Mayor to visit elementary school as part of reading project

Mayor Tyrone Garner is scheduled to visit Grant Elementary School on Wednesday morning, April 20, to read to students.

The Breakfast and Books program aims to provide an opportunity for kindergarten through second grade students to engage with positive role models in the community, from all types of career fields.

The adults may build positive relationships with students over breakfast while serving as role models who believe reading is fun and engaging.

Moses Wyatt Jr., who is active with the Breakfast and Books program with the Jegna Klub, stated that they want to be the change they wish to see in the community. Children do what they see adults doing confidently, he added. Wyatt, founder of the Jegna Klub, has many years of experience as a teacher and coach.

Suburban school officials predict ‘chaos’ if Kansas lets out-of-district students transfer freely

Conservatives say the plan would give families stuck in failing school districts a chance at a life-changing escape. But school administrators fear a flood of students they’re not prepared for and who come with needs they can’t afford to accommodate.

by Suzanne Perez, Kansas News Service and KMUW

Wichita, Kansas — Kansas stands on the verge of letting students attend any public school — regardless of where they live.

Conservatives love the plan. They say it would give poor families stuck in failing school districts a chance at a life-changing escape.

But school administrators running well-heeled suburban districts already are taking measures to demonstrate their classrooms are full — the one exception the proposed change would allow from barring students who want to transfer into a district they don’t live in.

They say they have little choice if they’re going to protect their taxpayers from the cost of teaching a flood of students they’re not prepared for and who come with needs they can’t afford to accommodate.

“We believe in neighborhood schools,” said Brett White, superintendent of Andover schools east of Wichita. “The open borders would just throw into chaos what’s an established policy.”

Open enrollment proposals passed in both the Kansas House and Senate before lawmakers left for their spring break this month. They echo measures in more than two dozen other states where public school transfers are seen as a hallmark of school choice.

If a compromise bill is approved, here’s how it likely would work:

By January 2023, every Kansas school district would be required to establish enrollment capacity limits by grade level and school building. By May 1, districts would determine the number of open seats at each grade level and would publish them by June 1.

Students could apply to districts outside their residential area — if the other district has space. If there are more requests than open seats, districts would use a random lottery to fill them. In October, the process would begin again for the spring semester.

That allows school districts to determine their own enrollment and capacity levels — and to go on record saying they can’t take in more students.

“They would determine if there was any room at the inn,” said Republican Sen. Molly Baumgardner, chair of the Senate Education Committee.

Districts wouldn’t have to accept students with histories of absenteeism, suspensions or expulsions. But they could not deny students based on a disability or special-education status.

The state’s portion of education funding would follow the student to the new district.

Republican Rep. Sean Tarwater, a member of the House K-12 Budget Committee who supports open enrollment, said boundaries based on a student’s address create academic segregation.

“One of the things that we hear is … ‘Why doesn’t the student just move into a better district if they want a better school?’ Unfortunately, homes or apartments in some of the better districts are unattainable for most of the families that live in the districts that might be failing,” Tarwater said. “This bill simply allows those children to have a choice and a chance.”

Supporters point to declining test scores as evidence of struggling districts — and the nearby schools they might flee to.

In Kansas City, Kansas, for instance, more than two-thirds of students scored below grade level in math last spring. In nearby Blue Valley, only 16% scored below grade level — half the state average.

At Heights High School in northeast Wichita, more than 72% of students scored below grade level in math. At Andover Central High School, about 15 miles away in a different district, only 22% scored below grade level.

But the open enrollment proposal doesn’t require districts to provide transportation for transfer students. So opponents say only wealthier parents will take advantage of the option, snagging any available spots in high-achieving districts because they can afford to drive their kids to school.

That could leave struggling urban districts in even worse shape, critics say, with a greater percentage of high-need students and less state funding.

“This bill creates two tiers,” said Sen. Cindy Holsher, a Democrat from Overland Park. “We have children (whose) parents have the means to get them maybe an hour away to another school. But there are a number of children in districts who don’t have that advantage.”

Many suburban superintendents oppose open enrollment in part because they say local taxpayers shouldn’t have to subsidize out-of-district students.

“Blue Valley is among the highest-performing districts in Kansas — indeed competing nationally — and, as such, would find our districts overwhelmed with requests from non-residents,” Blue Valley Superintendent Tonya Merrigan said in written testimony to the Senate Education Committee.

“Without intending to sound elitist, it is nonetheless true that housing costs in our districts often provide a check on resident student growth.”

In Andover, some residents complained on social media that an influx of outside students would increase traffic and pollution and deteriorate the district’s sense of community.

Sen. Renee Erickson, a Wichita Republican, called those arguments elitist.

“Based on what the superintendents said, I think it’s very clear,” Erickson said. “‘We want our high socioeconomic status to remain. We’re born on third and think we hit a triple, and we don’t want anyone interfering with that.’”

Under the House bill, districts would get to define the term “capacity” and set their own capacity limits. The Kansas State Board of Education would audit only one district each year to determine whether they complied with the law.

About 20,000 Kansas students currently attend schools outside their district. More than 90% of districts reported accepting at least some out-of-district students. Andover, for example, allows children of full-time district employees to enroll in Andover schools regardless of where they live.

White, the Andover superintendent, said open enrollment would be a logistical nightmare. He said it’s hard enough to predict enrollment trends within his district, which has grown steadily for the past decade.

Setting new capacity guidelines, handling applications and then readjusting for latecomers — possibly having to hire additional teachers just before school starts — would be an unnecessary burden, White said.

“We have a system that works,” he said. “Why would Topeka want to create a whole new bureaucracy for us at the local level?”

Suzanne Perez reports on education for KMUW in Wichita and the Kansas News Service. You can follow her on Twitter @SuzPerezICT.
The Kansas News Service is a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio focused on health, the social determinants of health and their connection to public policy.
Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished by news media at no cost with proper attribution and a link to ksnewsservice.org.
See more at https://www.kcur.org/news/2022-04-19/suburban-school-officials-predict-chaos-if-kansas-lets-out-of-district-students-transfer-freely

School board accepts NFL grant; no change to mask rule

The Kansas City, Kansas, Board of Education voted Tuesday night to accept the NFL’s $250,000 grant to build a turf athletic field in the district.

In another vote on Tuesday night, the school board voted not to change its mask rule, which requires students, staff and all those in the district to wear masks.

There was some opposition to accepting the NFL grant. Board member Wanda Brownlee Paige said the grant was done by a former employee who did not have board authorization at the time, and that the school district did not own the property it was on, at Eisenhower park.

Dr. Anna Stubblefield, superintendent, said this vote meant only that the district wants to accept the grant and is exploring where the field may go. The district was looking at an artificial turf field at Carl Bruce Middle School or for Sumner Academy.

Dr. Stubblefield said if the board decided later not to move forward, it still could decline at that time. Grant partners are allowed to explore other property for the athletic field, she said.

Paige said she didn’t want to vote for it, since she didn’t like how the situation developed. The district would end up spending much more than the $250,000 grant, she believes.

The amount required by the district to match the grant would be $550,000, according to district officials. For several years, the district has set aside money in the budget for a Sumner Academy field, and those funds are still available, according to the superintendent.

Board President Randy Lopez backed the idea of agreeing to accept the NFL grant at this time, as there was a deadline of Friday for the district to respond to the grant.

The vote was 4-2, with Paige and Dr. Valdenia Winn voting against the acceptance of the grant. Explaining her vote, Dr. Winn said as long as the board allows staff to commit taxpayers’ money without any review, there was no reason to have a board.

In other action, Lopez made a motion to make the school district “mask-optional” beginning Wednesday, but the motion did not pass. The vote was 4-2, with Lopez and Yolanda Clark voting yes.

There was no recommendation from the school district’s nursing staff, and Paige said she would have liked to have had a recommendation from the staff.

Dr. Stubblefield said that an appearance by the health staff wasn’t necessary since none of the information had changed since the last time the district discussed the topic, a few weeks ago. Wyandotte County is still ranked high on the CDC’s risk list for COVID, and the district’s mask policy is tied to the CDC’s guidelines.

Board member Rachel Russell said at the meeting that something was “fishy” and she was very taken aback that those who work in the front lines on health services did not have input on this decision.

Later in the meeting, Lopez said he would defend his integrity, stand up for himself, and that he would never do anything to undermine integrity because that is what he holds high.

Several other topics were discussed at Tuesday’s meeting. To view the six-hour KCK school board meeting on YouTube, visit
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vIWtV2CQ2NE.