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Joint City Council/School Board

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Title: Joint City Council/School Board


1
Community Forums
Joint City Council/School Board 700 p.m.,
Monday, December 29, 2008 Buker Community Center
- Gymnasium 700 p.m., Tuesday, December 30,
2008 Hodgkins Middle School - Gymnasium
PUBLIC INVITED
2
THE CITY AND ITS PUBLIC SCHOOLS ARE FACING
ECONOMIC HARDSHIPS
  1. Loss of General Purpose Aid to the schools from
    the State of Maine
  2. Loss of Revenue Sharing to the City from the
    State of Maine and
  3. City and School operating cost increases for
    Utilities, Insurances, and Labor Agreements.

3
SCHOOL OPTIONS
CLOSURE OF HUSSEY ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
  • PROS
  • Savings of 859,075
  • Easier to staff and project enrollments for the
    other three elementary schools students
  • Students from Hussey would move into
    more-recently constructed elementary schools and
    at least two of those schools, Lincoln and
    Farrington, would have specialized spaces, i.e.
    Music, Art, for those programs and
  • Students would have a more heterogeneously-grouped
    population.
  • CONS
  • Elimination of All-Day Kindergarten. In order to
    accommodate the Hussey Elementary School students
    in the other three buildings, the School
    Department would need to return to a Half-Day
    Kindergarten Program
  • Class sizes between 26-30 students per class,
    including Kindergarten, First, and Second Grades
  • Disparate impact on students from the Hussey
    neighborhood as they no longer have a
    neighborhood school to attend
  • Anticipated increase in special education
    services and
  • Unknown costs for busing and more students taking
    the bus as opposed to walking to school.

4
SCHOOL OPTIONS
CLOSURE OF HODGKINS MIDDLE SCHOOL
  • PROS
  • Saves 933,564.
  • Students from Hodgkins would move immediately
    into upgraded facilities. The Hodgkins physical
    plant is deteriorating and specialized areas,
    such as those for the Music Program, Coral
    Program, Art Program, and Gymnasium are in poor
    shape
  • The transition from students moving from the 8th
    Grade to the 9th Grade would be facilitated as
    students would already be familiar with the
    building
  • Vertical teaming opportunities for Teachers in
    Grades 7-12 and
  • Increased use of the Capital Area Technical
    Center, which may encourage additional enrollment
    in Technical Center Programs.
  • CONS
  • Loss of identity for students formerly considered
    Hodgkins Middle School students and
  • No more Middle School transition. Students would
    move from the Elementary world directly into the
    High School.

5
SCHOOL OPTIONS
CLOSURE OF HODGKINS MIDDLE SCHOOL (ADDITIONAL
PROS AND CONS)
  • PROS
  • Middle School/High School transition concerns
    greatly reduced.
  • The Middle School program will be in a modern
    and more educationally-sound facility.
  • Middle School will have access to more
    specialized academic spaces.
  • Middle School will have the opportunity for
    exposure to technical programs at CATC.
  • An opportunity exists for expanded Middle School
    UA offerings.
  • High School programming and class size will be
    affected less than if there are major teacher
    cuts.
  • All Middle School core teachers will have common
    planning time.
  • High School core teachers will have common plan
    time that coincides will Middle School planning
    time.
  • Opportunity for High School students
    mentoring/tutoring Middle School students will be
    increased.
  • Greater opportunity for vertical and horizontal
    curriculum articulation 7-12.
  • CONS
  • Possible loss of Middle School identity.
  • Some mixing of Middle and High School students.
  • Change in daily schedules for both Middle and
    High School students.
  • Some components of the Middle School Unified
    Arts Program may be reduced.
  • Non-core teachers will not have planning time
    with Middle and High School core teachers.
  • The house concept at the High School will have
    to be revised.

6
ELIMINATION OF TEACHING POSITIONS
30 Teaching Positions 30 Teaching positions
would break out to be 10 at the Elementary level,
15 at the High School, and 5 at the Middle
School. The total savings would be
1,363,100. Eliminate All-Day Kindergarten (5
Teaching Positions) Offer only half-day sessions.
The total savings would be 208,000. Eliminate
5 Additional Positions The total savings would
be 220,400. Instrumental Music - 1 Position
- 57,400 Elementary French - 1 Position -
48,000 3 additional teaching positions
115,000 Grade 6 Farrington (1
position) Gilbert (5/6 Combination) (1 position)
(23 students per class) Currently 4 positions
down to 3 positions. Hussey (1-2 combination) to
hold at current 3 staff for Grades 1 2 (23
students per class)
7
ELIMINATION OF TEACHING POSITIONS
  • Middle School - Eliminate 5 Positions
  • The total savings would be 206,400.
  • 2 Language Teachers - 94,000
  • 2 Classroom Teachers (1 Grade 7, 1 Grade 8) -
    74,000
  • 1 Life Skills Teacher - 38,400
  • High School - Eliminate 15 Positions
  • The total savings would be 728,300.
  • The first considerations were current and
    projected capacity in each Department and the
    Departments contribution toward graduation
    requirements. The core (Math, Science, Social
    Studies, and English) was kept at a level that
    allows students to meet graduation requirements.
  • Department Positions
  • English 2
  • Math 1
  • Foreign Language 1.4
  • Science 1.6
  • Social Studies 1
  • PE/Health 1
  • Art 1
  • Family/Consumer Science 2

8
ELIMINATION OF TEACHING POSITIONS
  • PROS
  • Savings of 738,000.
  • CONS
  • The existing program will be drastically
    reduced.
  • The majority of non-core (elective) classes will
    be eliminated.
  • It will be impossible to provide a full academic
    schedule for all students.
  • It may be necessary to reduce graduation
    requirements to the minimum
  • State requirement.
  • Many students will have more and larger study
    halls unless open campus
  • exists for the majority of students.
  • NEASC Accreditation will be in jeopardy and may
    be lost.
  • A reduced academic program will not prepare
    Augusta students to be
  • competitive at the post-secondary level.
  • Students will not be exposed to a broad-based
    curriculum that prepares
  • them to be competitive in society.
  • If graduation credits are reduced, many students
    will graduate prior to
  • reaching a level of maturity expected by
    society.
  • A sub-par high school may have a negative effect
    on the local real estate

9
ELIMINATION OF ATHLETICS AND CO-CURRICULAR
ACTIVITIES
  • PROS
  • Savings of 433,000.
  • CONS
  • Community support for school system will
    decrease
  • Student behavior problems could increase
  • Without physical activity, student obesity could
    increase
  • May lose students to other schools who do offer
    athletics
  • With loss of students comes loss of families,
    many of whom help the school in different ways.
  • Loss of school spirit and community spirit.
  • Grades of athletes may decrease, as sports are a
    huge incentive to many students
  • Drug and alcohol issues may increase without an
    athletic drug and alcohol policy and
  • Loss of school pride.

10
PROPERTY TAX INCREASE
Property tax increase of at least 6, or an
additional 140.00 taxes on a 100,000 home.
AUGUSTA PUBLIC SCHOOLS Office of the
Superintendent 12 Gedney Street Augusta, Maine
04330 Phone 207-626-2468 Fax
207-626-2444 www.augustaschools.org
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