All grades will ride together at Pearson

WINSTED — When students return to Pearson Middle School at the end of the summer, all four grades will share the same morning start time.

The Winchester Board of Education approved a new, unified start time of 7:40 a.m. at the board’s July 20 meeting. The regular school day’s dismissal bell will ring at 2:10 p.m. for all students.

Previously, the school’s fifth and sixth grades — referred to as Pearson Middle School Academy — started their school day at 8:25 a.m., while the seventh and eighth grades began at 7:40 a.m.

The academy was created last year as part of the Plan B reconfiguration. The staggered start times, which also included two separate school bus runs, were instituted as a way to limit daily interactions between the school’s younger fifth- and sixth-grade students from the older seventh- and eighth-graders.

Pearson Middle School Academy Principal Deborah Alduini, however, will not return to the school this September after her position was eliminated as part of the districtwide layoffs included in the 2010-11 budget. Alduini’s last day on the job is today, July 30.

Current Pearson Principal Clay Krevolin will remain in his full-time position for the new school year, overseeing all four grade levels.

Superintendent of Schools Blaise Salerno told board members that due to the staffing reductions at Pearson and elsewhere throughout the district, it would no longer be logistically and financially feasible to allow for the split start times between the grades.

Board of Education Chairman Kathleen O’Brien agreed.

“I think it only makes sense that if you only have one administrator you only have one start time,� O’Brien said at last week’s meeting.

School board member Carol Palomba, however, said many parents are against the unified start time, because it will increase interactions between the younger and older students.

“Right now, no parents want this,� Palomba said. “They do not want their fifth- and sixth-graders on the same bus with the older kids.�

But school board member Christine Royer responded that the middle school’s staff is “fully behind� the unified start time, as is a large group of parents.

“There’s just as many people who think it’s ridiculous,� Royer said of the separate start times.

Salerno said returning to a single bus run for the middle school could save on the district’s transportation costs.

The motion to return all four grades to the 7:40 a.m. unified time was approved in a 5-3 vote, with Palomba, Paul O’Meara and Ray Neal voting in the negative. School board member John Rogers did not attend last week’s meeting.

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