School enrollment expected to remain flat

SHARON — In her report to the Sharon Board of Education (BOE) on March 11, Region One School District Superintendent Patricia Chamberlain said while most schools in the district are projected to have declining enrollments, it is expected that Sharon Center School’s (SCS) enrollment will remain flat for most of the decade before declining. The superintendent also said she expects Sharon’s share of state money to offset local education costs for the current year will be $145,788.Speaking about education happenings at the federal level, Chamberlain reported much is happening concerning school security. She said President Barack Obama is forming some safety crisis standards and templates for plans for emergency response as well as for supporting mental health. “While there are big numbers being talked about for these things, we do not yet know how much money will actually be allocated for Connecticut or how much of what the state receives will make its way to the Northwest Corner,” she said.The state is recommending that student assessment teams be in place in all schools in order to be able to take regular looks at students’ needs, she said. “The state wants us to be more proactive with mental health first aid issues,” she said, adding that, “We already have such a team.”Marilyn Yerks, the town’s representative to the Region One Board of Education, said the regional All Board Chairs committee had discussed the superintendent’s evaluation but no decisions were made. The committee is made of the chairmen of the seven regional boards of education.Yerks reported that while the Region One board had not yet voted on the budget for the 2013-14 fiscal year, it looks like there will be a 0.7 percent increase over the 2012-13 budget. Sharon’s contribution to the Region One budget will decrease by about 10 to 10.5 percent from what the town paid in the last fiscal year, a savings of approximately $225,000.In her report, SCS Principal Karen Manning said the SCS PTO sponsored its second assembly this year. Sharon dentist Martin Nweeia, a world expert on narwhals, gave a presentation that Manning said had the students fully engaged. “In reply to a thank-you note I sent to Dr. Nweeia, he responded saying he was impressed with the quality of the questions the students asked him,” Manning reported.The school production of “The Wizard of Oz” will take place on April 5 in the evening and April 6 as an afternoon matinee. SCS purchased 10 iPads with grant funding, which will be used in teacher CiCi Nielsen’s classroom in a pilot program with a focus on technology.The principal reported that SCS conducted an online survey about whether parents want the hot lunch cafeteria program to continue. Of the 44 parents who responded, 100 percent want the program continued. But, Manning said, “Quite a few want healthier food choices for their children.”Manning talked to the BOE about Power School, a web-based student information system. “It tracks attendance, state reporting requirements, lunches, health management and discipline management. It requires intensive setup.” Each staff member requires a minimum of seven hours of training. The board granted permission for Manning to schedule two early-dismissal days this semester so staff can be trained in the new system.The board voted to continue, for the 2013-14 school year, the current tuition for nonresident students of $12,500 for grades kindergarten to four and $14,000 for grades five to eight.

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