Monday, December 2, 2013

SBISD Athletes in the News


Spring Branch ISD high school athletes have made news in recent weeks by signing letters of intent with state and national universities, as well as for scholarship awards and nominations.

On Nov. 13, Memorial High School seniors Ashley Pilcher (softball) and Matt Collins (baseball) signed, respectively, with George Washington University in softball and Texas A&M University.

On Nov. 6, Matt Collins of Memorial High and Zachary Miller of Stratford High School won recognition along with 23 other football players at the annual Football Scholar-Athlete Award Luncheon sponsored by the Touchdown Club of Houston.

Student nominees were chosen by the presidents of Rice, Texas Southern and the University of Houston. As Club honorees, Collins and Miller are eligible to receive $500 scholarships. Three finalists will be awarded additional scholarships. Students must be team starting players with a strong academic record.

Earlier on Oct. 26, meanwhile, three SBISD students were honored as finalists during a Positive Coaching Alliance scholarship and awards breakfast held at the River Oaks Country Club.

Selected as top finalists in the PCA Triple-Impact Competitor Scholarship were seniors Jessica Ustick of Memorial High, Abigail Brown of Stratford High, and Marissa Clark of Spring Woods High. Marissa Clark is also a recent recipient of a $5,000 Reliant Scholarship awarded to student athletes in the Houston region.

PCA is a national group with more than 200 partner schools and organizations, including SBISD secondary schools. It provides youth and high school athletes positive, character-building sports experiences.

District outpaces most state and national averages on SAT & ACT


District student average scores on the SAT and ACT college-readiness assessments continue to outpace Texas and the nation, according to results from these two well-known and widely taken tests.

According to 2013 District Summary information, SBISD students averaged 1516 on the combined SAT, while the Texas student average was 1437 and the national average was 1498.

The SAT assesses student reasoning and logic based on knowledge and skills that students develop in their course work.

More than 1,400 district students took SAT tests last school year.

This test has three parts – critical reading, mathematics and writing. SBISD students outpaced state and national scores in the verbal and math portions o f the SAT.

SBISD’s average writing score was 489, while the Texas average was 461 and the national writing average was 488.

In mathematics, SBISD’s average score was 533 versus 499 in the state and 514 in the nation.

SBISD’s critical reading score was 494, much higher than 477 in Texas, but slightly less than the national average of 496. On the 2013 ACT, SBISD students averaged 23.4 compared to 20.9 in both Texas and the nation.

In addition, the percentage of SBISD students performing at or above college-ready levels continues to exceed state rates by 14 to 24 percentage points, with college algebra exceeding state performance by the largest margin in six years (72 percent in SBISD compared to 48 percent in Texas).

Other Selected Highlights: 2013 SAT:

• About 70 percent of the SBISD graduating class took the SAT, and student participation increased by almost 10 percent.
• More than one-third of SBISD students (35 percent) taking the SAT reported family income of less than $30,000, a 5-year high in the participation level at this income level.
• Two student groups, Hispanics/Latinos and Mexican/Mexican American had the greatest increases in student SAT testing, 39 percent and 18 percent respectively.
• Mathematics and critical reading continue to be the strongest performance areas.
• SBISD girls and boys outperformed the state in all three areas tested, while district boys also outperformed the nation in all three areas tested.
• Hispanic students in SBISD outperformed their Texas peers in mathematics. All other student groups outperformed Texas and national student groups in mathematics.

2013 ACT:

• SBISD continues to exceed state averages by 2 to 3 points, and in the past five years, ACT participation has increased 9 percent from 863 to 939 students.
• The percentage of SBISD students performing at or above college-ready levels continues to exceed state rates by 14 to 24 percentage points, with college algebra showing the greatest margin in the past six years.
• College English composition is the strongest of four subjects tested, with 75 percent of SBISD students performing at or above the college-ready level, and 14 percentage points above the state average.
• SBISD students performed at or above the college-ready level in four tested areas, and district students performed 19 percentage points above the Texas performance rate.
• Students with three or more years of math, or three years of science as well as physics or more, outperformed the state average for similar students.

Catching Up With the Jason Argonauts

Two Spring Branch ISD ninth-graders returned recently from their “Argonaut” Caribbean Sea research trip from Puerto Rico to Antigua that included living, working and sleeping aboard the Exploration Vessel (EV) Nautilus.

Selected earlier as 2013 National Jason Argonaut team members were two SBISD freshmen, Chase Gonsoulin of Northbrook High School and Paloma June of Westchester Academy for International Studies. During their Oct. 17-21 research trip on the EV Nautilus, Chase and Paloma learned about sea navigation, cartography and oceanographic sampling techniques, among other topics.

On their trip, they also learned about remotely operated vehicles (ROVs) used in sea research, hiked in Antigua up a hill and through a rainforest, and saw the sun set on a Caribbean beach. Both students posted blogs with photographs during their Argonaut trip.

Treasure Forest Elementary Spark Park

Spring Branch ISD students, teachers, and community and civic leaders gathered on Nov. 19 to celebrate the new Spark School Park at Treasure Forest Elementary School, 7635 Amelia Road. The school park was financed and built through a cooperative effort by Spring Branch ISD, the City of Houston, Harris County, the school PTA and community.

Click here for event photos >>

Treasure Forest Elementary’s new on-site park includes a new playground with a slide and play equipment, in addition to a separate playground structure, campus walking trail, and two soccer fields. The new park is the 16th such community playground built in SBISD under the nonprofit Spark School Park program, also known as the SPARK Program.

“This is a really wonderful playground,” Principal Blanca Reyes said. “There are two separate playground structures for different age ranges of children. We’ve got a walking trail, two soccer fields, and areas where teachers can teach outside. This gives our students an opportunity to play and interact constructively, and to refresh them for learning in their classrooms.”

“This also means that our kids will have an improved place to go and play after hours. It’s going to do wonders for their health and fitness, and it’s going to provide safe areas for families to get together.

The community benefits so much in having a safe place to gather after school, and for the weekends,” she also said. Elementary students, parents and community raised more than $5,000 for the park in fundraising events ranging from a student fashion show to a Rodeo Night and community garage sale.

Other sources of park funds included: $5,000 from SBISD; $5,000, Frost Bank; and $87,500 in federal funds through the City of Houston’s Housing & Community Development Department. Building contractor for the project was All Play.

SBISD Board members who attended the Spark Park dedication included Board President Pam Goodson and four Trustees: Chris Gonzalez; Katherine Dawson; Wayne Schaper, Sr.; and Chris Vierra. Trustee Chris Gonzalez told Treasure Forest students to run, and play, and make special memories in the new park, but she also encouraged them to preserve it for future students.

“Play hard in this new park and take care of it. Remember how hard other people who are here today worked to make it possible,” she told students gathered outdoors.

In his remarks, Superintendent of Schools Duncan F.Klussmann, Ed.D., noted that former City of Houston Councilwoman Eleanor Tinsley, now deceased, took the same approach to building and improving school parks and undertaking other city beautification projects that she did as a champion of the city’s 1980 sign ordinance to regulate billboards.

“That was a gutsy effort, but she was successful in making it happen. We have all been fortunate to have had the Spark Park Program in Spring Branch,” the Superintendent said. Highlighting special guests was Kathleen Ownby, who is the executive director of the SPARK Program and Eleanor Tinsley’s daughter. She noted that more than a dozen parks are open now across SBISD, and another under construction.

Those helping make possible and dedicate the new school park included the following:

• Trees for Houston planted 11 new trees in the park
• Erica Lee with U.S. Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee’s Office presented a flag that has flown over the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.
• Ariana Campos with Texas Rep. Jessica Farrar’s Office presented a flag to the campus that flew over the Texas Capitol in Austin
• State Sen. John Whitmire’s Office presented a certificate of achievement to the school
• Landscape Architect Carmen Posey with Environments, the park designer
• Joyce Tyler Williams with Frost Bank
• Nancy Bailey with The Coca-Cola Co.
• Kris Drosche with SBISD’s Planning & Construction Department

The Navy Jr. ROTC Color Guard from the Guthrie Center presented the colors. Treasure Forest Elementary second-, third-, and fifth-graders performed two songs, “One Light, One Sun,” and “Thank You,” under the direction of school music teacher Darlene Williams.

Art teacher Cynthia Cisneros supervised the school’s outdoor art mural, which includes student-created and hand painted images on tiles. Student murals are a feature of the SPARK program. Students at the dedication received a copy of the SPARK coloring book.

The 2014 SPARK Art Calendar was also unveiled at the dedication.