Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Spring Branch ISD School for Highly Gifted Students opens its doors

- Reprinted from the SBISD STARNews



The nostalgic image of the one-room schoolhouse might be one way to look at what 36 students in kindergarten through the fourth-grade are experiencing as the inaugural learners in the Spring Branch ISD School for Highly Gifted Students.

Don’t be fooled by the image. The pace of learning and the mind power at this new school will knock your socks off. With the Aug. 26 opening of the School for Highly Gifted Students, the Houston region has its first public elementary program designed especially for highly gifted children.

This program is another signal that SBISD is committed to meeting the educational needs of all students and to providing choice to students across the district. The new school operates at Valley Oaks Elementary School’s transition site.

Thirty-six children meet daily in a big windowed classroom along with three instructors. Both group and individual activities are held in language arts, social studies, science and mathematics. There are no one-room schoolhouse chalkboards and McGuffey Readers, of course. Instead, the students here may work with digital laptops, Kindles, Lego Robotics and Bee-Bot programmable robots. Students work in a non-graded, advanced learning setting that puts a premium on meeting the academic and social needs of highly, exceptionally and profoundly gifted children.

“I took this teaching job because working with this group of students gives me a chance to continue my professional growth in a unique area of education,” language arts teacher Sally Craddock says. She has taught 21 years in SBISD. “I’ve studied gifted and highly gifted children for a long time. Now, I finally get to work directly with them in a great setting,” science teacher Rebecca King says.

A Montgomery County resident, she graduated from Spring Woods High School and then later sent three children through SBISD schools. She has made plans to live with her sister-in-law in the Houston Heights during the work week to make her commuting easier. That’s how desirable this teaching opportunity was for her.

The new school’s director, Lynda Maxwell, is living a dream, too. Frostwood Elementary School principal for many years, she served most recently as district director of curriculum and instruction. “Gifted education has always been my passion,” she says simply. The School for Highly Gifted Students was first recommended in 2005 by a task force, and then once again two years ago. With Board of Trustees approval, it joins a few similar programs nationwide.

There are only a few private schools specializing in meeting the needs of gifted students, and programs for highly gifted students are rare. The inaugural class includes qualifying students in kindergarten through fourth grade. Each year, another grade will be added in the school-within-a-school format. In several years, a secondary campus has been proposed that would lead to high school graduates.

To qualify for the program, students had to be SBISD residents, identified as highly gifted, and be chosen through a lottery process. An IQ score of 145 or more on two or more tested areas was one requirement. For kindergarten, children had to read at a mid-first-grade level to qualify for consideration.

The first-year class includes students from a variety of SBISD campuses as well as some former home schooled students. Twenty-two boys and 14 girls are enrolled this year. School leaders and staff are committed to providing top individualized instruction at the appropriate pace, depth and complexity needed by all students. This is both a goal and a challenge, leaders say.

“You have to meet three needs of gifted students,” Director Maxwell told a reporter recently. “They have to have time to work alone. They have to have time to work with others who have the same abilities, and they need time with same-age peers.” Highly gifted students will interact with their Valley Oaks Elementary peers in music and art classes, and in other campus-wide peer activities.

Director Maxwell and teachers have been trained in a language arts and social studies curriculum developed by gifted education leaders at The College of Willam & Mary in Virginia. Educational Programming for Gifted Youth, also known as EPGY, provides math and science curriculum that is supported by Stanford University. “All of the children in this program are unique.

A student may be gifted in one area, and a regular third- or fourth-grader in another area,” Director Maxwell says. “There are challenges involved with children who accelerate like our students. We want to be there to support and to help them throughout their time with us.

We’re all very excited.” “We’re super excited,” says math teacher Julie Sirianni, who taught eighth-grade math and algebra at Spring Oaks and Spring Woods middle schools. “We’re really looking forward to seeing how the students will move through the curriculum. My hope, and my fear, is that I will be challenging enough!”

To learn more about this program and other district options, visit the Student Choice website: http://cms.springbranchisd.com/administration/home/elementarysecondaryadministration/forparents/studentchoice/tabid/26966/default.aspx

Volunteer Knights

- Reprinted from SBISD's STARNews



Volunteers come in all shapes and sizes. Some cook. Some coach. Some teach. At Northbrook Middle School, home of the Knights, Felipa Munoz and Bruce Rollins check all of the above boxes.

The two have been honored in recent years as district Volunteers of the Month. Felipa and her team make Tacos for Teachers every week; cook up Thanksgiving dinner for adult volunteer mentors at the school; and bake 400 cupcakes for staff and children at Texas Children’s Hospital. “I love to cook,” says longtime volunteer Felipa.

“I love to do this, and I do it from my heart. I love being here every day. To me, all the children here are my children. I want to be here for them.” She began this giving 25 years ago at Shadow Oaks Elementary when her daughter, Guadelupe, was in third grade. She followed grandson Anthony to Northbrook Middle. Granddaughter Jazmine is now an eighth-grader there.

Felipa is supported by up to a dozen other volunteers. Adult mentor Bruce Rollins doesn’t know how to retire. He’s tried to do so three times now. After a successful career in sales and marketing at Proctor & Gamble, he retired a decade ago. He was Mr. Mom at home, but needed more. An All-American college swimmer, he took up the sport again and was soon coaching at St. Thomas High and Duchesne Academy.

He started the student swimming program at Buffalo Creek Elementary School a decade ago, and was later athletic director for five years at Duchesne, which his daughters attended. His wife, Elaine, recruited him three years ago to mentor a Northbrook Middle student.

Since then, he has helped three brothers. He’s at the school most days either early in the morning or after school, working one on one with students, or mentees. Reading, writing and math drills have led to grade-level gains. He teaches adult swimming, too, at the Brenda and John Duncan YMCA on Clay Road.

“I was on my third retirement when I took my first student. I always wanted to be a teacher and a coach. I am retired, but as a mentor, I find that I’m both of these – teacher and a coach,” he says.

“It is unlike anything else I’ve ever done.” To learn how you can mentor a student or volunteer in SBISD’s schools or supporting departments, please call the SBISD Community Relations Department at 713-251- 2286.

We’re Building Our Future in Spring Branch ISD

- Reprinted from SBISD's STARNews




In just a few months, the new Frostwood Elementary School will become the 11th campus to be rebuilt under the 2007 Bond Plan. The Grand Opening celebration is Thursday, Feb. 13, beginning at 4 p.m.

Public tours are planned. Under the Bond program, 13 elementary schools will be rebuilt. Valley Oaks Elementary is under construction and design plans for Rummel Creek Elementary have been approved. These schools are improving student learning and supporting our neighborhoods.

Under state law, bond funds must be used only for school-related construction, renovation and other allowed uses. By law, bond funds can’t be used to pay for annual operating costs and expenses like teacher and staff salaries.

SBISD taxpayers age 65 or older should apply for the “Over-65 Exemption” on property taxes to “freeze” their school taxes for the year that the exemption is claimed. If you have questions, call the SBISD Tax Office at 713-251-7960.

When we work together anything is possible!

Students Head Back to Class Prepared Thanks to SBISD Community

Sometimes something as simple as a pencil and piece of paper can bring a smile to the face of a child. For many families in Spring Branch, the back to school season marks a special milestone in the year. Along with the excitement and thrill of starting class with new friends, teachers and endless opportunities, some families face the very real struggle of paying for school supplies.

While most parents wonder what supplies to buy, some wonder how they are even going to fund such a purchase. Well, area families don't have to ask themselves that question this school year. The Spring Branch Education Foundation's (SBEF) School Supply Project and SBISD Good Neighbor partners like CITGO, CINCO Energy Services, Nexen, and Metro National put their respective corporate and personal philosophies into action.

From binders to backpacks, calculators, notebooks, paper, pocket folders, highlighters and just about every other school supply you can think of, Foundation supporters and area leaders delivered on their promise of responsibility to the community, and stewardship for our future, in the form of much needed school supplies for area children. The Spring Branch Education Foundation's School Supply Project, now in its eight year, delivered big in 2013.

Generous corporate and community support, combined with the hard work of over 60 volunteers including students from the SBISD Dual Language Program, resulted in the Project delivering 21 pallets of materials to 28 schools in the district. More than 8,000 students headed back to class with the supplies they so desperately needed thanks to the project, its organizers and volunteers.

The expanded outreach of the project for the 2013 year is a direct result of School Supply Project organizers' ability to maximize donation funds. By ensuring each dollar is stretched to its full potential, more students were able to start the new year with the critical supplies they needed. Project volunteers took time to sort supplies and assist with delivery. The monumental effort of providing supplies to thousands of students is an inspiration to the entire SBISD community. In 2013, the Spring Branch Education Foundation celebrates twenty years as a leader in supporting student and educational programming in SBISD. 

The Foundation provided close to $700,000 during the 2012-13 school year to fund programming in SBISD. Foundation members are committed to harnessing the generosity of the community for the benefit of its children. Thank you to the SBEF School Supply Project for their continued support of our students and outstanding leadership in our community!


Like the Spring Branch Education Foundation, countless individuals, educational organizations, corporations and local faith and community groups are actively engaging as members of the SBISD family through participation in a wealth of community engagement opportunities, including SBISD's Good Neighbor Program.

Good Neighbor members, through select partnership activities such as mentoring or other community engagement initiatives, make positive impacts for students in our schools daily. The work and support of our SBISD Good Neighbors are examples of how combining great ideas and great people yield great results. CINCO Energy Services employees collected supplies as part of establishing their 2013 Good Neighbor designation for the year.



In past years, CINCO staffers earned their designation by hosting a mentee at their work site as part of the Mentoring Program as one of their Good Neighbor activities. This hands-on opportunity to support the district initiative of T-2-4 is a great learning experience for both mentor and mentee. Students benefit from the real-world work experience with professionals in the field, pivotal for their college and career planning, and businesses and their employees experience first-hand how their active participation impacts student achievement and T-2-4 in Spring Branch.

Nexen and Metro National both began partnerships with SBISD this year, and are engaging their employees in supporting our schools and students through donations to the SBEF and as participants in Good Neighbor and Mentor Program activities.

In addition to providing support for the Spring Woods High School musical and Stratford Academy of Science and Engineering, Nexen employees will begin mentoring students at Woodview Elementary this year.  Their support of district programming with a $10,000 donation to the J. Landon Short Mini-grants Program to fund STEM and Literacy projects in SBISD ensures students will have the skills necessary for career and college success. 

Metro National has partnered with Shadow Oaks Elementary to leverage their expertise to help support Shadow Oaks’ goals, particularly around literacy.

When asked why her organization felt so strongly about participating in a school supply drive this year, CINCO's Leah Vann shared her insight on how community engagement will shape our collective future in Spring Branch.

"We feel it is our responsibility to engage in community building and service projects. And what better way to help build our community than to support our future through the kids of Spring Branch ISD. Cinco Energy Services fully supports the Mentoring Program of Spring Branch ISD. We encourage our employees' participation in the program and allow time each week during the work day for mentors to visit their mentees. "

From our Education Foundation and the work done by its committed board of directors, to our phenomenal collection of Good Neighbor members who give their time and talents in so many ways, to our outstanding mentors and volunteers, the student of SBISD benefit daily from your tireless support. Thank you!  When we work together anything is possible!

For information on how you or your organization can get informed, engaged, connected, visit the SBISD website: www.springbranchisd.com

Other links of interest: