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Waterford school board to vote on proposed 6.5% budget increase
Waterford school board to vote on proposed 6.5% budget increase

Yahoo

time26-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Waterford school board to vote on proposed 6.5% budget increase

Waterford — The school board is set to vote Thursday on the proposed $61.36 million school budget for 2025-26 and its 6.5% increase. The spending plan is about $3.8 million more than the current school budget. After the board's vote at its 6 p.m. meeting at Town Hall, the budget will be sent to the Board of Finance and Representative Town Meeting for approval. The board has already held two budget workshops this month during which board members looked for places to cut the initial $61.46 million plan proposed by Superintendent Thomas Giard. Board Chairwoman Pat Fedor said there wasn't much wiggle room" to reduce the budget without sacrificing staff, their benefits or necessary equipment. "One percent of our budget was really all we had control over," Fedor said. That's because Giard said the other 99% of the increase is due to staff raises and health insurance benefits, along with the replacement of Chromebooks for students. Replacements are needed every 5 to 6 years. Fedor said as a result, no major changes were made to the budget at the workshops, including to current staffing. The $95,000 reduction that was done by eliminating a new $60,000 information technologies position while a $35,000 grant was found to fund pre-kindergarten equipment. "Nobody gets adversely impacted," Fedor said. "We're not laying anybody off. Giard said new contracts with raises for school administrators and paraprofessionals take effect in the 2025-26 budget. In the proposed budget, two full-time teaching positions and two half-time positions left vacant due to retirements or resignations will be replaced by two multilingual teachers and a pre-kindergarten position. A presentation to the school board last month showed the number of multilingual learners, which most often refers to students who are learning English as a second language, has tripled over the past years. State law requires a bilingual program be added at Oswegatchie Elementary School in 2025-26 and likely another at Quaker Hill Elementary School in 2026-27. Giard said the proposed budget also addresses the need by adding two multilingual tutors costing $75,000. The tutors will work under the guidance of the multilingual teachers, he said. Also added to the proposed budget is $25,000 for a part-time World Language teaching position to help replace a retiring language teacher.

Waterford schools looking to add bilingual programs
Waterford schools looking to add bilingual programs

Yahoo

time28-01-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Waterford schools looking to add bilingual programs

Waterford — With its multilingual learners tripling over the past eight years, the school district will add a bilingual program at Oswegatchie Elementary School next school year, and likely another at Quaker Hill Elementary School the year after that. Multilingual learners are students who are becoming proficient in more than one language at a time, which most often refers to students who are learning English as a second language. Under state law, districts that have schools that house more than 20 multilingual learners who speak the same native language must provide that school with a bilingual program. Students receive both native language instruction and English language development time during the school day. Great Neck Elementary, which was the first school in town to be designated a bilingual school, began its program this school year. 'It continues to climb,' Great Neck Principal Billie Shea said. 'We're really working to ensure that every multilingual learner in Waterford has the resources, the strategies and the personalized plans and support to really thrive in our district.' Jill Bessette, an educational consultant with LEARN, the regional education service center, told the school board last week that the goal is recognize bilingualism and biliteracy starting with the youngest children. More multilingual learners in the region In the 2016-17 school year, 51 multilingual learners were enrolled here, but it has risen to 137 students, Shea said. About 70% of those are currently in elementary school. That increase is similar to what's been seen in city school districts nearby. Norwich Public Schools from 2021 to early 2024 had seen its multilingual population increase from 638 to 839. Norwich Free Academy recorded 181 multilingual learners in 2021, and that rose to 297 by January 2024. New London Public Schools for the 2020-21 school year had 790 multilingual learners, and that rose to 977 by February 2024. 'This trend is certainly not unique to Waterford,' Waterford Superintendent of Schools Thomas Giard said Monday. As for the exact reason for the increase, Giard couldn't say. 'I don't have a root cause or analysis as to why,' Giard said. 'But I think our challenge, or opportunity, is how we best meet the needs of these students.' Great Neck leads the way Great Neck was the first school to implement the bilingual program, which it did this year. The 20 multilingual learners at the school are native Spanish speakers who are learning English. As mandated, they are being taught by certified Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages, known as TESOL teachers, who specialize helping students slowly gain proficiency in English while still maintaining their home language. The three TESOL teachers and a tutor are shared among the schools. In addition, the school has instituted specific services to assist teachers, students and families communication, like LanguageLine, an on-demand, phone interpretation service. 'So you can literally pick up a phone, and over 240 languages are supported,' said LEARN Multilanguage Learner Coordinator Lisanne Kaplan. 'And you can get a live interpreter on the phone that can help assist a parent at the office, that can also be used for a PPT, parent conferences…' Kaplan said another software the school has implemented is TalkingPoints, an app that helps teachers of multilingual learners send messages to their families. The teacher can send the message in English, but the families will see it in their native language. When they respond, their message gets translated back to English. Students are tested yearly on their English proficiency and if they meet a certain standard they leave the program, Giard said. The 20 multilingual learners state rule is based on schools' Oct. 1 enrollment numbers, Giard said. This past Oct. 1, Oswegatchie had more than 20 learners whose native language is Spanish, and Quaker Hill is currently at 20, so if it maintains those numbers, it will need a program to add a program by fall 2026. Giard said he is certain his upcoming 2025-26 budget proposal will feature additional staffing for multilingual learners.

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