Tag Archives: South Milwaukee schools

Investing In Our Schools: School District Plans Presentation Tonight On State Budget Impacts

From the South Milwaukee School District …

On October 7th, at 5:30 p.m., in the SMPAC, there will be a special 15-minute presentation regarding the State Budget that was passed and the impact on public schools.  The presentation will also cover a critical flaw in school funding that we need to communicate to our legislators about so that they can provide a solution to ensure that all students can receive an equitable education throughout Wisconsin. We highly encourage all families to stop in to this brief presentation.

I thank the schools for continuing to tell this story. It needs to be told — and we need the help of fellow South Milwaukeeans to tell it, be it to state lawmakers or anyone else with influence in Madison.

In short, we need a commitment from the state to work toward adequately fund our public schools.

I stand with the district in that fight.

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Guest Blog: Stand Up In Favor Of Our Local Schools!

A guest blog from South Milwaukee School Board member Doug Perry and Blaise Paul, the South Milwaukee School District director of business services …

The School District of South Milwaukee is once again being asked to do more with less.  

For many years our expense increases outpaced our revenue ability.  The District had to make reductions, and over 50 teaching positions were eliminated, between 2003-2011.  In 2011, we had an unprecedented cut to our revenue (over 6% reduction).  The unprecedented reduction in revenue was accompanied by cost control measures that allowed us to unilaterally shift costs.  We cut benefits to staff to balance the loss of revenue.  The following three years were accompanied by revenue limit increases between half percent to one percent per year.  As we navigated through the minimal increases, we continued to reduce specific budgets and cut benefits to staff to balance the budget.  

We are now being faced with a budget proposal that makes a half percent increase look like a windfall.  The Governor’s budget proposal includes a $460,000 reduction to our revenue ability for 2015-16.  We are at a point where after 12 years of eliminating positions, eliminating programs, cutting benefits and limiting wage increases, we will start impacting our students in a way that will not be easily reversed.

The School District of South Milwaukee is advocating for a $200 per pupil increase to the revenue limit and to not decrease our funding by $460,000 as the Governor has proposed.  Please go to the Business Office website to find out more information regarding the impact of the proposed budget on the School District of South Milwaukee. (http://www.sdsm.k12.wi.us/district/financialreports.cfm)

If possible, contact members of the State Joint Finance Committee, our local representatives and Governor Walker, and share the South Milwaukee Story with them and advocate for a $200 per pupil increase and to not reduce revenue to South Milwaukee Schools by $460,000. Draft letters and phone conversations developed by the district parent group can also be found on our website.  Legislative contact information can be found at: http://www.sdsm.k12.wi.us/cms_files/resources/Legislative%20Contacts.pdf

Thank you for your time and dedication to our Community!

I will add this: I 100% stand with our schools on this issue. We must invest in public education, and make a real commitment to adequately funding our local schools. It’s time for our governor and legislative leaders in Madison to put the partisanship aside and come together around common-sense solutions here.

The cuts can’t continue. They’re not sustainable, and their impact is real.

I am proud to send my two kids to Rawson Elementary School. And I always keep them front and center when I consider the issue of education funding. This is not just a local issue, it’s a household issue.

That’s why fixing our broken public education funding system is so critical.

Join our schools (and me) in advocating for solutions that adequately invest in public schools.

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Adding Minutes And Days: South Milwaukee’s Plan To Make Up For Snow Days

The South Milwaukee School District has detailed its plan to make up for classroom time lost due to four cold-weather cancellations in January.

Here is the memo. The plan includes …

  • The addition of a full day of school on May 23, the Friday before Memorial Day, for all students;
  • The addition of full days on June 12 for elementary and middle schoolers and June 13 for middle schoolers (elementary students will have a half day on June 13);
  • The addition of longer school days for elementary and middle school students — one minute longer for grade school students and 15 minutes for middle school students. The middle school day will now run from 7:45 a.m. to 3 p.m., as district officials have discovered “passing time at the lunch hour was inadvertently counted as instructional time.”

Also, the district is looking at starting future bad weather days two hours late vs. cancelling an entire day. And it’s telling parents to keep June 16 and 17 open on calendars in case of additional full-day cancellations.

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No School On Tuesday, Either

Add another day to Christmas vacation for South Milwaukee students.

The South Milwaukee School District has cancelled classes again due to the extreme cold.

Check out their website for more.

Other cold notes:

Do you know of any other are businesses closed today or Tuesday? Pass them along.

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School Back In Session Soon

Summer does go by quickly, doesn’t it? Being married to a teacher and as the proud father of two Rawson Elementary School students, for me, the answer to that question is a resounding “yes.”

Elementary school registration is next Tuesday and Wednesday, and middle and high school registration is Tuesday and on August 21. Learn more here. Additional high school registration information is here.

The first day of school is Tuesday, Sept. 3. Here is the full school calendar.

As always, I’ll do my best to keep you informed on school issues on South Milwaukee Blog. Stay tuned.

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Snow Update: South Milwaukee Schools Open

For all of you hoping for a snow day today (and I’m married to a teacher, so I know that’s not just kids): Sorry.

South Milwaukee Schools are open today, despite the snow. That’s according to the district website.

Meanwhile, some area districts are closed today, including Milwaukee, Oak Creek-Franklin, Franklin, Whitnall, Wauwatosa and West Allis-West Milwaukee. Others are apparently open, at least as of 6:15 a.m., including Cudahy and St. Francis. Divine Mercy also appears to be open.

Here are Milwaukee County school closings.

And I got this message from Dan at the Street Department this morning …

We started salting yesterday afternoon and by 5 we started plowing. Last night at midnight we went to a 5 area plow/salt operation.  Right now for today we will have a 4 area plow/salt with alleys being cleaned up as well. Garbage collection will be picked up today as well. We also have 3 front end loaders out cleaning up cul de sac’s and bus stops, corners, municipal lots etc.  Today we will also have a city sidewalk crew out as well. 

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South Milwaukee Looks Good In Pink

Pink delivered some green at Tuesday’s City Council meeting, as students from South Milwaukee schools presented checks totaling more than $11,000 to representatives from the Susan G. Komen Foundation during a brief ceremony.

Here is the tally:

  • South Milwaukee High School: $9,748
  • Rawson Elementary: $510
  • Lakeview: $325.52
  • Blakewood: $213

Congratulations to everyone on their fundraising efforts, from the DECA students at the high school to Police Chief Ann Wellens’ work in uniting the community — including city officials — around this wonderfully worthwhile cause.

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Controlled Burn: Day One

Update: Day two (Thursday) will have burning concentrated east of 15th Avenue around the football field, according to the fire department. I’ll keep you posted. 

The controlled burn around the South Milwaukee High School and Middle School campuses is underway, and the fire department reports things seem to be going smoothly.

The burn will continue on Thursday, and no complaints have been received so far.

I’ll keep you posted as the burn continues.

And, of course, post your comments below.

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Controlled Burn Planned Near High School, Middle School April 7-15

Call me crazy, but I kind of like the prairie feel around the South Milwaukee high school and middle school campuses. I think it gives the properties a unique and more natural look.

Well, sometimes prairies demand controlled burns to rejuvenate and sustain healthy regrowth.

Such a burn is planned for April 7-15 — Spring Break week in South Milwaukee.

Learn more in this notice from the firm doing the burn … and be prepared for some smoke around the 4th District during that week.

Also note that our fire, police and health departments have been closely involved in the planning and execution of this. So I am confident it will be executed safely … with the end result being a better-looking school campus for the long term.

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South Milwaukee Schools Provide Good Example Of Shared Services At Work

The South Shore’s Connects Learning Center — operated out of a building owned by the South Milwaukee School District but located in Cudahy — is being held up as an example of shared services that work.

Check out the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel story on the Public Policy Forum study here. From it:

The South Milwaukee School District owns the building that houses Connects Learning Center, but it’s located in Cudahy. And it’s paid for and operated jointly by the South Milwaukee, Cudahy and Oak Creek-Franklin school districts for the benefit of students struggling to make the grade.

A fourth school district, Franklin, pays for the right to seats in the school.

“We needed some place that we could have students that were having a difficult time adjusting to the routine and structure of a regular school day go and do some credit recovery and still stay connected to their high school,” said Jim Heiden, superintendent of the Cudahy School District.

Connects Learning is an example of sharing resources that the Public Policy Forum highlights in a new report that says suburban school districts in Milwaukee County are missing out on many such opportunities to band together to offer some services more efficiently, particularly for such noninstructional support services as nursing, guidance, payroll, accounting, curriculum development and staff training.

“We’re just hoping the report will raise the visibility (of sharing support services) and districts can learn from other districts that have been doing this for a while and have done so successfully, so they’re not having to reinvent the wheel to start a successful agreement,” said Anneliese Dickman, research director of the Public Policy Forum.

Learn more about Connects here.

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Oh, Those Crazy Kids …

No comment on this one.

http://www.oakcreeknow.com/news/144643275.html

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Ranking Local Schools: How Did South Milwaukee Fare?

I’ve written a number of times about how impressed I am with South Milwaukee schools, and that belief is stronger than ever.

It starts with passing the “eye test” — what you see first-hand and every day in how they educate kids and prepare them for future. It’s a difficult test to pass, but what I see from my Rawson Elementary first-grader shows me a lot of what I need to know about our local schools.

Add in the district’s commitment to long-range planning — devising solutions to some of the major problems all area schools face — and my dealings with what I view as a first-class leadership team, and they pass the “eye test” with ease.

But that’s one person’s opinion. It’s nice to see it validated by a (somewhat) scientific report in a respected local publication.

Milwaukee Magazine rated the area’s 33 K-12 school districts in its most recent edition. You can see the story here.

Admittedly, the overall ranking of the South Milwaukee district — based on factors like test scores, spending per pupil and student-teacher ratio — is a bit disappointing. The magazine ranks the district 28th out of the 33.

Then you read more of the article … and see the strongly positive results for our local schools.

  • For starters, the overall rankings are clearly influenced by local economics. More low-income communities fared worse. So that is instantly strike one against the South Milwaukee School District.
  • But dig deeper, and you see clear signs of hope. According to the piece, our local schools were called perhaps the area’s biggest “After-School All-Star … ranking first in the academic category (among 33 area K-12 districts),with 37 offerings per school, second in athletics with another 37 and third in music with 11.” The quote from Superintendent Rita Olson: “We’ve taken a funding hit like everybody else but we’ve really tried to protect athletics and music and keep the clubs going. In some cases, we rely on volunteers, and a number of teachers are leading clubs without compensation.”
  • Then dig even deeper. And the article rates South Milwaukee High School the No. 2 “overperformer” in the area — using statistics that compare districts only to those with similar economic standing.

So, I give South Milwaukee’s showing in the magazine article a solid B. Let’s hope that others read it and recognize that our schools are strong — and a real reason to love living here. They’re certainly at the top of my list.

Of course, I’d like to know what you think about this. Read the article, and check out more on MilwaukeeMagazine.com, and then post your comments below!

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Focused On Character: Another Reason To Be Impressed With South Milwaukee Schools

As my now first-grade son makes his way through Rawson Elementary, I’ve been nothing but impressed with the South Milwaukee School District.

Administrators, teachers and staff — I’ve been lucky enough to be exposed to all levels of leadership in the district and am always happy with what I see.

From the commitment to long-range planning (and acting on those plans) to the classroom learning I see my 6-year-old receiving, I feel blessed to live in this city and public school district.

The district’s latest effort around character education is the latest reason to believe.

Simply, the district is now turning its focus to improving the character traits of its students.

Learn more in this Journal Sentinel story. From it:

One of the current participants is the School District of South Milwaukee. Leaders of the district and each of its six schools have been going to the sessions. What is emerging is a districtwide focus on improving relationships within schools.

South Milwaukee had an all-staff professional development session around character education recently. (Disclosure: I spoke briefly as part of the program.) The featured speaker was Adolph Brown, a Virginia-based psychologist who does presentations all over the country.

One of Brown’s themes: “More is caught than is taught.” Students pay attention to and learn a lot from what goes on around them. Not only the way they are treated but the way they see others (including the adults in a school) treat each other shapes their education.

Colin Jacobs, principal of Rawson Elementary School and one of the leaders of the South Milwaukee effort, said the message resonated with staff members. As he put it, “I’d rather see a sermon than hear one.”

He said a focus in coming months will be on practices that say to everyone in a school, “This is what we can expect from each other.” One goal is to see if more cases involving problems with specific students can be solved by building relationships rather than by, say, referring the student for a special education evaluation.

After Brown’s presentation, staff members from each of the South Milwaukee schools met to discuss how they might launch into this. One thing they did was vote, from a list of 51 attributes, for what traits they thought should be emphasized. Input from parents and others is also being sought, Jacobs said, with the goal of focusing on nine.

In the overall staff voting, the most votes went to three traits that you would expect to be at the top of the list: Honesty, respect and responsibility. But coming in a close fourth was perseverance.

I’ll keep you posted as this initiative takes flight.

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Get Educated: Plan Commission Considers Walmart, State Superintendent Speaks At Monday Meetings

There’s a couple of interesting and sure-to-be-thought-provoking meetings plan for Monday night in South Milwaukee.

Unfortunately, they begin at 6 p.m., so attending both will be difficult.

  • First, the South Milwaukee Plan Commission is considering the site plan and zoning for the proposed Walmart development on north Chicago Avenue. Check out the agenda here.
  • Also, the Wisconsin Education Association Council is sponsoring an education forum — one of seven being held across the state into October — at the South Milwaukee Performing Arts Center. State Superintendent Tony Evers is attending. Topics of discussion will include: school quality and accountability, community/parent involvement in schools, student progress, teaching quality and how programs and resources are distributed and used in the school system. Learn more in this New Kid’s View blog post.
I’m planning to (and kind of have to) attend the Plan Commission meeting. Please post comments below on how the school forum goes.

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