Archive for the ‘Education’ Category

Ribbon Cutting Ceremony Sept. 18 for Dearborn High School’s New $2.9 Million Athletic Facility

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

Dearborn High School will hold a ribbon cutting ceremony this Friday at 6:30 p.m. for the school’s $2.9 million athletic complex renovation. The ceremony will take place on the school’s new synthetic turf football field prior to the start of the Sept. 18 football matchup with cross town rival Fordson High School.

Dearborn High School will celebrate new football field and athletic complex this Friday, Sept. 18. This earlier photograph shows the new synthetic turf being installed.

Dearborn High School will celebrate its new football field and athletic complex this Friday, Sept. 18. This earlier photograph shows the synthetic turf being installed.

As a Dearborn High graduate, I’m still having a hard time adjusting to the relocation of the football field from the valley to alongside busy Outer Drive. Don’t get me wrong, the field looks great and so do the new stands. It’s just the wrong place for a football field and the home seats are actually constructed on the wrong side of the new stadium (the sun is supposed to shine in the faces of the visiting team, not the home team sideline). In addition, noise complaints from nearby residents have forced the school to turn down the volume of the loudspeakers at the new football field.

We can’t help but wonder what the field would have looked like if the School Board had taken up the City of Dearborn’s offer to pay for the costs of moving clay and dirt from the holes being dug for the combined sewer overflow basins and used it to raise the grass field in the valley.

A Dearborn Schools spokesman confirms the city did indeed make such an offer but it wasn’t as simple as filling the valley up with dirt to raise the field out of the flood plain. The quality of the soil that would have been trucked from holes along the Rouge River to the school was unknown and would have needed testing. In addition, the school district would have had to create a new flood plain in another location to match the exact size of whatever was changed in the valley of Dearborn High. While an interesting idea, those obstacles stopped the plan before it could ever get traction.

For those wondering, the $2.9 million price tag at Dearborn High covered the complete renovation of all athletic property at the school. The athletic complex renovation project began with the west complex in the spring of 2008. The complex includes a new synthetic turf football field, grandstands, press box, concession stand, new tennis courts, new softball field, renovated baseball field and renovated track.

The Dearborn High project is the final piece of a three year district-wide program to renovate the athletic facilities at all three high schools. A great deal of work was accomplished at Dearborn High over the summer. The school held their first gridiron match-up on their new synthetic turf field on Sept. 4, 2009.

Costs Force Dearborn Schools to Limit Court Time

Friday, August 21st, 2009

Costs associated with general maintenance, wear from regular use and complaints about noise from some nearby residents has forced Dearborn schools to limit the number of tennis courts it now keeps open to the public.

Costs have forced Dearborn Schools to lock some of the tennis courts at Edsel, Fordson and Dearborn High's new courts, pictured here.

Costs have forced Dearborn Schools to lock some of the tennis courts at Edsel, Fordson and Dearborn High's new courts, pictured here. Residents behind these courts have complained recently about noise.

 The move has upset some residents who contend that as taxpayers they should have unfettered use of a school’s tennis facilities. We have received several emails from upset tennis players in recent weeks saying as much.

One such reader had this to say in an email to us:

“Either courts have been demolished, a la at Henry Ford and UM Dearborn, or they are all locked up at Dearborn High or at Ford Field. We pay our school taxes and are funding the new football stadium, which the jury is still out if it is completely necessary.

“They have built some lovely new courts at the high school, but no one can use them. What is going on here? Who do you have to know to get keys?”

With shrinking school budgets, school officials tell us they had to lock some tennis courts at Dearborn, Edsel and Fordson for simple cost reasons. They also wanted to be sure students had good surfaces to play on when the school year began.

If people are simply “hanging out” late into the night at the new courts behind Dearborn High, as some residents are complaining about, closing off some courts was the right move.

Now we know some will disagree but as a tennis player myself, the question I have is why some of our city parks don’t have more tennis courts. Our guess is that there simply isn’t the tennis traffic needed to warrant such a move. Another, no doubt, is the cost to maintain and keep the courts lighted at night.

This of course begs this question: if the hard-surface tennis courts are being closed for maintenance concerns and wear does that mean the new football fields with their fancy artificial field will also be closed to those hoping to play on when the football or soccer team isn’t using them?

Here are the new tennis court operations at Dearborn High School: 

The (2) courts near Outer Drive to be open all of the time

The (3) courts in the back of the building to be opened as follows:

· From 7:30am – 3:30pm every day that the school building is open.

· For DHS tennis team use (practice and matches) – must be coach/staff supervised

· For all permit use (limited)

Dearborn Supt. Names New School Principals

Monday, June 29th, 2009

Dearborn School Supt. Superintendent Brian J. Whiston is making some personnel changes at Dearborn’s middle and elementary schools.

Whiston appointed three new principals at the middle school level last week. His selections must now be approved by the School Board, whose next meeting is in July. The moves at the middle school come as a result of recent retirements.

The changes at the middle schools look like this:

  1. Shannon Peterson is named Bryant Middle School principal. She previously was assistant principal at the school.
  2. Scott Casebolt is named O.L. Smith Middle School principal. He was an assistant principal at Fordson High School and a former O.L. Smith assistant principal.
  3. Majed Fadlallah is named Salina Intermediate School principal. He was assistant principal at Salina and a former assistant principal at Fordson.

The changes at the elementary school level look like this:

  1. Radewin Awada, previously DuVall Elementary principal, is named Oakman Elementary principal.
  2. Veronica Jakubus, previously Long Elementary principal, is named DuVall Elementary principal.
  3. Kathleen Klee, previously Snow Elementary principal, is named Long Elementary principal.
  4. Glenn Maleyko, previously Salina Intermediate principal, is named Snow Elementary principal.

Smooth Sailing for Dearborn Edsel Ford Student

Monday, June 8th, 2009

Talk about a student going above and beyond.

Edsel Ford High School senior Danielle Boettger designed and built a kayak in her high school woodshop class.

Boettger spent 100 hours on her kayak, working toward her special launch day, which took place last Friday in Edsel’s pool, where friends, family, school administrators watched and cheered as she demonstrated her “rolling” techniques.

Boettger’s headed to Michigan Tech University on a full ride scholarship. We say well done and good luck at university. Below is the video story:

New Dearborn High Football Field Takes Shape

Sunday, June 7th, 2009
Turf for the new football field is scheduled to be installed by month's end.

Turf for the new football field is scheduled to be installed by month's end.

The artificial turf for Dearborn High School’s new million dollar football field is expected to be installed by month’s end.

Below are some images of the current state of the new field that is being installed along Outer Drive. For those wondering, the home team’s bleachers will be on the east side of the field. The visiting team bleachers will back up to Outer Drive.

We aren’t thrilled with the location of the new field, which we have said before HERE.  But we are told this is progress and the field will be ready for Pioneer football this fall.

Looking toward Dearborn High School from behind the yet-to-be installed scoreboard.

Looking toward Dearborn High School from behind the yet-to-be installed scoreboard.

Distance Nixes Hollywood Role for Dearborn Schools

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009
Nowlin nearly lands starring role in upcoming Hollywood movie.

Nowlin nearly lands starring role in upcoming Hollywood movie.

Dearborn schools nearly landed a starring role in an upcoming film being directed by Rob Reiner, aka “meathead” from his days in the sitcom “All in the Family”.

 

The G-rated movie called “Flipped” is about second grade friends growing up together who then struggle trying to understand the awkwardness they begin to experience as feelings for each other grows stronger. Filming for the movie begins this summer in Michigan.

 

Production teams were in town last week looking at Nowlin Elementary and O.L. Smith Middle School. After looking at several Dearborn schools on three separate occasions, the production team fell in love with Nowlin, located near Grindley Park and O.L. Smith, immediately adjacent to the elementary school, because the schools so perfectly fit the time period for the movie.

Smith was built in the early 1950s, Nowlin in the 1940s.

But when Reiner came to town to make the final decisions on locations last week, he chose a school in Saline because it was closer to another location in Ann Arbor where a good portion of the movie will be filmed. Production crews simply did not want to make the drive between a movie set in Ann Arbor and one in Dearborn, school officials were told. (Now we know why he was called “meathead” for all those years.)

The good news is that the production team said they would keep Dearborn schools at the top of their list of potential future movie locations because the buildings are so well maintained.

Can Corporal Punishment Improve Schools?

Monday, May 4th, 2009

Corporal punishment has long been banned from Michigan schools but it apparently is having some impact on more than just the rear ends of some elementary school students in South Carolina. A reader sent this article to us from a recent issue of Newsweek.

For those of you in your late 30s, you may recall or perhaps experienced first hand similar treatment in Dearborn schools. At Dearborn’s Adams Junior High it was the “Shader Persuader”, a wooden paddle that science teacher Shader wasn’t afraid to use on his 7th grade students. Another gym teacher at Adams would use the cord of his whistle on a wet bathing suit to get students inline. We can’t recall how effective it was but we do know that students acting up in class were rare events.

But would a crack on the behind today bring about discipline or a lawsuit?

Below is the Newsweek article:

The Principal And The Paddle 

 Eric Adelson
NEWSWEEK
May 4, 2009

The wooden paddle on principal David Nixon’s desk is two feet long, with a handle wrapped in duct tape that has been worn down by age and use. He found it in a dusty cabinet in his predecessor’s office at John C. Calhoun Elementary in Calhoun Hills, S.C., where Nixon has been the principal since 2006. He has no idea if the old principal ever used it, but now it sits in plain view for all visitors to see, including children who have been dismissed to his office. As punishment for a “major offense,” such as fighting or stealing, students are told to place both hands on the seat of a leather chair and brace for what Nixon calls “a whippin’.” Before he begins, though, he sits the child down for a quiet talk about why he, or she, is in trouble. He tries to determine if a deeper issue, such as a problem at home, might warrant a meeting with a counselor. If the child shows remorse, Nixon will often send him or her back to class without a spanking. Otherwise, he makes sure he is calm, and he makes sure his elbow is still. Then he delivers “three licks” to the child’s rear end. If the child is a girl, then a female administrator does it. Some of the kids cry. Some are silent. Some want a hug. And after the child is sent back to class, still stinging, Nixon sits alone in his office and thinks about what the child has done, and what he has done. “If I could burn that paddle in my stove,” Nixon says, “I would. This is the worst part of my job.”

Before Nixon took over “John C,” student behavior had gotten so bad that one teacher described it as “chaos.” She eventually quit in disgust, pulled her own child from the school, and moved to a different one 45 minutes away. John C is located in a rural stretch of South Carolina near the Georgia border where all but one of the major textile plants have closed, and where the leading local employer is the school system. Nearly 90 percent of the kids at John C live below the poverty line. When Nixon went to his first PTO meeting, only about a dozen parents showed up at a school with 226 students. He still has trouble reaching many families by phone because they can’t afford to put down a deposit on a landline. And yet Nixon has managed to turn John C around. It recently earned three statewide Palmetto awards, one for academic performance and two for overall improvement-the school’s first such honors in its 35-year history. Not everyone agrees with his methods, but most parents and teachers will tell you he couldn’t have pulled off such a turnaround without his wooden paddle.

Still, the mere fact that it works hasn’t made spanking kids any easier for Nixon, who’s no fire-breathing traditionalist. He’s 31, a brownish-haired beanpole with a soft-spoken but determined manner. Married, with an 8-month-old daughter, he taught agriculture to high-school students for six years but had no prior administrative experience. He studied animal science at Clemson, served as state president of the Future Farmers of America, and raised 50 head of beef cattle on his ranch. In 2006, a family friend called about an opening at John C. The school, he heard, was “kind of in bad shape,” but he took the job anyway.

For the rest of the story, click HERE.

Hospitality Way of Life at HFCC’s Fifty-One O One

Monday, April 6th, 2009

If you’re looking for a slightly different place to dine in Dearborn, you might want to consider dropping in on Henry Ford Community College’s Fifty-One O One restaurant.

 

Located in the Student & Culinary Arts Center on HFCC’s main campus at 5101 Evergreen Road in Dearborn, the restaurant is run by students in the college’s culinary arts program who get practical experience in the kitchen, preparing food for dinners, waiting tables and also take classes in sanitation, food preparation, nutrition, baking, food purchasing and cost control.

Students in the HFCC program can earn an associate’s degrees in culinary arts or hotel-restaurant management or receive certification in a different culinary, baking or hospitality areas. And these two year degrees can be applied towards a bachelor’s degree at other institutions without losing credits.

Dearborn Councilman George Darany takes a closer look at the Fifty-One O One restaurant in this video interview done by the CDTV team.

The restaurant is open for lunch on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays. On Wednesdays, Fifty-One O One also is open for dinner. To dine at Fifty-One O One, reservations are recommended. For reservations, please call (313) 206-5101.

Free College Tuition for Future Dearborn Students?

Saturday, March 28th, 2009

Nearly all public school students in the Kalamazoo school district have the opportunity to attend a college or university for free under the Kalamazoo Promise program. Dearborn’s new school Superintendent Brian J. Whiston would one-day like to be able to offer a “Dearborn Promise” for public school students in our city, too.

 

The idea of providing scholarships to Dearborn school kids so they can attend higher education institutions still is just in the “idea” stages but it is one of Whiston’s plans for the district. In this recent interview with Dearborn Councilman Robert Abraham, Whiston mentions the idea as one of his long-term goals.

Under Whiston’s preliminary plan, students who attend Dearborn schools from kindergarten to grade 12 would be eligible for two years of free school at Henry Ford Community College. Those students with fewer years in the district would be eligible for smaller amounts of financial aid to the community college.

Just how it would be paid for still would have to be worked out. According to school officials, if the district began saving money for this system for the kindergarten class of 2011 and worked out a plan with Henry Ford Community College to lock in a credit hour rate, it could be possible by about 2024. The plan would require the district to set aside and invest a portion of money each year for some 12 years in order to potentially have enough funding to offer free tuition to students who completed K-12 in Dearborn.

There are other challenges, too. Henry Ford, no doubt, might have concerns about having to lock in a tuition rate for students for 12 years in the future.

What is driving Whiston’s idea, no doubt, is the success it has had in Kalamazoo. That city was losing students until the “Kalamazoo Promise” was created, which provided free tuition to colleges and universities in the state to students who went to school in the district. More people moved to the district and home sales increased, too.

Funding for the Kalamazoo Promise came from a group of undisclosed benefactors, which Dearborn at this point doesn’t have. The program works like this: students graduating from Kalamazoo’s public school system are offered scholarships to local colleges and universities. The longer the student is in the public school system, the greater the scholarship. Those who started at the kindergarten level get a full ride scholarship.

Under the Kalamazoo Promise, the scholarships will cover between 65-100 percent of tuition and fees, starting with the class of 2006. Qualifying students will have entered the public school system no later than the ninth grade.

The entire program was geared around the idea of attracting businesses and families to Kalamazoo and improving property values. Could such a program work in Dearborn? As there are so many unknown variables right now, who knows? But it is an interesting idea.

State Slashes Budget for Dearborn Schools

Monday, February 16th, 2009

The Dearborn School District would face cuts of $17 million under the state's current budget plan.

The Dearborn School District could see a cut in state funding of nearly $8 million if Gov. Jennifer Granholm’s budget recommendations are approved in its current form by the Michigan Legislature.

Such a cut would be devastating to the Dearborn School District, which already is facing an $11 million deficit for the 2009-10 school year, including a $1.8 million reduction in state aid.

Gov. Granholm, however, decided to cut much deeper for Dearborn and several other school districts.  The Dearborn district is now looking at an overall reduction of $17 million or about 10 percent of the district’s total general fund budget.

The governor’s proposal included the following cuts for Dearborn Public Schools:

  1. $59.00 per pupil cut = $1,064,411
  2. 20J Cut = $616,928 (20J Funding was created in 1999 to ensure equal funding increases to all school districts.)
  3. Bilingual (Sec 41) = $381,000
  4. At Risk 31a = $5,875,000 (31a funding helps those students who are at risk of not being successful in school.)

All of us understand the need for cuts given the state’s current economic condition, but cuts need to happen across all districts equally. That isn’t happening under the current plan.

The Dearborn School District is seeing both its 20J and 31a funds slashed. Hardly equitable when you consider that Dearborn sends more local tax dollars to Lansing to fund public education than it receives from the state. In all, Dearborn taxpayers send $14 million more to Lansing than the district receives back, thanks in large part to Proposal A.

Dearborn’s own House and Senate representatives understand the impact such cuts will have on our district and are fighting to ensure that if cuts need to be made then all districts across the state should be cut the same per-pupil amount.

Gov. Granholm, however, doesn’t quite understand that part so it would be in all of our best interest to call her office at 517-373-3400 to ask her to treat all school districts the same. What is on the table now is unfair to Dearborn.