Soap Lake school district plans for grant money
Shantra Hannibal | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 13 years, 8 months AGO
SOAP LAKE — Soap Lake School District administrators are almost
finished outlining their recommendations for a school improvement
grant.
“We’re still working on different areas,” says Soap Lake School
District Superintendent Dan McDonald. “We’re clarifying some areas
and getting it laid out.”
The Soap Lake School District is one of 50 around the state
eligible to receive up to $2 million in federal funds for school
improvement.
The U.S. Department of Education will provide $7.2 million to
Washington education officials to distribute around the state.
“It’s a process of continuing what we’re trying to accomplish here
and what the BERC report recommended,” says McDonald. “The things
we have in the grant are focused on those.”
The BERC Group is an independent evaluation, research and
consulting firm aimed at utilizing data to improve schools that
completed an “academic audit” last month.
McDonald says the BERC report focused around four areas including
distributing leadership, improving communication with the
community, improving curriculum and standards as well as ensuring
“we have a strong human resource management focus to improve
getting quality educators when people retire or move on,” says
McDonald. “Those are what I’d call the most focused pieces.”
Soap Lake is on a list federally known as “persistently
lowest-achieving schools,” according to the Office of the
Superintendent of Public Instruction, and are ranked using reading
and math scores from the past two years as well as graduation rates
and Adequate Yearly Progress as outlined by the No Child Left
Behind Act.
Four districts with schools on the persistently lowest-achieving
list were designated for required action by the State Board of
Education. The designation guarantees funding for those schools
grants.
The districts include Morton, Onalaska, Renton and Soap Lake.
“Schools were identified using both academic performance of all
students and improvement trends over the past three years,” said
Tonya Middling, Director of Project Management of District and
School Improvement and Accountability at the Office of
Superintendent of Public Instruction.
Eligible schools can receive between $500,000 and $2 million for
three years, depending on the availability of funds.
McDonald says the school district will seek between $250,000 and
$550,000 in grant funds.
“We talked about extended learning as another area that was a big
emphasis,” McDonald says. “We’re looking at improving student
achievement and looking at extended learning opportunities for the
district.”
Summer school, extending school year are some of the options,
according to McDonald.
“I
think we’ll have to look and see what fits the Soap Lake district
best. Maybe we’re talking about an online school,” says McDonald.
“We’re going to push to dream big and that everything we’re doing
is going to benefit all kids. It bodes well for some very exciting
things to occur as we work to improve student achievement and make
sure our instructional focus is strong and make sure everybody can
learn.”
McDonald says the recommendations will be presented to the school
board on Feb. 28.
Applications for the grants are due to OSPI by March 4.
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