Planada Elementary school community adjusts after flood damage

Planada Elementary school community adjusts after flood damage

Robert Fisher-Yarbrough’s daughter gets nervous when it rains.

Major storms in early January flooded the streets of Planada, forcing evacuations and closures throughout the small community in rural Merced County.

Now, the sounds of heavy rain pounding the roof causes anxiety.

“It was pretty impactful,” Fisher-Yarbrough said. “It started raining (the other day), and she got really scared.”

Fisher-Yarbrough’s family didn’t return home for more than week, until Planada Elementary School reopened. With so many families displaced, the school’s reopening was crucial for the community.

It reopened despite heavy damage that’s rendered much of the school unsafe. The 800-plus-student school was the hardest hit in Merced County as water penetrated most of the campus, which was built below the floodline in the 1950s.

A month after the waters receded , belongings are seen piled in front of many homes en route to Planada Elementary, “a home away from home” to its staff and students, especially now that many kids are displaced from their own home or living with relatives.

“They have came to school talking about their experience, what has happened, what they have seen during the flooding,” first grade dual immersion teacher Karina Pacheco said. “They’ve lost items in their home as well as their homes.”

Students share those stories of fear, trauma and loss with their teachers, many of whom are also coping with their own grief and trauma.

“We have several staff members who were impacted personally,” Planada Elementary Principal Erica Villalobos said. “Their home flooded. They lost everything they had. If it didn’t affect them, they have a parent, grandparent or family member (impacted).

“Dealing with a personal loss as well, it has been a challenge for a lot of them.”

At least two more months of split schedules, shared spaces

Yellow-and-black caution tape blocks the west side of Planada Elementary where the school’s office, library and most classrooms are.

About 90{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of the school was damaged in the early January flooding that overtook the rural town.

Ever since students returned, there’s been a lot of changes.

Only K-2 grade students and teachers remain on campus as they share the cafeteria and around a half dozen untouched classrooms — newer classes added on over the years above the floodline in contrast to the rest of the school built in 1955.

The classrooms left dry from the flood are currently the rooms for all students.

The cafeteria is now a shared space for three classes at a time. Atop the cafeteria stage is the makeshift library.

The 3-5 grade Planada students are bused to Cesar Chavez Middle School about four minutes away as they utilize the space provided for them.

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The teacher lounge area now serves as the office at Planada Elementary School in Planada, Calif., on Wednesday, Feb. 8, 2023. Many classrooms and buildings at the school as well as homes and businesses throughout the community were damaged by January flooding which forced thousands to evacuate the town. Andrew Kuhn [email protected]

No matter if students are at their “home” of Planada or temporarily at the middle school, they’re facing challenges, Villalobos said.

“Instruction looks different,” she said. “We are striving to meet those academic minutes but the only time they have in a (classroom) space is three hours (in comparison to) the full six hours they would’ve been in the classroom.”

Six hours is split between the usable classrooms and other activities. Students receive three hours of instruction in a classroom. For the remaining three hours, students are in the divided spaces of the cafeteria, engaged in instruction through physical education, “library” time, online learning and “everything we could find to fill that time (not) in the classroom,” Villalobos explained.

The students using the middle school follow the same model.

The changes for those students are more difficult, she said. Younger students are clustered into classrooms designed for older students and there is no playground, though staff takes items for them to play with.

“The changing environment. The classroom setting. Their materials and their books being wheeled around for them,” Villalobos noted. “It’s more challenging for those students.”

With the student body divided between schools, staff is splitting time between campuses.

At 12:30 on Wednesday, Villalobos came onto the Planada campus after being at the middle school. She tagged the vice principal, who then headed to the middle school — something they do at least once a day.

“We try to be at both schools everyday so kids can see us, and we don’t become strangers to a whole chunk of students,” she said.

Other staff, such as the nurse clerks and secretaries, are doing two-week rotations between the campuses.

Regardless of location, the current situation affects learning for all of them, from missing nearly two weeks because of flooding to having a “minimized daily schedule” until they have their space back.

“There’s going to be some academic loss,” Villalobos said.

MER_AKPlanadaElementaryScho(2)
Crews work to repair a building damaged by flooding at Planada Elementary School in Planada, Calif., on Wednesday, Feb. 8, 2023. Many classrooms and buildings at the school as well as homes and businesses throughout the community were damaged by January flooding which forced thousands to evacuate the town. Andrew Kuhn [email protected]

With the damaged areas already demolished for construction, repairs are expected to take about two more months for the walls and flooring to be implemented to bring some students back, Villalobos said.

As classrooms become available, the principal and superintendent discussed, the school will phase in more grade levels of students. For example, by March, Superintendent José González expects the special education students and fourth-graders to be back on the Planada campus. All students should be back by the end of the school year.

Losing everything: ‘It makes us feel homeless,’ limits teaching

Planada’s severe flooding is the result of Miles Creek breaching its banks near the community.

While it’s hardly the first time the decades-old school has flooded, staff said January’s disaster was the worst in recent memory. Water damaged 27 rooms in the school, including most classrooms as well as the library and administration office.

“Bookcases, books, chairs, anything we had — we’ve lost,” Pacheco said.

They also lost class libraries, reading carpets, decor, recently purchased tablets and other instructional materials as well as items that created “special learning centers in our classrooms,” Villalobos added.

“Some teachers have occupied those spaces as their home away from home for 15 to 20 years,” González said.

Teaching is “limited,” Pacheco said about she and her colleagues doing “whatever we can with what we have.”

“It makes us feel homeless,” Pacheco said. “One way or another, we make it work.”

From the librarian turning the stage into a library to educators hanging age-specific learning charts or flyers around the cafeteria to administrators transforming the staff lounge into office space, the Planada staff wanted things to be as normal as possible amid the drastic changes, librarian Maribel Ceja said.

“We wanted to create a safe place for them – somewhere they could feel comfortable coming to, somewhere they recognized,” Villalobos said. “This is home for them.”

MER_AKPlanadaElementaryScho (3)
Planada Elementary School in Planada, Calif., on Wednesday, Feb. 8, 2023. Many classrooms and buildings at the school as well as homes and businesses throughout the community were damaged by January flooding which forced thousands to evacuate the town. Andrew Kuhn [email protected]

Moving forward: new classrooms mean starting over

With learning materials lost in the flooding, Planada educators must soon prepare to restock and recreate students’ learning environments once construction is complete.

Educators learned Thursday at the school board meeting that the district’s insurance would be covering some items, but every year, teachers come out of their own pockets to supply their classrooms with the things their students need and things to enhance the teaching and learning environment.

Curtis Earheart, an agent with Horace Mann Educators Corporation in Merced and Madera counties, is coordinating a fundraising effort for them through crowdfunding platform DonorsChoose.

More than 20 educators plan to participate by sharing their story, including discussing the classroom materials and items they’ve lost and how community donations will benefit their students.

Three projects have already been funded.

For example, Graciela Dixon’s project is to replace classroom Lego and MagnaTiles sets used to support her students with special needs in math, science and mental health.

“Our students also use them to engage their peers and practice socialization skills,” Dixon wrote on her project. “It is essential that they be provided with ‘out of the box’ learning experiences since they have not been able to find success in the general education classroom.”

Helping Dixon and other educators – who can still post their projects on DonorsChoose – will help the school continue to feel like home for both staff and students as the community around them recovers.

How to help

Donate to educators’ projects on DonorsChoose. Either follow the link or enter “Planada Elementary School” in the DonorsChoose search box.

Donate books for students. Donated books will go home with students who’ve lost their home libraries in the flooding.

Earheart encouraged donors to “keep checking back” if they don’t immediately see any projects listed on the website. Multiple projects are expected to be rolled out on the website in the coming days.

“Teachers have a bunch of projects that have been created and are in the DonorsChoose review process,” Earheart said Saturday in a text message, “but don’t know when they will be active.”

The Education Lab is a local journalism initiative that highlights education issues critical to the advancement of the San Joaquin Valley. It is funded by donors. Learn about The Bee’s Education Lab at its website.

This story was originally published February 12, 2023, 5:30 AM.

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Lasherica Thornton is the Engagement Reporter for The Fresno Bee’s Education Lab in Fresno. She was previously the Education Reporter at The Jackson Sun, a Gannett and USA Today Network paper in Jackson, TN for more than three years.

Center Elementary School cuts ceremonial ribbon | News

Center Elementary School cuts ceremonial ribbon | News

TEWKSBURY — Com­munity customers collected at the Heart Elementary College very last week to celebrate many years of tricky perform culminating in the opening of the new faculty in early January.

Pupils in grades two by way of four attended the ceremony with their instructors, observing from the balcony of the two-stage cafetorium. The central business staff members, which is housed in the making, also joined the viewers.

Speakers involved Tewks­bury Community Faculties Super­intendent Brenda Ther­iault-Regan state reps Vanna Howard, Tram Nguyen, and Point out Senator Barry Finegold Massachusetts Faculty Buil­ding Authority govt director Jack McCarthy commissioner of schooling Jeff Riley Elementary University Making Commit­tee Chair Anne Marie Stro­nach Faculty Committee chair Bridget Garabedian and Middle Elementary Faculty principal Jay Har­ding and assistant principal Rob Rogers.

Also existing have been reps from the building and design groups at CBRE/Heery Interna­tional, Consigli Construc­tion, and Flansburgh Ar­chi­tects.

“This record of this undertaking goes back to ahead of 2005,” stated Theriault-Regan, than­king previous superintendent Christine McGrath for conducting an architectural learn strategy research of college buildings.

“I’m another person that attended the North Street School early in my years, and it’s from time to time challenging to permit go of the previous. But this is better, and this is the upcoming and this is what our children de­serve,” reported Finegold.

“This is an investment in our local community, in our young ones, and in their kids… I’m just so thrilled to be in this welcoming and condition-of-the-artwork position,” added Nguyen.

“It’s been a lengthy journey — this is the college that Tewks­bury pupils and inhabitants should have,” concluded Howard.

Officials praised city officers for the school’s completion, paying special tribute to the ESBC. Customers included chair Anne Marie Stro­nach, Jamey Cutelis, Jona­than Ciampa, Thomas Cooke, Shannon Demos, Jay Har­d­ing, Dave Libby, Lori McDer­mott, Richard Montuori, Eric Ryder, Keith Sullivan, Lori Sustek, Jayne Wellman, Maria Cutelis, Dennis Fran­cis, previous superintendent Chris Malone, Christopher Modica, Matthew Caston­guay, and Jacquelyn Simione.

The second quality workforce exhibited a new Middle El­ementary College banner. 3rd grade students, directed by Rose Poggio and Van­essa Chambers, sang Woody Guthrie’s “This Land is Your Land,” followed by a rendition of “Happiness” from the 1967 Clark Gesner musical “You’re a Superior Man, Charlie Brown.” Fourth graders examine a poem.

Members of the ESBC, College Committee, and Sel­ect Board joined point out and district officials to minimize the ceremonial ribbon.

The celebration concluded with a reception and a tour of the university creating.

“It’s simply just difficult to record all people who has experienced their fingerprints on this faculty project over these types of a lengthy time,” explained Theriault-Regan. “You’re all really ap­preciated for your attempts on behalf of our college students and our personnel.”

Check out the entire ceremony on the internet at www.youtube.com/TewksburyTV.

McCarver Elementary could change name because of racism

McCarver Elementary could change name because of racism

McCarver

MCarver Elementary, which is named immediately after Tacoma founder Morton M. McCarver, is going by means of the course of action of being renamed amid racism considerations.

Courtesy of Tacoma General public Universities

An elementary school named after the founder of Tacoma may be renamed after community members raised concerns about his racist past.

Tacoma Public Schools announced last month the principal would lead the process to rename McCarver Elementary School, according to a news release. The school, at 2111 S. J St., is named after Morton M. McCarver.

McCarver was a businessman and promoter who made real estate investments across the U.S. McCarver, who was born in 1807, visited Eureka on Commencement Bay and realized the potential of the site for a city. He bought 163 acres and called the site Commencement City. McCarver later renamed it to Tacoma, the Salish name for Mount Rainier.

The school was built in 1924 and named after McCarver in 1926, according to The News Tribune archives. In 1968, the school was transformed into an elementary school.

Tacoma Public Schools received requests to consider renaming the school after community members expressed concerns about McCarver’s work in the Oregon and California Territorial Legislatures, where he proposed and supported laws to remove and exclude Black and mixed-race Americans from living in the territories.

Historic Tacoma posted on its Facebook in November about McCarver’s history.

“Kentucky-born McCarver was an ‘unabashed’ racist whose hatred of people of color came from his upbringing in the South. It’s important to note that McCarver was not just a supporter of those legislative efforts, he was the leader of them,” Historic Tacoma said in the post.

Superintendent Josh Garcia asked McCarver Elementary principal Stephany Wright to lead the process to consider renaming the school. Wright has surveyed McCarver staff and met with the school’s leadership team to select a committee, which includes staff, parents, students, alumni and community residents. The committee began meeting last week, according to Kathryn McCarthy, TPS assistant director of communications.

The committee will provide background information on McCarver and conduct outreach to gather input.

The Tacoma Public School policy to rename a facility requires the principal to prepare a written report that summarizes the school and/or community support or opposition to the proposed change. The report will be submitted to the superintendent.

If the superintendent is in agreement with the proposed change, he will present the recommendation to the school board for approval. The board will then accept or reject the proposed name. If approved, the superintendent or designee should notify appropriate federal, state and local offices, locations and persons, as necessary, according to the policy.

Two Tacoma schools were recently renamed because of racist concerns. Jason Lee Middle School was renamed Hilltop Heritage Middle School, and Woodrow Wilson High School was renamed Dr. Dolores Silas High School in 2021.

Liz Moomey handles the city of Tacoma for The News Tribune. She was previously a Report For The united states corps member covering Japanese Kentucky for the Lexington Herald-Chief.

Lakeway extends disaster declaration, looks into access at new elementary school

Lakeway extends disaster declaration, looks into access at new elementary school
Lakeway extends disaster declaration, looks into access at new elementary school

During a specific meeting on Monday, the Lakeway Metropolis Council extended its disaster declaration from the latest ice storm and looked into feasible alterations for parking and pickup places for a new elementary college.

The city prolonged its catastrophe declaration to midnight May well 3, allowing inhabitants a lot more time to file injury claims and permitting the town receive exterior enable from the city of Austin and Travis County, stated Lakeway Mayor Thomas Kilgore.

“Up until that level of time when we despatched our files (for the declarations) in, both of those the …. county and point out were unwilling to declare a catastrophe,” Kilgore reported. “But as soon as the lesser towns of western Travis County began to light a hearth to them, they truly bought on board and subsequently both equally the metropolis of Austin and Travis County declared disasters.”

Hallowell-area fifth grade classes to return to elementary school building in fall

Hallowell-area fifth grade classes to return to elementary school building in fall

HALLOWELL — Fifth grade courses will not be element of Hall-Dale Middle University up coming yr soon after dad and mom complained the students are getting socially excluded and prematurely uncovered to teenage conduct.

Starting in the fall, quality 5 students — this means this year’s fourth graders — will keep on being at Corridor-Dale Elementary University. This year’s fifth graders will keep on being at the middle school, which ordinarily has involved grades six to 8.

Administrators originally moved the fifth grade learners to a wing in the middle college for the 2021-22 educational yr and informed people that it would be a non permanent remedy to make house for social distancing for the duration of the pandemic.

Now that the district has returned to a feeling of normalcy, a number of parents have requested the Regional School Device 2 board of administrators at new conferences why those students are nevertheless at the middle university constructing.

In a unanimous vote Feb. 2, the board agreed to move the fifth graders again for the 2023-24 university yr with no dialogue.

Board Chair Donna Seppy reported she gained various emails from parents about the topic. 

Their arguments involved that the 10- and 11-year-olds have been “too young” to be exposed to center university and significant school learners. Hall-Dale Higher School shares a building with Corridor-Dale Center University, which, at 111 Maple St. in Farmingdale, is about 3 miles absent from the elementary faculty at 26 Backyard Lane in Hallowell. 

One particular mother or father, Sarah Lutte, claimed through the general public comment time period at the Dec. 1 board assembly that the fifth graders were being remaining out of middle university actions, particularly, the faculty dance. At very first, the fifth graders were being invited to the center school dance, she said, but following officers ended up questioned whether or not there would be a chaperone for the 10-year-previous pupils, the fifth graders were being disinvited. 

“The experience as a result of the previous two several years, lodging they want have not been fulfilled, the fifth grade is not provided, there is a further dance coming up and the fifth grade is not invited. How does my fifth grader come to feel when they are not integrated?” Lutte mentioned.

Lutte spoke yet again at Thursday’s assembly, introducing that “all parents are on the similar side” and that “everyone feels the similar way” about shifting the pupils. She stated all dad and mom who were being surveyed by the faculty preferred to have the fifth graders in the elementary university and that “all but two people” responded.

An additional mother or father, Hilary Roberts, spoke at the board conference about how her daughter read communicate about material use and social media these as TikTok that she did not want her 10-year-aged exposed to. She also reported her daughter instructed her some fifth grade college students sit on your own at lunch simply because “there was a spot for (them) at the elementary college but not at the middle faculty.”

Interim Superintendent Rick Amero called it a “burning issue” that he has attempted to determine out with Assistant Superintendent and previous Principal of Corridor-Dale Elementary Faculty, Kristie Clark, in the course of the a few months he has led the district. 

Collectively, they surveyed and spoke with mothers and fathers and academics about how they felt. 

“Through all those distinctive ranges of comments, it turned obvious to satisfy the requirements of learners the two academically and emotionally,” Amero said at the Feb. 2 board meeting. “We strongly advocate for the fifth graders to go to the elementary school.” 

By retaining this year’s fourth graders at the elementary faculty in the tumble, the inhabitants is expected to be about 350, relying on the dimension of the incoming kindergarten class. 

Amero claimed shifting the pupils back again will issue into the future spending budget procedure as Regional University Unit 2 prepares for up coming yr.  

Though uncommon in the increased Augusta place, getting fifth graders in a center university constructing is not unheard of in Kennebec County. In Oakland-based mostly Regional School Device 18, fifth by means of eighth graders attend China Center Faculty, even though the China Most important College is restricted to pre-K through fourth grade. Somewhere else in central Maine, the elementary schools in Somerville-primarily based Regional University Device 12 are hooked up to a middle faculty, but many other community districts have middle schools possibly as standalone structures or connected to a significant faculty.


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Governor Josh Green, M.D. | HIDOE News Release: Helemano Elementary School counselor honored nationally as 2023 Hawai‘i School Counselor of the Year

Governor Josh Green, M.D. | HIDOE News Release: Helemano Elementary School counselor honored nationally as 2023 Hawai‘i School Counselor of the Year

The ASCA School Counselor of the Yr award honors gurus who devote their careers to advocating for the nation’s college students and addressing their academic and social-psychological enhancement and college and job readiness desires. Honorees had been judged centered on their capability to generate systemic adjust in just the school counseling career.

“The job of our university counselors are so integral to the achievement of our college students,” Superintendent Keith Hayashi reported. “Now extra than ever, we count on their abilities and guidance in creating favourable and progressive strategies to greatly enhance the tutorial and social-psychological requirements of our learners. The Division is grateful to have counselors like Ms. Caraulia in our colleges, just about every day, operating tirelessly to advocate for and aid college student achievements. She is a shining case in point of Helemano’s initiatives to improve a ‘leaderfull’ corporation. Congratulations on this very well-deserved accomplishment.”

A faculty counselor for grades 3-5 at Helemano Elementary due to the fact 2019 and a Hawai‘i State Division of Education college counselor considering the fact that 2015, one of Caraulia’s biggest achievements has been developing a info-driven Multi-Tiered Procedure of Support (MTSS) application inside of her university. The plan takes a systemic method to monitoring scholar results, creating college-vast social-psychological understanding (SEL) initiatives that focus on quality teacher-college student interactions. As a consequence of applying this application, students’ notion of total university protection improved from 56{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} to about 90{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf}.

Caraulia also helped to build a Helemano College Counseling System, where by she conducts quarterly education for employees on SEL interventions and classroom administration, collaborates with teachers to include SEL into their main curriculum, makes biweekly SEL lessons for all grade stages and has created a referral method to make knowledge-informed conclusions for all college students. The faculty counseling method now serves as a basis for scholar social-psychological, behavioral and academic achievement. Caraulia regularly trains staff on the system and has even shared the achievements of this plan with other elementary educational facilities throughout the point out.

“Ms. Caraulia is an indispensable source to our college — providing an great counseling application, a intense devotion to learners and lecturers, and an innovative method of vastly advancing the social and psychological requires of our pupils,” Helemano Elementary Principal Ernest Muh claimed. “She advocates vigorously for all college students at our faculty by collaborating with dad and mom and academics to figure out the most useful training course of action to support just about every person scholar.”

Caraulia’s passion in serving her school local community is felt independently and collectively throughout the school by equally instructors and learners. In addition to aiding the pupils, Ms. Caraulia has cultivated a nurturing natural environment for instructors, concentrating on their psychological well being and wellness wants. She has an open doorway policy for any employees needing to share own or specialist fears and has spearheaded actions that boost and prioritize personnel well-currently being.

ASCA is celebrating 2023 Nationwide Faculty Counseling Week from Feb. 6-10. The purpose of the 7 days is to concentrate public notice on the one of a kind contribution of college counselors within U.S. faculty units. For additional details about ASCA, click here.