By Travis Reems
Filed Friday, September 22 at 10:59 PM
In 2002, the SLPS were provisionally accredited. If it had not been for the impending end to the desegregation program within the district, the district would have been unaccredited at that time, but instead was given an additional nine years to meet the requirements for accreditation. 2011 is the target date by which the district must meet those state requirements, and for which Building Towards 2011, a strategic plan, was developed by the previous district administration. Since taking office, the current Superintendent, Dr. Diana Bourisaw, had promised to review the strategic plan, which she has done and has made her recommendations to the school board.
At the school board meeting last Tuesday, the Superintendent said, "The immediate goal for all of us should be accreditation for our district. As such, we will focus on the performance standards established under the Missouri School Improvement Plan (MSIP), including academic achievement for all students, career preparation, graduation rates, and attendance rates."
Dr. Bourisaw's presentation noted several key areas where the strategic plan is deficient:
The Superintendent, in her presentation, proposed the following areas for focus: achievement standards based on improved MAP scores, scholastic preparedness based on ACT scores, and educational persistence as measured through graduation rate and attendance rate. You can view the Superintendent's entire report here.

3 Comments:
I like the focus but the proof is in the details. I think many of us would like to hear about specific, far-reaching programs/policies that address the problems that have, thus far, prevented us from "focusing" in the first place. I won't list them. I tried that already and raised a few hackles.
Saturday, September 23, 2006 11:08:00 AM
Jim, you said "many of us would like to hear about specific, far-reaching programs/ policies ..."
However, Bourisaw's 2nd to last slide entitled "How Do We Get There?" says:
"We improve academic achievement by focusing on people - not programs."
The presentation appears to be long on "why not" and light on "how".
Saturday, September 23, 2006 1:44:00 PM
It is nice to hear the word accreditation again. I am certainly glad the new sup is concentrating on this.
Wednesday, September 27, 2006 4:06:00 AM
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