logo
Wichita Falls ISD partners with Third Future to boost Hirschi Middle School

Wichita Falls ISD partners with Third Future to boost Hirschi Middle School

Yahoo11-06-2025
WICHITA FALLS (KFDX/KJTL) — For eight years. Hirschi Middle School, formerly Kirby, has been below an acceptable accountability rating.
The Wichita Falls ISD Board of Trustees voted to enter into negotiations with a turnaround and education improvement partner.
Legacy High unveils advanced new band trailer features
'We've really failed these kids,' Board of Trustees, Place 5 Representative Jim Johnson said.
Johnson noted the shortfalls the board has made in trying to turn Hirschi around.
The campus is at risk of being taken over by the state or closed.
'We've been doing the same thing year over year from about 2016, and the results have been kind of stagnant since then,' WFISD Superintendent Dr. Donny Lee said.
The board is now taking a different approach in turning the campus around.
The board turns to Third Future Schools to be the school operator for Hirschi Middle School.
'We're trying to jump ahead of this in anticipation of the 2024 Accountability Letter and partner with Third Future to get the ball rolling now, instead of waiting another calendar year and lose another year of academic instruction,' Lee said.
Currently, the school is projected to receive an 'F' rating for the 2024 school year.
Lee and the board said that Third Future Schools' track record speaks for itself, with the company operating several schools across Texas.
'We looked at Mendez Middle School in Austin, a very tough middle school. It went from an F to a B,' Lee said. 'We're going into this with the expectation that there's going to be some significant improvements in student outcomes where we would not do it.'
While Hirschi will still be under the WFISD, Lee says Third Future Schools will have access to personnel hiring decisions.
Lee said the organization will conduct interviews with staff next week.
The district will offer staff the option to interview with Third Future Schools, or they will find a suitable position within the district for them.
Third Future Schools will decide who will work for them as the operator of the Hirschi.
The organization champions turning failing schools around in a quick timeframe.
Now, only time will tell the fate of Hirschi Middle School.
The WFISD will host a town hall meeting for the community regarding the partnership. It begins at 6 p.m. Wednesday, June 11, 2025, at the Career Education Center.
The partnership is scheduled to begin in Fall 2025.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lunchtime policy at Hirschi stirs social media concerns
Lunchtime policy at Hirschi stirs social media concerns

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Lunchtime policy at Hirschi stirs social media concerns

Hirschi Middle School responded this week to what staff called "a lot of misinformation out there regarding multiple flash cards at lunch." The school's Facebook page on Monday contained a post that said, "Lunch is not withheld from any student." Some posters had taken to social media to say students in the lunch line were given a few seconds to answer a multiplication problem correctly or be sent to the back of the line. Hirschi educators said on Facebook: "Students are given a multiplication question to answer while in the lunch line (such as 6x5). If they get the question wrong, then they will move to the back of the line. If they get the 2nd question wrong, then they are taught a skill to get it correct next time and they move forward in the lunch line…and it doesn't slow down the lunch lines, as they are already backed up." Hirschi educators also said in the post that the grade levels have seen improvements as a result. "The intent is to get our students to learn their multiplication facts, as it is very difficult to learn middle school math when a student doesn't know them," Hirschi educators said in the post. On Wednesday, Dr. Donny Lee, WFISD superintendent, declined to comment at this time on the math questions at Hirschi lunch. The student population attending Hirschi has performed poorly on state accountability ratings, so the Wichita Falls ISD School Board voted in June to turn operation of the school over to Colorado-based Third Future in an effort to improve scores. Lee has called it "a turnaround company." Third Future brought in about 36 of its own staff and teachers and kept 11 members of existing WFISD staff, according to a previous Times Record News story. Lee has said he expects word this week from the Texas Education Agency on whether it will intervene at Hirschi, which received a "D" rating on 2024-25 accountability ratings released last week. More: New WFISD high schools received poor ratings. The superintendent explains why More: WFISD turns Hirschi Middle School operation over to a turnaround company This article originally appeared on Wichita Falls Times Record News: Hirschi lunches Solve the daily Crossword

Vigil Labs AI Raises $5.7 Million To Build Bionic Traders
Vigil Labs AI Raises $5.7 Million To Build Bionic Traders

Forbes

time12 hours ago

  • Forbes

Vigil Labs AI Raises $5.7 Million To Build Bionic Traders

Vigil's founder and CEO, Kole Lee, dropped out of Stanford to start what may become the world's largest hedge fund, powered by real time data from proprietary sources, and a reasoning system specifically trained to advise and augment human traders. His first customer is himself. Lee is literally betting his fortune on his startup. Lee is a former teenage magician who once performed for Silicon Valley luminaries, he traces his interest in computing back to his grandmother, one of UCLA's first Fortran programmers. In high school, he started building his personal wealth by trading equities, but soon gravitated toward crypto. He interned at Pantera Capital, led Stanford's Blockchain Club, and turned a small personal crypto stake into a fortune. 'I've always believed that markets reward intelligence and adaptability,' he said. 'AI is the purest way to scale those qualities.' In 2024, Lee made headlines when he persuaded the student-run Blyth Fund to allocate seven percent of its portfolio to Bitcoin. At the time, Bitcoin was trading at roughly $42,000. The move drew national attention and over a million views across social platforms. 'It was a lesson in conviction and timing,' Lee told me. 'Markets are intelligence games. The edge comes from who can see the signals first and act with confidence.' The key to the system is where Vigil gets its data. It supplements traditional sources that everyone uses with a proprietary combination of data gleaned from diverse sources, like social media, Reddit, and predictive markets, the sum of which, Lee admitted, is their own 'black box.' Instead of training an LLM, the company is building infrastructure to harness existing AI advances but with a specialized reasoning system for trading. 'The result' said Lee in an interview yesterday, 'is continuous, superhuman coverage of global markets, surfacing opportunities no single analyst could monitor.' Comparison with Wall Street's famous 'black box' systems is inevitable. Firms like Renaissance Technologies and Citadel have long cultivated reputations for secretive algorithmic models that churn through massive datasets to identify patterns and generate trades. Vigil sits in the same competitive frame, but its founder argues the approach is fundamentally different. Their reasoning system is built to focus and advise traders, making them 'bionic,' able to spot, and measure opportunity and risk. The company's longer-term vision is to build a 'prediction engine' that learns directly from financial markets, which serves as the reward system. Every tick of data is a feedback loop, teaching the AI how to adapt and improve. If successful, Vigil would blur the line between algorithmic trading and applied machine reasoning. 'Applying AI to solve the markets is among the largest opportunities in the intelligence era,' said Koko Xs, Cofounder at Nova. "Every generational technology company has a core cash engine that fuels compounding innovations, and a new generation of missionary hedge funds like DeepSeek are emerging as the dominant tech players. We hold deep conviction in Kole's magical ability to shape markets and the future.' The small founding team of four blends computer science and trading backgrounds. Chief Product Officer Daniel Nunes worked at the intersection of crypto and analytics. Newly appointed Chief Technology Officer Calder White has a diverse background in programming, system-level engineering, and real-world trading. By 20, he had helped scale Tensor, the leading NFT exchange on Solana, to process over $3B in annual volume. Lee is hoping the system will work so well that he won't have to take another dime from investors, and instead will self-fund. 'It comes down to who adapts fastest,' Lee said. 'by changing the timing and quality of information traders get, AI will turn the smartest human traders into super traders ' Nova led the seed round, with participation from Lux Capital, Pantera Capital, SV Angel, Soma Capital, Valor Equity Partners, Jack Altman, Kevin Hartz, Cyan Banister, Micky Malka, and several prominent AI researchers.

WFISD president: TEA ratings cause for 'shouting from the rooftops'
WFISD president: TEA ratings cause for 'shouting from the rooftops'

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

WFISD president: TEA ratings cause for 'shouting from the rooftops'

Wichita Falls ISD School Board President Mark Lukert said Monday trustees should "shout from the rooftops that we had a really, really good year" in the latest accountability ratings from the Texas Education Agency. The district scored an overall 68 or D in the A-F ratings. But Dr. Donny Lee, WFISD superintendent, said while the district had 11 campuses that scored F or D two years ago, the number was reduced to five in the 2024-25 ratings. "After this year, it should be minimal," Lee said. "We need to celebrate the good things," Lukert said. Lee told trustees at the Monday meeting that low scores for the city's new high schools dragged down the district's overall grade. Memorial High School received a D, and Legacy received an F. "It doesn't look good now. We'll take ownership of that, but it will be better in one year. We'll see a big jump in ratings after this year is over," Lee said. He said there's "more to the story" than just the letter grade. He said the main reason for the low ratings at the high schools was a lack of a track record for the high schools that just opened in the 2024-25 school year. Past performances weigh heavily into a school's grade. Hirschi Middle School received a D, meaning the district may face intervention of some kind from the TEA. That could mean closing a campus, assigning a conservator to oversee the district or taking over WFISD and replacing all of its trustees. Lee said he hopes to hear from the agency this week on the steps it might take. The district also set a tax rate for the coming 2025-26 budget year that is slightly lower than the current year. Chief Financial Officer Leah Horton said the state makes up the difference in funding. More: New WFISD high schools received poor ratings. The superintendent explains why More: How did your kids' school do? Here are the TEA ratings This article originally appeared on Wichita Falls Times Record News: School board Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store