Archive for the ‘K-12 Education’ Category

Riding the bus

Thursday, March 1st, 2012

As it does every year, the Foundation for Lee County Public Schools let The News-Press onto its chartered bus to surprise Golden Apple winners Thursday morning. There were about 40 of us on the bus, mostly the Foundation’s board members and selection committee members, as we traveled to six schools in Lee County.

It was my first time on the bus, and the trip couldn’t have gone smoother. The Foundation’s director Marshall Bower cracked jokes on the bus. The group even sang happy birthday to Gina Lombardo, the Foundation’s director of programs.

One Golden Apple winner stood out to me— Fort Myers’ Eric Riemenschneider. His family—wife, 1-year-old Rhys, 12-year-old Clay and 10-year old Kai— helped surprise him Thursday. 1-year-old Rhys held the Golden Apple trophy box as he was pushed in a stroller.

Riemenschneider walked away from a lucrative graphic design job to teach digital design to high schoolers.Why did he do it?

“The money was great but the reward inside wasn’t,” he said. “I know it sounds corny but it’s the truth.”

One community, another one’s goals

Friday, February 17th, 2012

It was a plan months in the works: “One Community, One Goal: Preparing the 21st Century Workforce.” The Alliance of Educational Leaders drafted the catchy title to describe a three-year plan that articulates a shared vision of improving Southwest Florida’s economy by first improving the region’s K-12 and higher education systems.

The big announcement was Wednesday, and my story appeared in Thursday’s newspaper. That morning, though, the Beacon Council, Miami-Dade’s economic development agency, called with some bad news. Not only is “One Community, One Goal” the slogan of its key initiative, but it’s also trademarked. Additionally, the Beacon Council owns the website onecommunityonegoal.com. The Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce first used the slogan in 1996, and the Beacon Council resurrected it in 2010.

“It’s got quite a long history here,” said Holly Wiedman, the Beacon Council’s executive vice president of strategic planning and market development.

And it had quite a short history in Southwest Florida. Superintendents and college presidents are in the process of selecting a new name, and early favorites include “One Community, One Vision” and “One Region, One Goal.”

Alliance

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Top-20 ranking

Thursday, February 16th, 2012

The Foundation for Lee County Public Schools is the 16th-best education foundation in the country, according to a recent study by Dewey & Associates, a Tampa-based management consulting firm.

The study looked at the following: Long-term financial sustainability, fundraising/revenues, program expenditures and volunteers. According to the study, Lee County’s foundation had $1.7 million in revenue and spent $21.15 in revenue per student.

“There are a lot of ways to measure success of an education foundation, but we chose these performance categories because it is objective data reported to the federal government in the foundations’ IRS Form 990 fillings,” said Dewey Caruthers, president of Dewey & Associates.

Who was the No. 1 ranked education foundation, you ask? Pinellas County.  Here’s the top 10:

1. Pinellas, 2. Denver, 3. Clark County, NV, 4. Hillsborough, 5. Brevard. 6. Polk, 7. The Fund, NY, 8. Albuquerque, NM, 9. Chicago, 10. Broward.

— Chris Umpierre

Say hello to the Fort Myers Institute of Technology

Thursday, February 16th, 2012

On Tuesday, the Lee County School Board will vote to change Lee County High Tech Center Central’s name to the Fort Myers Institute of Technology. The center picked the name from five finalists.

The 44-year-old postsecondary vocational school wants the new name to better identify itself to the community. Earlier this year, the center’s director William McCormick told the school board that many people aren’t sure what the High Tech Center does.

“Some people see our name and they’re not sure if it’s a high school or a postsecondary school,” McCormick said.

The center has about 1,300 students enrolled in its programs. Just 10 percent of students are Lee County high school students. The rest are postsecondary students seeking certifications in a array of fields such as nursing and automotive service technology.

“Some people see our name and they’re not sure if it’s a high school or a postsecondary school,” McCormick said.

The center has about 1,300 students enrolled in its programs. Just 10 percent of students are Lee County high school students. The rest are postsecondary students seeking certifications in an array of fields such as nursing and automotive service technology.

— Chris Umpierre

A tent for the 1 percent

Monday, January 9th, 2012

Glenn Beck didn’t know what to expect when they told him he’d be speaking in a tent.

Time’s Person of the Year in 2011 was the protester, and Beck — a talk show host and political commentator — spent much of his time on air chronicling the Occupy movement, headquartered in tent cities around the country. And on Saturday, Beck opened the 2012 Naples Town Hall Distinguished Speaker Series… in a tent.

This was no ordinary tent, though. It was a 14,652-square-foot tent at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Resort, the hotel’s first event in its new Grand Lawn Pavilion. The tent featured linen-draped walls, advanced sound and lighting systems, full floor carpeting, six chandeliers, high-speed Internet, air conditioning, flat-screen television monitors, a harp and seating for 1,200 guests. The restroom was in a portable trailer, but that, too, was no ordinary trailer. It featured music, automatic sinks, marble countertops and an attendant to open the door. All tent guests were treated to valet parking.

“If this is what camping is like, let’s go camping,” Beck said.

I kept looking for a campfire to roast some s’mores, but no such luck.

Grand Lawn Pavilion

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A twist on “based on a true story”

Wednesday, January 4th, 2012

You’ve seen the phrase attached to many movies: “based on a true story.” Actors play up characters and dramatize scenes, but the true story essentially is intact.

One of those real-life-turned-movie tales was the story of a 2-month-old beached bottlenose dolphin found in 2005 off the east coast of Florida. She was entangled in a crab trap and couldn’t swim. Rescuers named her Winter, and she was taken to Clearwater Marine Aquarium for rehabilitation. Her tail eventually fell off, but Winter learned to swim side to side (like a fish) instead of up and down. The team outfitted Winter with a prosthetic tail, which allows her to swim like a normal dolphin.

Sounds like a great storyline for a movie, and Dolphin Tale was released Sept. 23, opening No. 1 at the box office. The movie trailer states “inspired by the amazing true story” and promos continue with “In an inspiring story of the bond between animals and humans, a boy named Sawyer discovers an injured dolphin…”

So, after touring the aquarium and a nearby movie attraction display on Tuesday, we wondered why none of the exhibits showed anything about the boy who discovered Winter, developed an emotional friendship and often swam with Winter as she rehabbed, all key points of the movie. Who was he?

“There was no boy,” an employee bluntly said.

Winter Dolphin

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Turning a vacation into a field trip

Friday, December 30th, 2011

Budget cuts impacting public schools in Florida all but ended field trips in Lee County, which are few and far between. Rather than waste the two-week winter break with cartoons, coloring books and boredom, we packed up the car and took a family road/field trip to Atlanta.

Lesson No. 1: A child born and raised in Florida needs instruction on how to put on a winter glove. You’d be surprised at how tough it is for a 5-year-old boy to place five fingers into five separate parts of a glove.

Much like a teacher makes field trips educational, I dissected activities of our trip and broke them down into classroom subjects. It’s something any parent can do, whether it’s a trip to Georgia or a trip to the grocery store. Learning doesn’t have to stop just because the school calendar says class is not in session.

Below is an educational analysis of our trip. We’ll start with history.

Social studies: The Martin Luther King Jr. National Historic Site. The sprawling complex is just a few blocks southeast of downtown Atlanta, and is as much about MLK as civil rights in general. The highlight is a ranger-led tour of MLK Jr.’s birth home, where he lived until age 12. It was a little difficult explaining MLK’s impact to a child, who couldn’t quite grasp that people were treated different just because of their skin color.

MLK Mural

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Growing future business leaders

Tuesday, December 20th, 2011

One of the takeaways from The News-Press’ Market Watch Education Summit in October was that high school students needed more opportunities outside of the classroom to interact with real world jobs. The Future Business Leaders of America club is a non-profit district, state and national organization for all middle and high school students. FBLA provides students an opportunity to apply their classroom instruction in business practices, leadership development activities and competitive events.

Riverdale High School has one of Southwest Florida’s top FBLA programs. This year, five Riverdale High students earned the prestigious “Future” award. Just 20 Florida FBLA members have achieved that honor this year. The Riverdale High students honored are: Alexandria Amott, Jerrett Nelson, Alex Karicher, Tanner Mulling and Preeya Raghubar.

Riverdale High’s program has 118 members, who are involved in community service projects, fundraising and preparing for almost 60 competitions each year. Last year, 63 Riverdale High students won trophies in events with 11 members placing at state and one team winning second place in the nation for digital design.

Keiser tips Alliance’s balance

Wednesday, December 7th, 2011

Four years, the Alliance of Educational Leaders had a perfect game of five-on-five. The brain trust featured five school superintendents and five college CEOs, and the group met periodically to discuss issues and trends impacting education in Southwest Florida.

The number of school superintendents can’t change; that’s set by Florida law. But a host of new colleges have entered the region in recent years. Finally, one of the newbies was eligible for membership (it’s only open to regionally accredited, non-profit institutions). Keiser University, which switched from for-profit to non-profit in January, will have a seat at the table. Fort Myers campus president Nancy Tedros represents the school.

At one point, the Alliance was all men, but Collier Superintendent Kamela Patton’s arrival in June changed the dynamic. Edison State College also has a new representative on the Alliance, although acting District President Patricia Land only has an estimated five to seven weeks left before trustees name an interim president.

Below is a list showing who belongs to the Alliance:

Alliance of Educational Leaders logo

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Lee wins environmental grant

Thursday, December 1st, 2011

The district received a $4,680 grant from the Charlotte Harbor National Estuary Program. This is going to help twice as many Lee fourth graders to study estuarine grass flats. Today, about 1,300 fourth graders study the field. With this grant, 2,600 students are going to get the opportunity next year.

The field studies provide first-hand observations of the effects of hydro logic changes, habitat degradation, and the loss and impact of water pollution and nutrient enrichment.

The district is making a push to increase its science, technology, engineering and math offerings and this one way it’s accomplishing the goal. STEM jobs will be in high demand in the future and the more science opportunities students have, the better.