Title: The Mission Statement of the Burke County Public Schools
1The Mission Statement of the Burke County Public
Schools
- The mission of Burke County Public Schools
(BCPS) is to provide opportunities for students
to acquire the knowledge and attitudes which will
enable them to function successfully as
responsible citizens and to choose careers
commensurate with their interests, needs and
abilities.
2Our Belief
- There is a successful student in every child.
- Community involvement is the key to ensure that
quality education exists for each student. - A good public education system creates benefits
for everyone.
3A History of High Schools in Burke County
- Three Independent School Systems Merged Into One
Countywide System in 1969 - New Board Adopted a Comprehensive Facility Plan
to Consolidate 8 Existing High Schools into 4 New
Schools - Old High School Facilities Would Become Junior
High Schools - Property Tax Rate Was Doubled to Build the High
Schools - Funding Would Only Allow for 2 Schools to be
Built
4A History of High Schools in Burke County (Cont.)
- Two High Schools Were Designed Without Walls
Designed for a Student Capacity of 1,600 - 1972 - Freedom Opened
- 1973 - East Burke Opened
- 1989 Bond to Consolidate the 8 Junior High
Schools into 4 Middle Schools and Build Classroom
Additions at The High Schools to Accommodate
Grades 9-12 - 1992 East Burke and Freedom Became 9-12
Comprehensive High Schools - 2000 Comprehensive Facility Study and Citizens
Study Committee Formed
5Timeline for New High Schools
- Discussion of Building New High Schools Since
1973 - Opening of Bids for High Schools October 27,
2005 - Decision of the Burke County Board of Education
to Build Two New High Schools November 8, 2005 - Construction Begins on Enola Road Site December
2005 - COPS Bond Sale Finalized January 19, 2006
- Construction on Lovelady Road Site to Begin
Late Spring/Early Summer 2006 - Open High School on Enola Road Fall 2007
- Open High School on Lovelady Road Fall 2008
6Funding for New High Schools
7System Wide Budget Analysis
- 6 Federal government - primarily for workforce
development and programs that serve at-risk
learners - 6 Child nutritional revenues - CNP funds must be
self-sustaining and cannot use funds from the
academic budgets - 60 State Government - primarily salaries and
benefits - 18 Local County Government - current expenses
(operational costs) - 10 Capital outlay (major construction projects)
- All expenditures must contribute to achieving the
school system's and the community's strategic
goals.
8Personnel Initiatives
- Burke County Public Schools hires the highest
quality teachers. - Its focus on the "school-teacher" fit
appropriately pairs a teacher's interests with a
school's goals and philosophy and helps to ensure
a long-lasting career in the system. - The personnel department involves many community
agencies, such as the Burke County Chamber of
Commerce, to aide in teacher recruitment, and it
is dedicated to "growing our own" teachers
through its collaboration with colleges and
universities. - WPCC and Lees McRae Elementary Education Program
- York College of Pennsylvania Partnership
- ASU Partnership
- Western Carolina University Programs
- Grow our Own (NC Teaching Fellows)
9Quick Facts About Your School System
- The Burke County Schools Have 2,100 Employees
(1,000 certified and 1,100 non-certified) - We operate 111 yellow school buses that travel
7,000 miles per day, 1,260,000 miles per year,
and use 1,200 gallons of fuel per day. - Our Child Nutrition Program employees 115
workers, prepares 12,300 meals per day or 2.2
million meals per year. (We have not raised
lunch prices in 7 years.) - We maintain 138 buildings, 2.3 million square
feet of floor space, and 838 acres. (Total Worth
- 200 Million) - New Community Based Bereavement Program in
Conjunction with Hospice
10No Child Left BehindStatement of Purpose
- The purpose of this title is to ensure that all
children have a fair, equal, and significant
opportunity to obtain a high-quality education
and reach, at a minimum, proficiency on
challenging state academic achievement standards
and state academic assessments.
11No Child Left Behind
- Focus in Four Areas
- Accountability
- Flexibility
- Emphasis on what works
- Empowerment of parents
12No Child Left Behind (Cont.)
- Demonstrating Proficiency
- All schools required to have 100 proficiency by
2013-2014 - Schools must make Adequate Yearly Progress
13Digging into Adequate Yearly Progress a Bit More
- Requires the annual reporting of the percentage
of students who are academically proficient by
school, by district, and by state in reading and
mathematics. There will be, at this time, a
single achievement standard for all groups and
all schools in reading and another single
achievement standard for all groups and all
schools in mathematics. - Proficiency indicators are for the whole school
(grade level breakdown not a factor in AYP) and
for 10 identified subgroups in each school (All,
White, Asian, Multiracial, Hispanic, American
Indian, Black, Free and reduced-priced lunch,
Limited English Proficient, and Disabled).
14Our People - Our Strength
- The best resource we have in Burke County is our
people. If we give them the education and chance
they will do the rest. - In light of the partial collapse of the countys
manufacturing sector and the specter of falling
wages and incomes for persons without high
quality education, we must acknowledge and act
upon the practical necessity of quick action to
dramatically improve our countys public
education system. - Economic necessity compels us to stretch for
universal excellence in education. - Please remember, the road to economic recovery
runs past the school house doors.
15Need to Increase Educational Attainment in our
County
16Need to Increase Educational Attainment in our
County
17In Closing
- "The future of the nation is on the shoulders of
teachers and how they teach kids the future of
the world is in the classroom where the teachers
are. And if we have any chance to guarantee a
positive bridge to the twenty-first century, it
is how we educate the children in the classroom
today. Richard Reginald Green