Tag: Richland 2 Review

  • R2 Looks at Grants, Review

    Dr. Arlene Bakutes, District Grants Coordinator, and the principals’ benefiting from a grant presented at Tuesday night’s Richland 2 School Board meeting the merits of a nearly $4.5 million grant over a three year period to Killian Elementary, Longleaf Middle and Westwood High schools. Called “Full STEAM Ahead!,” this program is a science, technology, engineering, arts and mathematics focused curriculum designed to reduce minority isolation. A study by the National Endowment for the Arts shows that students from lower socioeconomic backgrounds who actively participated in the arts tended to score better in science and writing, and were more likely to aspire to college. A major purpose of the grant is to “provide the programs and resources to keep [students] at these magnet schools,” and to “slowly increase the diversity of the student body at Killian,” to “create a more diverse student body at Longleaf Middle School and Westwood High School,” the grant application states. At the end of the grant period, the district intends for schools to continue the programs with regular district funding.

    Review Team Findings

    Also on the docket Tuesday night was the Review Team of faculty and district staff that sifted through a district-wide survey to gather employee feedback on what should be funded in the district and concerns where funding is allowing them to reach optimum. Most notable was the impact of rising poverty rates severely curtailing field studies and purchasing of library books. Under the previous superintendent’s attempt to create equity in access to field trips, field trips are no longer funded by the parents. In the past, students who were unable to pay the fee were covered by a donation from another family, a PTO fundraiser or the principal’s discretionary budget. Currently, the school raises the funds or school’s discretionary fund is used. Discretionary funds do not have budgets to support multiple school field trips, so a school is currently in the position of selecting one class or one trip per year. Fundraisers can also contribute, but this has proven to be less successful in schools of high poverty. The Review Team asks that the way field studies are funded be uniform across the district and be recognized as a way to enrich the focus of hands on learning.

    Also, the Review Team noted that funding for the media centers was removed from the general budget several years ago. Again, the principals fund the purchase of books. As in the field trips, funding is inconsistent across the district. High poverty schools have a difficult time raising the funds to purchase supplies. Board Member Susan Brill mentioned that she had spoken with Media Specialists and has this request on her priority spending list when the Board meets to discuss budget.

    The Review Team also said that the work of Family Interventionists should continue to focus on the whole child and address the issues within the family – usually meeting outside of school setting as a family unit. This work has proven to be particularly effective with middle and high school students and their family units. The positive spillover has been improvements in behavior and academic performance.

    Prior to the next School Board meeting, Wednesday (new day), April 9 at Polo Road Elementary School, there will be the first of two hearings on the General Budget for the coming school year. The public is invited to attend at 5 p.m.

  • Hamm Takes Top R2 Job

    Dr. Debbie Hamm

    Dr. Debbie Hamm, who had been serving as Interim Superintendent since the abrupt June 13 departure of former Superintendent Katie Brochu, accepted an employment contract valid thru June 2015 for an annual salary of $199,000. The motion to approve the terms was accepted 6-1 at the Richland 2 School Board meeting Tuesday night at Polo Road Elementary School. Board member Monica Elkins-Johnson voted nay on the grounds that the Board was moving hastily and did not go through a formal interview or national search. Assenting Board members cited longevity, understanding of Richland 2 culture, willingness to expand collaboration and the renewal of joy in the District as considerations for offering the permanent role to Hamm. At the end of the contract, a national search will be conducted and Hamm has the opportunity to put her name in the hat for continued consideration. Hamm told the audience that she is “grateful and it will be a privilege to serve as your superintendent.” She was met with a standing ovation from the audience.

    Board adopts plan for Lake Carolina Elementary

    A student assignment plan was decided for Lake Carolina Elementary and its newly built partner school just two blocks away, Elementary #19. All students living in the Lake Carolina neighborhood and students in the Ashland neighborhood will attend the two schools with Lake Carolina housing kindergarten through second grade and Elementary #19 housing the upper grades third thru fifth. Elkins-Johnson didn’t support the plan because, she said, she wasn’t comfortable that Lake Carolina teachers could adequately prepare children for third grade under this system. She also voiced concerns that “this establishes a private school in a public school setting.” Board member Melinda Anderson made no comment but also voted against the approved plan. Board member James Manning sees this decision as a new, modern tool for the District in making attendance choices. Board member Chip Jackson told the public that the principals for the two schools located just two blocks apart are proven academic leaders and the opportunity for deep collaboration is exciting for the students.

    Melinda Anderson in the news

    Perhaps what garnered the most discussion was what was not discussed at the Board meeting – the recent allegations in the news that Board member Melinda Anderson verbally threatened Westwood High School’s head football coach Rodney Summers. Jackson, in closing comments, alluded to this when he gave praise for Chairman Bill Fleming’s excellent leadership for the past month during turbulence within the Board. Prior to the meeting and after the meeting, the audience was expectant that the situation with Anderson would be addressed, but no mention was made. In the recent weeks, Anderson is alleged in a report filed with a Richland County deputy to have threatened to kill her grandson’s football coach and stating that she had a gun. Top executives in the District were present during the reported incident and identified as witnesses to the alleged comments. Anderson denies the comments and says it is beneath her to address such “foolishness.” More recently there have been news reports that a friend was sent by Anderson to the football field to witness Summers’ football practice. A scene allegedly ensued and the School Resource Office, who is also a Richland County deputy, was called to file a complaint report. The District’s students who make threats of bodily harm, meanwhile, routinely face stiff disciplinary action and even expulsion.

    The next Board meeting is nearly a month away, Dec. 10, at Blythewood High School.

  • Parents Want More Info on New School

    Public participation was heavy at the Richland 2 School Board meeting at Longleaf Middle School Tuesday evening, with several Lake Carolina residents speaking of the need for more information before they could cast a vote for their choice of elementary schools. Elementary School #19, opening next fall, is a short walk from Lake Carolina Elementary School. The District is considering offering kindergarten through second grade at Lake Carolina and third through fifth grade at the new school. The second consideration would be to open both schools with kindergarten through fifth grade. Lake Carolina Development President David Tuttle has solicited input from Lake Carolina residents (even those without children in the schools), residents of the Ashland neighborhood who border Elementary #19 and other families currently in the Lake Carolina attendance area. Because some students currently attending Round Top Elementary will be affected, the District Planning Department will contact those parents for their feedback. At the next Board meeting, the attendance lines for each proposal, logistics for walking, bus routes, start times and the educational benefits of one school over the other will be presented.

    Last year, in an effort to streamline fees, the Board evaluated activity fees for middle and high school students to ensure that they were uniform across the district. Additional fees for the older students (lab fees, activity fees for career and technology classes, athletic participation fees, music/band fees, etc.) were also evaluated. A high school parent expressed concern that cheerleader participation fees were $700 and after a month of culinary classes and the payment of that regular activity fee, her daughter was asked to pay $56 for a uniform and the following week to purchase specific shoes. These unexpected fees, she said, make it difficult for a family on a budget.

    The proposal to equip security personnel with pepper spray was tabled after three meetings when it became apparent to Board members that there could be no guarantee that the spray would not be used on a student.

    The importance of third-graders reading at grade level is one of the greatest indicators of achievement in high school and beyond. Jeff Potts, Director of Accountability & Evaluation, told the Board that up until third grade, students are learning to read and that after third grade, they are reading to learn. A number of issues were discussed in this regard. While 86.2 percent of students in third grade read at grade level, 14 percent are not. Eighty percent of those not third-grade proficient receive free or reduced price lunch. Poverty has a great impact on student achievement and is a focus in the district goal of learning. While a larger number of students in the district are reading in recent years, reading at grade level has gone down for fourth- and fifth-graders. The factors for this decline are being assessed by Potts and his staff, and a report is expected at the next Board meeting, Oct. 22 at Pontiac Elementary School.

  • R2 Board Reviews Charter School

    RICHLAND — The Richland 2 Charter School reported during the Richland 2 School Board’s regularly scheduled meeting Tuesday night at Longleaf Middle School that the school is open to junior and senior students who have good standing in discipline and academics. Thirty-four of the 40 seniors graduated this year with the same standards that all public high school students must meet. The on-line program offers academic classes, tutoring and counseling in a flexible schedule. Dr. Henry Lovett, principal of the Richland 2 Charter High School, has requested that the Board consider amending the school’s charter to include ninth- and 10th-graders. While stating that this program is not for everyone, former Superintendent Katie Brochu had sent letters to the District’s high school principals for their thoughts and it was thought the principals had been favorably inclined. Dr. Debbie Hamm, Interim Superintendent, will re-poll the principals, at the suggestion of the Board, and get the principals’ new feedback. The Charter School operates with the permission of the School Board/District but is funded with the local and state dollars that are attached to each student. The expansion of the program does not impact the budget of the District but the District does determine if the goals of the Charter School are a match for the objectives of Richland 2. A vote on the expansion of the lower high school grades will be a future item.

    The AVID (Advancement Via Individual Determination) program was modeled in Richland 2 a dozen years ago — flowing from the high schools to the middle schools and now to six of the elementary schools. High school students spoke of the merits of being in a program that supported them from sixth grade to graduation – giving them the skills to organize their work, prioritize their free time and practice public speaking. Their academic work improved and life skills were developed. Ridge View AVID teacher Tracy Skinner, herself an AVID graduate, spoke to the life-changing work of the program. Students selected are performing at a level below their potential. In some way in their life, they are underrepresented. Skinner had 18 seniors in her class. All of her students graduated and went on to college – earning more than $300,000 in scholarship money for their freshman years alone.

    Hamm had accepted the Interim Superintendent position effective July 1. District Staff and teachers report that her leadership of the District actually began the day Brochu resigned, June 13. The Board approved the employment conditions of her Interim position: a supplemental $5,000 a month salary and $800 per month for auto expenses.

    The Budget that was written in April in a special called meeting had awaited approval until local and state funding had been approved. With that known, the Board voted 6-1 to accept the $223 million general fund budget, with Barbara Specter casting the lone dissenting vote.

    During closing statements by Board members, it was mentioned by several that the joy in the District for the coming year was contagious. When Hamm spoke of experiencing the same joy with the teachers in professional development earlier in the day, the audience broke out in spontaneous applause. On that note the Board broke for a second executive session to attend to personnel, legal and contractual matters. No vote was to be taken. The next Board meeting is Aug. 13 at Longleaf Middle School.

  • Manning Questions Fees

    During closing comments at the March 26 Richland 2 School Board meeting, held at Conder Elementary School, Board member James Manning continued his pressure on the Board to track and disclose professional development fees. Manning said the Board should have empirical evidence to support the amount spent and received for professional development. The rest of the Board remained silent on the issue. Without referring to Schlechty training directly, Manning reiterated the Budget Design Team findings, saying that there may be different professional development opportunities that would yield stronger results.

    Survey Says – Earlier in the meeting, the District’s Budget Design Team made a presentation to the Board. Under the Schlechty training model, Design Teams are created for all areas of the District. To that end, a cross-divisional group of District employees were organized into sub-committees to analyze employee responses to an on-line survey regarding the District’s budget. There was a significant drop in employee responses to the survey, down by a third from last year. Survey suggestions include: more diversity in the kinds of professional training available; more IT/computer training to support the purchase of technology; increase administrative support at the schools and a reversal of the controversial experiment that put assistant administrators in the classrooms with teaching duties at the high schools.

    Bulls vs. Bears – Chief Financial Officer Bob Davis reported that First Citizens Bank suggested the District place $5 million of its $20 million cash reserve account into a more aggressive investment account (one-time only) to increase yields. This departure from the usual investment criteria was endorsed by Davis who said all funds would continue to be insured.

    Last of Bonds – The Board approved selling the last of the bonds available from the $306 million bond referendum of November 2008. The funds will be used to finance improvements at existing schools and the construction of new schools – School #19, an elementary school in Blythewood on Kelly Mill Road, is currently 43 percent complete but final work will not be completed until more than a year from now, in the spring of 2014.

    Arts & Language – The standing room only meeting kicked off with dozens of recognitions and presentations made. Conder Elementary showcased the arts in a poetry reading and strings performance of Cajun music. Project CARE, a three year counseling grant expiring this year, highlighted the work of the bilingual portion of the program.

    The next Board meeting will be April 9 at Polo Road Elementary School. The first public hearing of the proposed budget will be at 5 p. m. before the Board holds executive session. The regularly scheduled public session is at 7 p.m.

  • Following the ‘Green’ in Evergreen

    In late 2010, newly hired Richland 2 Superintendent Dr. Katie Brochu created a District Design Team to carry out an internal survey of the effectiveness and efficiency of the operations of the District. The team comprised District office employees, school administrators and teachers. A few months later, Dr. Brochu called for the gathered survey information to be evaluated. She suggested the School Board hire Evergreen Solutions out of Atlanta to do this evaluation, called an Effectiveness and Efficiency (E&E) study, on all areas of operation in the District at a cost to the District of $150,000. The Board gave its full approval and the E&E was launched.

    In an early April 2011 Board meeting, Linda Recio, president of Evergreen Solutions, presented the resulting 441 page E&E report along with 161 recommendations for improvements in the District’s operations. Dr. Brochu told the Board that she intended to appoint a Task Force to work as a team to implement the recommendations and that she would report their progress to the School Board publically each month. But it was not until two years later that the first report on the implementation was presented to the Board, and it was presented by Sue Melette, Chief Academic Officer, not by the Implementation Task Force.

    Stephanie Burgess, then Chairmen of the Board (but no longer on the Board), called for the Task Force to be started immediately. Following the April 2011 Board meeting in which Evergreen made their presentation, the Spring Valley School Improvement Council (SIC) hosted a community forum where numerous parents pointed out inaccuracies in the data that lead to Evergreen’s recommendations and that the five chosen S.C. school districts that were used as comparison for Richland 2 were underperforming Richland 2 in every measure of achievement.

    In the second April 2011 Board meeting, Dr. Brochu elaborated that the Implementation Task Force would “provide a cooperative and collaborative method of researching items that were noted in the report. They [will] share that information with the administration and our Board and whether the recommendation would be practical, feasible or ready to be implemented as it is currently written.” The inaccuracies were of concern to Board member Chip Jackson who was reassured by Brochu that checking the levels of accuracy is part of the Task Force’s responsibility.

    The initial Implementation Task Force comprised nine people from schools, 12 District employees and four community members. Of the parents represented, only two were not employed by the District. The initial Task Force was divided into four sub-groups that were to review recommendations grouped in four areas: Curriculum & Human Resources; Information Technology; Administration and Building. Three meetings were held before parents protested their lack of input, and eight additional parents/community members were added by the Board based on a random drawing. Since the parents were added, the new, expanded Implementation Task Force has never met.

    While the initial Task Force actually met, at no point were the members told that 110 (68 percent) of the 161 recommendations were already in effect or in process prior to the first Task Force Implementation meeting. While this has been disputed by Board members and District executives, it was confirmed by phone calls to individual schools and District departments. Still to be answered is what constructive work the Task Force would have ever been able to contribute if many of the 161 recommendations were already in the process of implementation before the Task Force was even appointed?

    Richland 2’s long-standing tradition has been one of community involvement from many facets – realtors, Chamber of Commerce, elected officials, civic organizations, business people and parents. The Board has seen the success of this collaboration. Certainly the community has felt the success of this joint effort. It is the Board’s responsibility to impart this cultural knowledge to the newest members. While the District must remain open to new ideas and positive direction from any source, they have an obligation to preserve what does work for the district – and that is ongoing collaboration to ensure that each student has more than a fighting chance for success.

    Given the reputation and success of R2SD over such a prolonged period of time, why were such wide sweeping changes deemed necessary and what was the driving force to make those changes so rapidly without transparency and without the promised community input? Why did Superintendent Brochu ask the Board to fund this study? Why did Evergreen Solutions receive $150,000 for a comprehensive study when 68 percent of their recommendations were already in progress without adequate community input?

    Example of some of the recommendations:

    Educational Services 3.4 Evergreen postulates that site-based management (meaning principals guide the individual culture of their schools within the larger context of the district) is a deterrent for academic learning. For example, our high schools have different schedules within the day (although all start and end at same time) and time makes for difficult coordination for students working with other students in other schools.

    Evergreen traditionally recommends programs and initiatives that are specific to the programs of Schlechty Center – a training program with direct personal ties to our Superintendent, and the relationship between the District and professional development has been in question since Ms. Brochu’s hire. It is the same training program that was used in her previous district. Also, Evergreen, as an outside consultant, had not previously made recommendations for specific professional development as it was asked to do for R2SD. There are deep concerns with some administration and parents that Evergreen was encouraged to suggest programs that Dr. Brochu had every intent of initiating. In fact, the entire report is full of vocabulary that is unique to the Schlechty teaching. Professional training and Schlechty are a future column.

    After a year of silence, the Board, at the suggestion of Jackson, has once again called for monthly E&E updates. At last week’s Board meeting, Board Member James Manning asked for the status of the E&E study given that, to date, neither the Task Force nor anyone from the community had been given any voice in the process.

    Melinda Anderson, in a reversal from past Board musings, stated that “a lot of things recommended in the Study we have already done – we had done prior to the study . . . we are still using the study, a limited number of things we have not addressed. ” When asked if we are still using the E&E Study, Dr. Brochu said, “We look at a number of different reports and studies and information as we are building toward greater efficiency and greater effectiveness. We are taking each and every one of those – whether a report, study or audit, if you will. We are taking all that info and utilizing that to make the best decision moving forward for Richland 2. So that is why we are taking a variety of things and bringing them to you. It all comes to a Richland 2 program.”

    Like opening Pandora’s Box, one circle of answers, leads to another circle and still the public doesn’t have the answer.

    We do know that the procedures for community partnership that were laid out by the Board and District have not been followed, were never followed even with repeated e-mails, public input and phone calls from the community. This brings to question – if the Board and District do not value the input from the community for this highly publicized study, how can the public trust that the requests for the community to partner with the schools will have value for our students?

    Stevie Johnson can be reached at stevie@blythewoodonline.com

  • Vote on Cell Phones Tabled

    At Tuesday’s Richland 2 School Board Meeting, held at Bookman Road Elementary School, students presented to Board members how the programs at Bookman are ‘lighting the way’ for future success. Project Unify, an after-school club, pairs students for participation in Special Olympics. Each class has a chore or responsibility to contribute to the Bookman family. This in-school service might include composting, keeping the marque current or recycling. Service projects beyond the school walls are further encouraged.

    The Board voted 6-1 (Chip Jackson, nay) to table the vote for the expansion of cell phones in the middle schools. Safety and appropriate use of cell phones for education value will be reviewed before the policy revision will be considered.

    The Board voted 7-0 to revise three policies that would put the district in compliance with a state law that allows students currently attending the virtual school or home-schooled students to participate in after-school activities.

    A District policy labeled ‘Self-Esteem Promotion/Suicide Prevention’ was also presented for vote. This policy had had considerable overhaul and was tabled for more time for discussion. Melinda Anderson was concerned that bullying and the role that it plays in teen suicide was not mentioned. Barbara Specter felt the policy as revised put the burden of prevention on the District without equal consideration of community accountability. Also of concern for Specter was the vague language on who was responsible for funding the programs outlined in the policy.

    Jack Carter, Director of Operation, provided an update on the District’s security and crisis response, reporting that Richland 2 is currently adhering to the safety procedures recommended by the State Department of Education. “The strongest and best line of defense is a well-trained school staff,” Carter said, adding that this is what the district has. One improvement on the horizon is a Grab and Go Kit with rosters and other vital student information for each teacher. Currently this kit is held in the school main office and not the individual classrooms.

    Wrapping up old business, the Board discussed the Human Resources section of the Effectiveness and Efficiency Study. The discussion focused on the District’s desire to have employee handbooks written specifically for each school as opposed to the single handbook available on the District Web site to serve all the schools. The Board approved 7-0 to have the HR department write employee handbooks specific for each school. Also approved unanimously was the refinement of performance evaluations for classified employees. The Effectiveness and Efficiency Study generated much discussion among Board members, which will be reported in detail next week.

    The next Richland 2 School Board meeting will be held at Polo Road Elementary School on March 12 at 7 p.m.

    Stevie Johnson can be reached at stevie@blythewoodonline.com

  • Reward Without Review

    In absence of a school board meeting this week, I will discuss some of the ongoing questions that remain about whether annuities have been inappropriately paid to Richland 2 Superintendent Katie Brochu, the School Board’s evaluation of her performance and her apparently incomplete Dec. 5, 2012 response to the Board’s evaluation of her.

    While some details have emerged, most of my questions go unanswered.

    Here’s what we know:

    Brochu’s contract calls for annuity payments of approximately $17,000 to be paid to her each January following a satisfactory review by the Board. While not a single satisfactory review of Dr. Brochu’s performance was completed by the Board, it has now been confirmed that the annuity payments were, indeed, paid to Dr. Brochu three times.

    When asked about this discrepancy, Board members tell me that they have sought legal advice and are prohibited from discussing the matter at this time.

    Dr. Brochu was hired March 23, 2010, yet the Board didn’t conduct their first (and only) performance evaluation until Oct. 22, 2012. Six weeks after that evaluation, on Dec. 5, the Superintendent delivered her response to the Board.

    That response, as we now know, did not include the required “comprehensive professional development expense report,” yet her response was enthusiastically accepted in an online statement from then Board Chairman Chip Jackson on Dec. 14, even though the Board had not even met.

    So how did the Board discuss Dr. Brochu’s response and formulate an acceptance of that response if they had not met? Was this Jackson’s personal response without input from the Board? Plus, it is important to note that Dr. Brochu’s response was incomplete in that it lacked the comprehensive professional development expense report that was required.

    Even though Board Members initially reported that they had received a 75-page response from Dr. Brochu that included a 25-page report on the District’s underperforming schools and a comprehensive professional development expense report (assumed to make up the remaining 50-pages of the response), no Board member was able or willing to produce the comprehensive development expense report for inspection.

    After submitting a Freedom of Information Act request for the comprehensive report, the District gave me a 147-page report that was not a comprehensive professional development expense report but a list of financial data that is incomplete in its content, listing expenses without the name of attendee, date stayed and sometimes not even the name of the hotel, etc.

    This lack of information renders the ‘report’ meaningless and suspect. I expect to have more on the inadequacies of this financial listing in coming weeks.

    Although, to date, the Board has not discussed the Superintendent’s response to their evaluation, they have scheduled a work session in March that is purported to include such a discussion.

    But it is likely that the reasons why the School Board chose not to give Superintendent Katie Brochu either of her first two reviews and have declined the opportunity to tweak any of her initiatives will remain hidden in executive session discussions involving “personnel issues.” And I might note that ‘personnel issues’ alone is not provided for under the South Carolina Freedom of Information Act as a reason to go into executive session.

    The reason must be more specific.

    Contact Stevie Johnson at

    stevie@blythewoodonline.com