WINCHESTER — Winchester and Keene’s school leaders will resume
regular meetings in an attempt to improve relations between the two
districts, which have a shared interested in Winchester’s teen students.
The commitment followed a meeting Thursday between a team of Keene officials and the Winchester School Board to address concerns Winchester board members and parents say they’ve raised several times before. Winchester has sent its high school students to the 1,450-student Keene High School since 2003.
Kaitlin Mulhere can be reached at 352-1234, extension 1439, or kmulhere@keenesentinel.com. Follow her on Twitter @KMulhereKS.
The commitment followed a meeting Thursday between a team of Keene officials and the Winchester School Board to address concerns Winchester board members and parents say they’ve raised several times before. Winchester has sent its high school students to the 1,450-student Keene High School since 2003.
Keene’s business
administrator also will attend an upcoming meeting to answer Winchester
board members’ questions about tuition calculations.
Winchester officials have
grown frustrated in recent years with what they say is a lack of
information about how their students are doing at Keene High.
Some board members and
residents have said the rising cost of tuition to attend Keene is
unsustainable. Others feel that Winchester students are lost in a sea of
students in Keene.
Besides Winchester,
students from Chesterfield, Harrisville, Keene, Marlborough, Marlow,
Nelson, Stoddard, Sullivan and Surry attend Keene High.
“This is not easy for us
to send our kids away,” Winchester board Chairman Richard Horton said.
“They’re stripped of their sense of community.”
For the past year, a
study committee approved at town meeting in 2012 has been researching
whether a contract with the Keene School District provides the best
option for Winchester students.
One major component of
that, board members say, is determining how Winchester students are
performing academically and socially at Keene.
In particular, members
want to know whether Winchester students are taking advantage of all the
opportunities attending a larger high school provides, such as a wide
range of classes and extracurricular activities.
Yet gathering that data has been a source of irritation.
When former Keene High
Principal Lynda C. “Lynne” Wagner presented an annual report to
Winchester in June, board members tore it apart. There were
inconsistencies in the data about grade-point averages, disciplinary
action and extracurricular involvement, and a lot of missing
information.
On Thursday, Keene High
Interim Principal Jim Logan gave Winchester board members an updated
report that answered some of their questions.
But it also led to others, including why so many Winchester students are placed in lower-level classes at Keene High School.
During the 2012-13 school
year, almost three-quarters of Winchester students’ courses were
foundations courses. Foundation-level classes are the lowest of four
class levels at Keene.
Board members from each
district agreed that it’d help to talk about how Keene places students
in those courses, and what they can do to bring that number down.
“Moving forward, this
conversation has got to be a year-long conversation,” Logan said. “It
can’t be once a year or twice a year.”
Everyone agreed.
Logan also suggested
using some of the time set aside in the school day for individual
learning needs and small group meetings to gather all the Winchester
students and talk with them about their concerns with Keene High.
“If they’re unhappy, they need to have the avenue to tell us that,” he said.
The conversation grew
tense when questions were brought up about tuition prices and why prices
haven’t been reduced, even when Keene has closed recent budgets with
surpluses.
Winchester paid about
$3.1 million to Keene for fewer than 200 students last year, Winchester
board member Elisha Jackson said. Tuition rates have increased year
after year.
This year, Winchester is paying $13,081 for each regular-education student and $29,000 for each special-education student.
The regular-education fee is average, Winchester board members said. But they think the special-education price is far too high.
“If you were a business, you wouldn’t be in business,” board member Jason Cardinale said.
Keene Superintendent
Wayne E. Woolridge said at the beginning of the meeting that the high
school offers more than 200 courses, including several AP and
career-education classes. He highlighted a diverse collection of sports
and clubs. He also touted the school’s staff recruitment, professional
development and college and career counseling.
When adding all that together, Keene offers the best option for Winchester, Woolridge said.
“I think it’s a good deal for you, and we want you to think that, too,” he said.
Winchester board members
said they were thankful to the Keene delegation of administrators and
board members for coming to their board meeting.
“This is probably the most productive conversation we’ve had with your leadership,” Horton said.
But all the unhappiness they’ve voiced recently over their relationship with Keene wasn’t all of a sudden corrected.
Board member Kevin Bazan
said he didn’t understand why Winchester had to ask so much. The town
pays Keene tuition. It simply should be able to expect information and
communication in return.
Horton made similar comments, and said he’s heard some of these promises about an open dialogue and changes before.
“Why has it taken this to get you guys here?”