Monday, August 18, 2008

First broad daylight of class today for most tract schools.

Loaded down by backpacks stuffed with revitalized notebooks, laptops, calculators, pens, pencils and other items, students in Aztec, Farmington and the Central Consolidated School District are swarming the halls today for the leading stiff age of the 2008-09 set year. The expectation has built for weeks. Teachers reported closing week to embellish their classrooms, heed employees meetings and finalize their schooling plans.



Students in transition years - sixth and ninth degree - started school in Friday, using the notably day to adjust. Farmington Superintendent Janel Ryan said the region is charming a more individual viewpoint toward learning this year and focusing on optimism. "We basic to look at the positives, and we paucity to be happy and show children that wisdom is exciting," Ryan said. "And deal with all the pessimistic with a positive attitude." Six of the 17 schools in Farmington met Adequate Yearly Progress goals at the rear year, putting the part degree in the lead of the state average of approximately 32 percent of schools passing.






Advertisement Still, three fundamental schools were given phase designations and some parents are exercising the way out to ploy their children out of those schools. Ryan said about 34 requests for hand were received as of Friday and the deadline is today. Ryan encourages families to telephone the community with any concerns that may rise during the fashion year. "We're here to be of amenities to the children and parents, and they need to have knowledge of that we're here to help them," she said.



Major renovations to Heights Middle School and McKinley Elementary are continuing into the scholastic year, but officials await the handle to be minimally invasive to students and staff. Aztec Municipal Schools also was lively with construction this summer. Fred Cook Stadium proudly bears further contrived turf, Lydia Rippey Elementary has a unusual playground and procreator pick-up lane, and both Lydia Rippey and McCoy Elementary have remodeled cafeterias. Construction on the kitchens at Lydia Rippey and McCoy have not, however, been completed.



Superintendent Linda Paul expects the kitchens to be deft within a week, but until then foodstuffs will be brought in from kitchens at other schools. Paul said the district's two vital goals are adding additional technology and improving math scores. Six of the seven Aztec schools failed AYP math proficiency, but Paul expects a changed math program started in 2007 will make off hold this year and scores will rise. "We'll go on to cause the reborn math program that we implemented after year … and prolong to promote that," Paul said. Bloomfield School District doesn't receptive its doors until Thursday.



But in the same way as their colleagues in the other districts, day-school shaft in Bloomfield have set for weeks. "We're looking consign to a great 2008-09 year," Superintendent Randy Allison said. Three of the district's seven schools made AYP rearmost year, well above the position average. "I'm in seventh heaven overall with what we did academically," Allison said.



Fresh off attending a colloquy in Michigan on bullying, Allison said that protecting and alluring charge of each separate follower will be a immediacy this year. Another of the district's goals is to broaden the staff member aide program and providing more benefits for the staff. "The level is consumers working together," Allison said, echoing equivalent thoughts by Paul and Ryan.



Drivers are asked to old-fashioned down in equip zones throughout the county starting today. Speed limits are 15 mph when lights are flashing near schools.

new math program




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