SOUTH PORTLAND — The vision and mission statement that
guides all policymaking for the South Portland School Department has remained
untouched since 1992, save for one exception. A few years ago, said
Superintendent Suzanne Godin, it was decided to amend a section promising to
“prepare all students for the challenged and opportunities of the 20th
century.”
“We changed that to 21st
century,” she said.
But last spring, the school began the
process of crafting a more comprehensive review. In April, a 14-member steering
committee began meeting monthly to create a new visioning process. On the
second day of school this year, teachers, students and staffers were asked to
weigh in with three things they “value and want to preserve” about the school
department and three things that need to change to ensure “greater student
engagement and achievement,” as well as a list if things students should need
to know “to be successful in tomorrow’s world.”
Finally, in a special "summit"
held Oct. 3 at the South Portland Community Center, the public got to have its
say. That meeting drew 31 participants, primarily school board members, city
councilors and school staffers, along with a few parents. Even the allure of
free pizza did not draw out more than one or two rank-and-file taxpayers, or
parents not already active volunteers, but the school department is not giving
up.
Becky Brown, a former principal at Dyer
Elementary School who this summer was hired to fill a long-vacant role in South
Portland as director of curriculum, instruction and assessment, said the same
survey given at the summit meeting will be made available online by
mid-October.
“I’m not so sure people are fully engaged
in the process yet, which is why we’re doing the community forum, to engage
parents in the discussion,” she said.
The need for community input, said Godin,
stems from the fact that every decision made by the school board or her staff
is measured against the vision of “enriching lives through quality learning for
all.” That, she said, makes the mission statement something that’s mission
critical and not just a list of common-sense catchphrases – like “teaching is
an active, changing process,” or “schools are community centers for life-long
learning” – that some might feel should go without saying.
“As a school department we use that
document to drive our comprehensive education plan, which looks at our
recourses, facilities, people, and programming and asks, what is it we need to
be doing to reach these goals and what data are we going to collect to see if
we are meeting those goals.
“This really is the cornerstone of out
school department,” said Godin. “It really does lead us.”
Godin said that based on the feedback
collected from students, staff and the public, a draft of a new Mission, Vision
and Beliefs document will be read for school board review by December.
After that, she said, new members will be
added to the steering committee in hopes of spinning that into a new strategic
plan.
“That plan will identify the major goals
that we want to address of the next five years,” said Godin. “All of this has
come from the board wanting to make sure that we continue to meet the needs of
out students as well as of the community.”
In addition to an increasing emphasis on
project-based, hands-on learning, Godin said, she expects any new strategic
plan will have to address the trend toward “proficiency-based learning,” that
will necessarily change how the school department measures and reports on
student progress. A new state law says Maine schools must transition to
so-called “proficiency-based diplomas” by 2017.
“What does that mean? What does it look
like? How do we do it?" Godin said. "We don’t know that yet, but we
do know it applies to next year's freshmen, so there is some real urgency to
all of this.”
Brown said she expects at least one more
community forum, if not two, will be scheduled in the coming months.
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