Tag: Schools

Texas Watchdog probes Houston ISD’s business ties to friend of trustees’ president

by on Jul.24, 2011, under In the News, What's New

A story produced for Texas Watchdog:

Texas Watchdog probes Houston ISD’s business ties to friend of trustees’ president
Friday, Jun 10, 2011, 10:25AM CST
By Jennifer Peebles

As part of its ongoing look at potential conflicts of interest for people in government, you may have seen that yesterday Texas Watchdog took a closer look the Houston school system’s business relationship with a close friend of the president of the school district’s trustees.

See the full story by clicking here.

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Some Houston ISD trustees question cost of proposed ‘career academies’

by on Jul.24, 2011, under Video, What's New

A story produced for Texas Watchdog:

Some Houston ISD trustees question cost of proposed ‘career academies’
Friday, May 20, 2011, 10:56AM CST
By Lynn Walsh

Some Houston school district trustees are questioning whether the time is right to spend $1.6 million on proposed “career academies” at four high schools that would allow students to earn both their high school diploma and an associate’s degree in just five years.

As the Houston Independent School District prepares to lose $160 million in state funding next year, the school district is also proposing to launch the career academies at Furr, Sterling, Kashmere and Scarborough high schools through a partnership with Houston Community College.

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4 HISD schools to be closed; view trustees’ comments in video here

by on Jul.24, 2011, under Multimedia, Video, What's New

A story written for Texas Watchdog:

4 HISD schools to be closed; view trustees’ comments in video here
Friday, May 13, 2011, 06:12PM CST
By Lynn Walsh

This will be the last school year for Rhoads, Grimes, Stevenson and McDade elementaries now that Houston school district trustees have voted to close those campuses.

The closures will save the Houston Independent School District close to $700,000 next year and $1.8 million the following year, the head of the district’s financial department, Melinda Garrett, said during the Thursday board meeting.

Trustee Carol Galloway voted against the closure of all four schools. Trustee Juliet Stipeche voted against the closure of Rhoads, Grimes and Stevenson elementaries but not McDade Elementary School. Trustee Manuel Rodriguez was absent for the votes, but present during other parts of the meeting. The other six trustees approved the closures.

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Neighbors fear ‘eyesores’ if HISD closes four schools; old Bastian Elementary to be bulldozed

by on Jul.24, 2011, under Multimedia, Video, What's New

A story written for Texas Watchdog:

Neighbors fear ‘eyesores’ if HISD closes four schools; old Bastian Elementary to be bulldozed
Thursday, May 12, 2011, 11:30AM CST
By Lynn Walsh

The proposed closures of four Houston elementary schools could leave those neighborhoods with more eyesores and create safe havens for illegal activity, some neighbors have said — but school district administrators said they’re taking steps to prevent that from happening.

As Houston Independent School District trustees consider closing four elementary schools, community members are reminding them of the forlorn condition of another campus, the old Bastian Elementary building on Calhoun Road.

“The fact that an unoccupied, unused, raggedy, unmonitored, closed school … sits within 1.3 miles of Grimes Elementary School and only 3 miles away from Rhoads Elementary School is very unsettling,” Tristan Washington told HISD Superintendent Terry Grier and trustees in an e-mail. “We don’t need another school closure which results in another ‘old Bastian Elementary’ situation.”

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Test scores show improvements at Apollo 20 middle schools, Houston ISD says

by on Jul.24, 2011, under Multimedia, What's New

A story written for Texas Watchdog:

Test scores show improvements at Apollo 20 middle schools, Houston ISD says
Friday, Apr 29, 2011, 01:36PM CST
By Lynn Walsh

The percentage of students passing a state-sanctioned math test on the first try went up at three of the five Houston middle schools in the Apollo 20 turnaround program, and two schools saw increases on the reading test, district data shows.

Overall, the Houston Independent School District says the percentage of eighth graders passing the TAKS math test increased by two percentage points, from 76% last year to 78% this year. The overall percentage of HISD eighth graders passing the reading portion of the TAKS test decreased by one point, from 88% last year to 87% this year.

Only two middle schools that are a part of HISD’s academic turn-around program saw increases in the percentage of students who passed both the math and reading tests — Dowling and Key.

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City of Pearland, education nonprofit settle dispute for $2,500; conflict of interest questions raised

by on Jul.24, 2011, under Investigations, What's New

A story written for Texas Watchdog:

City of Pearland, education nonprofit settle dispute for $2,500; conflict of interest questions raised
Wednesday, Apr 27, 2011, 02:44PM CST
By Lynn Walsh

When a marriage ends in divorce, often times, neither side walks away happy.

And so it is in the Houston suburb of Pearland, where an unusual marriage between a handful of local government agencies — including the City of Pearland and the Pearland Independent School District — has ended in a messy divorce. And no one seems to be walking away happy.

At issue is a nonprofit called the Northern Brazoria County Education Alliance, which, among other things, aims to improve local workers’ skillsets and help with local job placement.

The nonprofit brought about an unusual intermarriage of the city and the school system that some in Pearland defend and some have criticized. Long story short: Its work was largely funded by city tax dollars, but its employees were technically on the school system’s payroll.

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Nonprofit to hire teacher recruiter for Houston ISD while school system lays off nearly 1,000 teachers

by on Jul.24, 2011, under What's New

A story written for Texas Watchdog:

Nonprofit to hire teacher recruiter for Houston ISD while school system lays off nearly 1,000 teachers
Monday, Apr 25, 2011, 01:40PM CST
By Lynn Walsh

Help wanted: Director of teacher recruitment for a school system that just laid off nearly 1,000 teachers.

A nonprofit that is trying to help improve Houston’s public schools is hiring six full-time employees — including a person in charge of recruiting teachers.

This is the same Houston Independent School District that has notified 950 teachers that their positions are being eliminated next school year, with roughly 75% of them losing their jobs due to massive state budget cuts. (The rest are being laid off for performance issues, the school district says.)

Taxpayers aren’t picking up the tab for the six new hires. They’ll be on the payroll of The New Teacher Project, a New York-based nonprofit that has been working with HISD for more than a year to help fine-tune its hiring practices, which HISD hopes will lead to better teachers.

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Number of schools on HISD’s chopping block drops to 4 (again) — but Love Elementary is saved

by on Jul.24, 2011, under What's New

A story written for Texas Watchdog:

Number of schools on HISD’s chopping block drops to 4 (again) — but Love Elementary is saved
Friday, Apr 22, 2011, 09:18AM CST
By Lynn Walsh

Four elementary schools in the Houston school system are being considered for closure due to their low enrollment, the district announced Thursday — but Love Elementary School has been spared after all.

Once again on the small school closure list: Grimes, McDade and Rhoads elementary schools in the Houston Independent School District. Missing from the list is Love Elementary, which, along with those three schools, was being considered for possible closure earlier this month.

HISD has also added one school to the list: Stevenson Elementary, just outside Memorial Park, near the Houston Heights neighborhood.

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Houston’s Sunnyside neighborhood appeals to save Grimes Elementary School from closure: Featured video

by on Jul.24, 2011, under Video, What's New

A story written for Texas Watchdog:

Houston’s Sunnyside neighborhood appeals to save Grimes Elementary School from closure: Featured video
Wednesday, Apr 20, 2011, 09:12AM CST
By Lynn Walsh

As the Houston school system continues to debate closing 17 elementary and middle schools in the district, alumni and community members at one school are creating a video awareness campaign to save their school.

Opened in 1952, B.H. Grimes Elementary School in Houston’s Sunnyside neighborhood, may see its final bell ring come June, as Houston Independent School District trustees consider closing small schools in the district.

Local Grimes alumni are hoping to keep the doors to the school open a little longer and they are pleading their case with a video, which is today’s featured video on the Texas Watchdog home page.

“When you go to HISD meetings, they show their videos,” said Travis McGee, a civic leader in Sunnyside. “Their videos paint the pretty picture, but that’s not reality. Our video shows the reality.”

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Houston school where 3 kids were grazed by bullet is highly rated by state

by on Jul.24, 2011, under What's New

A story written for Texas Watchdog:

Houston school where 3 kids were grazed by bullet is highly rated by state
Tuesday, Apr 19, 2011, 01:40PM CST
By Lynn Walsh

The elementary school northeast of downtown Houston where three kindergarteners were injured when a loaded gun went off in the school cafeteria is top-rated by the state for its academics.

The students, two 6-year-old boys and a 5-year-old girl, at Ross Elementary School in the Houston Independent School District were taken to the hospital for non-life threatening injuries, district spokesman Jason Spencer said in an e-mail Tuesday. The gun had been brought to school by one of the 6-year-old boys, the school system said.

The elementary school, located just beside the Eastex Freeway/U.S. 59, between the Northside Village and Kashmere Gardens neighborhoods of Houston, is rated “exemplary,” the highest academic rating given by the Texas Education Agency.

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