Trout and truancy at BOE meeting

KENT — The Board of Education (BOE) met on Thursday, May 1, to hear reports from Kent Center School (KCS) Principal Florence Budge and Region One Superintendent Patricia Chamberlain.Budge gave a recap of some events and activities that have happened in the past few months.She said that there are 26 kindergarten students registered for the 2014-15 school year. There are 25 students in this year’s kindergarten class.Middle-school students got special health instruction about the dangers of smoking (grade six), HIV/AIDS (grade seven) and sexually transmitted diseases (grade eight).On Tuesday, April 29, Ellen Paul and Sarah Marshall from the Kent Memorial Library gave a presentation to the second-grade class on slavery and the Underground Railroad. In conjunction with the presentation, second-grade teacher Jennifer Menniti introduced a new teaching method into her classroom called the “flipped classroom.” This more interactive teaching format emphasizes group work, discussions and other forms of participatory, hands-on learning. Last fall, in October, students in grades three to five began a program called Trout in the Classroom (TIC). Using trout, the students learn about ecology, science and aquarium biotics. The school received a donation of 200 trout eggs in November, and the children cared for them as they hatched and grew into adult fish. On Thursday, April 10, they released 98 baby trout at Macedonia State Park.In her report, Chamberlain explained two bills currently in the state Legislature that would directly affect education. One would create funds to help fund video production classes or programs. It has not been voted on yet.Another bill that was recently passed addresses chronic absenteeism. The bill requires regional boards of education to form districtwide school attendance review teams to investigate absenteeism when the district as a whole has a 10 percent chronic absenteeism rate; a single school has a 15 percent or greater chronic absenteeism rate; or when any student has 18 or more absences in one school year. Boards of education are now required to add the number of chronically absent children to the annual strategic school profile. They also have to report the number of truants (a student with four or more absences within a month or 10 unexcused absences in a given school year).

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