'This is a Big Step': Board Approves All-Day Kindergarten
Members sign off on $12.3 million in construction projects.
The Valley View Board of Education may have met with opposition to its decision to lay off teachers and staff, but a unanimous vote in favor of all-day kindergarten drew applause from audience members Monday night.
The board OK’d a contract with Wight Construction for the renovations, additions and combination thereof needed to outfit all 12 elementary school buildings to accommodate the program.
On Monday, Valley View awarded a contract in the amount of $12,320,590 to the Darien-based company. The new contract includes a prior $833,300 pact with the company for the completion of site work at the campuses.
The contract also includes two new add-ons: toilet rooms for six campuses and $95,622 in technology infrastructure upgrades, according to Assistant Superintendent for Adminsitrative Services Gary Grizaffi.
District documents outline plans to install the following toilet rooms at Valley View campuses, at a cost of $288,664:
The all-day kindergarten program is part of efforts to reallocate resources to the primary grades, according to Superintendent James Mitchem — a move he has said will lay the foundation for students’ academic careers and eliminate the need for remediation later.
"This is a big step," board vice president Rick Gougis said.
Assistant Superintendent for Education Venus Smith said the program will mean hiring 20 to 24 kindergarten teachers.
Wight has assured the district that the campuses will be ready in time to launch the program next fall.
“The contractors have told us they can get this done by the 25th of August,” board president Steve Quigley said. “I guess we’re going to find out.”
By law, Smith said, the district must continue to offer half-day kindergarten to parents who choose it.
The renovations and additions will be funded by shifting money from the district’s working cash fund to the site construction fund, Grizaffi said.
READ MORE ABOUT THIS STORY ON ROMEOVILLE PATCH:
Mitchem Says Valley View Needs All-Day Kindergarten
Survey: Parents Love the Idea of All-Day Kindergarten, But Not the Cost
VVSD Explores Costs of All-Day Kindergarten
VVSD Hires All-Day Kindergarten Architect, Signs off on Improvement Projects
All-Day Kindergarten Construction Projects to Begin; RHS Gets New Boiler System
Technology updates
In addition to the new digs for all-day kindergarten, Valley View campuses will get technology updates over the next two years — to the tune of $2.1 million for fiscal year 2013, Grizaffi said.
The cost would break down to $158.50 per student, affecting 4,085 middle school students and 8,158 preschool through fifth-grade students.
The plans include infrastructure updates, computer upgrades and a move to a middle school math curriculum that includes interactive technology, according to district documents.
Grizaffi said the changes will put Valley View “ahead of the curve,” especially when it comes to wireless infrastructure, and could pave the way for the use of tablet computers by students.
“We believe that mobile computing is here to stay,” he told the board.
Click here for a full list of planned upgrades and improvements.
tom
9:06 am on Tuesday, April 17, 2012
"The all-day kindergarten program is part of efforts to reallocate resources to the primary grades,"
If I understand it correctly, they are taking money from other grade levels like high school where they're cutting Driver's Ed, so that they will have the money to fund the All-Day Kindergarten program. Is that correct?
Because parents objected to the monthly fee for All-Day Kindergarten, they are charging more for Driver's Ed, Sports, Parking, Clubs... for the older students instead.
Lettuce
11:02 am on Tuesday, April 17, 2012
How did they start construction on all this two weeks ago before it was even passed?
stephanie
4:30 pm on Tuesday, April 17, 2012
So excited to see the district investing in our kids! I'm not 100% crazy about full day kindergarten but I have no doubt that the extra time focusing on instruction will absolutely help them lay a foundation for success. I hope it does reduce the intervention needed later. It does make sense to get it right now rather than trying to fix the problem later.
Indy
6:12 pm on Tuesday, April 17, 2012
The interesting thing is that the majority of the children who would benefit most from all day kindergarten come from households who can not afford to pay the monthly cost of the all day program. They are also the children who come to kindergarten without having gone to preschool because of costs. At this time I do not know if VVSD has found some way to make accessible to these children. Until that is done and all our children can attend all day kindergarten VVSD will not see the progress they are looking for.
tom
6:52 pm on Tuesday, April 17, 2012
Indy,
They're no longer charging a monthly cost for the program, just a one time fee of $200. If the family qualifies for Free/Reduced lunch, that fee will probably be adjusted as well. It sounds like the money to fund this program will be coming from cuts and higher fees at other grade levels.
Indy
9:23 pm on Tuesday, April 17, 2012
Tom, Thank you for clearing this up. I fully support the all day program as long as it serves those who will benefit the most from it. My own children attended all day programs at private schools and I truly believe the benefit was tremendous!
stephanie
11:11 am on Wednesday, April 18, 2012
I really hope the district will be distributing more info. I'd be happy to enroll my child in all day kindergarten but I need to know what they will be doing in that extra time. I don't want it to be day care with fillers. I don't need a babysitter. I'd like her to be learning during that time but I need to see how that learning will be structured.I'm dying to see their schedule and curriculum.