Sunday, January 26, 2020

Harwood Middle School update, January 26, 2020



HUMS students took time out during their 
studies to hit the Harwood Slopes.   Hillary Wheeler and Jen Dreimiller
 organized an opportunity for HUMS
students to "catch some air"off the amazing 
Harwood Union back hill this past week.  
 

HUMS chefs learned the origin stories of where their daily food comes during a 7th grade sustainability lesson.  Students will be preparing healthy choice snacks over the next few days to sample their creations.  Student chefs will  visit a nearby farm to help connect the dots between agriculture, sustainability and why making the right choice about food matters.  
 

Field Trip Reminder: 
This year our Celebration of Learning will be held at the Big Picture Theater in Waitsfield!
This coming Wednesday, January 29th - We hope to see you there!



Subject: HUUSD Board Meeting Recap 1/15
Dear members of our six town community,
At our last meeting on January 15, 2020, of the Harwood Unified Union School District (HUUSD) Board: 
Michelle Baker, Director of Finance & Operations, gave a presentation and answered board member questions on the FY21 Budget. Her report, and all FY21 budget documents, can be found at https://huusd.org/business-office under “FY21 Budget Development.”
Board members broke into small groups to discuss how they view equity in regards to HUUSD schools, using the HUUSD vision statement and guiding questions to frame their conversations.

Please note that our full administrative team has now started to work on transition plans and we will be sharing out more details following our January 22nd meeting.

The Board took action on the three (3) items below:
Approved the following items as part of the consent agenda: Approve: Minutes of 1/8/2020; Accept: Vouchers 1151 and 1165 equaling $358,456.18

Approved draft RFP for bond communications consultant. 

Approved Budget #5 with a total expenditure of $39,457,342 for fiscal year 2021 which would include combining all 7th and 8th graders at Crossett Brook Middle School and moving Moretown Elementary’s 5th and 6th graders to Crossett Brook Middle School (or IDC).

Our next meeting is Wednesday, January 22nd at 6:00 pm in the Harwood Union School library. Please visit https://huusd.org/huusd-board to confirm time and place of meetings. 

You’ll also find all board and committee agendas, packets and minutes, and the link to board meeting videos. The direct link to watch this and other recent meetings is: https://mrvtv.com/category/school-board-meetings/. An archive of older meetings can be found here: https://archive.org/search.php?query=Harwood+Unified+Union+School+Board&sort=-date 

Dear Families,
At our recent school board meetings, the Board approved a budget for next year that includes some significant changes to the way our schools are organized, and we wanted to reach out and tell you more about these decisions.
The two biggest changes include moving all of the district’s 7th and 8th graders to Crossett Brook and rezoning Moretown’s 5th and 6th graders to Crossett Brook, both of which will happen next fall. This may come as a surprise to some, though others may be aware that conversations around grade configurations in the schools have been going on for years in our district.
This past fall, the Board had approved a long-term plan that included these two changes as well as the expectation that we would continue exploring the possibility of closing the Fayston School. This long-term planning effort had been spurred by the Board's recognition that rising costs, our diminishing Act 46 merger tax break, the need for major reinvestments in our buildings (that is, bonds), and declining enrollment were coming together in a perfect storm that would be financially unbearable for our communities. We came to see that if we could bring larger cohorts of students together we could actually improve programming opportunities for students. 
We did not anticipate implementing the long-term plan as early as this year. Our principals had been urging us to merge the 7th and 8th grades, but the Board indicated that it wanted to wait at least another year to make this change. In late December, as we began to work with next year’s budget, we saw projected tax increases that ranged from 3.0% to 8.7% in our towns, and many of us felt this was more than our community could support. Efforts to reduce the budget showed we would have to cut programming (you may remember that 5th and 6th grade band and chorus as well as elementary world language were on the list), which we also thought our community would not support. 
This caused us to return once again to consider the possibility of moving forward with parts of our long-term plan as soon as next year. The whole administrative team -- every building principal, as well as several district-wide staff members -- met to flesh out this possibility in terms of staffing, programs, and class sizes. The budget chosen by the Board allows the district to deliver the same high quality programs but with less expense by bringing more of our 5th through 8th grade middle school students together. 
Planning for this transition is already under way. A Transition Leadership Team will be working to identify questions that need to be answered (for example: What happens to the bus routes? Will student teams be reorganized? How will staff be reassigned? When can students and families visit their new schools? and hundreds more). They will develop committees of staff and principals to answer these questions and share out this important information. It will be intense work, but we have confidence in the highly skilled and experienced educators who will implement this transition to best serve our students.
We know that your children also have many questions about the changes ahead. We urge you and your students to share those questions with your building principals, who will be best equipped to respond. If they don’t yet know the answers, they can let you know when we can expect the information. We also encourage you to discuss the opportunities this change will bring with your children. The more we can guide them through this change - whether it is welcome or unwanted - with a positive lens, the better we equip them to navigate future changes. As students who have spoken to the Board about this matter have reminded us in recent months, they are sometimes more flexible and resilient than adults, and we are wise to acknowledge and support their ability to successfully manage change.
For those families whose students will change schools next year, please know that more detailed information will be coming from our district leaders about school choice options for Moretown incoming 5th and 6th graders and transition plans for all of our incoming 7th and 8th graders. 
We know that our students and teachers need our support throughout the months ahead. Thank you for joining us in the effort to make this a smooth and successful transition.

Respectfully,
The HUUSD Board

Community Announcements
Please note that the opportunities/events listed below are not specifically endorsed or screened by school staff. As always, families should use their own standards and review processes to determine appropriate activities.
MECA Children's Clothes Swap: February 8, 10-12, at Moretown School.  Bring your child's outgrown clothing or shop for new-to-you gear at the MECA Children's Clothing swap.  They are looking for infant through 6th grade (you may have old old clothes from your elementary school days..) clothing sizes in good condition that can be swapped on the day of the event.  Bring your children's old clothing, pay a $5 entry fee and fill a bag of new clothing for your child.  You need not have clothes to swap. Just pay the entry fee and fill a bag full of clothes.  Here is a list of what to bring to trade(warm clothing for ages infant-6th grade): long sleeves and long sleeve onesies for babies, long johns, warm socks, boots, hats, gloves, jackets, sweaters, snow pants, and sneakers.

Sunday, January 19, 2020

Harwood Middle School update, January 17, 2020


HUMS Artists displayed their projects this past Wednesday. Here is just a sample of
what was ready for viewing.
 



In advisory this past week, all TA's partnered with another TA to share trail mix,
as a metaphor to "mix up" groups and talk to people we may not normally interact with.

Here are two articles to review that might be helpful prior to attending the workshop 

Supporting children in facing their fears
How to help teens weather their emotional storms

School Board Updates

Information to be updated soon

Community Announcements
Please note that the opportunities/events listed below are not specifically endorsed or screened by school staff. As always, families should use their own standards and review processes to determine appropriate activities.

9 Things All Children Need to Succeed with Dr. Michael Ungar  January 21, 6-7:30pm, Waterbury's Steel Community Room, 28 North Main Street(by the Waterbury Library).  Hannah's House is pleased to welcome Michael Ungar,  leading authority on resilience research to speak about what every child needs in their life in order to thrive and succeed.  In his new book "Change the World", Dr. Ungar explores real lives, across age and culture, and discovers that the answers lie in the people and the support systems around us.  Strong relationships, caring families, a sense of connection and identity are very often the difference between individual success and failure. This event is free.

Kids Pottery Classes at Blockhouse  We are offering classes 3 days a week this winter for kids ages 6-17 starting January 13th. Explorations through clay are fun, creative & therapeutic.  Visit us online to learn more and to register- www.blockhousestudio.com. Discounts available for siblings- use code SIBS10 at checkout.

NSAA Safety Month Events at Sugarbush  Meet the Sugarbush Parks team, January 18, 11am-1pm, at the top of Slow Poke Trail, Lincoln Peak, and learn how to navigate features and conquer the PARKS.  The Ski & Ride team will provide tips on how to improve your form and style. Space is limited.



Friday, January 10, 2020

Harwood Middle School Update, January 10, 2020

HUMS French 7th grade class practicing visualizing
as part of our world language programs educational tools they use
to assist with understanding language. 
The 7th grade scientists received a special delivery of 100 brook trout fish eggs from the Dwight D. Eisenhower National Fish Hatchery this past Thursday.   The fish will develop and grow nestled in the dark, chilly confines of the tank through the beginning of June. Students will release the small trout into the Dowsville Brook when the air and water temperature warm with the arrival of the changing season.
HUMS would like to welcome two UVM student teachers to the 7th grade team.
They will be with us from January to May.  Their focus areas are in English and Social Studies.  We look forward working with them!
  


  



Harwood's Flight Club working on our fleet of aircraft
during the winter months in preparation for warmer and dryer weather.  


January 2019 
IMPORTANT REMINDER 
Monday 20Tuesday 21 
No School for students - Inservice Trainings for all HUUSD educators 

Hello HUUSD community, 
In order to keep everyone informed about the upcoming budget for 2020-21, we have some documents that may help you.  Below you will find the board meeting recap from January 8, 2020.  
For full budget details and budget reduction scenarios, please click here to go to the website.  You may then click on the FY21 Budget Development section on the right hand side of that page for a drop-down menu.  The two latest documents are entitled "2020-01-08 Budget Reductions Per 12-18 and 1-8 board meetings" and "2020-01-08 FY21 Budget Presentation to the Board."

Board Recap 1-8-2020
Subject: HUUSD Budget update / Important meeting Jan 15th
Dear members of our six town community,
As you may have been hearing from headlines and news stories, this is a tough school budget year around the state. We want to make sure our voters are aware of the financial challenges school districts are facing and the work we are doing to address them. 
The HUUSD has been making good progress in its long-term preK-12 planning effort -- identifying major changes that will reduce operational costs across the system while also improving opportunities for our students. But even as we plan ahead to re-configure our district in the coming years, we face huge challenges right now to balance affordability and excellence in next year’s budget. The combination of reduced merger tax incentives, dramatic increases in health care costs, lower pupil counts, and property value fluctuations (among other things) mean that actual tax rates in our towns could increase by 4.0% to 8.7%.  
In response to this high number, the Board has asked for several additional budget plans to be developed -- each of which makes different levels or types of cuts -- to see if there are opportunities to reduce expenditures next year and what those opportunity costs might be. Each of the plans has pros and cons, and many of them include significant changes in how and where we teach our kids. At our next meeting on January 15th, the Board will be reviewing and choosing among the different budget drafts.
We are required to pass a budget for voter approval by January 22nd. As we prepare to narrow our choices on the 15th, we are sharing this overview of what will be on the table and our most current numbers: 
Budget #1, the original budget, is for $40,472,342. This shows a 4.8% growth in expenditures and a 4.5% increase in equalized per pupil spending, with a 6-cent equalized tax rate increase.
Budget #2 cuts $950,000 from Budget #1 and includes no new staff; would severely limit intra-district choice for incoming 7th and 8th graders; moves Moretown’s 5th and 6th graders to CBMS next school year; reduces elementary music offerings; and eliminates foreign language K-4. This budget of $39,720,778 shows a 2.9% increase in expenditures and a 2.1% increase in equalized per pupil spending, with a 2-cent equalized tax rate increase.
Budget #3 reduces Budget #1 by at least $300,000. Among other things, this budget severely limits intra-district choice (IDC) for incoming 7th and 8th graders and prohibits cuts to existing programs. This budget of $40,317,342 shows a 4.4% increase in expenditures and a 4% increase in equalized per pupil spending, with a 5-cent equalized tax rate increase.
Budget #4 reduces Budget #1 by at least $300,000. Among other things, this budget would add staff to CBMS to allow the district to approve most IDC applications for incoming 7th and 8th graders. It also prohibits cuts to existing programs. This budget of $40,314,842 shows a 4.4% increase in expenditures and a 4% increase in equalized per pupil spending, with a 5-cent equalized tax rate increase.
Budget #5 is based on moving all 7th and 8th graders in the district to CBMS for the coming fall. This budget of $39,427,342 shows a 2.1% increase in expenditures and a 1.1% increase in equalized per pupil spending, with a 1-cent equalized tax rate increase.
Budget #6 is based on moving all 7th and 8th graders to CBMS for the coming fall, and eliminates most new programmatic or operation additions that administrators had requested. This budget of $39,194,842 shows a 1.5% increase in expenditures and a .4% increase in equalized per pupil spending, with a 1-cent equalized tax rate reduction.
We hope you will review the details available online at https://huusd.org/business-office by clicking on the “FY21 Budget Development” tab, and welcome you to join us at our next meetings, Wednesday, January 15th and Wednesday, January 22nd at 6:00 pm in the Harwood Union School library. 
Respectfully,
The HUUSD Board


Community Announcements
Please note that the opportunities/events listed below are not specifically endorsed or screened by school staff. As always, families should use their own standards and review processes to determine appropriate activities.

Kids Pottery Classes at Blockhouse: We are offering classes 3 days a week this winter for kids ages 6-17 starting January 13th. Explorations through clay are fun, creative & therapeutic.  Visit us online to learn more and to register- www.blockhousestudio.com. Discounts available for siblings- use code SIBS10 at checkout.
NSAA Safety Month Events at Sugarbush: Breakfast with patrollers, January 12, 8-9am, in the Sleeper Room, Gate House Lodge, Lincoln Peak , $10suggested donation for the Patroller Relief Fund. French toast, bacon/sausage, coffee, juice and hot chocolate to be served. Also on January 18, 11am-1pm, at the top of Slow Poke Trail, Lincoln Peak, meet the Sugarbush Parks team and learn how to navigate features and conquer the PARKS.  The Ski & Ride team will provide tips on how to improve your form and style. Space is limited.