Friday, October 30, 2009

Here's one of the RCF traditions that I love: Halloween Parade. It is a little bit messy, a little bit ragged, different every time, but a whole lot of fun. I love that the kids are so excited. I love that the teachers join in the fun and I love that parents turn out in huge numbers. There are always too many cupcakes, too many Darth Vaders and some child cries for some reason (it might be the cupcakes and Darth Vader). But it is all about the kids and the community, and that is what makes RCF a special place.

The picture above features many, but not all the great staff costumes. Thanks to all the teachers and staff who enthusiastically embrace the craziness, most especially Building Services, who does a great job when it is all done. Thanks to all the room parents who organized a fun afternoon and to Nina Bronk Keller who organizes all the room parents. Finally, thanks to all the other parents who come and join in the fun.

Happy Halloween.
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Thursday, October 29, 2009

CIP released; RCF on track for Modernization

The Board of Education released its Six Year Capital Improvement Plan today. Most importantly for us, RCF remains on track for modernization. Quoting from the report:

*Rock Creek Forest Elementary School*Capital Project: A modernization project is scheduled for this school with a completion date of January 2015. An FY 2011 appropriation for facility planning funds is recommended for a feasibility study to determine the feasibility, scope, and cost of the modernization. Division of Long-range Planning staff will review the educational specifications for the modernization with the school staff and community in the spring of 2010 in anticipation of the feasibility study. In order for this project to be completed on schedule, county and state funding must be provided at the levels recommended in this CIP. Projections indicate enrollment at Rock Creek Forest Elementary School will exceed capacity throughout the six-year period. Relocatable classrooms will be utilized until additional capacity can be added as part of the modernization.

This is very good news, HOWEVER, note the words that county and state funding must be provided at the levels recommended. Over the next few months, we need to maintian pressure across the spectrum -- from the Board of Education, to the County Council, and most importantly, to the State House and Governor's Office. Check back here to get more information about how to help.

For starters, plan to attend the CIP hearing with the Board of Education on November 11 and 12. Wear your RCF shirts, bring signs and bring your kids! 7 PM in the Carver Educational Services Center, 850 Hungerford Drive, Rockville, MD 20850. Craig Brown is testifying for the cluster on November 11 and I am testifying on the 12th. See you there.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Parking, Kiss and Ride and Other Dangerous Sports

OK, In the interest of full disclosure this post is pure editorial, but parking and driving and drop off around the school during peak times is tough at best and very nearly a contact sport at worst.

Let's all remember, the kiss and ride is there for a reason, to ease the flow of traffic. Please don't park illegally on Grubb Road or Colston to drop your kids off. Colston is so narrow firetrucks cannot fit through if people are parked illegally. Grubb is very busy at 9 AM, when people are parked illegally, it is nearly impossible to see clearly enough to make the turn from Blaine onto Grubb safely. Which leads me to my next point.

PLEASE look for walkers when you get close to an intersection. I can't tell you the number of times I have almost been hit by a parent pulling out of Blaine Dr. Even more frequent are the times I stop and watch the parent pull through the stop sign craning their head to the left to look for oncoming traffic on Grubb and make the right turn WITH OUT EVER LOOKING TO THE RIGHT, where my kids and I are standing. These are people I know, friends, fellow parents, PTA members and dedicated volunteers.

Finally, when we do park, please be respectful of our neighbors and try not to block driveways or park at the condos, even for a few minutes. The condos WILL tow your car. It is so tempting, I know, the open spots are just sitting there, when we need them most, but they aren't ours to use.

OK, done with editorializing for now. Go forth and drive safe!

Staff Appreciation Luncheon - November 12th

The PTA Staff Appreciation Committee is organizing a warm, potluck luncheon for all Rock Creek Forest Staff on Thursday, November 12th. This is the second, long conference day for teachers.

Please prepare something according to your child's grade:
Grades 2 & 4: entrees and breads
Grades 1 & 3: salads and side dishes
Grades K & 5: desserts, drinks, paper products, table settings

Cash/check donations are accepted in lieu of food! Please send them to school by Monday, November 9th in an envelope marked "PTA Luncheon - Elizabeth Sadqi".

Can you prepare something special for the staff that works so hard with your children? There are lots of no-cook options. Please contact Elizabeth at sadqi@aol.com or 703) 622 5136 to tell what you can bring, and/or to offer to donate an hour to set up, serve or clean up that day. In advance, thanks for your contributions!

Monday, October 26, 2009

Frank Stetson Promoted, Sean Bulson New Community Superintendent

Frank Stetson, the Community Superintendent serving the BCC cluster. Dr. Stetson has been promoted to the role of Acting Chief School Performance Officer. Both positions are effective December 1.

Dr. Stetson has been a strong advocate for the needs of our cluster. Mr. Bulson is currently a director of school performance and is a former principal at BCC.

We wish both Dr. Stetson and Mr. Bulson well in their new positions.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Cluster testimony dates announced for the CIP

for those who read that and thought, "wow, I didn't know Amanda spoke greek," here is the translation. As many of you know, because I have been harping on it for about a year, this is the year that we are slated to receive funds for our long awaited modernization.

The Board of Education takes testimony for two nights on the CIP (Capital Improvement Plan).The BCC Cluster will testify on Wednesday, November 11. I am asking to testify on Thursday, November 12. We need as many parents and kids there as possible on BOTH nights.

It is vital that we make sure the BOE knows that
1) RCF is overcrowded (roughly 130% capacity, more than any other school in the queue)
2) RCF is crumbling (we haven't had a modernization in almost 40 years)
3) Our community is strong
4) Our community is paying attention to the choices made by our elected officials

Thanks everyone. If you plan to attend, please let me know which night: daniel.cantor@rcn.com

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Ms. Ladd given Distinguished Service Award

Our new Librarian, Ms. Sally Ladd, was awarded Friday with the Maryland Association of School Librarians Award for Distinguished Service to the Profession.

Ms. Ladd was recognized for her ground breaking work in making digital databases of information available to school libraries throughout the state. (For those of you who aren't library geeks, digital databases are online tools with access to tons of information -- we are talking encyclopedic in scope and fully multimedia in execution. It's really exciting.)

Prior to coming to RCF, Ms. Ladd worked with the state to negotiate the availability of these resources on behalf of Maryland's school systems. As a result, many more students have access to a wide range of information both in school and at home.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

The Testimony

Hello, thank you for allowing me the opportunity to share my views. I am speaking tonight as a parent, as a taxpayer and as a co-president of the Rock Creek Forest Elementary School PTA.

Like all of us here tonight, I come to you aware of many of the challenges that face our school system. We see them in our own corner of MCPS.

Our economy is appears to be in recovery and yet, unemployement is high, prices are rising and enrollment is growing. We must do more with fewer resources.

Rock Creek Forest Elementary School is a complicated place. We have an immersion program drawing kids from across the county and a neighborhood English Academy that serves a diverse group of kids, both economically and ethnically.

Tonight, you are hearing from many parents and community leaders. I am sure you are also hearing from teachers, staff and administrators. Your decisions are tough.

But as a parent, a tax payer, and a PTA leader, I ask the following:

First, this is about our kids, their learning experience and the environment that they work in for hours every school day.

Second, this is about creating a relentless focus on those things that matter: class size, teacher ratios, and specific learning matters.

Third, this is about equality. Children at schools in less privileged communities should not be at a disadvantage, either by lack of technology or other key learning devices because their parents cannot contribute to directly augment the learning capabilities at their school.

Too often we have seen wealthy schools supplemented with the generosity of their parent body while poorer schools struggle.

Please, hold the line on class sizes. It is so critical to our kid’s educational experience.

In our English Academy, we had to add a first grade class to accommodate the demand and maintain the student teacher ratio. In our immersion program, kindergarten classes fill to 26 children due to the popularity of our program.

Every indication is that smaller classes support learning better than larger classes and frankly, it just makes sense. This last year our immersion program was cut a half time reading position, and while our dedicated staff has “made it work,” we are getting closer and closer to the bone with each cut.

Remember the kids, this is their one year in first, second, or third grade. They don’t have a chance to do it again. Make it count.

As you look for efficiencies, remember the kids, who are notoriously, wonderfully inefficient. It’s their charm.

They need one on one time with an experienced educator. They need small group time with a dedicated staff member. Kids won’t do more with less.

They are less likely to notice their textbook is old than they are to notice the 29 kids crammed into one 3rd grade classroom.

And while you are at it, remember the communities that brought you these kids. As diverse as Rock Creek Forest is, the county is even more so.

As you select cuts, please remember that they won’t be felt equally across the county. There are schools in Montgomery County where parents will simply buy more books, playground balls and Promethean boards out of their pocket. And I say this recognizing that my school, Rock Creek Forest is somewhere in the middle. But it troubles me and my community that there are schools that will never get a new ball that MCPS doesn’t give them.

The least we can do is keep them in a modestly sized class with a qualified educator where they can learn to their greatest potential.

Thank you for your time tonight, and for your work on behalf of my kids, Rock Creek Forest’s kids and all the kids in MCPS.

Testimony at the Board of Education

Thursday, October 15, 2009

It was a dark and stormy night. No really, it was. Traffic was miserable, but the cause was important-- making sure the Montgomery County Board of Education knew how important our teachers are to us.

Rock Creek Forest ES is a complicated but exciting place to be and one of the most important parts of our community are the teachers.So when the BOE put forward the opportunity to testify on where they should place their priorities in "difficult economic times," we knew we would be there.

The teaching staff at RCF is terrific and we don't want to lose anyone. Moreover, with full classes in our Spanish Immersion lower grades and with an additional class in the English Academy first grade as well as one giant class in the EA 5th grade, we are full up. We need every teacher we have and a few more to boot. Not to mention the overcrowding -- did you know that we are at about 130% of capacity?

I have attached my testimony as a separate post, but I wanted to share one other thing. One of the most fascinating things about being a PTA leader is getting to see some of the exciting programs happening around the county -- it's more than a little humbling. Testimony was offered from a program called Identity which offers assistance to recent immigrants with little education and few English language skills. We also heard from UDL -- Universal Design for Living -- which advocates for the most serverly challenged kids to have adaptive technology in their education. Students testified on behalf of the Wellness Center at Northwood HS about the many service offered to keep them healthy and self reliant. It is more than a little humbling, but makes me proud of the many ways our communities strive to find solutions to our problems

Welcome to the RCFPTA blog

We have just begun this blog as a way to keep parents connected and up to date on activites at the school and that affect us all. Please check back for updates and information!