Large class size impacts otherwise small school budget


 

SALISBURY — The Salisbury Central School Board of Education has been hard at work this winter on its proposed 2008-09 budget.

The $4,570,947 spending package was presented to the town’s Board of Finance March 6. The total operating budget will actually see a rise of 3.32 percent, but after expenditures of about $50,000 from a capital account, the total Salisbury Central budget increase will be only 2.08 percent.

"We’re very pleased," board Chairman Roger Rawlings said in an interview. "We think it’s a responsible budget."

Chief among the concerns the spending package addresses is the issue of the possible size of next year’s first grade. This year’s kindergarten class was unexpectedly large. At the end of the last school year, the board and incoming Principal Chris Butwill expected less than 30 kindergarteners.

But when the school year started in September there were 39. That left the two kindergarten teachers, Joanne Klein and Lisa McClave, with classes of 20 and 19 apiece — too large by Salisbury Central standards. At the end of January, 22 kindergarten parents presented a petition to the board calling on it to take steps to reduce the size of first-grade classes next year.

So in this year’s budget proposal, the board included the hiring of a new teacher for the primary grades. That new hire will likely be used in first grade. Asked what size class is ideal for the lower grades, Butwill said, "There is no magic number. We realize this year’s [kindergarten] classes were larger than we want."

First- and second-grade classes this year have 12 to 13 students in them, so that will be the number he will aim for in next year’s first-grade classes, Butwill said.

Rawlings said the school is planning on 28 kindergarteners. Early kindergarten registrations have already been held, but as last year demonstrated, those registration sessions are not necessarily a reliable predictor of actual enrollment.

"Last year 11 more kindergarten students came in over the summer," Butwill said.

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