> 01:54:03.270 Regan Molatore: Okay. Go a look 744 01:54:04.710 --> 01:54:05.820 Barb Soisson: At now in 745 01:54:05.970 --> 01:54:07.230 Looking at this 746 01:54:08.700 --> 01:54:24.540 Barb Soisson: Kind of reviewing what was was in the memo. One of the first things we want to emphasize is that this is an independent adoption. So, by no means is this saying that we are adopting this curriculum and going through the process that we usually do. 747 01:54:24.870 --> 01:54:33.900 Barb Soisson: Our curriculum processes usually take a full school year. We have groups of teachers representing every school in the subject area. We have 748 01:54:34.830 --> 01:54:40.800 Barb Soisson: Administrators, we have specialists or learning specialist and our teachers and it's a full group. 749 01:54:41.400 --> 01:54:52.290 Barb Soisson: And we start with instruction and we always look at instruction curriculum assessment together materials are then available for parents to look at. And that's, that's one key point. 750 01:54:52.710 --> 01:55:01.680 Barb Soisson: The other thing that I think is important here is that for our past adoptions. We have not adopted one curriculum in a subject area. 751 01:55:02.040 --> 01:55:10.230 Barb Soisson: We are finding increasingly that we don't find anything that's perfect that touches on the, the level of rigor. 752 01:55:10.590 --> 01:55:21.330 Barb Soisson: That provides access for all students that is culturally responsive. So some examples are in our social studies in our science curriculums in our 753 01:55:22.080 --> 01:55:34.290 Barb Soisson: Our math curriculum our K five math curriculum, which was several years ago, we have investigations as a core we have redbird as supplementary and then we have 754 01:55:34.530 --> 01:55:42.360 Barb Soisson: Some performance tasks to put it all together. So increasingly, that's a trend, not just our district, but most districts are taking 755 01:55:43.200 --> 01:55:47.610 Barb Soisson: This independent adoption is occurring because on September eighth the 756 01:55:48.120 --> 01:56:05.580 Barb Soisson: The state realized that with districts, mostly in the state of Oregon and beginning with comprehensive distance learning. There was a scramble to begin and to get online curriculums. And that meant that what was being 757 01:56:06.090 --> 01:56:17.370 Barb Soisson: Adopted needed to still adhere to all of the things that were set out which is grade level standards accessibility equity those basic pieces. 758 01:56:18.420 --> 01:56:31.050 Barb Soisson: The timeline here shows it in our district. We actually this is not a new discussion from the high school study and from our student success act, there was interest in an online curriculum. 759 01:56:31.650 --> 01:56:44.190 Barb Soisson: What we had started to find even prior to the pandemic was there is no perfect curriculum out there in online learning right now. That's the state of the art. A lot of the 760 01:56:44.430 --> 01:56:54.180 Barb Soisson: Research and the professional journals suggest that this is going to change. And it might be that is is the real catalyst for that change. 761 01:56:55.200 --> 01:57:07.440 Barb Soisson: That said, we looked for and a new went process that you see outlined on the slide here, starting with last actually it was last March, even though in 762 01:57:07.950 --> 01:57:28.830 Barb Soisson: December 2019 actually started looking at online program standards and what we were looking for. And that was for the idea of Western Wilson bill just having a an online option for students and also having hybrid or blended learning to go on for regular classroom. 763 01:57:29.910 --> 01:57:30.300 Work. 764 01:57:31.410 --> 01:57:44.610 Barb Soisson: Last March, we actually sat in the boardroom and saw a presentation for for feel ed and that was before we of course knew what we were going to be doing in the 765 01:57:46.590 --> 01:58:00.330 Barb Soisson: SCHOOL YEAR AND HOW THE SCHOOL YEAR WAS BEGINNING IT TAKES considerable time to once you get these curriculums to start to work with the intricacies of the platforms, the 766 01:58:00.960 --> 01:58:11.040 Barb Soisson: integrating them with your student information system and to work with their learning management systems so also the training the staff to use curriculum. 767 01:58:11.910 --> 01:58:20.100 Barb Soisson: So in looking at those pieces. The rationale overall for the fuel ed and the Florida Virtual 768 01:58:20.460 --> 01:58:31.020 Barb Soisson: Was based on the feedback that we collected and we collected pretty robust feedback at the primary middle and high school levels last spring that said that 769 01:58:31.440 --> 01:58:52.200 Barb Soisson: Students being able to have experiences connections with their teachers that having something that was simple. That was clear or every subject area. You didn't have to figure out how to navigate it. And that could lead to some independence was really, really critical. 770 01:58:53.520 --> 01:59:05.550 Barb Soisson: We also know though and want to be really clear that we are not saying that by going through this required process which is looking at using these programs. 771 01:59:05.760 --> 01:59:13.920 Barb Soisson: For this school year only, as opposed to an adoption with which goes for six or eight years that we are not saying that this defines learning 772 01:59:14.460 --> 01:59:25.260 Barb Soisson: It doesn't define learning in fuel ed or in Florida Virtual they're a little different. Those families who opted for why call this year. 773 01:59:25.710 --> 01:59:39.000 Barb Soisson: did so for a variety of reasons. There was the health and the not wanting to be on site in school at all. There also could have been some things about families, looking at their lives differently for the school year. 774 01:59:39.540 --> 01:59:50.940 Barb Soisson: There also was interested in self pacing and something that stands alone. So it was with the feedback that we received from the community that we looked at these pieces. 775 01:59:51.870 --> 02:00:03.330 Barb Soisson: Finally, want to be really clear with looking at our timeline that we look at it now is, though, when it says, and the very bottom systems in place for responding to needs for support. 776 02:00:03.870 --> 02:00:15.210 Barb Soisson: That we are not saying that the outcome of having these systems is meaning that we are satisfied or finished with working with them. 777 02:00:16.050 --> 02:00:27.090 Barb Soisson: There's two different sets of pieces that we're working with, with fuel add we acknowledge that, although they started working with fuel add 778 02:00:27.720 --> 02:00:44.820 Barb Soisson: Formally in July that because nationally, they have just been flooded with requests for districts. They're used in over 2000 school districts in the United States, they quite simply were not prepared for that level of use. 779 02:00:45.900 --> 02:00:59.040 Barb Soisson: And that means that we are daily working with the work and the implementation to work on those problems Curtis Nelson has a and the directors. 780 02:01:00.450 --> 02:01:07.770 Barb Soisson: In the online program have a daily meeting to troubleshoot and to look at and to resolve. 781 02:01:08.250 --> 02:01:15.750 Barb Soisson: Things that are going on. So, we will acknowledge that we know that the start and the delivery of the content. 782 02:01:15.960 --> 02:01:25.170 Barb Soisson: Because they simply had volume that they were not prepared to deal with is not all solved. So we have systems in place, but it's not resolved. 783 02:01:25.410 --> 02:01:35.310 Barb Soisson: With Florida Virtual it's a bit different. That was never meant to be the end all and be all and all teachers use that are the only thing that teachers used 784 02:01:35.910 --> 02:01:43.590 Barb Soisson: It was so that there would be a basis of foundation so that teachers. We're not trying to work with. 785 02:01:44.220 --> 02:01:52.020 Barb Soisson: Engaging with providing feedback doing the things that we have learned and that are outlined in comprehensive distance learning are so important. 786 02:01:52.470 --> 02:02:02.670 Barb Soisson: While they're trying to transcribe and transfer the curriculum that they have developed and our Western Wilson bill school district curriculum so that it works online. 787 02:02:04.020 --> 02:02:06.450 Barb Soisson: So with that said, we look at the next slide. 788 02:02:09.660 --> 02:02:28.200 Barb Soisson: And some of the things in deciding this that we are part of, of course, is we are with all things in in Clackamas county regional and state based on our roles in work groups that are looking at troubleshooting and working with issues in these programs. 789 02:02:29.580 --> 02:02:38.520 Barb Soisson: We consulted, there was participation prior to this in February last year that some district administrators attended 790 02:02:39.570 --> 02:02:55.140 Barb Soisson: In a Digital Learning Conference. We also have been using these national standards that and and equity and learning outcomes that have been vetted to come up with this. But again, we know that this is for this year. 791 02:02:56.190 --> 02:03:16.110 Barb Soisson: That rather than having everyone putting together parts of curriculum. There's a shell there and the word shell is used in the industry to talk about, you have a course and then you can within that course take things out. 792 02:03:17.100 --> 02:03:32.550 Barb Soisson: put things in hide things minimize things and that's being done, specifically in language arts and social studies because of the lack of cultural responsiveness in subject areas. 793 02:03:33.570 --> 02:03:51.360 Barb Soisson: There's more of it being done with the Florida Virtual curriculum that needs to be with the fuel ed curriculum. The work again with the fuel ed curriculum is some of the actual work with the platform and having it all. 794 02:03:52.440 --> 02:03:55.020 Barb Soisson: It all ready for families to access 795 02:03:56.280 --> 02:03:56.790 Barb Soisson: Next one. 796 02:04:00.540 --> 02:04:11.820 Barb Soisson: So when we research these we had a shortlist, and those are listed and they tend to be some of the larger ones used in the United States, there 797 02:04:12.150 --> 02:04:17.820 Barb Soisson: Are the CK 12 is one that we actually started looking at with our high school math adoption. 798 02:04:18.150 --> 02:04:31.170 Barb Soisson: And there's pieces of each of these that are very strong. I think our wish list is if we could find elements of them and maybe, you know, put them together. That might create the ideal piece. 799 02:04:31.980 --> 02:04:44.160 Barb Soisson: In looking at the ones we did go with fuel n had started developing in 1999 for virtual in 1997. So in terms of 800 02:04:44.490 --> 02:04:55.560 Barb Soisson: Having something that was usable. And in looking at equity we were looking at something that could be used and transferred online to 801 02:04:56.160 --> 02:05:07.890 Barb Soisson: A variety of households, a variety of students that was meant to be learned online because again we learned last spring that some of our curriculum just was not 802 02:05:08.700 --> 02:05:20.010 Barb Soisson: Translating that way, our partners at the end have looked at these other programs closely and actually some other districts might be using this schools PLP 803 02:05:20.430 --> 02:05:34.170 Barb Soisson: And one of the factors that they looked at also was was cost. And again, we looked more at the factors that you see on the right. And those come from the national standards. 804 02:05:35.340 --> 02:05:46.680 Barb Soisson: But in looking at that. Those are aspirational. So we certainly know that for example with supports and accessibility. There's pieces that 805 02:05:47.310 --> 02:05:59.880 Barb Soisson: Are there there's pieces that in all of these curriculums that could still be there. We opted for the two that had the most in these areas cultural responsiveness is another area. 806 02:06:02.520 --> 02:06:03.630 Barb Soisson: Go to the next slide. 807 02:06:05.490 --> 02:06:11.610 Barb Soisson: So for this in pendant adoption. The way it works is it actually 808 02:06:13.410 --> 02:06:26.460 Barb Soisson: Says that these are the legal requirements and that we opted for curriculum that maybe had some gaps in areas that we are prepared to fill 809 02:06:27.240 --> 02:06:35.520 Barb Soisson: We have done significant work in our district for eight years with developing for example in grades six through 12 810 02:06:36.330 --> 02:06:56.700 Barb Soisson: Social Studies and language arts units with diverse text. And so what is being encouraged is you can open it up and take out a unit and replace it with another unit. And again, this is mostly in language arts and social studies where that is being done. 811 02:06:57.930 --> 02:07:11.760 Barb Soisson: This form is what, just to be clear what will be submitted and it's asked that they be kept on file for each subject area with each curriculum. 812 02:07:12.870 --> 02:07:15.300 Barb Soisson: And it talks about the 813 02:07:16.530 --> 02:07:22.140 Barb Soisson: Just the four areas that we have to sign off on and if we go to the next slide. It will show 814 02:07:23.970 --> 02:07:33.660 Barb Soisson: So in reading these and in both of them, yes they align with bazell instructional materials, meaning content standards. 815 02:07:34.380 --> 02:07:41.640 Barb Soisson: In that we have questions in both curriculum areas, sometimes about the depth of knowledge. 816 02:07:42.360 --> 02:07:58.560 Barb Soisson: But again, that's a place where the reason that we look and started with these curriculums. And then also staff this with our own teachers because with fuel, Ed, you can have a much higher ratio of 817 02:07:58.980 --> 02:08:07.620 Barb Soisson: Students to teacher was so that teachers are manipulating and working with and making adjustments with the content. 818 02:08:08.640 --> 02:08:28.860 Barb Soisson: We realize that a lot of our families and our students are just beginning to experience that because of the delay in delivery with the materials, but that is how they work. You, you open it up and teachers can hide content and they can replace it with other content. 819 02:08:30.570 --> 02:08:42.690 Barb Soisson: In looking at the equity criteria. The reason that both programs, especially Florida Virtual received a two was because there's more subject areas. The Language Arts and Social Studies 820 02:08:43.050 --> 02:09:01.530 Barb Soisson: So if you look across at adhering to the criteria for equity. They tend to be stronger in the the math and science areas for that than they are in the language arts and social studies. So again, we want to be clear, because we do feel that 821 02:09:02.040 --> 02:09:10.830 Barb Soisson: Our teachers are working with that. We also know that we have to put some structures in place. So, for example, last week we had the first session. 822 02:09:11.040 --> 02:09:23.820 Barb Soisson: With middle level and we worked together with the teachers who are teaching fuel ed and the teachers who are working with Florida Virtual to look at what are the 823 02:09:24.270 --> 02:09:36.660 Barb Soisson: Four initiatives around equity in Oregon right now. And how are we going to be using these materials to teach to them and using our own material. 824 02:09:37.470 --> 02:09:48.630 Barb Soisson: To them, and we are doing the same thing in high school also want you to know that this summer and just we couldn't do our camps and we didn't do our 825 02:09:49.290 --> 02:10:02.100 Barb Soisson: Regular summer learning, but we did. We do have k five units anti-racism units that have been developed by instructional coordinators that are being embedded 826 02:10:02.430 --> 02:10:10.500 Barb Soisson: Both whether you are using fuel ed or whether you are working with Florida Virtual we have a new unit in 827 02:10:11.070 --> 02:10:22.230 Barb Soisson: Middle School, and that is going to be stamped and it's going to be in Language Arts and Social Studies. We thought that this year is especially important to have new units brought forward. 828 02:10:22.530 --> 02:10:28.380 Barb Soisson: And both of our high schools now are expanding their work with just mercy, which is something that 829 02:10:29.070 --> 02:10:39.570 Barb Soisson: Had been adopted previously but expanding the work that we can do with that. And especially be because it's a nonfiction work. So that's just an example. And I'm kind of going to quickly here. 830 02:10:39.990 --> 02:10:58.620 Barb Soisson: So the also one we want to be clear about is, they, they just they pass muster, but certainly don't want to say that everything is in place with accessibility with these materials or learning specialist or working with factors and working with students to work with them. 831 02:11:01.110 --> 02:11:01.920 Barb Soisson: Next slide. 832 02:11:04.620 --> 02:11:12.270 Barb Soisson: So our priorities for working with them for this school year. It takes quite a bit to get them in place and as is 833 02:11:13.020 --> 02:11:29.850 Barb Soisson: We believed and I was interested to see how actually are just started significantly earlier and some of our partner districts and getting this in place. And so, in looking at just the working with the platforms and 834 02:11:30.840 --> 02:11:38.070 Barb Soisson: You know having this here as this foundation for this year is all that this independent adoption is asking for 835 02:11:39.420 --> 02:11:52.740 Barb Soisson: But these are our priorities that we have to continue the work with families for actually accessing the content and using the platforms. And again, I really want to point out the 836 02:11:53.490 --> 02:11:58.860 Barb Soisson: Contributions of curse Nelson and all of our IT staff and 837 02:11:59.670 --> 02:12:09.990 Barb Soisson: Jewels. Luke Perry and documented Gomez and Becca chuck in work the directors and the online program in working with and just troubleshooting dealing with this. 838 02:12:10.560 --> 02:12:19.050 Barb Soisson: And again, the significant substitution and addition of content that's ongoing work. We can't just say, yes, you can do that and work with it once. 839 02:12:19.800 --> 02:12:30.810 Barb Soisson: Schools are set up to work collaboratively. This year we are working collaboratively in these areas across the white cup program and the CEO hybrid 840 02:12:32.910 --> 02:12:38.010 Barb Soisson: Meeting time this year is all used for this collaborative planning and and learning. 841 02:12:38.550 --> 02:12:45.720 Barb Soisson: We are finding that we are especially needing to work with supporting our younger students in working with these 842 02:12:46.170 --> 02:12:59.370 Barb Soisson: And again, just the bringing forward the pieces consistently around speaking to what Westland Wilson build curriculum is and how this fits in. So, in 843 02:12:59.820 --> 02:13:09.930 Barb Soisson: Closing before questions. I think the best way to to look at this would be that we are asking for this independent adoption to fit in to 844 02:13:10.500 --> 02:13:25.200 Barb Soisson: wessling Wilson bill teaching and learning in subject areas because it is not the real the usual means for adopting materials and we have other things in place that we can use to 845 02:13:26.430 --> 02:13:31.800 Barb Soisson: To not just supplement curriculum, but to work with the instructional practices. 846 02:13:36.480 --> 02:13:38.010 Barb Soisson: And questions and 847 02:13:39.120 --> 02:13:39.600 Kelly Douglas: Thoughts 848 02:13:42.360 --> 02:13:48.300 Regan Molatore: And if we could start like with a motion on this one. That would be helpful. And then we can do discussion. 849 02:13:50.850 --> 02:14:02.760 Ginger Fitch: We get clarification. I don't think this came with a memo about what we are moving for what, what is the motion that you're looking for. 850 02:14:04.080 --> 02:14:19.290 Barb Soisson: As it. I think it described it in the beginning that an adoption requires and approval and this is a process and independent adoption process where you will approve you're approving the use of this for the 851 02:14:21.270 --> 02:14:21.870 Barb Soisson: School year 852 02:14:23.490 --> 02:14:34.260 Regan Molatore: So, ginger, essentially we put the this curriculum into place and then subsequently the state then required districts to 853 02:14:35.130 --> 02:14:51.270 Regan Molatore: Have school boards adopt the curriculum. So even though we have put these in place, we now have to go through the just the process of a formal adoption so emotion would be that we adopt the use of fuel ed and Florida Virtual 854 02:14:52.440 --> 02:15:01.380 Regan Molatore: And then we can ask our questions or have the board discussion if we have emotion or tonight, but it's already in place. So it's a little bit tough. 855 02:15:02.190 --> 02:15:14.910 Ginger Fitch: It can, I guess that's, yeah. Jen, is the motion to adopted as a online curriculum or is it to adopted as an online curriculum for this school year. 856 02:15:16.710 --> 02:15:25.230 Barb Soisson: And that's why I would appreciate that question. We did not Dr. Ludwig did not recommend it and think about 857 02:15:25.860 --> 02:15:36.420 Barb Soisson: Having us ask us to bring this forward for an adoption, because we aren't considering it a formal adoption, we're considering it. What we're using 858 02:15:36.960 --> 02:15:48.810 Barb Soisson: As a base for online for the situation in CDO hybrid or online learning. So we're asking for it to be used. 859 02:15:49.140 --> 02:16:01.350 Barb Soisson: The word adopt I understand kind of throws us off, off and that's why in starting to explain. And I said, you know, this is not something that we didn't come to you and ask you to adopt because we would have done that, if we were 860 02:16:01.980 --> 02:16:12.240 Barb Soisson: Knowing that we were planning to use this and make this something that we were saying this is our curriculum for mathematics. This is our curriculum for 861 02:16:12.600 --> 02:16:24.660 Barb Soisson: It's a very different process and one that I described earlier, that takes us you know quite, quite a significant amount of time and it involves all of our teachers and it is different business. 862 02:16:24.840 --> 02:16:36.870 Regan Molatore: I think, for our purposes tonight. I think the answer is that we're not disregarding any other curriculum. We currently use you're looking to add this to our curriculum for the present. 863 02:16:38.070 --> 02:16:38.670 Regan Molatore: School year 864 02:16:38.730 --> 02:16:50.790 Kathy Ludwig: Yeah, that's, that's the key here. Thank you, Director fish for helping us clarifying for viewers at home. We already have an adopted math curriculum. We already have adopted language arts health curriculum. As you know, last year. 865 02:16:51.120 --> 02:17:05.160 Kathy Ludwig: We've gone through those processes there in place for six to eight years, we're in this unique circumstance where we've added some digital curriculum that families and students will be using because of the online nature. 866 02:17:06.390 --> 02:17:22.500 Kathy Ludwig: that's unique to digital curriculum. It's hard to replicate Lucy caulkins language arts into an online platform so there there is these two curriculums have those standards embedded within them. This is just for one year. 867 02:17:23.670 --> 02:17:35.550 Kathy Ludwig: And so we did not need to go through this whole process, except that the state on September 8 decided that it was important to actually slow down and do this. 868 02:17:36.060 --> 02:17:47.100 Kathy Ludwig: Because there were some decisions being made pretty quickly and and perhaps with some curriculum that warrior subpar and did not meet the muster. 869 02:17:47.550 --> 02:17:59.610 Kathy Ludwig: That Dr. Boyce, and has described and some of that were decisions districts had to make very quickly due to economics and getting things uploaded pretty fast. And there's some regret right now with that. 870 02:18:00.870 --> 02:18:17.760 Kathy Ludwig: So there was some coming back to districts and saying, please make sure you're only using a digital curriculum that meets the standards which are which ours did and we made sure of that in our, in our own setting. So in terms of what are you looking now for emotion language for emotion. 871 02:18:19.140 --> 02:18:23.010 Christy Thompson: I wondering, can we say we approve the use 872 02:18:24.060 --> 02:18:28.290 Christy Thompson: Of Florida Virtual and 873 02:18:30.000 --> 02:18:37.860 Christy Thompson: The fuel, Ed, if we if we said it like that versus adopt, but we approve the use, is that a better use of her 874 02:18:41.310 --> 02:18:43.080 Kathy Ludwig: Yeah, he's a hand. 875 02:18:44.130 --> 02:18:44.640 Regan Molatore: Chelsea. 876 02:18:45.690 --> 02:18:51.330 Chelsea King: Um, yeah, I don't know if that was a formal motion. So I'll take a go at this I 877 02:18:52.260 --> 02:19:03.150 Chelsea King: I recognize that this is something that's already in place and that there was a lot of work that went into this prior to the state mandating this conversation to occur. So I respect that and 878 02:19:03.600 --> 02:19:14.640 Chelsea King: At the same time, I'm thankful that we have the opportunity to have a discussion about it and to further examine it for me, it would be useful to 879 02:19:15.690 --> 02:19:22.860 Chelsea King: Tease apart fuel ed and Florida Virtual and so I'm willing to make a motion to get discussion going. 880 02:19:23.490 --> 02:19:40.440 Chelsea King: And I'm comfortable with just starting with Florida Virtual and that just is easier for me to just take them because they're two separate entities. So I will move that we adopt Florida Virtual or the NFL vs for the 2020 2021 academic year. 881 02:19:46.050 --> 02:19:46.710 Regan Molatore: Second, 882 02:19:49.980 --> 02:19:50.370 Christy Thompson: I'll second. 883 02:19:51.900 --> 02:19:56.430 Regan Molatore: Okay. It's been moved and seconded and discussion. 884 02:20:00.210 --> 02:20:02.730 Chelsea King: On I'll go ahead and 885 02:20:04.890 --> 02:20:07.620 Chelsea King: Thank you so much for this information and 886 02:20:07.980 --> 02:20:11.310 Chelsea King: You know, I already said kind of my piece about how I know it's in place and 887 02:20:12.480 --> 02:20:27.900 Chelsea King: You know it's currently being used in a lot of investment went into putting it into place and I respect that and really respect. Dr. Ludwig and Dr Swanson and your whole team and all the work that you've done. I do have concerns that I would like to voice about Florida Virtual 888 02:20:29.130 --> 02:20:34.740 Chelsea King: I have concerns about whether or not this curriculum meets our standards that are particular to our district. 889 02:20:35.130 --> 02:20:44.460 Chelsea King: And particularly, just this love, you know, a very high level of academic rigor and the fostering of that teacher, student relationship. I'm 890 02:20:45.120 --> 02:20:53.910 Chelsea King: Primarily that I think I'm concerned about whether or not this is a useful tool to our students and our teachers. I'm wondering if our teachers are using it and loving it. 891 02:20:54.540 --> 02:21:11.430 Chelsea King: I'm wondering if it's engaging our students and I recognize her spending just a short period of time using it and and also I recognize that nothing. No system is perfect. And this may have been the best choice out of that list of, you know, vendors 892 02:21:13.140 --> 02:21:20.700 Chelsea King: But I also recognize. Sometimes the best intentions and the best decisions we make with information we have, at a certain time. 893 02:21:21.090 --> 02:21:31.200 Chelsea King: To always yield the outcome that we think it's going to yield. And so that's what I'm curious about. Now that we've been implementing it for some time, you know, what is the actual impact. 894 02:21:31.800 --> 02:21:45.570 Chelsea King: And I also have a concern that the two areas that Florida Virtual seems to be the weakest are around cultural responsiveness and supports for students on IPS and ELD and 895 02:21:46.080 --> 02:21:58.320 Chelsea King: And six years on the board. I know those two areas to be of utmost important to our work and areas where we've worked very hard to move the dial. And so to adopt and implement 896 02:21:58.920 --> 02:22:08.490 Chelsea King: Florida Virtual when that's their weak side I have concerns about that. I also have concerns about the significant contribution of time by 897 02:22:09.600 --> 02:22:14.580 Chelsea King: Our staff and just the sheer amount of effort that they put into making this work. 898 02:22:15.600 --> 02:22:25.200 Chelsea King: Makes me wonder is it the best use of our money or if on the ground implementation that our teachers are having to put in 899 02:22:25.530 --> 02:22:40.290 Chelsea King: And the level of engagement from our students if it would make more sense to spend that time and money on our own curriculum and our own professional development and meeting our own standards and I say this from a place of just 900 02:22:41.280 --> 02:22:54.240 Chelsea King: You know, complete respect for our district and our teachers and our administrators and what you're capable of and what you deliver on your own. And so I'm I'm wary of Florida Virtual 901 02:22:55.110 --> 02:23:03.840 Chelsea King: I see. I don't know if teachers and students are finding it a useful tool or if there be a better place to use our time and money. 902 02:23:04.500 --> 02:23:11.550 Chelsea King: So those are those are my concerns that I guess you know if I was to put that into a question I would wonder 903 02:23:12.210 --> 02:23:21.840 Chelsea King: You know, I heard you say that the Language Arts and Social Studies curriculum are areas where you know those were we're seeing the greatest weakness with cultural responsiveness. 904 02:23:22.530 --> 02:23:30.120 Chelsea King: So I become curious. I think about two things. One is, do is Florida Virtual all or nothing situation. 905 02:23:30.810 --> 02:23:38.040 Chelsea King: Is it a menu option. Can we get an all a cart with math and science or do we have to take the whole package. So I became curious about that. 906 02:23:38.550 --> 02:23:45.930 Chelsea King: And then I also become curious about, even though I just made that motion to generate some movement on a discussion. 907 02:23:46.230 --> 02:24:02.670 Chelsea King: And I don't love adopting it for an entire academic year, particularly because of the unique circumstances in which the decision had to be made and I do wonder if it's possible to do something more month by month with some sort of a simultaneous 908 02:24:03.960 --> 02:24:12.330 Chelsea King: Advisory Committee being ran by teachers so we can really hear from teachers and students if if they're using the tool if it's working for them or not. 909 02:24:13.260 --> 02:24:25.950 Chelsea King: And does it behoove us to instead be lifting our brick and mortar curriculum up onto an online platform instead. So those would be my two primary wanderings I think based off of those concerns that I express 910 02:24:27.210 --> 02:24:36.900 Barb Soisson: So in starting with the fostering student teacher relationships. I think one thing that we know is that that doesn't come from a curriculum. 911 02:24:37.590 --> 02:24:50.100 Barb Soisson: It comes from looking at instruction with curriculum and the intent behind this was if teachers are spending so much of their time. 912 02:24:50.550 --> 02:25:02.760 Barb Soisson: Transferring and working with trying to make what was created to be used in a live setting as opposed to making and finding materials. 913 02:25:03.120 --> 02:25:18.420 Barb Soisson: That that was the idea that if they had that to us, not necessarily instead of but for some parts that that would be a starting place Payless. We did find of the 914 02:25:18.900 --> 02:25:33.450 Barb Soisson: curriculums that are available now in the areas, especially of accessibility and cultural responsiveness. It did me better than the others. And that's, I think, indicative of where 915 02:25:34.020 --> 02:25:42.570 Barb Soisson: These curriculums are with looking again at talking about just as important point about, is it a useful tool. 916 02:25:43.230 --> 02:25:54.120 Barb Soisson: So to say that we trust most our teachers professional decision making and how we work with teaching and learning and developing that 917 02:25:54.780 --> 02:25:59.430 Barb Soisson: And if we gave them something to draw from as opposed to 918 02:26:00.030 --> 02:26:11.040 Barb Soisson: What was happening where they were having to go and just find what am I going to use for this. How am I going to make this fit online. And then the other piece we were finding was 919 02:26:11.490 --> 02:26:18.360 Barb Soisson: Things just the form that they were in somewhere in PDFs, which is problematic than for 920 02:26:18.960 --> 02:26:27.780 Barb Soisson: Families that you know can't have access to printing that we ran into lots of how do you have something that's new to us like that. 921 02:26:28.620 --> 02:26:38.880 Barb Soisson: If we were to do a month by month. It takes two months just to actually get something you know in place and familiar and up and running and what 922 02:26:39.240 --> 02:26:54.540 Barb Soisson: We know right now, even in talking about what we're doing with Language Arts and Social Studies, especially with feel Ed. That's just beginning as our, our teachers are now having access to the curriculum. So it could be 923 02:26:56.220 --> 02:27:04.020 Barb Soisson: Challenging for teachers to have to be either starting with something else. We are saying that 924 02:27:04.710 --> 02:27:18.810 Barb Soisson: This is like most tools you use it more for some parts than for others. We also have found that because we have more collaboration. It's not everyone doing something separately. 925 02:27:19.080 --> 02:27:30.900 Barb Soisson: But we do have teachers working together across subject areas, especially in grade 612 to look at what would it be useful to us from this and to draw from so that 926 02:27:31.410 --> 02:27:43.410 Barb Soisson: The purpose was to have teachers, being able to focus on the feedback with students, the actual kinds of activities that they developed to work with them. 927 02:27:43.740 --> 02:27:53.820 Barb Soisson: And the actual it takes quite a bit for a teacher to make a zoom and to be doing that so that that works with students. That's the engagement part and 928 02:27:54.150 --> 02:28:05.550 Barb Soisson: But if they're looking at how am I going to find something that has these basic ideas that students need for this discussion listed doing both. 929 02:28:05.970 --> 02:28:17.760 Barb Soisson: In consult with our teachers is what seemed overwhelming. The other thing we want you to know as we again are not we're not looking to adopt this 930 02:28:18.390 --> 02:28:30.000 Barb Soisson: I don't think any of us would say that it is something that would make it as a full adoption and that we're not looking for that anyway for something for our 931 02:28:30.480 --> 02:28:34.560 Barb Soisson: ongoing learning, but because it is standards aligned 932 02:28:35.190 --> 02:28:41.520 Barb Soisson: And we know that a lot of those standards are things that we can do with this with critical thinking. 933 02:28:41.760 --> 02:28:52.350 Barb Soisson: With analysis, it gives you the pieces to work with to do those things. It doesn't mean that the curriculum ever tells you to do those things. When we're in school. 934 02:28:52.980 --> 02:29:03.480 Barb Soisson: We have textbooks on the shelves that certainly we would not say in math or in social studies or in science, define what the learning is 935 02:29:03.540 --> 02:29:18.720 Barb Soisson: In that class, but it's are they tools that allow teachers to draw from them and do that learning. We also we have made objections to some content that is in Florida Virtual and they removed it. 936 02:29:19.740 --> 02:29:29.790 Barb Soisson: And we are not using it without being we hope critical consumers have it as we as we use it. 937 02:29:35.760 --> 02:29:42.510 Kathy Ludwig: Yeah. Could I just add um I think barb described it so thoroughly and if I could just summarize 938 02:29:43.380 --> 02:29:52.350 Kathy Ludwig: Two pieces that a feedback that we heard in the spring, one from teachers with distance learning is the extraordinary amount of time. 939 02:29:52.680 --> 02:30:03.330 Kathy Ludwig: That they were spending making videos in their bedrooms and garages at night, just to be able to upload the next day extraordinary amount of time creating 940 02:30:03.870 --> 02:30:12.000 Kathy Ludwig: Practice sheets, because their typical curriculum wasn't built for an online platform. It was built to use in person. 941 02:30:12.540 --> 02:30:23.280 Kathy Ludwig: And they were spending hours manipulating that into an online version doing it very differently. Finding challenge collaborating around that. 942 02:30:24.090 --> 02:30:36.720 Kathy Ludwig: And this request for if I already knew that a video was made. Could I use that video. But then I'll bring the rigor to it. I'll bring the discussion to it that frees up the teacher. 943 02:30:37.530 --> 02:30:47.400 Kathy Ludwig: To bring the learning with the curriculum so that was one of our quests to say how could we save teachers time becoming less 944 02:30:47.970 --> 02:31:05.010 Kathy Ludwig: Film producers of all these videos and here we've given you something. Now, you pick and choose and Florida Virtual is designed to be much more open like a shell that Dr. Seuss and described and Florida Virtual allows you to take more things apart. 945 02:31:06.030 --> 02:31:16.170 Kathy Ludwig: Not use a whole unit add things in it and manipulate it much more than fuel left which is integrated with so many other components and serves more as a standalone 946 02:31:16.920 --> 02:31:27.540 Kathy Ludwig: So that appealed to us that teachers as they got to know what was available in Florida Virtual could do exactly that. That they could bring their best professional critique. 947 02:31:28.050 --> 02:31:36.750 Kathy Ludwig: And manipulation to what we would say is a solid curriculum, the standards are there. But then how do you make it even better. 948 02:31:37.560 --> 02:31:45.930 Kathy Ludwig: What we also heard from parents. The second piece was whatever you do in this in the fall, if we're in, you know, distance learning again. 949 02:31:46.650 --> 02:31:58.770 Kathy Ludwig: Please have some similarity across classrooms and levels because with a family with multiple children could not juggle so many different platforms acronyms. 950 02:31:59.640 --> 02:32:04.320 Kathy Ludwig: If everybody created their own and they were finding and experiencing some of that. 951 02:32:04.770 --> 02:32:17.310 Kathy Ludwig: So by giving one digital curriculum to use a base allowed all the families to say, okay, we just have to learn Florida Virtual and from there. My teacher could then adapt and adjust 952 02:32:18.060 --> 02:32:29.520 Kathy Ludwig: But I'm not getting multiple different links and resources to so many different things. It's making it hard for a parent. So it had a sense of some alignment to it. 953 02:32:29.940 --> 02:32:38.610 Kathy Ludwig: But our choice of Florida Virtual for all the reasons, Doctor. So I said mentioned in terms of the best that was out there was also its ability to be unpacked 954 02:32:39.060 --> 02:32:51.990 Kathy Ludwig: And repacked in a way that teachers feel as that rigor. The first four weeks in, we're just letting people kind of figure out how does Florida Virtual work. You have to start with it in order to know how to manipulate it. 955 02:32:53.040 --> 02:33:02.940 Kathy Ludwig: It's just like any good recipe you first make a cake. The first few times and you get good at making it and then you know how to make a better cake and a different cake and as swap out ingredients. 956 02:33:03.390 --> 02:33:08.250 Kathy Ludwig: And so there's a little bit of an insistence on having some fidelity with 957 02:33:08.760 --> 02:33:18.480 Kathy Ludwig: Getting students and teachers and families acclimated to how Florida Virtual functions so that then as a teacher begins to work with it and change it. 958 02:33:18.930 --> 02:33:30.030 Kathy Ludwig: There's understanding within the family with the student and with everyone involved around what we're referencing and how we're using it and I'm going to turn it over to Dr. Prior well 959 02:33:31.260 --> 02:33:43.080 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): Thank you. Catherine, you actually hit upon some of the key points that I just wanted to first affirm our Vice Chairs questions, but I think their questions that we talk about every day as we think about how to do this work better. They're really good questions. 960 02:33:43.410 --> 02:33:55.560 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): And it's also just reminds me that the beloved curriculums that we want to go back to, we asked the same questions, two months into those curriculums. Do you know we had to really learn how to do them well and 961 02:33:56.280 --> 02:33:58.650 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): And how to help students access 962 02:33:59.010 --> 02:34:12.210 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): them really well. But the one thing I wanted to add to what Kathy was saying is, you know, as you know, we're also very hopeful that we can participate in the K three exemption as we move forward this year. And so, you know, as we kind of track the metrics. 963 02:34:12.810 --> 02:34:16.860 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): We're still planning to be successful in a transition like that. And we know that 964 02:34:17.190 --> 02:34:23.070 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): When if we get to a point where kindergarten through third graders are in school one day and then at home, the second day 965 02:34:23.310 --> 02:34:34.020 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): That teachers are going to be with those students, which students every day and they won't have the same capacity to offer guidance and feedback to the students who are at home while they're with students at school. 966 02:34:34.320 --> 02:34:44.940 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): And so, as Dr level. We've been saying we want to invest enough time where students and families know how for to virtual works. They can grow in their independence and then because you can imagine. 967 02:34:45.240 --> 02:34:55.590 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): At teacher which students at school and living into our typical curriculums and even extending that learning sub child might take home a writing assignment or a math assignment. 968 02:34:55.980 --> 02:35:02.280 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): But when they finish it instead of just sort of being stuck and not knowing what to do. Now they can flow smoothly into 969 02:35:02.490 --> 02:35:11.040 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): The components of for to virtual and continue to work until they come back to school. The following day. So we see it being a tool that will allow us to 970 02:35:11.970 --> 02:35:20.070 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): To extend learning during the hybrid K three exemption which students aren't at school each day. And I just want to reiterate 971 02:35:20.460 --> 02:35:28.620 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): Regardless of our curriculum as dr Laguna was saying, teachers, bring the rigor to it and we are steeped in the learning curve right now and 972 02:35:28.920 --> 02:35:40.470 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): One thing that I've learned by working in a district that takes bold moves, is that every time you make a big change. There's a lot of pushback to sort of step back, just as you're about to reap the results of it. And I think that by sort of 973 02:35:40.710 --> 02:35:51.420 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): Being really consistent in maintaining what we said we're going to work on will will allow the system to get smoother, more efficient, more in line with student needs each day. 974 02:35:52.140 --> 02:35:59.430 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): So I would encourage us to kind of stick with the the steep learning curve for now because there are some some benefits that will be gained. 975 02:35:59.670 --> 02:36:07.320 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): And our teachers are going to get better. They're going to keep bringing value there already. I can tell you now I have many instances in primary where they're bringing 976 02:36:08.010 --> 02:36:18.960 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): Lucy caulkins into the work they're bringing investigations right alongside the Florida Virtual and we're getting better at it being seamless each day. So thank you for that opportunity. 977 02:36:20.100 --> 02:36:31.350 Barb Soisson: And vice chair King, I just want to add. We didn't answer one of your great questions. And we're going to, I wrote them down. We're going to keep these questions in front of us. Because I think they'll be helpful as we continue to 978 02:36:31.770 --> 02:36:45.930 Barb Soisson: To work with this and that was the can we do an all a cart or is it all or nothing. And one of the things we quickly LEARNED BOTH IN consult with others and not just in the Portland metro area, but also across the state was 979 02:36:46.770 --> 02:36:49.290 Barb Soisson: These programs kind of fall into categories we also 980 02:36:49.350 --> 02:37:01.890 Barb Soisson: found this out from the conference, the national conference and that CK 12, for example, is one that when we spent a year on our high school math adoption our teachers were really interested in it. 981 02:37:02.310 --> 02:37:14.130 Barb Soisson: Then we actually have someone who has worked extensively with online curriculums who explained to us that it would take a school year. 982 02:37:15.120 --> 02:37:17.340 Barb Soisson: Another school district, a very large 983 02:37:18.120 --> 02:37:31.440 Barb Soisson: Suburban school district has been doing that with some of my math curriculums. And they have found that in these kind of our current ones. It takes a year to put together the right dishes and to get it, you know, to 984 02:37:31.860 --> 02:37:40.020 Barb Soisson: To blend and we know that we don't want to use a losing year of learning. So we found that you either have just these 985 02:37:40.290 --> 02:37:51.180 Barb Soisson: Grab and Go ones that you actually need to then have something much more significant in place than teachers, while they're teaching full time you'd need 986 02:37:51.720 --> 02:38:07.860 Barb Soisson: A lead time of, you know, a year or some things to put it together before they used it and that's why we went with one of the comprehensive ones that have its own problems. So that was the reason that we actually landed on that. 987 02:38:09.150 --> 02:38:15.870 Barb Soisson: Rather than going with something where we could just grab and go, and we think also that you know it's it's really 988 02:38:17.250 --> 02:38:27.630 Barb Soisson: Understandable that our teachers have had some of the things that I think you have heard voiced. And that's because these other 989 02:38:27.750 --> 02:38:29.010 Barb Soisson: Processes that we 990 02:38:29.010 --> 02:38:40.080 Barb Soisson: Do you know are much more extensive and we have problems still when we spend this time landing on the one thing that will define it for that subject area. 991 02:38:40.350 --> 02:38:45.150 Barb Soisson: So if we expected to use Florida Virtual asking where it's used 992 02:38:45.450 --> 02:39:00.000 Barb Soisson: There are some areas where it's used more than others. There are grade levels where it's used more than others. When we look over all comprehensively is, is it something that we can draw from, that's what led us to say, we could we could do it for this year. 993 02:39:01.980 --> 02:39:03.900 Regan Molatore: And ginger question. 994 02:39:05.460 --> 02:39:21.630 Ginger Fitch: Yeah, can we just do an agenda check to. I know that you have people here the bond. Are we, is that important for us to move forward in this meeting or we at a point where we decide not to. I'm not complaining. I'm just doing a check. 995 02:39:25.080 --> 02:39:25.620 Regan Molatore: I'm 996 02:39:27.900 --> 02:39:28.830 Regan Molatore: Took a question. 997 02:39:29.790 --> 02:39:32.310 Ginger Fitch: But I'm gonna ask my questions on this way, your consumer 998 02:39:32.670 --> 02:39:33.630 Regan Molatore: Let me thank you 999 02:39:35.250 --> 02:39:38.970 Ginger Fitch: So anything. My wondering regarding 1000 02:39:41.850 --> 02:39:44.940 Ginger Fitch: Approval of the use of these is 1001 02:39:46.290 --> 02:39:47.400 Ginger Fitch: And then hearing 1002 02:39:48.540 --> 02:39:52.770 Ginger Fitch: Dr. Ludwig and Dr Swanson and Dr. Prior is 1003 02:39:56.550 --> 02:40:07.590 Ginger Fitch: Was our choices of either. And right now we're talking about for to virtual based on assumptions that haven't played out to be accurate. 1004 02:40:08.190 --> 02:40:20.880 Ginger Fitch: And while I understand what is particularly Dr prior was saying is like when a learning curve. We're almost there. Hold on. This is how we would see a plane out during a hybrid 1005 02:40:22.470 --> 02:40:23.130 Ginger Fitch: Um, 1006 02:40:24.570 --> 02:40:42.000 Ginger Fitch: When do we know and what would happen for us to know those assumptions that we made going in having borne out like we we made assumptions based on things that happened in the spring, but we're in a really different place now so 1007 02:40:43.920 --> 02:40:44.430 Ginger Fitch: What 1008 02:40:46.140 --> 02:40:51.540 Ginger Fitch: Have we already resolved those or have things played out the way that we thought they would 1009 02:40:56.610 --> 02:40:57.150 Barb Soisson: One. 1010 02:40:57.180 --> 02:41:01.320 Barb Soisson: First thing. And again, it's too early in the school year. Um, 1011 02:41:01.980 --> 02:41:03.780 Barb Soisson: We are seeing that 1012 02:41:04.830 --> 02:41:15.870 Barb Soisson: students are learning to learn virtually and that's a, that's a process. So whether we will need to use as much of the things that are 1013 02:41:17.250 --> 02:41:26.850 Barb Soisson: Prepared for online and especially once we're in hybrid. No, we will not, you know, that we assumed that we did. Assume that as 1014 02:41:27.210 --> 02:41:38.700 Barb Soisson: Children work with this longer that they will become more used to using these platforms. And actually, there were some some things that came out nationally last spring that 1015 02:41:39.060 --> 02:41:43.740 Barb Soisson: You know that predicted that. And that's been something that's been said about online learning. 1016 02:41:44.010 --> 02:41:53.310 Barb Soisson: That when you moved online learning, you actually have to teach students how to learn online. And so, as students are doing that and learning how to interact 1017 02:41:53.520 --> 02:42:03.060 Barb Soisson: And teachers are finding more ways to engage check in and what are the things that support them, you know, again, it's 1018 02:42:03.900 --> 02:42:16.770 Barb Soisson: We see we foresee that we will probably be using more of a hybrid of this and our regular curriculum and does that mean that we shouldn't 1019 02:42:17.580 --> 02:42:41.220 Barb Soisson: Have it at all. It's well that's what Dr. Ludwig was saying is, where do we want to ask our teachers to put their time if they have something that they can draw from, but they draw from it less than less. We don't look at that as a reason not to have something that they used partially 1020 02:42:43.020 --> 02:42:59.130 Barb Soisson: If we opted not to to use it at all. That would go back to I don't think it would be an assumption to say that everyone has a fully consistent way of finding presenting 1021 02:42:59.910 --> 02:43:11.520 Barb Soisson: Preparing on a daily basis, especially across subject areas. So, but I think that's it. That the we did assume that we would get better at this. 1022 02:43:13.020 --> 02:43:15.330 Barb Soisson: And that's playing out 1023 02:43:19.650 --> 02:43:23.070 Chelsea King: It may follow up on that question, I'm 1024 02:43:23.460 --> 02:43:29.130 Kathy Ludwig: Good. I'm going to actually direct us to chair mala tour we have guests who 1025 02:43:30.330 --> 02:43:47.220 Kathy Ludwig: WERE SCHEDULED TO PRESENT about I think 45 minutes ago. And would it be okay with you, Chair monitor if we just pause this discussion here the presentation from our presenters who then need to go for the evening and then come back to this one with our staff who are able to stay late 1026 02:43:48.330 --> 02:43:48.930 Kathy Ludwig: Is that 1027 02:43:49.560 --> 02:43:49.980 Barb Soisson: Will get 1028 02:43:50.160 --> 02:44:02.760 Regan Molatore: You that makes a lot of sense. So we will pause this discussion will return to it momentarily, and we will then move on to Mr Douglas and he's consultants who can 1029 02:44:03.930 --> 02:44:10.140 Regan Molatore: Walk us through site plans for a couple of projects, hopefully kind of quickly. 1030 02:44:11.700 --> 02:44:12.090 Yeah. 1031 02:44:13.350 --> 02:44:17.700 Remo Douglas: Thank you share good evening board this evening. We'll get to hear from the designers of 1032 02:44:17.700 --> 02:44:32.010 Remo Douglas: Two of the largest projects from the 19 capital bond program. I apologize in advance presentation probably run a little longer than noted, but I expect the presentations will demonstrate the scale and the quality of the work underway. 1033 02:44:33.120 --> 02:44:49.530 Remo Douglas: First, I'm excited to introduce Rebecca Sucre with IBM group architects IBM has been a long term partner with the district and Rebecca has produced a lot of exemplary work for us over the years in various designs, as well as the writing of our 1034 02:44:50.910 --> 02:45:01.470 Remo Douglas: Long Range facilities plan. She is the project designer for the new middle school at Dollar Street project and Rebecca will be presenting the current design concept, this evening. 1035 02:45:02.340 --> 02:45:08.010 Remo Douglas: In addition to staff and administrator input this concepts been informed by a broad array of public feedback. 1036 02:45:08.400 --> 02:45:15.600 Remo Douglas: After three community meetings, as well as surveys emails, phone calls and virtual conversations with community members. 1037 02:45:16.440 --> 02:45:33.000 Remo Douglas: It has also taken direction from various technical studies that are currently wrapping up we expect to more community meetings for the project ahead of our land use application in early 2021 and we'll be happy to answer any questions you might have. After she presents the design. 1038 02:45:34.650 --> 02:45:36.630 Remo Douglas: that'll turn it over to Rebecca 1039 02:45:41.670 --> 02:45:50.430 Rebecca Stuecker: Great. Thank you, remote and Hi everyone, it's good to see familiar faces, even though we're not in the same room together. 1040 02:45:51.000 --> 02:46:01.680 Rebecca Stuecker: And I'm extremely happy to join the meeting today to present the new middle school design our progress and our process. Most importantly, which I think has been quite successful. 1041 02:46:03.840 --> 02:46:11.220 Rebecca Stuecker: We're about a third of the way through design as you could see on this graph, and we're in what we call design, development, until the end of the year. 1042 02:46:12.780 --> 02:46:14.760 Remo Douglas: I'm not seeing your share our others. 1043 02:46:14.970 --> 02:46:16.650 Rebecca Stuecker: Oh, I apologize. 1044 02:46:19.140 --> 02:46:19.620 I'm 1045 02:46:24.150 --> 02:46:24.900 Rebecca Stuecker: Sorry for that. 1046 02:46:25.680 --> 02:46:26.460 Rebecca Stuecker: Able to see it now. 1047 02:46:29.040 --> 02:46:30.960 Rebecca Stuecker: Let's schedule. Okay. Yep. 1048 02:46:31.230 --> 02:46:33.090 Remo Douglas: That's what, that's where we're all right. 1049 02:46:33.330 --> 02:46:40.800 Rebecca Stuecker: So as you can see, about a third of the way through the design process here on that top bar. 1050 02:46:41.340 --> 02:46:46.470 Rebecca Stuecker: We're in design, development, till the end of the year. And then we kick off our final phase called construction documents. 1051 02:46:47.340 --> 02:46:53.310 Rebecca Stuecker: In January at the turn of the year. And at that time, will also be putting together our land use package to submit to the city. 1052 02:46:54.210 --> 02:47:05.820 Rebecca Stuecker: What you see tonight is that many of the design decisions we've made. As I said in the past several months have been guided by the input and feedback from the local jurisdiction, of course, and also the community. 1053 02:47:09.390 --> 02:47:25.380 Rebecca Stuecker: And context. This is an overall aerial view of the 22 plus acre site and its surrounding region, we can see the 12 river I 205 and of course the connection formed Bible Emmett falls drive from the highway to the new middle school. 1054 02:47:29.490 --> 02:47:35.460 Rebecca Stuecker: And since it's often difficult to get a sense of scale. We also have indicated the location of the limit primary school as a reference. 1055 02:47:36.690 --> 02:47:46.440 Rebecca Stuecker: The site extends between Dollar Street and William it falls drive and it's surrounded by the neighboring communities of arbor Cove and river heights is adjacent to feels bridge Park. 1056 02:47:48.780 --> 02:47:55.260 Rebecca Stuecker: Our property has a rich history and in more recent years we can begin to see the important role it's played 1057 02:47:55.740 --> 02:48:07.470 Rebecca Stuecker: And meeting the cultural needs of the population during the Depression and as the 20th century went on, we could start to see that groves of trees were planted in many fields are maintained for agriculture. 1058 02:48:10.320 --> 02:48:28.110 Rebecca Stuecker: And the next photo did in 1998 we see river Heights neighborhood is now established with some young trees dotting the perimeter of Dollar Street and then in the 2000s feels bridge Park is now in place in the community of arbor Cove is under construction and the lower right. 1059 02:48:29.310 --> 02:48:36.180 Rebecca Stuecker: Aerial photographs are one way that we can understand the rich history and rich information that this property can share with us. 1060 02:48:37.680 --> 02:48:48.210 Rebecca Stuecker: Another way is just by walking out there and seeing how enriched the site is by its proximity to the 12 River. This view is taken from the pathways around fields bridge Park. 1061 02:48:50.310 --> 02:48:58.290 Rebecca Stuecker: We can start to see the rich and varied topography or slopes that are along the river and the steep hillside, that will be in view of the new middle cool school site. 1062 02:49:02.550 --> 02:49:11.490 Rebecca Stuecker: In addition to studying the relationship of the property to the river and park. We also look at the threshold between the site and the neighborhood is a view along Dollar Street here. 1063 02:49:12.600 --> 02:49:17.040 Rebecca Stuecker: Looking east, and you can see on the right side, that the street is unimproved 1064 02:49:17.580 --> 02:49:23.640 Rebecca Stuecker: Middle School side is within the jurisdiction of the city of Atlanta, of course, and therefore subject to the Westland, community development code. 1065 02:49:24.180 --> 02:49:29.340 Rebecca Stuecker: Or design parameters like setbacks and regular parking building height storm water treatment. 1066 02:49:29.850 --> 02:49:42.390 Rebecca Stuecker: So making those improvements to the right away as part of our land use process and a condition of approval, based on the municipal code. These improvements will include parallel parking occurred trees down and a sidewalk. 1067 02:49:45.510 --> 02:49:57.930 Rebecca Stuecker: And it's test for viability as a school site that district grad gathered a great deal of information about the property before the bond pass, but since then has engaged and many other consultants provide a variety of investigations as remote mentioned 1068 02:49:59.100 --> 02:50:10.230 Rebecca Stuecker: We have received data from our geotechnical engineer from our arborists as well as environmental consultants, all of these some of these reports will be part of the land use application. 1069 02:50:10.770 --> 02:50:22.710 Rebecca Stuecker: But they have all provided information to our design team so that as we iterate through those options for a site plan and we can make the best decisions about the placement of buildings fields parking 1070 02:50:25.560 --> 02:50:31.410 Rebecca Stuecker: So for our design team this diagram was really where we started. Every represented organizing party. 1071 02:50:31.830 --> 02:50:38.580 Rebecca Stuecker: The site is hugged on one side by the neighborhood fabric and on the other by the natural assets of the river and forest at hillside. 1072 02:50:39.420 --> 02:50:53.940 Rebecca Stuecker: And our charge as designers who are placing a building on this land is to develop a design response that's thoughtful of the concerns and experience of a Jason community that can also embrace the spectacular views and beauty of the surrounding environment. 1073 02:50:56.910 --> 02:51:14.400 Rebecca Stuecker: Or major site elements that were designing the program essentially is an 850 students middle school parking separate parent and bus drop off areas a track and field with lights outdoor play and learning areas emergency vehicle access and storm water treatment facilities. 1074 02:51:15.840 --> 02:51:24.120 Rebecca Stuecker: And undeniable feature we have to work with is the topography. So as you can see these typography lines as they get closer together, that's an indication of a steeper slope. 1075 02:51:24.990 --> 02:51:33.480 Rebecca Stuecker: And it presents us with challenges, but also a great many opportunities because we can then design I hills, a building that Nestle's into the hillside on the northeast. 1076 02:51:34.380 --> 02:51:41.580 Rebecca Stuecker: And gently front the neighborhood ed for them to understand the presence will get to see that a little bit more in the next slides. 1077 02:51:42.150 --> 02:51:52.890 Rebecca Stuecker: These are photographs of a laser cut typical model that we that we built in our office to really get a sense of the relationship of existing grade of surrounding areas. 1078 02:51:55.410 --> 02:52:09.330 Rebecca Stuecker: And these two views these simple section cut views that we'd share it in a community meeting there early schematic section cuts that illustrate the opportunity we have to nestle or burn the building into the hillside and reduce the height along Dollar Street. 1079 02:52:12.630 --> 02:52:26.550 Rebecca Stuecker: In addition to views and topography. Our Southwest orientation gives us an opportunity to take advantage of daily classrooms create outdoor zones like play areas gardens learning courtyards that will have plenty of light, even in the Oregon winners. 1080 02:52:30.270 --> 02:52:34.920 Rebecca Stuecker: So beyond understanding the history and environmental and technical conditions of our site. 1081 02:52:35.790 --> 02:52:43.620 Rebecca Stuecker: The success of the design solution also must be measured by the needs of many stakeholders neighboring communities, the city. 1082 02:52:44.340 --> 02:52:53.130 Rebecca Stuecker: Tax pairs. What is the most fiscally responsible and efficient design and meets the bond promise, of course, what are those the everyday experience for students and teachers. 1083 02:52:53.700 --> 02:52:59.580 Rebecca Stuecker: How does the building respond to the site and the and the way that provides a teaching and learning environment, the next generation. 1084 02:53:00.990 --> 02:53:07.830 Rebecca Stuecker: And links through the space in between spaces that provide a connection between pedagogy and space. 1085 02:53:09.210 --> 02:53:15.420 Rebecca Stuecker: We continually can turn our perspective to the sixth, seventh, and eighth graders, it'll be inhabiting the site for many decades. 1086 02:53:18.840 --> 02:53:26.460 Rebecca Stuecker: So, the city is right away improvements we've spoken about that a little bit on both dollar sweet animal on the false drive. I should be clear. It's both. It's both frontage 1087 02:53:27.000 --> 02:53:41.310 Rebecca Stuecker: They'll provide Safe Routes to School for increased likability and walkability but also a connector road will be included and a response to the traffic flow concerns and land use permissions, the connector. It'll be an extension of Brandon place. 1088 02:53:43.590 --> 02:53:45.690 Rebecca Stuecker: And connect all the street to Atlanta falls drive 1089 02:53:48.090 --> 02:53:53.430 Rebecca Stuecker: And our vigilance are designed to budget. Our team is highly aware, the fact that earthwork is a major cost component 1090 02:53:54.030 --> 02:54:02.370 Rebecca Stuecker: Of any construction projects or design solution needs to be cognizant of the slopes and work with typography to reduce earthwork and retaining walls. 1091 02:54:03.030 --> 02:54:19.140 Rebecca Stuecker: Large flat elements like the track and field that can't really slope or step in any way, the way that a building or a parking area can should be placed in the flattest area of the site and the building should be multi level following the contours of the site. 1092 02:54:22.470 --> 02:54:33.630 Rebecca Stuecker: So here you can see a look at the current site plan their major site online start to find their logical location on the health side the track and field that require that flat space is 1093 02:54:34.980 --> 02:54:36.510 Rebecca Stuecker: Located in the northeast corner. 1094 02:54:37.530 --> 02:54:44.160 Rebecca Stuecker: Which is the flattest area of our site and the split level school building curves to follow the contours. 1095 02:54:45.360 --> 02:54:53.550 Rebecca Stuecker: With a bus drop off at the upper level entry point and then parent and visitor entry on the lower level. 1096 02:54:55.080 --> 02:54:57.180 Rebecca Stuecker: Can you all see my cursor. I don't know if you can see my 1097 02:55:00.030 --> 02:55:01.770 Rebecca Stuecker: Buddy is a laser pointer, just in case. 1098 02:55:02.850 --> 02:55:03.840 Rebecca Stuecker: So this that 1099 02:55:03.870 --> 02:55:07.080 Regan Molatore: Our board books did have this map in it. 1100 02:55:07.230 --> 02:55:11.430 Regan Molatore: We are great with the arrows colored showing which traffic flows where 1101 02:55:11.910 --> 02:55:12.630 Rebecca Stuecker: Okay, great. 1102 02:55:14.160 --> 02:55:21.780 Rebecca Stuecker: So the star being the main entry. I'll try to move along at a good clip here and parking is divided between visitor and staff lots 1103 02:55:22.290 --> 02:55:36.390 Rebecca Stuecker: And the staff, the parking count actually exceeds the everyday requirements of the school use to account for sporting and performing arts events, but also to respond to community concerns about parking particular access by bus and staff leave around the fields. 1104 02:55:38.040 --> 02:55:49.290 Rebecca Stuecker: And all the parent visitor traffic is routed to that new connector road and consideration of community feedback. The routing of the parents and buses in this manner is intended to reduce the traffic on Dollar Street as much as possible. 1105 02:55:50.040 --> 02:56:01.620 Rebecca Stuecker: Bus and staff are less frequent typically more orderly, in comparison to parents and visitors. Therefore, the site connection from Dollar Street is dedicated only to bus and staff use 1106 02:56:03.690 --> 02:56:11.580 Rebecca Stuecker: The fully inclusive outdoor play socializing and dining areas are HUD's between the field and the building this area is lowered. 1107 02:56:12.090 --> 02:56:20.640 Rebecca Stuecker: And therefore protected from Dollar Street with one of the few retaining walls on the site and ensures a large outdoors on that's fairly flat and accessible to all students. 1108 02:56:21.300 --> 02:56:35.550 Rebecca Stuecker: And instructional greenhouse and outdoor sport support areas are located adjacent to the staff parking for easy truck delivery access and also the most sun exposure and an outdoor learning courtyard is hug between the two major classroom wings. 1109 02:56:36.720 --> 02:56:44.460 Rebecca Stuecker: The school itself is oriented with a large gymnasium volumes at the north end of the building that are personally buried into the hillside. 1110 02:56:44.940 --> 02:56:58.440 Rebecca Stuecker: Being tall volumes were able to bury those and still maintain tall windows of above on the wall and daylight into those spaces essential zone of the school includes the two entry points with a split level commons joining them together. 1111 02:56:59.670 --> 02:57:08.730 Rebecca Stuecker: The south of the comments is the library, which is the heart of the school and classroom neighborhoods radiating from it with windows and courtyards oriented towards the river views. 1112 02:57:12.420 --> 02:57:21.840 Rebecca Stuecker: This site rendering also shows the existing and new vegetation, the thorough analysis and has revealed. Many of the substantial trees on this site are located along the perimeter. 1113 02:57:22.920 --> 02:57:32.310 Rebecca Stuecker: And the right ways on that is slated for those required street improvements. So as a result, many of those perimeter trees will need to be removed to accommodate the new sidewalks and bike lanes that we mentioned before. 1114 02:57:34.110 --> 02:57:41.280 Rebecca Stuecker: Those are required right away improvements, I should be clear in order to maintain a visual leaf along the perimeter of the site though along Dollar Street. 1115 02:57:42.240 --> 02:57:51.570 Rebecca Stuecker: Our design contemplates a new vegetative buffer in excess of code required plantings so that were existing trees will need to be removed, we're maintaining that buffer. 1116 02:57:52.260 --> 02:58:02.640 Rebecca Stuecker: While the design team is reviewing grading plans and effort to balance the construction costs and tree preservation, along with southern slopes. Many of the trees in this area have been determined unhealthy. 1117 02:58:04.620 --> 02:58:09.450 Rebecca Stuecker: By the consulting arborist. So the design team is working to preserve significant trees. 1118 02:58:11.100 --> 02:58:13.020 Rebecca Stuecker: Eastern slope and ravine. 1119 02:58:14.100 --> 02:58:22.260 Rebecca Stuecker: Currently act as a buffer between the site and they are joining property of our river arbor Cove and the district intends to maintain and restore this natural area. 1120 02:58:23.040 --> 02:58:36.990 Rebecca Stuecker: The portion of the site west of the brand and place extension currently lacks acts as a link to fields which Park and the district and tends to maintain and restore that natural area and includes a new path to facilitate access to the park. 1121 02:58:40.680 --> 02:58:43.680 Rebecca Stuecker: And the section cut, you can see the building and relation to Dollar Street. 1122 02:58:45.690 --> 02:58:48.570 Rebecca Stuecker: The hillside and William befalls drive 1123 02:58:52.500 --> 02:59:02.940 Rebecca Stuecker: And the closer view of this parent dropoff zone. You can see how Dollar Street begins to climb up the hill, alongside the building with windows and the brick facade facing out and down the slope. 1124 02:59:05.790 --> 02:59:18.660 Rebecca Stuecker: This section code is taken through the outdoor play area reveals again the understated height right here of the building that faces Dollar Street and the gentle slope from the building down to limit falls drive 1125 02:59:22.020 --> 02:59:31.920 Rebecca Stuecker: And this view. We've taken a section cut that's due east, west, and you can see the location of the track and field areas of top of the hill and then the location of Lima falls drive 1126 02:59:33.030 --> 02:59:35.640 Rebecca Stuecker: There's a little car about halfway up the hillside. 1127 02:59:37.710 --> 02:59:50.400 Rebecca Stuecker: And this our last and personally my favorite section we've cut right through the building and you can see start to really see how deeply the main gymnasium is pushed into that hillside right here. 1128 02:59:52.650 --> 02:59:55.980 Rebecca Stuecker: And the scale of the river and forested slope beyond 1129 03:00:01.470 --> 03:00:08.700 Rebecca Stuecker: I just want to close by saying the design process for this new middle school has been one of incredible collaboration group thinking 1130 03:00:09.240 --> 03:00:16.410 Rebecca Stuecker: Iteration many iterations and I'm presenting our work tonight, but there's a whole team of really talented, folks. 1131 03:00:16.860 --> 03:00:25.200 Rebecca Stuecker: On our team from our my fellow architects to our many Consulting Engineers structural civil landscape architects. 1132 03:00:25.560 --> 03:00:32.730 Rebecca Stuecker: Plumbing engineers acoustician technology engineers food service designers, etc. Our team is lucky to design also with 1133 03:00:33.360 --> 03:00:44.250 Rebecca Stuecker: The District administrator staff and project managers who are always available to us answer questions and able to give us the direct and critical input and feedback that we need to drive smart decision making. 1134 03:00:44.880 --> 03:00:58.290 Rebecca Stuecker: So I look forward to completing the galvanizing phase of design, development and the next few months as we hone that student driven place making and as we get into it and the new middle school and thank you again to the board for providing me this opportunity. 1135 03:01:02.700 --> 03:01:08.430 Regan Molatore: Thank you, Rebecca, very much for joining us and being so patient this evening, while you needed to share 1136 03:01:10.050 --> 03:01:13.470 Regan Molatore: Or any questions on the x 1137 03:01:16.230 --> 03:01:25.800 Regan Molatore: Alright, I'm not seeing Amy and so thank you for the the images and that thorough discussion of walking us through this project as well as the primo the 1138 03:01:26.820 --> 03:01:34.170 Regan Molatore: Memo leading up to this. I think that helps the board not have to ask a ton of questions. All right. Ready for the next one. 1139 03:01:35.490 --> 03:01:43.320 Remo Douglas: Yeah, yeah. And thank you board for the clarity on some of what you guys are looking for on memos, as I'm coming into this role. 1140 03:01:44.700 --> 03:01:51.540 Remo Douglas: Each time it's been helpful to get a little bit of notation ahead of the meeting, so I can try to provide what you folks are looking for. 1141 03:01:52.770 --> 03:01:53.310 Remo Douglas: So, 1142 03:01:54.450 --> 03:02:03.390 Remo Douglas: Now, I'm pleased to get to introduce Chris Linn and Becca Cavell with bar architects I've mentioned in previous reports that this is our first project with Bora. 1143 03:02:03.810 --> 03:02:12.270 Remo Douglas: And that they've been exceptional to work with for the Wilson Ville high school auditorium and addition sorry auditorium addition and renovation projects. 1144 03:02:13.080 --> 03:02:23.490 Remo Douglas: Chris is that design principal and Becca is their project manager, they have designed a number, number of schools and auditoriums in the past. 1145 03:02:24.540 --> 03:02:40.350 Remo Douglas: And their experience and creativity has been evident to us through the design so far. They'll get to elaborate further on their work with the various stakeholders as well as the latest design concept and we'll look forward to answering any questions the board might have afterwards. 1146 03:02:41.400 --> 03:02:43.290 Remo Douglas: Go ahead. Chris and Becca. Thank you. 1147 03:02:45.570 --> 03:02:47.760 Chris Linn: All right, let me share my screen here. 1148 03:02:50.670 --> 03:02:51.420 That's working 1149 03:02:52.710 --> 03:02:54.180 Chris Linn: The work. Everybody can see it. 1150 03:02:55.350 --> 03:02:56.010 Chris Linn: Terrific. 1151 03:02:57.030 --> 03:03:00.810 Chris Linn: Thanks for having us. Thanks for the intro video. I'm Chris Linn and the partner. 1152 03:03:01.680 --> 03:03:12.810 Chris Linn: aura and want to take a couple minutes just to introduce ourselves, our process show you the progress we've made on a really interesting and exciting project. 1153 03:03:13.470 --> 03:03:29.130 Chris Linn: But first I want to say that, you know, constructing a middle school or a theater in times like this is a really hopeful act. That takes courage in leadership in. We thank you and the entire community that you serve thanks you as well. 1154 03:03:36.390 --> 03:03:37.410 Chris Linn: So we'll go through 1155 03:03:38.520 --> 03:03:45.120 Chris Linn: We'll talk a little bit about ourselves, our stakeholder engagement process how we've developed some goals, objectives. 1156 03:03:45.330 --> 03:03:46.710 Chris Linn: That little man. 1157 03:03:47.430 --> 03:03:57.450 Regan Molatore: I'm sorry to interrupt you but you're hard to hear you able to move a little closer to your microphone turn my volume up as much as possible. And I haven't worked number saying the same 1158 03:03:57.750 --> 03:03:59.070 Chris Linn: About now. Can you hear me now. 1159 03:03:59.520 --> 03:04:00.420 Regan Molatore: Yeah, that's better. 1160 03:04:00.720 --> 03:04:04.170 Regan Molatore: Yeah, you're able to get me closer than even be better. 1161 03:04:04.830 --> 03:04:05.730 Chris Linn: When we try this. 1162 03:04:08.640 --> 03:04:09.450 Chris Linn: Computer here. 1163 03:04:20.130 --> 03:04:21.900 Chris Linn: Okay, how's that 1164 03:04:24.300 --> 03:04:24.600 Regan Molatore: Yeah. 1165 03:04:25.290 --> 03:04:26.220 Chris Linn: You hear me now. 1166 03:04:26.730 --> 03:04:28.050 Regan Molatore: Yes, thank you. 1167 03:04:28.500 --> 03:04:30.930 Chris Linn: Better. Okay. Terrific. Sorry about that. 1168 03:04:32.220 --> 03:04:36.420 Chris Linn: We'll talk about the the the building and some milestones that are coming up. 1169 03:04:37.560 --> 03:04:48.990 Chris Linn: This district. When you pass the bond, you made a promise to your voters and happy to say that at West Wilson Ville high school were able to really keep all the promises that you made. 1170 03:04:49.500 --> 03:05:04.140 Chris Linn: We're looking at safety, security improvements expanding access to the parks and CTE some renovations and repairs, as well as updating technology. So we're tracking and firing on all cylinders. 1171 03:05:05.070 --> 03:05:13.440 Chris Linn: One of the reasons we're really excited to work with you is I think we share a lot of values, our practices rooted in education. 1172 03:05:13.980 --> 03:05:24.210 Chris Linn: And the driving force in our work is using architecture to increase engagement in student performance. And so we share a lot in common. 1173 03:05:24.720 --> 03:05:30.270 Chris Linn: In our entire team is really excited to be working with you moving forward on this front. 1174 03:05:30.900 --> 03:05:42.000 Chris Linn: At the same time, the firm has grown over the past couple of decades to have an additional focus on the performing arts. And so this is an area of expertise that we've developed, we have 1175 03:05:42.450 --> 03:05:53.400 Chris Linn: honed our, our design designed tools and dozens of performing arts centers across the country of for k 12 theater and civic uses 1176 03:05:55.110 --> 03:06:14.010 Chris Linn: Wherever we go, we get engaged with the community, whether it's through internships or volunteerism service projects or even advocated for policy change and at the state level, like the Family Leave Act. We are a community focused and community driven architecture firm. 1177 03:06:15.990 --> 03:06:21.060 Chris Linn: In terms of the fears that we've done across the country. There are numerous 1178 03:06:22.260 --> 03:06:33.900 Chris Linn: And we, I think, are bringing a lot of experience to bear on a really exciting new theater for Wilson Middle High School. That's really a hybrid theater, it, it will serve as school 1179 03:06:34.440 --> 03:06:40.650 Chris Linn: It also serves the community, the Community's been deeply engaged in our design process up to now. 1180 03:06:41.310 --> 03:06:49.920 Chris Linn: And has really resulted in, I think, a building that will be an asset for everyone in the community for decades to come. 1181 03:06:50.820 --> 03:06:57.210 Chris Linn: I think one thing that we really believe about teaching theaters, is that every space is a teaching space. 1182 03:06:57.600 --> 03:07:05.100 Chris Linn: So whether you're up on the catwalk or the gridiron or the control room or the scene shop. These are all teaching and learning spaces. 1183 03:07:05.520 --> 03:07:12.900 Chris Linn: And in a lot of ways. These are the CTE spaces for the Performing Arts, and as such they will really compliment 1184 03:07:13.350 --> 03:07:19.530 Chris Linn: The additional CPU spaces that will be putting in the renovated spaces such as the theater that we're vacating 1185 03:07:19.890 --> 03:07:27.990 Chris Linn: And you'll the green the theater as well. So a great synergy the amazing synergy of programmatic elements coming together to make 1186 03:07:28.950 --> 03:07:37.470 Chris Linn: A really great project and green addition. I was really moved by the superintendent's comments around equity and inclusion. 1187 03:07:38.190 --> 03:07:49.950 Chris Linn: Closing the opportunity gap has been a real driving theme in many of our projects, most recently at the new Pre K through rate school at Fabio for PPS 1188 03:07:50.430 --> 03:07:58.500 Chris Linn: Which is such a service oriented educational program a model for for for all of us to think about 1189 03:07:59.010 --> 03:08:12.210 Chris Linn: So enough about Bora what what this project includes is a 600 seat multi use auditorium. The scene shop dressing rooms the hundred seat black box theatres slash drama classroom. 1190 03:08:12.930 --> 03:08:23.910 Chris Linn: Will have multiple CTE spaces and multiple multi purpose spaces and on the site will have a new parking lot, improve site circulation for cars and buses. 1191 03:08:24.330 --> 03:08:35.010 Chris Linn: And miscellaneous energy and security improvements across the campus all of its been developed with really strong stakeholder engagement. 1192 03:08:35.550 --> 03:08:45.360 Chris Linn: And Becca, if you want to sort of speak up. Now, Becca has been leading our stakeholder engagement process, it can kind of walk us through through it real briefly. 1193 03:08:45.720 --> 03:08:52.050 Becca Cavell / Bora Architects: Sure, just super briefly and good evening, everybody. Thank you for hanging in there with us so 1194 03:08:52.860 --> 03:08:59.880 Becca Cavell / Bora Architects: It was very interesting, listening to you talking earlier about your online curriculum. We've had to be doing online stakeholder engagement. 1195 03:09:00.330 --> 03:09:06.090 Becca Cavell / Bora Architects: Which has been an adventure and as with your teaching. We have to find new tools. 1196 03:09:06.480 --> 03:09:15.270 Becca Cavell / Bora Architects: So we've been using zoom. We're all very familiar with zoom. These days, and we've been meeting with with teachers. We've been meeting with community members who are involved in the arts. 1197 03:09:15.690 --> 03:09:23.070 Becca Cavell / Bora Architects: And for me the most fun was meeting with your students, we've had the great pleasure of doing that twice already. We hope to do some more in the future. 1198 03:09:23.880 --> 03:09:31.860 Becca Cavell / Bora Architects: We met with them through using an online platform called mirror and you can see a couple of snapshots from that at the top here. 1199 03:09:32.190 --> 03:09:37.950 Becca Cavell / Bora Architects: Where we invite them to really work with us in a collaborative whiteboard environment and they really 1200 03:09:38.310 --> 03:09:45.870 Becca Cavell / Bora Architects: We break them out into teams and they really talk through some issues and share great ideas back with us. So your students are 1201 03:09:46.200 --> 03:10:02.070 Becca Cavell / Bora Architects: Why we're making this building there, the future of your school and your community and we think that they've really already helped shape the outcome of these spaces and we look forward to talking again soon with that Chris. I'm just going to hand it back to you. 1202 03:10:02.520 --> 03:10:05.610 Chris Linn: Here so through the process. 1203 03:10:05.610 --> 03:10:05.880 It's 1204 03:10:07.050 --> 03:10:15.450 Chris Linn: Pretty deep stakeholder engagement, we developed a set of goals and objectives for this project and I won't read them in detail, but you can see in the bolted 1205 03:10:15.960 --> 03:10:23.700 Chris Linn: Text is about access to the performing arts listening to a diversity of voices working hand in hand with a community. 1206 03:10:24.360 --> 03:10:36.930 Chris Linn: Thinking about a facility in programmatic equity with Wesley in high school, but not identical to Westland high school and really creating an identity around the architecture that is you need to Wilson bill. 1207 03:10:38.220 --> 03:10:50.580 Chris Linn: Supporting new CTE and one part that's really sort of interesting is, is considering spaces for public art and student art. So all of that's 1208 03:10:51.810 --> 03:11:08.430 Chris Linn: Driven a pretty strong conceptual framework for the project. And by the way, all these photographs are from Wilson little high schools archives. They have tremendous photographs and posters and everything they've ever done in over the, over the many years. 1209 03:11:09.870 --> 03:11:21.030 Chris Linn: Is really really pretty compelling stuff. So what is linked to in terms of a conceptual framework is we want to celebrate the energy around the performing arts and Wilson bill, which is really 1210 03:11:22.170 --> 03:11:31.140 Chris Linn: A very strong cultural aspect of that school. It has to do with, you know, families, connecting with their students during performances. 1211 03:11:32.580 --> 03:11:45.750 Chris Linn: Connecting with the energy of the performing arts and culture, even you know every poster from every performance, they've ever done is displayed in the hallway. So it's really present in vinyl and a lot of fun. 1212 03:11:47.010 --> 03:11:51.210 Chris Linn: We treat every space, whether it's a lobby or a catwalk as a teaching space. 1213 03:11:53.250 --> 03:12:01.980 Chris Linn: School process can't afford to build single use faces every space as a dual user triple use space that's really informed design moving forward. 1214 03:12:02.580 --> 03:12:12.750 Chris Linn: And one of our mantras is let's turn the theater inside out the most exciting parts of theaters are the stage and the scene shops. That's where the energy and activity is 1215 03:12:13.170 --> 03:12:24.690 Chris Linn: Our goal is to bring the architectural energy of those faces into the public spaces and really make the theater visible and display the vitality of the arts everywhere you go. 1216 03:12:25.800 --> 03:12:32.910 Chris Linn: So what this is. Let choose a building concept on our site. Can everyone see my cursor moving here. 1217 03:12:33.900 --> 03:12:42.060 Chris Linn: So on the left, this is a bird's eye view from Wilson Ville road, we're looking at the site that is the most recent band room edition. 1218 03:12:42.900 --> 03:12:52.290 Chris Linn: And it looks like a generous site, but we quickly learned that there are a wetland buffers area of impacts in a heritage hook tree. 1219 03:12:52.770 --> 03:13:07.950 Chris Linn: Which kind of carved into the quarters of the site and further reduce the buildable area that we have when we also introduce a roadway that connects the north and south half of the site, we actually end up with a pretty compact site, which is 1220 03:13:09.300 --> 03:13:25.710 Chris Linn: led us to a scheme that has a balcony, as well as a basement. But the overall architectural concept is to create these functional rooms or vessels and then to drape them with a metaphorical stage curtain as a reference to stage architecture. 1221 03:13:27.390 --> 03:13:38.460 Chris Linn: So let's get to the building. You can see on the site, the new building in black renovated area and medium gray existing building a light gray. 1222 03:13:39.000 --> 03:13:51.840 Chris Linn: And one of the big site moves here is to put a new roadway in to the west of the new theater that connects the North and the South, it connects the Beckman campus with the 1223 03:13:52.320 --> 03:14:08.910 Chris Linn: Wilson tool high school campus. We've created new loops for parents for buses and for staff as well as pedestrian connections that are improved between Beckman and the new school and Wilson High School. 1224 03:14:11.520 --> 03:14:15.930 Chris Linn: We are building a new parking lot. To the north of the new theater. 1225 03:14:18.960 --> 03:14:19.440 Here. 1226 03:14:24.150 --> 03:14:32.160 Chris Linn: So this is the new perimeter roadway that connects into the existing roadway network, we're looking at an additional 1227 03:14:32.760 --> 03:14:43.830 Chris Linn: 28 spaces, when all is said and done with the option of an ad alternate that would create an additional 24 spaces in this location right here on the west side. 1228 03:14:44.460 --> 03:14:51.780 Chris Linn: You can see that there's raised speed tables for pedestrian safety buses will line up along this side right here. 1229 03:14:52.200 --> 03:15:00.630 Chris Linn: And there's a new North entry plaza and the new North entry into the campus. It is really another front door in a lot of ways. 1230 03:15:01.020 --> 03:15:10.680 Chris Linn: And will bring the daily life of people coming and going to the school through the arts. So it's really exposing the arts to everybody on the campus. 1231 03:15:11.610 --> 03:15:21.570 Chris Linn: On the south side there's a new entry plaza with a new drop off zone, we're maintaining vehicular loading access to the Arena theater and 1232 03:15:22.080 --> 03:15:39.900 Chris Linn: Creating a rain garden preserving the heritage tree respecting all the various landscape buffers that are on the site and creating kind of outdoor south facing student hangout area that could even be used for small performances, if, if the if the mood strikes. 1233 03:15:41.700 --> 03:15:49.140 Chris Linn: On the north Plaza. There's a new North entry, a new North lobby. This also serves as a learning area for our scene shop. 1234 03:15:49.620 --> 03:16:02.010 Chris Linn: And again, you'll see lots of speed bumps and speed tables and really maintaining pedestrian access and safety is one of our driving ideas. So this is our view from the south. 1235 03:16:03.240 --> 03:16:13.290 Chris Linn: It's evening the student production of Hamilton is just about to start. And you can see the building is very transparent. It's very inviting 1236 03:16:13.710 --> 03:16:18.960 Chris Linn: You can see the activity happening people moving up and down the stairs up to the balcony. 1237 03:16:19.590 --> 03:16:35.610 Chris Linn: And what we've created is a metaphorical stage drape which is also serving to filter the South light make the building more comfortable and energy efficient. And we've also got a large display area over the entry for banners for artwork. 1238 03:16:36.870 --> 03:16:38.430 Chris Linn: Any number of things can happen there. 1239 03:16:39.690 --> 03:16:51.120 Chris Linn: And so that's our view from the south. That's what you'll see as you're coming to an evening performance activity in the plaza activity in the building a great indoor, outdoor connection and a lot of excitement and energy. 1240 03:16:52.620 --> 03:17:02.070 Chris Linn: It all fits into the existing architecture of the campus, which is a combination of some some really beautifully detailed and textured brick. 1241 03:17:02.910 --> 03:17:15.990 Chris Linn: Some profile middle panels and big areas of glass. And so we're using many of those materials, but we're also transforming them or sunscreen that I was just talking about. 1242 03:17:16.500 --> 03:17:29.190 Chris Linn: We're looking at a series of very lightly, sort of like shimmering perforated metal that you can see through but also kind of cuts the glare into the building. 1243 03:17:29.580 --> 03:17:42.990 Chris Linn: And I think we'll just give the building some real real distinction. And then inside, we're looking at a series of warm structural materials that are durable and affordable and sort of friendly as well. 1244 03:17:44.100 --> 03:17:51.000 Chris Linn: So as you walk in the front door. This is kind of a sneak peek will call us a sketch of the interior 1245 03:17:52.080 --> 03:18:01.710 Chris Linn: These have been greatly informed by the work we've done with the students and the stakeholders. They've had a real impact on these spaces. We are looking from the lobby. 1246 03:18:02.340 --> 03:18:12.300 Chris Linn: At the main entry into the hall itself for the box office. We've got what we call the Romeo and Juliet balcony overlooking the lobby. 1247 03:18:13.020 --> 03:18:22.110 Chris Linn: The grand stair that takes you up built in seating informal seating areas for students areas for artwork and display. 1248 03:18:22.560 --> 03:18:38.370 Chris Linn: And a bridge that connects to our second stare, which is fashioned after a theater catwalk. So you can actually imagine using that as a lighting position for performances that might happen in the lobby and that really comes back to our multi use idea around the use of space in the building. 1249 03:18:40.080 --> 03:18:49.950 Chris Linn: Looking back towards the front door. We have large walls for displays of artwork. We have gallery walls for display of student work. 1250 03:18:50.580 --> 03:19:07.260 Chris Linn: We have great views back out into the plaza and great sort of command point, both from the upper balcony and from the box office as well. So this really, you know, this really feels to me like a student oriented student focus kind of performing arts lobby. 1251 03:19:08.550 --> 03:19:09.720 Chris Linn: Welcoming tall. 1252 03:19:10.920 --> 03:19:16.320 Chris Linn: And then here's a sneak peek into the theater. This is kind of an early view which 1253 03:19:17.430 --> 03:19:26.670 Chris Linn: Will be our 600 seat theater with our balcony, I talked about how the site is so small that we had to put a the seating up part of the seating up in the balcony. 1254 03:19:27.180 --> 03:19:37.320 Chris Linn: To make it all fit one of the great advantages of that is that it actually brings the students closer to the stage. So this is going to be a very intimate feeling theater. 1255 03:19:37.740 --> 03:19:41.910 Chris Linn: Everyone's going to be close to the action. It's going to, it's going to have a feeling of, if you've 1256 03:19:42.300 --> 03:19:54.840 Chris Linn: Ever been to a show on Broadway, one of those old theaters. It's like you are right on top of the action and it brings great energy of the performers just brings great energy the performance overall 1257 03:19:55.860 --> 03:20:03.870 Chris Linn: So that's a sneak peek of of the inside all of us are under development and we'll get richer and more developed as we move along. 1258 03:20:05.670 --> 03:20:13.620 Chris Linn: Speaking you're moving along. We are planning to complete our documents in March will go out to bid and have bids back by May. 1259 03:20:14.100 --> 03:20:32.940 Chris Linn: And be starting construction in May as well. The addition will be done by July with the site work following up by by September I will be having a grand opening and I look forward to see you all in the theater in September of 2022 1260 03:20:34.410 --> 03:20:44.970 Chris Linn: So that's our performance. I'd like to take a bow that I would be out of the picture. So thank you very much for for for giving us the time and hanging in there with us. 1261 03:20:49.680 --> 03:21:03.150 Regan Molatore: And thank you as well. Thank you both. Back at and Chris for being here with us this evening and as well as being patient and waiting on this time, and I really appreciated your thoughtfulness around it being 1262 03:21:05.190 --> 03:21:14.310 Regan Molatore: A learning space that you know with multiple layers of purpose, not just a single, single use facility, um, does anybody have any questions, comments. 1263 03:21:17.040 --> 03:21:24.360 Chelsea King: Chelsea. One quick question. Um, the, it was beautiful. Thank you. I enjoyed learning more about you and seeing the design. 1264 03:21:24.750 --> 03:21:37.710 Chelsea King: And the, the only question I have is that that large beautiful space that has a lovely image right now digitally, which was the place that was stated as being a spot where large banners could be or really anything 1265 03:21:38.010 --> 03:21:51.240 Chelsea King: I'm envisioning an ongoing cost and effort to print, you know, very large banners to place there. And I'm just wondering, What's the vision for that if there isn't a lovely banner that's printed in place there. How does that space work. 1266 03:21:52.050 --> 03:22:00.600 Chris Linn: I would say that surface is still under development. We want to give the district as much flexibility as possible with with what goes on there so 1267 03:22:00.960 --> 03:22:10.800 Chris Linn: We imagine that will have brackets for grant for banners to be attached to. Likewise, there could be a permanent art installation or mural on there as well. 1268 03:22:11.400 --> 03:22:28.560 Chris Linn: And it could actually be quite beautiful just being left plane as a foil to the rest of the building. So I think is really quite it's really, it's, it's a very flexible surface on which any number of things can happen. Depending on on 1269 03:22:30.390 --> 03:22:33.330 Chris Linn: The funds, you want to dedicate to him. 1270 03:22:34.110 --> 03:22:35.850 Kathy Ludwig: Yeah, Becca, does it have the 1271 03:22:35.910 --> 03:22:41.070 Kathy Ludwig: Potential to be a digital service a digital screen that could have a 1272 03:22:42.510 --> 03:22:45.300 Kathy Ludwig: Moving Image projected on it. 1273 03:22:46.590 --> 03:22:48.570 Chris Linn: It can be a projection surface. 1274 03:22:50.010 --> 03:22:59.220 Chris Linn: We'll see, we'll have some pretty strict sign codes this surface is not really visible from the street. So we'll be talking with City Planning about 1275 03:23:01.440 --> 03:23:10.080 Chris Linn: What, how, how big signs can be on there and whether it can be digital, we are looking at were identifying the cost for an alternate actually put a digital screen. 1276 03:23:10.410 --> 03:23:23.580 Chris Linn: either inside or outside. So we'll have that information will know how the city will feel about it and we'll be able to you'll be able to make it a pretty informed decision but it'd be cool if it was a digital thing. I think that'd be pretty amazing. 1277 03:23:24.420 --> 03:23:33.240 Remo Douglas: Yeah, the city code, depending on how they interpret what that sign would be in that location generally limits. 1278 03:23:34.380 --> 03:23:39.720 Remo Douglas: Changing of the image to every 15 minutes which means you actually you're not allowed to have a clock. 1279 03:23:40.920 --> 03:23:43.680 Remo Douglas: On a publicly visible sign because that changes too often. 1280 03:23:44.760 --> 03:23:51.990 Remo Douglas: So there are there are some challenges there, but the team's been coming up with a whole array as, as Chris described options for 1281 03:23:52.410 --> 03:24:05.790 Remo Douglas: How could we, you know, either either. Could it be digital or could it be some system that would be very simple and easy to, you know, bring a little lift in real quick. The district has several and maintenance. 1282 03:24:07.200 --> 03:24:16.590 Remo Douglas: And go up quick disconnect. A couple brackets or you know strings to the edge of a boat a poster and and quickly swap that out and come back down. 1283 03:24:18.090 --> 03:24:19.890 Kathy Ludwig: And I wonder, was less about 1284 03:24:21.480 --> 03:24:35.040 Kathy Ludwig: Digital words that can be kind of annoying and flashing, but an image. I'm just thinking ecologically let's not keep filling the landfill with banners that outlive themselves after a few months, but this static 1285 03:24:36.210 --> 03:24:50.820 Kathy Ludwig: Image from a dress rehearsal. That's promoting the upcoming play projected on there and you know when it's done. It's you just turn lights off. You know, and it doesn't fill our landfill with a lot of banners or signs, either. 1286 03:24:51.390 --> 03:24:52.320 Chris Linn: So terrific idea. 1287 03:24:55.080 --> 03:25:06.660 Regan Molatore: I just had a wondering, and I was like, I appreciate the drape concept and that it's novel and unique, but I also sometimes feel that sometimes design and 1288 03:25:07.470 --> 03:25:15.690 Regan Molatore: The creativity of design sons hands outweighs the practicality and the purpose of it. And I just have a wondering about that particular curtain effect. 1289 03:25:16.170 --> 03:25:34.830 Regan Molatore: In that the perforated metal. This is Oregon. It's a wet damp environment moss and mildew grows frequently. And that's a really tough material at a height that is tough to routinely keep it clean. And while it would look really great maybe in its initial year 1290 03:25:36.060 --> 03:25:41.970 Regan Molatore: I think the cost of upkeep and expense and keeping it clean looking that over time is worrisome. 1291 03:25:43.050 --> 03:25:48.300 Remo Douglas: Yeah, I appreciate that chair bullet or that's definitely a conversation we've been having 1292 03:25:49.590 --> 03:25:55.740 Remo Douglas: You know the exact profile of that material hasn't been selected the whole size hasn't been selected. 1293 03:25:56.850 --> 03:26:00.840 Remo Douglas: And the extent to which it's perforated versus perhaps solid 1294 03:26:02.040 --> 03:26:18.870 Remo Douglas: In terms of the moisture, regardless of perforation or not there's very thorough what we call rain screen systems that are designed in behind, whatever, whether it's brick or metal or citing the going behind an actress. The true waterproofing. 1295 03:26:20.130 --> 03:26:21.390 Remo Douglas: But you. But you're exactly 1296 03:26:22.470 --> 03:26:31.590 Regan Molatore: Question, because that perforated metal supposed to be see through that light through so you don't have any paint that's not yeah i'm not talking metal itself hanging out from the 1297 03:26:32.310 --> 03:26:39.960 Remo Douglas: Right, right, so that the idea of being sorry that that that that similar type of material would wrap around some other parts of the building as well. 1298 03:26:41.430 --> 03:26:51.990 Remo Douglas: But absolutely, we need to be mindful of the maintain ability of the product and making sure that you know it's not something that's going to take an exorbitant amount of time. 1299 03:26:52.710 --> 03:27:03.480 Remo Douglas: To maintain but we're, we're in conversation with Jeff chambers and the maintenance team and they're getting to review documents as we go along. Commenting on everything from boilers to 1300 03:27:03.510 --> 03:27:07.890 Regan Molatore: Like that remote and I just, I guess my only kind of sorry to cut you off. I just don't want to. 1301 03:27:08.400 --> 03:27:24.870 Regan Molatore: Holy appreciate all all the work. And inside that goes into this. But the question is, is like, do you really want to be spending your time and energy, clean, like it's an unnecessary feature potentially and is that where you would want to use our time and resources. 1302 03:27:25.980 --> 03:27:36.720 Regan Molatore: On something that doesn't improve education. It's simply an aesthetic and ultimately I'm not on the comedian, you have stakeholders, but I just think that that's an important consideration. 1303 03:27:37.470 --> 03:27:45.060 Regan Molatore: To think about rather than trying to figure out how you're going to make something work that at the end of the day may just not be practical bottle somebody to consider it. 1304 03:27:48.630 --> 03:27:48.960 Regan Molatore: Okay. 1305 03:27:50.250 --> 03:27:53.100 Regan Molatore: Anybody else have any further questions dinner. 1306 03:27:55.410 --> 03:28:00.960 Ginger Fitch: So thank you for your presentations and for your work with the community, including our students. 1307 03:28:02.370 --> 03:28:14.790 Ginger Fitch: Both buildings that were presented tonight are two storey buildings. And so I had some questions about access for persons with disabilities as to particularly an auditorium. 1308 03:28:15.990 --> 03:28:16.770 Ginger Fitch: But 1309 03:28:17.910 --> 03:28:18.840 Ginger Fitch: I also 1310 03:28:20.070 --> 03:28:26.700 Ginger Fitch: Don't have to answer it tonight, but wondering about what thought you'd given to auditory and visually impaired persons. 1311 03:28:27.720 --> 03:28:32.430 Ginger Fitch: For the auditorium in that space. And then also 1312 03:28:34.020 --> 03:28:53.220 Ginger Fitch: For both buildings, Dr. Ludwig. In particular, we have separated the entry points to the schools for persons who are being dropped off my parents or driving themselves and those who are being bused and I just want us to think about the equity of set setting up 1313 03:28:54.300 --> 03:29:00.180 Ginger Fitch: Two different welcoming spaces, based on your arrival to school. 1314 03:29:02.970 --> 03:29:05.640 Remo Douglas: Yeah, I appreciate that director Fitch. 1315 03:29:06.780 --> 03:29:18.720 Remo Douglas: All all comment briefly on the second part first. In terms of drop off. It's a very deliberate exercise on the district's part to separate those entries 1316 03:29:20.460 --> 03:29:30.840 Remo Douglas: And we are pursuing directly to your point, how do you make both of those is celebrated entry that no one feels like they're coming in a backdoor. 1317 03:29:31.890 --> 03:29:33.510 Remo Douglas: So in the case of the middle school. 1318 03:29:34.710 --> 03:29:47.730 Remo Douglas: You have the parent drive coming into the lower level and they enter near the office that's also the entry that would be used throughout the school day. Once the building locks. Locks up when school has started. 1319 03:29:48.840 --> 03:30:00.540 Remo Douglas: But we're also creating a rear. We've been referring to it as an outdoor commons outside of the upper entry, where the bus. The students dropped off by buses would enter 1320 03:30:01.860 --> 03:30:10.410 Remo Douglas: And the Commons itself is actually proposed to be a multi level area. And so the students who enter from that upper entry from the buses. 1321 03:30:11.370 --> 03:30:26.820 Remo Douglas: Not only is it a celebrated entry and you know it's a it's a second front to the school deliberately but when they enter the school. They were, they would look down from the second floor of the comments down into the open to story space below. 1322 03:30:27.960 --> 03:30:38.040 Remo Douglas: And so I I feel that, you know, each entry has its own advantages and very much feels like a front entry. 1323 03:30:39.060 --> 03:30:43.110 Remo Douglas: And similarly for the 1324 03:30:44.520 --> 03:30:53.280 Remo Douglas: High School auditorium addition, we've actually created a small what we've been referring to as the North lobby in that addition. 1325 03:30:54.210 --> 03:31:05.520 Remo Douglas: That will accommodate all of the visitors who and future students who will park there either during the day, or for a performance in the evening and there will be a whole 1326 03:31:06.600 --> 03:31:16.800 Remo Douglas: You know, I'll be at a bit smaller, but a whole entry experience that will happen there on the north side it will also provide a new access into the auxiliary gym. 1327 03:31:17.700 --> 03:31:29.850 Remo Douglas: So when there are athletic events happening for there they'll have sort of a direct parking and building entry for those activities rather than having to go clear around to the front door. 1328 03:31:31.080 --> 03:31:33.840 Remo Douglas: So yeah, we've been very attentive to making sure that 1329 03:31:34.950 --> 03:31:37.710 Remo Douglas: Whichever parking or otherwise. 1330 03:31:38.940 --> 03:31:49.050 Remo Douglas: You know the means of transportation of arriving at the school, you have a celebrated way to be welcomed to the school. I always take with me. 1331 03:31:50.610 --> 03:31:54.210 Remo Douglas: Kathy's statement of safe and welcoming schools. 1332 03:31:55.650 --> 03:31:57.330 Remo Douglas: And we need to make sure that both are true. 1333 03:31:58.500 --> 03:32:02.430 Remo Douglas: And so we're being very deliberate about that, and I apologize. I forgot the first question. 1334 03:32:06.270 --> 03:32:09.960 Ginger Fitch: Just about persons with disabilities. Having access 1335 03:32:10.740 --> 03:32:11.700 Remo Douglas: Oh yes multi level. 1336 03:32:13.350 --> 03:32:24.090 Remo Douglas: Yep. Yeah, absolutely. For the middle school project we've been working with Dr. Spencer items, who of course as well versed in all of that. 1337 03:32:24.600 --> 03:32:33.990 Remo Douglas: It's been great to have her attending some of the meetings, talking about alternative playground surfacing you know really exploring and creating a little 1338 03:32:34.950 --> 03:32:47.160 Remo Douglas: Group that kind of a focus group for selection of play equipment so that we're assuring that there are options for you know all students or community members who visit the school. 1339 03:32:48.450 --> 03:32:52.830 Remo Douglas: To make sure that everyone has activities that they're able to participate in 1340 03:32:53.850 --> 03:32:54.780 Remo Douglas: And additionally, 1341 03:32:56.820 --> 03:33:09.300 Remo Douglas: Allowing for transfer between levels using elevators that are inappropriate places and that don't send students along way out of their way before getting to the space. 1342 03:33:10.410 --> 03:33:16.560 Remo Douglas: You know, it's, it's been a great part of this program is as we're building out a lot of hilly slope across the district. 1343 03:33:17.850 --> 03:33:18.990 Remo Douglas: Westland high schools. 1344 03:33:20.550 --> 03:33:22.380 Remo Douglas: Parking and stadium comes to mind. 1345 03:33:23.640 --> 03:33:35.310 Remo Douglas: Where we've really been focusing on how do we how do we reach that universal accessibility, meaning how do we cause the main route to be the accessible route wherever we can. 1346 03:33:36.360 --> 03:33:44.520 Remo Douglas: It's, it's, of course, a challenge with a two story building where you really need to use elevators, but we are working with ramps and other tools. 1347 03:33:45.840 --> 03:33:54.780 Remo Douglas: On other projects where we can say, hey, let's make it so everyone uses that same access point that there's not some side place that someone else needs to go. 1348 03:33:56.040 --> 03:34:04.230 Remo Douglas: And similarly, we will end up getting into in a few months, a presentation on the interior of both of these projects. 1349 03:34:05.370 --> 03:34:17.820 Remo Douglas: The auditorium project actually has three levels, though, because there's a full orchestra pit, similar to Westland high school. So there's a lower level down there. And then we have the balcony and production level. 1350 03:34:18.540 --> 03:34:30.510 Remo Douglas: Up above and we will have full size front of house style elevators for both there'll be no chair lifts, which is both conducive to welcoming 1351 03:34:31.470 --> 03:34:38.970 Remo Douglas: Folks with, you know, middle mobility limitations as well as you can't hear. Pat cheering from the audience. 1352 03:34:39.870 --> 03:34:53.280 Remo Douglas: But those chairlifts are are very difficult to maintain and keep in good order. So we just set out square one. No lifts all elevators, where you know we're allowing everyone to access this equitably 1353 03:35:00.900 --> 03:35:10.590 Regan Molatore: All right, I'm not seeing any further questions or comments. So thank you all very, very much appreciate it and thank you for your patience late evening. 1354 03:35:10.830 --> 03:35:11.910 Chris Linn: You. Thank you very much. 1355 03:35:12.870 --> 03:35:13.170 Becca Cavell / Bora Architects: Just 1356 03:35:14.160 --> 03:35:23.310 Kathy Ludwig: A 10. Second. Thank you, Rebecca, we've known your work for years, you're one of the family. Thank you again for a thorough and delightful presentation. 1357 03:35:24.060 --> 03:35:37.590 Kathy Ludwig: Becca, and Chris, you're new to the Western Wilson of a family, but we're so thrilled that you've joined us. And I've been hearing just such great reports from students and staff have been involved in the process to your attentive listening, your flexibility. 1358 03:35:38.730 --> 03:35:50.340 Kathy Ludwig: Your desire to create a joyful learning space and we're just so thrilled that you're working on this project with us and thank you for your artistic endeavors your thoughtfulness and 1359 03:35:50.970 --> 03:36:03.450 Kathy Ludwig: We're excited as we keep kind of tinkering with this over the next month so appreciate you both and glad you could stay in person to introduce yourself to our board and and to be here tonight. Thank you so much thank 1360 03:36:03.450 --> 03:36:04.590 Chris Linn: You. Thank you very much. 1361 03:36:05.670 --> 03:36:06.720 Rebecca Stuecker: Thank you very much. 1362 03:36:07.170 --> 03:36:09.060 Remo Douglas: Bye, thank you everyone. 1363 03:36:14.310 --> 03:36:26.700 Regan Molatore: On board Dini, let's maybe to use a restroom and return. Okay. Why don't we take a, like a five minute break and come back at 945. All right. Thank you. 1364 03:36:31.800 --> 03:36:38.130 Regan Molatore: Meeting and we will return to a we were talking about our emotion around I'm 1365 03:36:39.300 --> 03:36:49.800 Regan Molatore: The digital curriculum and and we had emotion, just for approval of the Florida Virtual curriculum. 1366 03:36:52.770 --> 03:37:06.780 Regan Molatore: And I just had a wondering, cuz I as everyone was asking their questions until see us some really good thoughtful questions, but I kind of feel like our I think we started this whole thing off is what is the emotion that we're looking for. 1367 03:37:07.530 --> 03:37:16.320 Regan Molatore: And, um, it's a little bit of a maybe seeing the forest through the trees and that you know before us is a recommendation that we have got 1368 03:37:18.360 --> 03:37:40.980 Regan Molatore: Two forms of digital curriculum and rather than thinking of it as that is the whole an entire comprehensive curriculum for the 2021 school year. It's really just one of many forms of curriculum and by thinking you know that we're just moving to approve a 1369 03:37:42.540 --> 03:37:47.940 Regan Molatore: Well, it's to digital curriculums for us during the school year and 1370 03:37:48.960 --> 03:37:52.680 Regan Molatore: May help reframe some of the conversations that we're having 1371 03:37:54.420 --> 03:38:02.160 Kathy Ludwig: And if I could build off of Dr. One of Dr Swanson's points the reluctance to maybe use the word adopt because 1372 03:38:02.580 --> 03:38:17.970 Kathy Ludwig: You've already adopted as a board we have in place a math curriculum language arts curriculum that perhaps the motion wording which we should have submitted, or could have. If we had thought about it, but we kind of were letting the conversation go 1373 03:38:19.260 --> 03:38:28.320 Kathy Ludwig: Emotion that we approve the use of fuel lead in Florida Virtual School as digital curriculum. 1374 03:38:29.400 --> 03:38:38.550 Kathy Ludwig: For the 2021 2020 2021 school year. So not as our curriculum, but as a digital curriculum. 1375 03:38:40.050 --> 03:38:51.420 Kathy Ludwig: May help maybe untangle with. Are we adopting something that stands alone and represents our school district as the math curriculum, the language arts curriculum. 1376 03:38:52.860 --> 03:39:09.990 Kathy Ludwig: I think where we were leading and getting to that conversation. I appreciate us fleshing that out for families who are watching this meeting, who may watch the recording to kind of hear the thinking behind it is still critical with that conversation. 1377 03:39:11.400 --> 03:39:19.770 Christy Thompson: So that was my kind of thought when we so that's why I think I mentioned those exact words that approving the use and I think that just got 1378 03:39:20.850 --> 03:39:36.390 Christy Thompson: Me, thinking back as a teacher that very much as to what Dr Swanson mentioned, I had a textbook. I did not teach from the textbook. In fact, I often told my students when it's time to study for a test. If you study the textbook, you're going to flunk my test. 1379 03:39:37.470 --> 03:39:39.960 Christy Thompson: Because I supplemented that textbook with 1380 03:39:40.710 --> 03:39:52.860 Christy Thompson: Lab with other things. And so my thought is, is that this is that this is something that one of those things that they're going to use going forward of many different things that are teachers and that we're proving that use 1381 03:39:53.250 --> 03:40:01.230 Christy Thompson: So that they have something, you know, almost like another tool in their pocket. And along with all the other things that they're doing. 1382 03:40:07.230 --> 03:40:07.650 Regan Molatore: Chelsea. 1383 03:40:08.160 --> 03:40:21.000 Chelsea King: Thank you. Um, yes. I appreciate that distinction and that's super clear to me and I think just for clarity. My concern is about and 1384 03:40:21.660 --> 03:40:35.640 Chelsea King: You know, I don't want to be labor, a point. I think we've, you know, we've talked about much of the substantive concerns that I've raised. I know you you know know them better than I do. Even are talking about them. 1385 03:40:36.900 --> 03:40:45.360 Chelsea King: My concern is about spending the time and money to make this tool work when we have a lot of good tools and so 1386 03:40:46.290 --> 03:41:00.840 Chelsea King: You know, if, if you all are recommending that this is the tool. It's worth the time and money. You want to give this to your teachers you believe that teachers want it and then it's the best tool that's available right now. I'm not going to 1387 03:41:01.890 --> 03:41:05.130 Chelsea King: You know, argue against that. I would just ask that. 1388 03:41:07.890 --> 03:41:07.980 You 1389 03:41:10.380 --> 03:41:14.490 Chelsea King: The implementation as far as the teacher voice and the implementation. 1390 03:41:15.510 --> 03:41:28.770 Chelsea King: Be strongly considered my personal preference would be that we, that we don't adopt it for the entire academic year. And that's why I asked about the month by month, you know, can it be just for calendar year. 1391 03:41:29.880 --> 03:41:37.650 Chelsea King: I'm hearing you say that that might not make sense because it takes a couple of months just to figure out how to use it and figure out if an alternative 1392 03:41:38.340 --> 03:41:47.970 Chelsea King: Method would work more effectively. But I also have a concern that we put that much time time and effort into figuring out how to use Florida. 1393 03:41:48.300 --> 03:42:01.320 Chelsea King: A virtual and it kind of becomes almost like the default choice and moving forward as well. It gosh we already all know it. We've already put in so much time. It's like the same argument gains even more traction 1394 03:42:01.770 --> 03:42:06.420 Chelsea King: And I have enough concerns about things like the cultural responsive element and the 1395 03:42:07.530 --> 03:42:11.460 Chelsea King: You know applicability with the IPS and things like that. 1396 03:42:12.720 --> 03:42:22.590 Chelsea King: You know that I would want a rigorous evaluation of its effectiveness prior to moving forward again and 1397 03:42:23.730 --> 03:42:26.340 Chelsea King: You know, I don't recall how much we're spending on it. 1398 03:42:27.960 --> 03:42:35.490 Chelsea King: But I know you know time and money is precious. And I just want to make sure it's the most. It's the most effective use of our time and money. 1399 03:42:36.930 --> 03:42:38.820 Kathy Ludwig: And I appreciate that. 1400 03:42:40.350 --> 03:42:46.680 Kathy Ludwig: I think with a number of tools you will get variability there will be some teachers who will say, 1401 03:42:47.520 --> 03:42:57.660 Kathy Ludwig: I hardly use it at all. I figured out a way to shape my curriculum digitally, and I only actually use Florida Virtual for some practice review for my students 1402 03:42:57.960 --> 03:43:04.620 Kathy Ludwig: But it's helpful for that because that's one couple less pieces I have to then generate on my own at 10 o'clock at night. 1403 03:43:05.220 --> 03:43:11.460 Kathy Ludwig: After I prepared my lessons and then there may be some teachers who say I really appreciate this, because 1404 03:43:11.820 --> 03:43:21.120 Kathy Ludwig: I have some students who are going to stay in CL a long time and it allows them to have some independence, their own pace and work on things when I'm not able to exam with students. 1405 03:43:21.570 --> 03:43:31.320 Kathy Ludwig: As Dr. Prior mentioned when we move to K through exception or hybrid. We've already got some feedback from a few teachers in secondary who have looked at some of the units and said, 1406 03:43:31.800 --> 03:43:38.340 Kathy Ludwig: Boy actively like this one that Florida Virtual creates around this mathematics unit. I'm going to do something different. 1407 03:43:38.640 --> 03:43:49.110 Kathy Ludwig: But in the spring or in the winter when I get to one of my other units. I kind of liked the one there. So, you know, a tool may even have very good quality of its use during the year. 1408 03:43:49.560 --> 03:43:57.420 Kathy Ludwig: And a teacher may say, I'm not going to use it much in the fall, but I could see in the winter and spring I like some of those units coming up and they 1409 03:43:58.170 --> 03:44:15.360 Kathy Ludwig: You know, and I don't have to customize or spend my own time recreating something digitally. It's there for me and I can enhance it. But I want to start my own fall unit. The way I typically do and I'm willing to put in all that time and work into making it digitally accessible for 1410 03:44:16.410 --> 03:44:27.270 Kathy Ludwig: For students are learning specialists have now a common tool that they can use instead of waiting for every teacher create theirs, and then having to modify or create accommodations 1411 03:44:28.080 --> 03:44:38.700 Kathy Ludwig: They can, you know, go straight to this digital curriculum and begin to work and interact with it and create some possibilities to present a teachers around how it could be used for some students 1412 03:44:39.210 --> 03:44:48.900 Kathy Ludwig: That's consistent across the district instead of waiting for everybody to finish creating their own and then figure out the accommodations and modifications for some of those so 1413 03:44:49.320 --> 03:45:00.840 Kathy Ludwig: We're hearing people react in different ways and my senses were a little too early to know exactly how this tool is going to fit the bill, but one of our 1414 03:45:01.470 --> 03:45:11.430 Kathy Ludwig: selling points around Florida Virtual is that it is so manipulate manipulate bubble and malleable and that teachers can unpack it white easy and 1415 03:45:12.300 --> 03:45:24.240 Kathy Ludwig: Again, use the parts that work for them, their students and set aside the parts that don't that's worth the time and money as well. And then to grab the parts that that fit when you need to. 1416 03:45:25.980 --> 03:45:36.600 Kathy Ludwig: So that's just a little bit of some of the feedback that we've been hearing around people reacting already to it. And there's some variability. As we begin to use it as a as a tool. 1417 03:45:37.950 --> 03:45:38.640 Kathy Ludwig: After sourcing 1418 03:45:38.940 --> 03:45:46.020 Barb Soisson: Yes, and appreciate the question of, just as a steward and looking at how we're using our resources so 1419 03:45:47.970 --> 03:46:03.900 Barb Soisson: We don't have a choice. This it's offered like many all of them. It's a year long license. So, you know, we couldn't go month by month, should we choose to. But the other thing you know having. We do a lot of curriculum purchases 1420 03:46:04.890 --> 03:46:27.120 Barb Soisson: When you look at over the number of students using it K 12, it would be reasonable to think of this as a supplemental resource and we again have moved more towards that when we purchase curriculum. So thinking of it that way as something for teachers. 1421 03:46:28.230 --> 03:46:34.320 Barb Soisson: It might be a way to think of it as opposed to it being again the curriculum. 1422 03:46:34.620 --> 03:46:46.110 Barb Soisson: Or something that is just a large investment of money when you amortize it out over, you know, the students for the school year. We do believe that it fits in as a 1423 03:46:46.440 --> 03:46:56.250 Barb Soisson: Very reasonable cost for what could be a supplemental piece and might become increasingly supplemental as we move into hybrid learning 1424 03:47:02.010 --> 03:47:03.960 Regan Molatore: And Christina. Did you have a question. 1425 03:47:05.190 --> 03:47:07.080 Regan Molatore: Oh, your hand was up and down. Down there, man. 1426 03:47:07.650 --> 03:47:21.990 Christy Thompson: Yeah, I took it down I my wondering, was just about, you know, if at some point during the year, would we put out some sort of survey to teachers or just and to parents is to give some feedback, but at the same time, not a mean 1427 03:47:22.830 --> 03:47:34.230 Christy Thompson: I don't know feedback that can help us utilize it better or utilize that was my only wondering, but then I took my hand down because I thought to 1428 03:47:35.460 --> 03:47:52.320 Christy Thompson: You know, if we're going to use it the entire year. That would be helpful if it was something I like Dr. Carson said that maybe we were going to move forward with and have as a supplemental for years to come. That it would, you know, that we would do some sort of survey like that, but 1429 03:47:53.160 --> 03:48:03.900 Barb Soisson: And again, even if we were going to use it in any way, shape, or form with either of these curriculums that would initiate a full process, you know, in doing that. 1430 03:48:10.110 --> 03:48:21.660 Chelsea King: Thank you. I appreciate chairman mentor and fellow board members for taking the extra time and energy to dive into this. And so, thank you. I know it makes us run late and I appreciate it. 1431 03:48:23.100 --> 03:48:32.460 Regan Molatore: I appreciate your comments and questions and wondering about it. I mean, it's all, it's definitely stuff that we need to keep at the forefront of all the work we do, and 1432 03:48:33.000 --> 03:48:40.170 Regan Molatore: It has value in that regard. Definitely. I just, you know, it's hindsight, and it's a lot of other things but 1433 03:48:40.950 --> 03:48:53.910 Regan Molatore: We were making these moves with a very short runway and, you know, with the world of education changing. And we thought we could open for in person and then it was like, No, we're online and then we're going maybe for the foreseeable future, and 1434 03:48:54.540 --> 03:49:05.220 Regan Molatore: You know, trying to find tools and aids to to help streamline and facilitate a consistent delivery of education to students when 1435 03:49:05.880 --> 03:49:26.490 Regan Molatore: In the absence of in person learning and I feel that both curriculums fulfill it and Florida Virtual we're well vetted and and to the extent that there are shortcomings, our district seems very aware of what those are and has the ability then to 1436 03:49:28.020 --> 03:49:35.430 Regan Molatore: supplement that learning in a way that you know we as a school district want to deliver education on those topics. 1437 03:49:37.200 --> 03:49:51.990 Regan Molatore: So that's, that's kind of how I my sense of where we are on this. It doesn't ignore any of the points that you've raised, and I think helps direct the work of our district to ensure that we are we are meeting those wanderings 1438 03:49:53.310 --> 03:50:09.270 Regan Molatore: But I'm not inclined to suggest we take a different course at this point in time. I think that would be much more harmful to our children and students then continuing with this curriculum that I think is actually 1439 03:50:10.620 --> 03:50:11.550 Regan Molatore: Pretty good. 1440 03:50:14.010 --> 03:50:20.760 Regan Molatore: And of which you know I'm hearing positive feedback from the community as well as you know there's some hurdles with it, but there is with everything. 1441 03:50:23.430 --> 03:50:37.740 Regan Molatore: I have a wondering, then, um, we've kind of discussed maybe potentially modifying the language around the motion. It didn't know if there was actual interest in doing that or if we just proceed with the motion that's on 1442 03:50:38.940 --> 03:50:39.750 Regan Molatore: before us. 1443 03:50:45.420 --> 03:50:45.780 Regan Molatore: Okay. 1444 03:50:46.260 --> 03:50:50.850 Kathy Ludwig: Could we consider director Thompson's phrase. 1445 03:50:52.050 --> 03:51:02.670 Kathy Ludwig: I move that we approve the use of versus adopting so that there isn't that confusion in the community or to our organization that we've 1446 03:51:02.910 --> 03:51:18.480 Kathy Ludwig: Adopted something that's going to replace something else that actually was adopted and has, you know, a six to eight years, standing in our district, but that we approved the use of fuel lead in Florida Virtual as as digital curriculums with the 1447 03:51:18.840 --> 03:51:21.780 Chelsea King: SOUND I would be willing to modify my emotion I 1448 03:51:21.870 --> 03:51:22.920 Chelsea King: There are, there's a 1449 03:51:23.190 --> 03:51:37.980 Chelsea King: Bit of a further discussion about fuel, Ed, which I do think was independent of Florida Virtual and so I could modify my motion to to state that I move that we approve the use of the tool, Florida. 1450 03:51:39.510 --> 03:51:40.230 Chelsea King: Virtual 1451 03:51:41.340 --> 03:51:42.450 Chelsea King: Learning System. 1452 03:51:44.970 --> 03:51:48.240 Chelsea King: For use in the 2020 2021 academic here. 1453 03:51:51.510 --> 03:51:55.770 Regan Molatore: withdrawing the original motion or are you just amending 1454 03:51:56.310 --> 03:51:57.000 Amending 1455 03:51:58.680 --> 03:52:00.540 Regan Molatore: The we needed a second on the amendment. 1456 03:52:03.150 --> 03:52:07.080 Regan Molatore: Okay, I think I read Christie's lips, and she said that she said 1457 03:52:07.710 --> 03:52:13.020 Regan Molatore: Seconds. Okay. All right. So, um, 1458 03:52:14.190 --> 03:52:15.570 Regan Molatore: Kelly would you call that for a vote. 1459 03:52:24.390 --> 03:52:25.050 Regan Molatore: Yes. 1460 03:52:26.610 --> 03:52:27.780 Kelly Douglas: Christie Thompson. 1461 03:52:28.500 --> 03:52:28.860 I 1462 03:52:29.910 --> 03:52:30.990 Kelly Douglas: Ginger Fitch. 1463 03:52:33.510 --> 03:52:34.320 Kelly Douglas: Chelsea King 1464 03:52:34.950 --> 03:52:35.310 I 1465 03:52:36.330 --> 03:52:50.070 Regan Molatore: OK, so my silver reservation on that was OK. So now that we've amended it. I don't even think the original motion exists, I'm typically you you use. Second, the amendment and you build on that and then you go back in code on the original motion. 1466 03:52:51.120 --> 03:52:53.280 Regan Molatore: So I think we saw the original emotion to vote on 1467 03:52:54.330 --> 03:52:57.240 Chelsea King: But subsequently the original motion is 1468 03:52:57.810 --> 03:53:07.380 Chelsea King: There was just there wasn't a substantive change was just a couple of words around. Instead of adopting curriculum we approved the use of a tool. I think those are the only the only phrase that was changed. 1469 03:53:07.740 --> 03:53:18.510 Chelsea King: So if it fits the bill for process I I could redact that original emotion. I don't think the substance of anything we've voted on or discuss this change. 1470 03:53:20.340 --> 03:53:24.750 Regan Molatore: All right, thank you. That just yeah from process. Thank you. That helps me out. 1471 03:53:25.710 --> 03:53:29.040 Ginger Fitch: Thank you so far. Can I make the motion on fuel and then 1472 03:53:29.670 --> 03:53:43.980 Ginger Fitch: Yes, please. I moved at the board approved the use of fuel and digital curriculum to supplement the existing curriculum for the 2020 and 21 school year. 1473 03:53:44.820 --> 03:53:47.220 Regan Molatore: Excellent. I'll second that discussion. 1474 03:53:51.000 --> 03:53:51.210 Regan Molatore: Yeah. 1475 03:53:53.250 --> 03:53:55.290 Chelsea King: Yeah, I think, I don't need to 1476 03:53:56.700 --> 03:54:06.600 Chelsea King: Restate some of the concerns I had about Florida Virtual I think some of them are similar and fuel add around cultural responsiveness and the intuitive ness of the platform and 1477 03:54:07.710 --> 03:54:27.570 Chelsea King: You know, potentially dated curriculum embedded in you know some of those things that were bound to find an any tool that we adopt so it's it's not necessarily unique to fuel ed and my primary concern was separating fuel Ed from Florida Virtual is that I know just based on him. 1478 03:54:29.250 --> 03:54:33.390 Chelsea King: The email that we received, I can pull it up but 1479 03:54:34.140 --> 03:54:44.640 Chelsea King: There was an email that came out about a week and a half or two weeks ago they stated some deliverables that we were waiting on from fuel, Ed. And there was a bulleted list of I think four or five 1480 03:54:45.120 --> 03:54:55.290 Chelsea King: What would it be useful for me to pull it up my can, but my my big wondering is, has fuel Ed delivered on their promises. 1481 03:54:59.430 --> 03:55:09.270 Barb Soisson: Yes. I mean it's, it hasn't been all of everything arrived in one package at one time, but they have made. 1482 03:55:09.810 --> 03:55:27.240 Barb Soisson: Delivery on things that were missing there are still not everybody has everything they need and not everybody is able to access all the time. And that's the part where there's ongoing work that is being done. 1483 03:55:27.900 --> 03:55:36.300 Barb Soisson: Meeting with them. There's a standing meeting every day. And it has to do with some access pieces. It has to do with 1484 03:55:37.440 --> 03:55:57.390 Barb Soisson: Some, some of the things that we use in in zoom you know with students navigating that so by deliverables. Have they gotten the pieces here. Yes. Is it all up and running smoothly for every family 100% that is still 1485 03:55:58.440 --> 03:56:08.010 Barb Soisson: Working on it. I think it's made significant progress and that it's it's getting there. But there are pieces that again with 1486 03:56:08.970 --> 03:56:23.520 Barb Soisson: This company is, you know, because it is so comprehensive, it does serve lots of districts in places and they're finding that there are some things that they're working with they've dedicated a lot of their staff. 1487 03:56:24.450 --> 03:56:35.970 Barb Soisson: To us, and again, it isn't that we would say that if we were not in this situation right now, and especially with the unique situation of the online program where 1488 03:56:36.390 --> 03:56:43.950 Barb Soisson: We have families who opted for that program because they are operating on very different schedules. 1489 03:56:44.340 --> 03:56:54.870 Barb Soisson: This year, and they need something that is standing completely on its own. So it's a bit of a different discussion with Florida Virtual so 1490 03:56:55.230 --> 03:57:03.480 Barb Soisson: In and there's health considerations as well. So in looking at those pieces that, again, is what this is the 1491 03:57:03.810 --> 03:57:17.430 Barb Soisson: Program right now that has the components needed for that. So we don't want to say, by any means that it's perfect. But in terms of the deliverables being there to where we can see we're getting there. Yes. 1492 03:57:21.810 --> 03:57:22.230 Regan Molatore: Ginger. 1493 03:57:31.170 --> 03:57:31.770 Regan Molatore: You're on mute. 1494 03:57:33.540 --> 03:57:44.730 Ginger Fitch: I heard you say that twice. Dr. Jason that people chose the online program for the year because of x and y. Well, the fact is that 1495 03:57:46.380 --> 03:58:03.300 Ginger Fitch: What was expected isn't necessarily what was delivered and and things are changing. And so it's not clear to me that the assumptions again that we made going in are the same ones that currently exist for families or for the district and 1496 03:58:06.240 --> 03:58:19.740 Ginger Fitch: I'm even hesitant to say that we should make people continue the commitment because experience isn't what we understood it was to be and I don't think we're going to be able to deliver what we said it was going to be 1497 03:58:20.790 --> 03:58:30.930 Ginger Fitch: So again, just to check what assumptions. Did we make. What's the reality is that reality going to change tomorrow or in a month or two months. 1498 03:58:31.260 --> 03:58:42.570 Ginger Fitch: And and what do we do, what do we have control over. And what don't we have control over. But the things we do have control over what do we, what do we do about the fact that this. Some may or may not match. 1499 03:58:43.290 --> 03:58:55.500 Ginger Fitch: What has actually happened on the ground. Those I don't need those answers today, but those are questions I'm asking, and I would like to know that the district is also engaged in that thinking as well. 1500 03:59:00.210 --> 03:59:07.200 Barb Soisson: Yes, we can do we can first of all if you would like to, you know, hear see converse about 1501 03:59:08.040 --> 03:59:22.290 Barb Soisson: Exactly what is being done. Yes. And I think with assumption. Some of the things around the reasons families selected that and what the program is I don't think those have changed again how 1502 03:59:23.040 --> 03:59:39.060 Barb Soisson: immediately accessible was the program and mainly just in getting the content that is a hurdle, you know, for us, in doing that. The other thing that we have found that has happened, and we are you know collecting information on this. It's 1503 03:59:41.040 --> 03:59:48.810 Barb Soisson: Becoming more systematic is we're finding that sometimes with some families wanted in July, when 1504 03:59:49.290 --> 03:59:58.830 Barb Soisson: The state was in a very different place with the pandemic and it was uncertain what the school year was going to be like I have conversation as do 1505 03:59:59.460 --> 04:00:14.700 Barb Soisson: Dr. Prior Dr downs. Dr. Ludwig Dr. Spencer items with families were now that children have, you know, our in studio. Now that the school year has started and 1506 04:00:15.630 --> 04:00:23.070 Barb Soisson: Have different things that they're thinking. And so we are understanding that some of this is going to shift. And I know 1507 04:00:24.060 --> 04:00:36.450 Barb Soisson: being nimble and being stable and steady at the same time is really what we're trying to do. So this curriculum. We want something stable and steady. 1508 04:00:36.750 --> 04:00:43.140 Barb Soisson: We do have conversations with families around and that's that's kind of a different conversation. 1509 04:00:43.410 --> 04:00:54.060 Barb Soisson: Around is what I thought was going to work for my family in July, the same thing now. So if that's you know what what you're thinking of for assumptions. 1510 04:00:54.420 --> 04:01:06.960 Barb Soisson: Yes, we are finding that some of those, those things are changing. We're also trying now in working closely with the two programs together CDO hybrid and the online program. 1511 04:01:07.260 --> 04:01:20.460 Barb Soisson: To look at how can we in some ways for some families blend some of those pieces. And that has to do with participation in school, which means, you know, literally, if you're in 1512 04:01:21.030 --> 04:01:28.350 Barb Soisson: Grade six through 12 you take band choir, orchestra with your peers at your homeschool 1513 04:01:29.130 --> 04:01:35.310 Barb Soisson: Doesn't mean that you will ever necessarily return to school in person won't appear in the online program. 1514 04:01:35.550 --> 04:01:46.410 Barb Soisson: Some of the students and CDO hybrid will not either, but we are finding that there are more ways where there is that blend. We're also trying to be responsive, because that's been an ask 1515 04:01:46.830 --> 04:02:05.850 Barb Soisson: From from the community as well with remaining part of the old school. And I think that's a big piece that Dr Pryor was alluding to earlier of what we're learning about what people need, you know, for their children's learning in this time. Yes. I mean, absolutely. I agree that that is shifting 1516 04:02:06.570 --> 04:02:12.630 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): And I think to I've been thinking about board member fishes question in my mind. They're kind of two components of that, you know, 1517 04:02:12.900 --> 04:02:25.350 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): One of them is going to be an ongoing conversation in the sense that our teachers understanding of pedagogy and student engagement is always going to require a lot of deep thinking if we merge with something like 1518 04:02:25.920 --> 04:02:30.690 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): You know, fuel ed that wasn't built on kind of the same premise, but we can 1519 04:02:30.990 --> 04:02:42.330 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): We can shift and move and kind of bring forward the best of both practices. So we'll continue working on that as far as your question around like deliverables in terms of materials and technological 1520 04:02:42.720 --> 04:02:50.790 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): Access we've made huge strides just in the last two weeks, we are so much further along than we were two weeks ago and 1521 04:02:51.330 --> 04:02:59.430 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): Some of that you know has been out of our control in terms of what we can control and they're in. But what we've done is we've maintained a really consistent front. 1522 04:02:59.640 --> 04:03:04.020 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): And saying this is what was promised. This is what we expect. How can we help you get there. 1523 04:03:04.380 --> 04:03:14.040 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): And what I will say to their credit is no one's throwing up their arms and saying we can't do it, they're staying in the conversation. They're being really responsive to our request for additional meetings. 1524 04:03:14.730 --> 04:03:23.160 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): As Barb said earlier, our IT department has been amazing. Incredibly patient professional willing to go above and beyond to make things work. 1525 04:03:23.490 --> 04:03:29.130 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): And to keep asking kind of uncomfortable questions in a way where people actually want to answer them. So 1526 04:03:29.370 --> 04:03:41.640 DAVID PRYOR (he/him/his): I do think we are going to get to a point where we have the deliverables that we were expected and then it's the hard work of just continuing to use them in a way which best matches how our students and parents are used to experiencing school 1527 04:03:44.940 --> 04:03:48.960 Chelsea King: And, you know, just to be clear, this is not 1528 04:03:50.430 --> 04:04:01.080 Chelsea King: I see how hard you all are working at least I hear reports of it. You know, when I hear that Curtis Nelson is, you know, and his team are meeting with them daily. That's where my concern primarily is 1529 04:04:01.950 --> 04:04:12.060 Chelsea King: You know, if I look at this email around learning kits being delivered coaching logins being created the video conferencing being up and running student courses being aligned 1530 04:04:12.540 --> 04:04:29.280 Chelsea King: That sounds like a lot. And so, you know, that's what my question is about is not so much are the changing needs of our families, but as fuel ed is there is their platform in their curriculum as strong as their sales team. Are they delivering what they said they were going to do. 1531 04:04:30.390 --> 04:04:32.340 Barb Soisson: Those things you just named 1532 04:04:33.390 --> 04:04:54.030 Barb Soisson: Yes, and that's what you know is everything integrated for everyone. We don't want to say that everybody now would say this is working seamlessly for my child, my family, but those items in that email. Yes, we are working on that and they do have those 1533 04:04:55.350 --> 04:05:02.040 Kathy Ludwig: And you know, I, I, again, I'm not here to defend feel led their, their own company, they, they can stand on their own two feet. 1534 04:05:02.490 --> 04:05:12.780 Kathy Ludwig: When we began this journey with them. And actually, we were having earlier conversations as we were considering them as part of our if you call a superintendent study to take a look at blended learning 1535 04:05:13.260 --> 04:05:23.610 Kathy Ludwig: They were a group that we were looking at because of their stellar partnership with some school districts little larger than ours in the Pacific Northwest and doing a great job. 1536 04:05:24.420 --> 04:05:35.640 Kathy Ludwig: So we already were in conversation with them. And then when we got to this point with the pandemic, you know, called them back and resurface that question and that engagement with them. 1537 04:05:37.410 --> 04:05:53.370 Kathy Ludwig: What I will say is what you know Dr. Boyce had mentioned the beginning. What they didn't expect. Is this all of a sudden demand across the country. So what the sales reps could say in the northwest around. We've got some clients, maybe not knowing what the sales reps in the 1538 04:05:54.510 --> 04:06:00.120 Kathy Ludwig: You know, Texas area were saying or what the Northeast were saying, and then discovering that 1539 04:06:01.440 --> 04:06:13.440 Kathy Ludwig: All of a sudden, they were in huge demand and their attempt to then hire more people these learning kits. They were behind because the materials with the pandemic, we've all experienced trying to get 1540 04:06:14.610 --> 04:06:26.580 Kathy Ludwig: More Chromebooks here and those kinds of things. So that slowed them down. They, they had a reasonable response for a number of items that we kept pressuring them on and 1541 04:06:27.510 --> 04:06:39.960 Kathy Ludwig: And then we had a huge turnover with synergy instead of. And so as we were learning synergy and merging that became another component where it was in the summer for us. We weren't 1542 04:06:40.260 --> 04:06:43.920 Kathy Ludwig: It wasn't like we've had synergy all along and they could have been working on it in the spring. 1543 04:06:44.370 --> 04:06:51.690 Kathy Ludwig: We did have to wait until our system transitioned. And then we could begin that transition. So there was almost a bit of a perfect storm. 1544 04:06:52.200 --> 04:06:56.670 Kathy Ludwig: That it's hard to tease out who who didn't deliver to what and who 1545 04:06:57.060 --> 04:07:12.930 Kathy Ludwig: There are components where they admitted. We're behind on some of our supplies. We're getting them out to you. They're all a lot of them are piled here in our district office teachers are picking them up. Others are being mailed to students homes learning coach logins are there. 1546 04:07:14.220 --> 04:07:19.410 Kathy Ludwig: So things took a little longer during this time than anybody would have wanted 1547 04:07:20.790 --> 04:07:26.670 Kathy Ludwig: But you know what, we kept seeing was while the gap was here. And we'd have a conversation 1548 04:07:27.150 --> 04:07:43.050 Kathy Ludwig: You know by the next week, things that happen if the gap hadn't closed, but a significant strides have been made, and now the gap was here we call another meeting a significant stride was made. But there was still a gap. And then, you know, and so where we are now is that gap is so small. 1549 04:07:44.490 --> 04:07:44.940 Kathy Ludwig: That 1550 04:07:44.970 --> 04:07:53.580 Kathy Ludwig: We're close, and where we're hearing is what it's just not quite working still for a family, and we don't know, sometimes even in those instances, is it 1551 04:07:54.990 --> 04:08:01.710 Kathy Ludwig: Something on our end fuel EDS and or is it just, I don't want to say user error but user adjustment. 1552 04:08:02.700 --> 04:08:12.090 Kathy Ludwig: And as we navigate and problem solve. Oh, actually, that would have worked, you know, had the family, maybe using a different system or logged in a certain way. 1553 04:08:12.540 --> 04:08:24.450 Kathy Ludwig: And let's go back and review some of the protocols. So sometimes it's a combination of all three. Is this something we still need to fix or get from fuel that or is this about training the teacher in the family still around the use of 1554 04:08:25.710 --> 04:08:27.210 Kathy Ludwig: The curriculum that platform. 1555 04:08:28.380 --> 04:08:30.090 Kathy Ludwig: Good device particular so 1556 04:08:33.120 --> 04:08:37.650 Regan Molatore: All right, Christy. I miss you had a question. And then I'm going to call it for a vote after that so 1557 04:08:38.820 --> 04:08:46.110 Christy Thompson: I'm just two questions that I had is, has there been any sort of price adjustment based on 1558 04:08:47.130 --> 04:08:52.230 Christy Thompson: The fact that they weren't able to deliver everything at the beginning it was there any 1559 04:08:52.800 --> 04:09:08.160 Christy Thompson: Anyway, I just have a wondering about that. And then my second question is just based off of what I heard Dr Swanson say about you know our families, made a decision in July circumstances have changed. And I know originally when 1560 04:09:09.210 --> 04:09:18.930 Christy Thompson: Families made that decision. They were told it had to be a full year decision. So from what I'm hearing from us. It sound like maybe that might change. 1561 04:09:20.280 --> 04:09:22.500 Christy Thompson: So those are my two my two questions. 1562 04:09:25.680 --> 04:09:44.010 Kathy Ludwig: So the first one we actually while we commit to the full year contract. It's an interesting billing, but I have communicated with with leadership there that we expect an adjustment based on those non deliverables. So we're working through that. 1563 04:09:45.210 --> 04:10:00.450 Kathy Ludwig: And I haven't heard a disagreement, yet it's now working through the system of is it client service, who's going to negotiate that. Is it the billing. Is it our rep, you know, so we've got to just work through those dynamics to get that approval and work through it. 1564 04:10:02.100 --> 04:10:13.140 Kathy Ludwig: You know, part of our commitment to our families, was we have to staff for the school year. We have teachers who are going to commit to a class. 1565 04:10:13.560 --> 04:10:28.710 Kathy Ludwig: Roster to a group of students. We have teachers who selected the online program for the year they needed to just like some families need to stay in there for a year and we got class rosters with the CDO hybrid brick and mortar and 1566 04:10:30.000 --> 04:10:50.040 Kathy Ludwig: You know, when we gave those deadlines that commitment. It was once you decide as a family, then we can assign the staff, we've had to hire some additional staff outside of our budget in order to make it work for families and to give them the choice and 1567 04:10:51.390 --> 04:11:01.920 Kathy Ludwig: To now up end, all of that. Careful assigning and placement of students to just open it back up for who would like to switch 1568 04:11:03.090 --> 04:11:17.220 Kathy Ludwig: is problematic and we've got classes that need to, you know, it's just like the same reason we don't do that when we're in typical brick and mortar situations we asked families to stay with it to work through it and will support them. 1569 04:11:18.450 --> 04:11:19.920 Kathy Ludwig: But we 1570 04:11:21.120 --> 04:11:26.070 Kathy Ludwig: It would be incredibly problematic to now say to all families, you have 1571 04:11:27.300 --> 04:11:38.730 Kathy Ludwig: An open opportunity to now revisit your choice for the year and decide where you want to go and what and we've got staff with committed and classroom communities that are being formed. 1572 04:11:39.810 --> 04:11:47.880 Kathy Ludwig: Lot of care and connection and we're making strides. We hope towards the K three exception and hybrid and we need to keep focused on that. 1573 04:11:48.240 --> 04:11:55.710 Kathy Ludwig: So our intention is always when a family is struggling to say how can we make things better. What's going on, that would help. 1574 04:11:56.580 --> 04:12:04.290 Kathy Ludwig: With the decision you made the classroom that you're in. How can we help to make the experience better if it's not going well right now. 1575 04:12:04.980 --> 04:12:13.980 Kathy Ludwig: We did give some provision very early on for the occasional exception, maybe outside of a family's control or ours. 1576 04:12:14.520 --> 04:12:25.710 Kathy Ludwig: Where we said maybe after first semester we could visit the possibility of a student here there that needed to make a change, but that would be an exception and not the norm. 1577 04:12:27.090 --> 04:12:29.370 Kathy Ludwig: And leaving some judgment and space for that. 1578 04:12:30.570 --> 04:12:40.560 Kathy Ludwig: But we really repeatedly said this needs to be a full year commitment because we are assigning assigning staff to these to these classroom rosters 1579 04:12:41.640 --> 04:12:52.350 Christy Thompson: Thank you. That was my understanding, I just was clarifying after I heard Dr. So I said, I just wanted to kind of clarify for myself and anyone who might be listening that no in fact it is still 1580 04:12:52.860 --> 04:13:04.770 Kathy Ludwig: I appreciate you asking because you gave us the opportunity to publicly state that again for families who may watch this recording, or who are attending this meeting at 1020 at night still 1581 04:13:06.450 --> 04:13:13.830 Kathy Ludwig: And may wonder about is the decision you're going to give that possibility and our intention at this point is, no, we're going to stay the course. 1582 04:13:14.550 --> 04:13:19.650 Christy Thompson: Thank you for clarifying that. And thank you also for just pursuing a price adjustment. 1583 04:13:20.340 --> 04:13:20.610 Yeah. 1584 04:13:23.430 --> 04:13:26.700 Kathy Ludwig: I wasn't doing it so joyfully but it didn't sound, you know, 1585 04:13:27.390 --> 04:13:29.250 Kathy Ludwig: as gentle as I made it sound, but 1586 04:13:30.480 --> 04:13:38.160 Chelsea King: They're, they're very large for profit organization so they can they can dish on a little discount for their deliverables. 1587 04:13:39.120 --> 04:13:39.480 I will 1588 04:13:41.100 --> 04:13:56.910 Kathy Ludwig: Carolyn Miller was a tough negotiator, and we got a lot put into our package that most districts did not get they were hungry for our business and our account. We have a reputation and they gave us a lot. 1589 04:13:58.530 --> 04:14:08.880 Kathy Ludwig: You know, for no cost to to make this work. So that's okay, like you said there for their for profit, they wouldn't have done it. If you know they absolutely couldn't 1590 04:14:11.190 --> 04:14:11.490 But 1591 04:14:13.410 --> 04:14:14.280 Kathy Ludwig: Will still pursue it. 1592 04:14:15.150 --> 04:14:17.790 Regan Molatore: With that, let's call this one for us, please. 1593 04:14:21.990 --> 04:14:22.770 Regan Molatore: Yes. 1594 04:14:23.970 --> 04:14:24.870 Kelly Douglas: Nice checking 1595 04:14:25.230 --> 04:14:26.040 Know, 1596 04:14:31.560 --> 04:14:32.520 Kelly Douglas: Christy Thompson. 1597 04:14:39.090 --> 04:14:52.170 Regan Molatore: Alright, thanks. And that comes to the conclusion of our agenda. Please keep in mind that we have our work section to October 26 and you can see that why I'm really exasperated with 1598 04:14:53.160 --> 04:15:07.620 Regan Molatore: An agenda because it's just not working for some reason, and I will go back to revisiting I'm not giving up yet. But, um, I thought, really, we could do it tonight, and I had an ending at 825 so 1599 04:15:09.540 --> 04:15:16.830 Regan Molatore: Maybe I just put 1030 and then we'll always enter. Either way, I'm ending it. Now you guys all have a wonderful night. Thank you and good work. 1600 04:15:17.430 --> 04:15:17.880 Thank you.