The state of Whitefish High School
Heidi Desch / Whitefish Pilot | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 12 years, 9 months AGO
Whitefish High School is showing its
age.
A walk through the school reveals the
obvious — long halls lined with worn lockers and classrooms without
windows that seem dull and dreary. Large garbage cans in the
hallways sit waiting to catch drips from a leaky roof.
Less obvious are the science labs
without working sinks. The lack of emergency lighting or sprinkler
system. A science classroom has a non-toxic, but concerning “brown
ooze” that seeps up through the floor at night and is cleaned each
day before students arrive.
These are just some of the reasons the
school district is proposing a $19 million renovation to the
school. The project would be a mix of upgrades and new
construction.
On a recent tour of the school,
Superintendent Kate Orozco noted the obvious leaks and even the
musty smell in one classroom closet.
However, what Orozco speaks most about
is the hindrance she feels these conditions have to creating a
great learning environment. A place where an English class and a
social studies class can come together to study global rights.
“We don’t have the space to put two
classrooms together,” Orozco said.
The high school was built in the 1950s
and late 1970s when teaching meant standing in front of the room
giving a lecture. Modern learning involves students collaborating
in small groups and using technology in ways that are difficult
when computers are located in a separate room down the hall.
In one science lab, only half the sinks
work and the equipment is more than 30 years old. Student desks are
squished to one side of the room with little space to walk.
“Our teachers are sitting on the edge
waiting (to implement new ideas),” Orozco said. “We need to give
them science equipment to do research.”
Principal Dave Carlson sees the need,
too. He also wants teachers to have enough space to work together,
and thereby improve the curriculum.
“Our teachers are asking for it,” he
said. “This building becomes inflexible. The new design allows us
to change and move on.”
The school district’s consultant on the
project, Steeplechase Development Advisors, have been studying the
school and created the design for the proposed upgrade. With an
office in the school, Chris Kelsey and Bayard Dominick with
Steeplechase know the building’s challenges well.
Kelsey points out that heating and
cooling throughout the facility is uneven. Rooms to the north might
have frost on the windows, while others, like computer labs, easily
become overheated by afternoon.
“You have one side where students are
wearing coats and across the hall it’s 95 degrees,” Kelsey
said.
The school isn’t up to modern
earthquake codes, there’s a lack of handicap accessible facilities
and the emergency lighting and fire systems both need work, he
noted.
“I don’t think it’s unsafe to be here,”
he said. “I wouldn’t worry about sending my kids here, but the
district could be forced to do some of these upgrades. That could
cost a lot of money that would take away from money for teaching
and learning.”
In addition, there are issues with
performing only upgrades in certain areas of the school.
For example, the brown ooze leaking
through the science classroom floor can’t easily be fixed. It’s
nearly impossible to reconfigure classrooms in much of the building
that has cinder block walls.
“As soon as the work starts, it
cascades,” Kelsey said. “To fix the pipe we have to tear up the
whole floor.”
Past comments have been made that the
school’s deficiencies could be fixed with a $7 million
renovation.
Kelsey said that amount of money only
allows the school to install some new windows, some lighting and
fresh paint. It doesn’t cover heating and cooling issues, fire code
and safety issues. It doesn’t take care of plumbing issues. It
wouldn’t address educational issues or a new floor plan.
The proposed $19 million project would
give the school district the ability to construct new portions of
the school and renovate others. Under the new design, the A and C
wings, which both house classrooms, would be demolished. The
B-wing, which is the gym and music/shop/art areas of the building,
would be renovated.
In addition to the obvious upgrades and
fixes to the building, the school would also be redesigned to
integrate modern learning techniques.
The school district envisions a high
school with classrooms of varying sizes for flexibility. A place
where technology can be integrated into the classroom including a
one computer to one student ratio.
“Now there’s no room for (those
computers),” Kelsey said. “There literally isn’t the physical space
for that.”
Modern learning is about students
learning to be problem-solvers and not just regurgitating
information, Orozco noted. Classrooms need to have the space for
students to gather together and foster those skills in a place
where technology is available instantly.
“Teachers can’t do that when they’re
fighting light switches,” she said. “Our teachers are excited about
the possibilities, but it doesn’t work when you want to pursue an
idea with a class of kids and you have to take them down the
hallway to a computer lab. Those computers need to be right there
so you can access them on the fly.”