Friday, September 29, 2017

SBISD Schools “Reboot” After Hurricane Harvey

SBISD operations personnel worked tirelessly before, during and after Hurricane Harvey, making sure that district facilities were sealed and secure. District facilities fared well during the storm, and every school was able to open on Monday, Sept. 11, as the school year “rebooted.” 

Here’s a look at how that happened. 

#harveyreboot from SBISD on Vimeo.

At the Monday, Sept. 25, Board of Trustees meeting, Associate Superintendent for Talent and Operations Jennifer Blaine presented the #IAMSBISD award to a group of directors who stepped up into senior leadership roles during Hurricane Harvey and the subsequent recovery. 

Director of Facilities David Vesling, Director of Planning Travis Stanford, Director of Transportation Sherry Lawson, Executive Director of Athletics Paige Hershey, Controller David Bender, Director of Child Nutrition Services Chris Kamradt and Director of Applications Mark Maxwell were recognized for #CollectiveGreatness for their extraordinary leadership before, during and after the storm, when several senior staff members were displaced by floodwaters. 

The #IAMSBISD award is presented to individuals who exemplify one or more of SBISD’s core values: #CollaborativeSpirit, #CollectiveGreatness, #EveryChild, #LimitlessCuriousity and #MoralCompass.

SBISD College Night and Parent U: Planning for the Future


Students and families interested in learning more about post-secondary options for their future need to Save the Date for two timely learning events in October.


SBISD College Night

Tuesday, Oct. 10, 2017
6-8 p.m.
Spring Woods High School
2045 Gessner Road, Houston TX 77080

Attending institutions >>


College Night is an evening designed especially for students and their families to learn more about the many post-secondary options available to students after high school. The evening program is organized as a one-stop “shopping” event. In recent years, up to 3,000 people have attended. We expect similar turnout again this year. Regional scheduling of advisors means that only one night program can be offered for all SBISD schools.

We will welcome more than 150 representatives from regional, state and national colleges and universities, both public and private, as well as technical colleges and military-related institutions on Tuesday, Oct. 10, from 6-8 p.m. at Spring Woods High School.


In addition, due to the early opening of the federal and state financial aid process, we will host financial aid information tables and also welcome representatives from Wells Fargo to share information about saving for higher education.


Lastly, the Texas Vaccine Institute will be offering the Meningococcal Vaccine again this year at College Night.  Accepted insurances are Aetna TRS Active Care I, Aetna TRS Active Care II, Aetna TRS Choice POS II, United Health Care, Blue Cross Blue Shield PPO, Medicaid, and Amerigroup MedicaidStudents covered by these insurances do not have to pay anything and will need to submit a copy of the insurance card and the student’s DOB must be written on the copy.  For children without insurance, the cost is $15.00 per person (for children 18 years old or younger). For 19 years old and older without insurance, the price is $110.00. Cash, check and debit card (Visa and Master Card) will be accepted.
Parent consent form - Meningococcal Vaccine (English / Spanish) >>



Parent U: Planning for the Future
Saturday, Oct. 14, 2017
8:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.
Northbrook High School
1 Raider Circle North, Houston, TX 77080

Register >>

Parent U provides parents with tips and tools to help your teen prepare for higher education, scholarships and financial aid application processes. Sessions on a range of topics will be offered. Given recent weather-related events, there will be no required fee to attend this Parent U. Instead, donations will be accepted to cover event costs. We hope to see you there!


Debate Students Bring Home Trophies, Awards

Speech and Debate students at Spring Woods High School started off the new school year with top rankings and new trophies and awards. 

Student team updates include:
  • In June, Spring Woods High was named a School of Excellence, ranking it in the Top 20 programs in debate, after students competed in the National Speech and Debate Association’s National Tournament. Senior Jeremiah Menslage placed fourth there and Hunter Brown advanced to the Top 60 nationally in the Congressional Debate category area. 
  • Earlier this month, Congressional Debate’s Hunter Brown advanced to the semifinals at the first national tournament of the year at Yale University in New Haven, Conn., and earned a Tournament of Champions bid. A student debater needs two bids to compete at the spring tournament. Brown is the first district student to ever achieve this ranking, the high school reports.
  • In separate student news, Spring Woods High School earned a Sweepstakes ranking and placed fifth out of 28 high schools at a recent competition held at Alief Elsie High School in Alief ISD. 
  • Individual student awards from the Alief Elsie High School tourney include: Nhi Tran, 6th place, Novice Congressional Debate, and 3rd place, Novice Extemporaneous Speaking; Sabina Garibovic, 5th place, Informative Speaking; David Valdez, 5th place, Poetry; Mi'kel Metz and Roel Cruz, 2nd place, Duo Interpretation; Valeria Lopez and Dexter Mejia, 6th place, Duo Interpretation; and Garrin Bundrick, 1st place, Dramatic Interpretation.
  • Student awards in Humorous Interpretation, also at Alief Elsik are: Mi'kel Met, 6th place, Marc Castro, 5th place; Kris McDermott, 4th place; Anahi Torres, 3rd place; and Roel Cruz, 2nd place.
The Spring Woods High student speech and debate program is led by Victoria Beard, director of forensics.

High schools offer great theater experiences


Spring Branch ISD is back in session, and for theater lovers of all ages that means it’s time to enjoy great, live high school performances ranging from upbeat musicals to crazy comedies.

The multi-award winning Stratford Playhouse has announced its 2017-2018 season, the 25th set of high school productions led by artistic director CeCe Prudhomme. Both Prudhomme and The Playhouse have won many region-level Tommy Tune Awards in those years.

“We’re excited about our season of hit shows to be performed and crewed by our Stratford High School Thespians,” Prudhomme said. “This season is full of larger-than-life characters in tales that are both epic and beloved that you are sure to enjoy. There is something for everyone.”

Stratford’s season kicks off Oct. 19 with Harvey, the Pulitzer Prize-winning comedy by Mary Chase. Harvey tells a comic story of a perfect gentleman, Elwood P. Dowd, and his best friend, Harvey, a pooka, or fairy type figure, who is a 6-feet tall, invisible rabbit.

Next up at Stratford in January 2018 is The Addams Family, an entertaining comedy that lights up the stage as family members Morticia, Gomez, Uncle Fester and Lurch try their macabre best when daughter Wednesday arrives with a suitor from the outside world. Full of satirical energy, great one-liners and superb musical numbers, Stratford’s Playhouse believes this musical is “ghoulishly good for the whole family.”

Stratford’s season will conclude next spring with Little Women, a musical version of the Louisa May Alcott classic 19th century novel. Follow sisters Jo, Meg, Beth and Amy March and their experience growing up during the Civil War era.

Next spring, Westchester students retell a tragic teenage love story that never seems to grow old, Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet.

Memorial High School begins its season with the Tony-winning Peter and the Starcatcher, which upends the century-old story of how a miserable orphan comes to be The Boy Who Would Not Grow Up, a.k.a. Peter Pan.

A theatrical adaptation of best-selling novels, Peter and the Starcatcher includes a cast of stage characters that range from marauding pirates and jungle tyrants to unwilling comrades and unlikely heroes. The play dives to the depths of greed and despair and lifts up the bonds of friendship, duty and love.


Fine Arts Calendar 2017-18

The curtains are rising on another great year of fine arts events and student theater performances in Spring Branch ISD. Publicly announced events are listed below. Tickets can usually be purchased online or in person at school box offices. STAR Card holders should check with campuses or box offices to determine ticket options and opportunities.

Stratford Playhouse – www.shsplayhouse.org
Memorial High Theater – www.mhstheatre.com
Spring Woods Safari Players – www.safariplayers.com
Westchester Academy – Please visit campus website at https://cms.springbranchisd.com/wais/

October 2017
  • 3, Spring Woods High/Spring Oaks MS Fall Choir Collaboration Concert, Spring Woods HS Auditorium, 6 p.m.
  • 5, Spring Forest Choir Concert, Spring Forest MS Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
  • 10, Stratford HS Symphony Orchestra Honor Concert, Tallowood Baptist Church, 7:30 p.m.
  • 12, Band Fall Concert and Social, Memorial MS Courtyard, 5:30 p.m.
  • 12, Bobcat Playhouse’s Spookfest, Spring Forest MS Auditorium, 4 p.m. and 6:30 p.m.
  • 12, Fall Choir Concert, Spring Oaks MS Auditorium, 5:30 p.m.
  • 17, Memorial Orchestra Concert, MHS Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
  • 19, Harvey, Stratford HS Playhouse, 7:30 p.m.
  • 21-22, Harvey, Stratford HS Playhouse, 7:30 p.m.
  • 24, Fall Choir Concert, Stratford High School, 7 p.m.
  • 25, Fall Band Concert, Spring Oaks MS Auditorium, 5:30 p.m.
  • 25, Choir Cabaret Show, Northbrook High School, 7 p.m.
  • 25, Orchestra Fall Concert for Everyone, Stratford High School, 7:30 p.m.
  • 26-28, Harvey, Stratford HS Playhouse, 7:30 p.m.
  • 28, Harvey, Stratford HS Playhouse, 2:30 p.m.
  • 28, Spring Forest Band Concert, Spring Forest MS Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
November 2017
  • 2-4, Fall Musical TBA, Memorial HS Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
  • 4, Region Choir Concert, Tallowood Baptist Church, 4 p.m.
  • 6-7, Cinderella, Westchester Academy for International Studies, 7:30 p.m.
  • 9-11, Bobcat Playhouse’s FALL into Theatre, Spring Forest MS, 6:30 p.m.
  • 9-11, Starcatcher, MHS Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
  • 10, Veterans Day Celebration, Spring Forest Middle School, 8:30 a.m.
  • 10, Veterans Day Celebration, Spring Branch Middle School, 9 a.m.
  • 10-11, Fall Play, Northbrook High School, 7 p.m.
  • 10-11, Romeo and Juliet, Westchester Academy Theatre, 7 p.m.
  • 13-14, Cinderella, Westchester Academy for International Studies, 7:30 p.m.
December 2017
  • 1, Band Winter Concert, Northbrook HS Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
  • 1, Winter Choir Concert, Westchester Academy, 7 p.m.
  • 1-2, Theater Production TBA, Memorial HS Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
  • 2, Theater Production TBA, Memorial HS Performing Arts Center, 2 p.m.
  • 3, Stratford HS Choir Wassail Dinner, Norris Conference Center, 6 p.m.*
  • 5, Winter Choir Concert, Spring Oaks MS Auditorium, 5:30 p.m.
  • 5, Band Winter Concert, Memorial HS Auditorium, 6 p.m.
  • 5, Orchestra Concert, Spring Forest MS Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
  • 5, Choir Winter Concert, Stratford High School, 7:30 p.m.
  • 5, Band Winter Concert, Memorial HS Performing Arts Center, 7:30 p.m.
  • 6, Band Christmas Concert, Spring Oaks MS Auditorium, 5:30 p.m.
  • 6, Winter Orchestra Concert/Dinner, Stratford High School, 7:30 p.m.
  • 7, Choir Concert, Spring Forest MS Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
  • 8, Memorial Orchestra Concert, MHS Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
  • 11, Beginner Band Winter Concert, Memorial MS Auditorium, 6 p.m.
  • 11, Band Concert, Spring Forest MS Auditorium, 6:30 p.m. 
January 2018
  • 25-27, The Addams Family, Stratford HS Playhouse, 7:30 p.m.
  • 27, The Addams Family, Stratford HS Playhouse, 2:30 p.m.
  • 26, IB Student Theatre Showcase, Westchester Academy Theatre, 3:30 p.m.
February 2018
  • 1, Band Small Ensemble Concert, Memorial MS Auditorium, 6 p.m.
  • 1-3, All Shook Up all-school musical, MHS Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
  • 1-3, The Addams Family, Stratford HS Playhouse, 7:30 p.m.
  • 1-3, Musical, Northbrook HS Auditorium, TBA
  • 2, Talent Show, Westchester Academy for International Studies, 7 p.m.
  • 3, Middle School Band Solo & Ensemble Contest, Memorial Middle School, 8 a.m.-4 p.m.
  • 3, The Addams Family, Stratford HS Playhouse, 2:30 p.m
  • 2, Bobcat Talent Show, Spring Forest MS Auditorium, 4 p.m. & 6:30 p.m.
  • 7, Valentine Choir Concert, Northbrook HS Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
  • 8-10, All Shook Up all-school musical, MHS Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
  • 27, Choir Concert, Spring Forest MS Auditorium, 6:30 p.m. 
March 2018
  • 2, Orchestra Concert, Memorial HS Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
  • 3, Pre-UIL Band Concert, Spring Oaks MS Auditorium, 4:30 p.m.
  • 7, Middle School Pre-UIL Festival, Spring Branch Middle School, 8 a.m.-4 p.m.
  • 21, SBISD High School Band Concert & Sight-Reading Festival, Memorial HS Auditorium, 3:30 p.m.
  • 22-24, Romeo & Juliet, Westchester Academy Theatre, 7 p.m.
  • 23, Memorial Symphony Concert(Carnegie Preview), MHS Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
  • 28, Choir Pre-UIL Spring Concert, Northbrook HS Auditorium, 6 p.m.
  • 29, Band Pre-UIL Concert, Northbrook HS Auditorium, 6:30 p.m. 
April 2018
  • 3, Stratford Pre-UIL Choir Concert, Memorial Drive United Methodist Church, 7 p.m.
  • 9, Band Concert, Spring Forest MS Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
  • 17, UIL Concert & Sight Reading Contest for Middle School Bands, Spring Woods MS, 8 a.m.-4 p.m.
  • 26-28, Little Women, Stratford Playhouse, 7:30 p.m.
  • 27, Bandoleras Spring Show, Northbrook HS Auditorium, 7 p.m.
  • 27, Spring Choir Concert, Westchester Academy, 7 p.m.
  • 27-28, Spring Theater Play, Northbrook HS Auditorium, 7 p.m.
  • 27-28, Markette Spring Show, MHS Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
May 2018
  • 2-5, Bobcat Playhouse’s Xanadu Jr., Spring Forest MS Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
  • 3, Bobcat Playhouse’s Xanadu Jr., Spring Forest MS Auditorium, 9:30 a.m.
  • 3, Choir Spring Show, Spring Oaks MS Auditorium, 5:30 p.m.
  • 3-5, Little Women, Stratford Playhouse, 7:30 p.m.
  • 4, Memorial Orchestra Concert, MHS Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
  • 5, Bobcat Playhouse’s Xanadu Jr., Spring Forest MS Auditorium, 9:30 a.m.
  • 5, Little Women, Stratford Playhouse, 2:30 p.m.
  • 8, Band Spring Concert, Memorial MS Gymnasium, 6 p.m.
  • 8, Choir Pop Show, Stratford High School, 7 p.m.
  • 9, Talent Show, Northbrook HS Auditorium, 6 p.m.
  • 10, Spring Concert, Spring Oaks MS Auditorium, 5:30 p.m.
  • 10, Spring Orchestra Concert, Stratford High School, 7:30 p.m.
  • 14, Band Concert, Spring Forest MS Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
  • 14, Band Spring Concert, Memorial HS Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
  • 15, Orchestra Concert, Spring Forest MS Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
  • 15, Spring Band Concert, Northbrook HS Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
  • 17, Spring Orchestra Concert, Northbrook HS Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
  • 22, Choir Concert, Spring Forest MS Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
  • 23, Choir Pop Show, Northbrook HS Auditorium, 6 p.m.
* Ticketed event

Thursday, September 28, 2017

Program for Parents of Children with Special Needs

Texas Children's Hospital, Baylor College of Medicine and Avondale House are offering a 2-part program for parents of children with autism spectrum disorders, intellectual and developmental disabilities. This two-day event will be hosted at Avondale House, 3737 O'Meara Drive on October 7 and 28 between 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. The cost is $10 per person. 

For more information, please contact Diannne Rendon at 832-824-8884.

Parent Registration >>

Disaster Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (D-SNAP) for Families

If you are a family impacted by Harvey, you may be eligible for D-SNAP!

Residents in Harris County may apply for D-SNAP until Oct. 5 at the locations below. Sites will be open daily from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. unless noted.

Greenspoint Mall
12300 North Fwy
Houston, TX 77060

Southwest Multi-Service Center
6400 High Star
Houston, TX 77074

Pasadena Convention Center
7902 Fairmont
Pasadena, TX 77505

The Disaster Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (D-SNAP) offers short-term food assistance benefits to families recovering from a disaster. D-SNAP is designed to help when people return to their homes and have access to electricity and grocery stores.

Benefits are loaded on a Lone Star Card within three days of applying, and the amount is equal to two months of the maximum amount of SNAP benefits, based on household size.

There is a limited period of time to apply for D-SNAP, based on your county of residence.

Read more about this program >>

Show Your Bear Pride at SBSHS All-Class Reunion on Oct. 20-21

Moving museum into its new home – the school’s former library.

When Spring Branch Senior High School alumni return for their biennial reunion the weekend of Oct. 21, many will be seeing their old school in a new light.

For starters, the building itself is new – kind of. The original entrance façade is now visible from behind the classroom wings facing Westview, wings that were demolished and rebuilt as part of Spring Branch ISD’s 2007 bond program. Behind the façade is the original school auditorium, which got a facelift during the renovation and rebuilding.

And many alumni will walk up to the new building for the first time on a brick walk – the “alumni pathway” – installed as a fundraiser by the Spring Branch Senior High School Alumni Association.

And they’ll get to see, for the first time, the Spring Branch Senior High School Museum in its new space, the former SBSHS library, with its glass walls and winding steel and terrazzo staircase, repurposed during the renovation specifically for the museum, including floor space for the mosaic bear from the former building’s entrance. Bruno the Bear has a new home as well.

“We’re very appreciative of (SBISD),” said Della Sivley Mousner (’53), founding curator of the museum. We’ve waited a long time for this space.”

VIPs and lifetime alumni association members will be treated to a museum preview soiree the evening of Friday, Oct. 20, before the museum opens to the public the next day. An official ribbon-cutting ceremony will highlight the Saturday festivities.

“(The preview evening) is a way to say thank you to our lifetime members as well as VIPS who helped make this happen,” said Sherry Roberts Williams (’74). She added that anyone buying a lifetime membership before that Friday will be invited to the soiree. “We’ve already had some people do that,” she said. Memberships are available at the group’s website at www.springbranchbears.com.

Mousner started a scrapbooking project for SBSHS to keep memories alive after the school was closed in 1985. Memorabilia and artifacts started pouring in, more than Mousner could store at her home.

SBISD offered up the band room at the former building, and Mousner and other alumni board members displayed as much as they could in the cramped quarters. The room was also off the beaten path, so to speak, and was difficult to open to the public.

So when SBISD was getting ready to do work at the former high school, repurposed by the district as the Spring Branch Education Center and which houses a number of functions, the district expanded the project’s scope from largely mechanical and system upgrades to one of transformation.
And the museum got its larger, more accessible space in the former library.

Alumni board members have been busy setting up the museum, dressing mannequins in blue and white Bruin Brigade, marching band, cheerleading and other uniforms, stringing streamers along the stairway handrails and putting up other displays.

Former SBISD Superintendent once said that the museum is more than the history of Spring Branch Senior High School – it’s the history of high school in Texas.

A flag football game the evening of Saturday, Oct. 21, pits SBSHS alumni against a “smorgasbord” of players from other SBISD schools, Williams said.

“It’s old people versus old people,” she said. “We’ll have an ambulance standing by.”

For more information about the reunion weekend, go to www.springbranchbears.com.

EVENTS
  • Friday, Oct. 20
    Museum Preview for Lifetime Members
  • Saturday, Oct. 21
    All Day – Alumni store, building tours, mingle with classmates
    10 a.m. – 2 p.m. – Museum grand opening and ribbon-cutting
    6 p.m. – Alumni Flag Football Game, Grob Stadium (Admission: $10 adults; $5 children (12 and under) )

Wednesday, September 27, 2017

In the Eye of the Storm …

#collectivegreatness
With school back in session and the community in full recovery mode, SBISD’s Facilities and Operations Team are taking time to reflect on how innovative thinking and a proactive approach to facilities planning, combined with a monumental team effort, ensured district schools successfully weathered one of the area’s worst rain events on record.

Innovation is what SBISD’s Director of Facilities, David Vesling, considers critical and often different about his team and their approach to the work.

“We have a decade worth of work history that’s informed our planning and maintenance operations,” said Vesling.  This foundation, along with his team’s openness to learning and innovation are two possible reasons the school district experienced minimal amounts of damage from the recent storm event.

“You have to be able to do critical thinking and reinvent yourself to come up with solutions,” said Vesling. “Three years ago we couldn’t have handled this, but we’ve developed our problem-solving skills. We’re more confident that we can deal with whatever Mother Nature throws at us.”

When faced with Hurricane Harvey, a potential monster rain event, his team’s confidence rested on the innovative application of a solution called Peel and Seal®. The product is traditionally used as a fix for temporary roof patching and repair.

Applying the traditional in a non-traditional way was a game changer against potential water infiltration, and something Vesling and his colleague Jose Galvan had tested successfully against in the year prior.

“We used it before to combat water penetration beyond just roofing application. That success led us to consider and use it as a way to thwart the water threat from Harvey,” said Vesling. Vesling’s team sealed every facility in the school district, substantially raising the bar and providing an additional 6-8 inch barrier against high water.

“I feel Peel and Seal® was one of the reasons we didn’t see water in our buildings. Look at the flooding that happened around the Sherwood and Nottingham Elementary facilities. Even with that amount of water, the buildings remained dry,” said Vesling. Ironically, the only water issues faced by the school district during the storm resulted from of an interior pipe leak at one school.

This non-traditional approach to solving problems is driven by his team's commitment to secure district assets and the community investment. It also is a testament to what SBISD Associate Superintendent of Talent and Operations Jennifer Blaine see’s critical to overall district success.


“I am proud (but not surprised) that they developed an innovative approach to managing this situation,” she said. “You hire the right people and empower them to develop systems and processes that result in incredible outcomes for students and staff. David and his team consistently produce quality results that positively impact the operation of the district.”

Harvey served as a proof point when accessing this belief, the division’s commitment and what some may see as an unconventional approach.

“My heart breaks. I am sitting on conference calls with districts that surround us listening to what they are dealing with. Many are facing massive recovery effort in their schools; they had significant damage to facilities. We don’t. I think part of the reason why was our approach,” said Vesling.

That approach also involved people, lots of them. Over 75 staff members from custodial and maintenance staff worked for two days before the storm to seal every door in the school district. “It didn’t matter what your regular job was. You were part of the team. We had a lot of ground to cover, and we did,” said Vesling.

“We had a protocol for before, during and after the storm event. We sealed the buildings over the course of two days, the Friday and Saturday before the storm. Then, our emergency team captains were assigned to monitor facilities for the duration. We had staff working 24-7,” said Vesling.

They weathered the storm together, out in high-water vehicles constantly monitoring facilities. “We even had folks sleeping in the concession stands at Tully keeping pumps running to ensure we didn’t lose the field,” said Vesling.

“Our Maintenance Manager, Dennis Louvier, and district plumbers, they slept out there during the storm,” said Vesling with a pause.

Even as Harvey’s rains subsided, work continued. SBISD’s Don Coleman Community Coliseum served as a deployment command center post-storm, making it a hub for emergency, rescue and recovery efforts.

“We had 11 agencies, 1,700 pieces of rescue equipment, 350 charter buses, and folks from all over the nation there,” said Vesling. Opening the coliseum doors was a true team effort. “It wasn’t just about a building; it was about breakfasts, lunches, shower facilities, technology support and more,” said Vesling. “Our supportive measures are what allowed these first responders to service the Memorial and surrounding areas with the help they needed.”

“Dr. Muri was by my side the entire time. It’s his district, and he was there through everything with us. It meant a lot to our people and me. I think we should be proud of the fact that we came out as we did and that we were able to provide the support we provided.”

Staff members from every division within the school district, converged on the Don Coleman Community Coliseum to offer support. “I made the calls. When I needed towels for folks to shower, I picked up the phone and called Wayne (Shaper, Jr.) in Purchasing. He was here with 300 towels. People stepped up,” said Vesling.

“Think about it, we had to feed rescuers, 400 plus people, and everything was closed. I contacted Chris Kamradt, he got two cooks and he, himself, prepared the meals for all these people. Then, Diana (Freiermuht) and Dee (Benefield) served. All of this during this torrential storm,” said Vesling.

From Food Service to Athletics and Technology, members of the entire SBISD Team pooled staff and resources to provide support for first responders and the community. From Vesling’s perspective, it’s just what you do as a family member.

“We got stuck at Don Coleman, and everyone’s cell phones had no battery, and no one had a single charger. I called Wes Hargrove in Technology Services, and before you knew it, Karen Justl from Educational Technology was there with exactly what we needed,” said Vesling. “For me, this event confirmed what makes our school district and this community great. You saw the character of people. This experience was a confirmation of just how amazing our employees are and why we as a community should be very proud.”

“It appeared to be a well-oiled machine, but behind the scenes, it was truly a wonderful display of collective greatness,” Vesling added.

Listen to what our staff and leaders have to say about the OUTSTANDING work of our employees: 


#harveyreboot from SBISD on Vimeo.

Tuesday, September 19, 2017

Board Approves Modification to 2017-18 Academic Calendar

Texas Education Agency has approved SBISD’s waiver request for missed school days as a result of Hurricane Harvey. Thus, SBISD will NOT have to use bad weather makeup days.

In support of our commitment to maximizing student instructional time while minimizing stress of the compressed semester as result of Harvey, there will also be no mid-term or final exams administered this semester for middle and high school students.

As a result,  last night, the SBISD Board of Trustees approved a modification to the 2017-18 calendar for Wednesday, Dec. 13, and Thursday, Dec. 14, to be full instructional days rather than early dismissal days. (These were originally scheduled as half days for final exams.) Friday, Dec. 15, will remain an early dismissal day for all students.

View Final Revised 2017-18 SBISD Academic Calendar >>


Public Forum Notices: Dedication of New Alumni Museum and Tully Stadium Press Box

Two separate public forums will be conducted from 4:30-5:30 p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 21, to consider and discuss dedications of the Tully Stadium Press Box and historical museum at the Spring Branch Education Center.

Both public forums will be held in SBISD’s Technology Training Center (TTC), Room 119. The TTC facility is located at 14330 Memorial Drive, directly west of Meadow Wood Elementary School and south of Spring Forest Middle School. Spring Branch residents are encouraged to attend these forums. Details include:

  • Dedication of the Tully Stadium Press Box will be discussed from 4:30-5 p.m. to honor coach and principal, Lary Reap, who passed away March 3, 2017. He served as principal at Spring Oaks Middle and Northbrook High schools. Mr. Reap also served for many years in the Tully Press Box during high school games. For details, please phone SBISD Talent and Operations at 713.251.2433.
  • Dedication of The Della Sivley/Mousner Museum located at the Spring Branch Education Center (SBEC), 9016 Westview Drive, will be discussed from 5-5:30 p.m. SBEC is home to Cornerstone Academy and Academy of Choice. It occupies the site of the former Spring Branch High School. A new museum focusing on alumni and district history will operate in the site of the old library there. Mrs. Mousner played a large role in preserving high school and district historical artifacts at SBEC for years. For details, please contact SBISD Talent and Operations at 713.251.2433.

Monday, September 18, 2017

We Love Mrs. Luna!

As the sun began to rise on Friday morning, district bus driver Veronica Luna was just another flooded-out homeowner. Her Richmond-area house, which had never flooded before, took on 6 inches of water in Harvey’s deluge several weeks ago.

Her first floor was ruined. The house’s sheetrock removed. She was living on the second floor, like many not sure if FEMA aid would put her house or life back together again.

Then on Friday, several stops into her Wilchester Elementary Bus No. 18 morning route, Mrs. Luna was suddenly greeted by students and adults, a homemade poster reading “We Love Mrs. Luna!” and cash donations that will soon help to start repairing her damaged home.

She is FEMA approved, but quickly learned that assistance alone will not fully replace the floors and sheetrock and paint that were destroyed.

At the first sight of the Wilchester Elementary bus stop gathering, she burst into tears. Beginning on Monday, her students and parents had asked about her home situation. A few had already handed her small gift card donations. This morning’s donation will help her much more.



“I feel so special,” said Mrs. Luna, who has driven the Wilchester route for four years. “At that bus stop this morning, I could not stop crying. I feel so blessed. Everyone has shown so much love to me.”

Carrie McKemie, one of several Wilchester Elementary moms who helped query, organize and then make a significant aid donation to Mrs. Luna, said parent concerns ran high in the Wilchester West neighborhood when they learned about the driver’s situation – living up on her second floor and her wait for FEMA aid.

During Harvey, many streets near the bus stop at Southchester and Alchester did flood, but there were no reports of flooded homes there.

“The whole neighborhood came together for Miss Luna,” McKemie said. “I was shocked in a really wonderful way by the generosity that resulted from a simple appeal.”

“She takes such good care of all of us, we wanted to take care of her,” she added.

As for Friday morning tears of joy at the bus stop, driver Luna was not alone, McKemie noted. “We were all crying out there.”

Friday, September 15, 2017

Community Rallies to Help Displaced Teachers, Staff

Call it the Boardroom Boutique.

Racks of gently used clothing arranged by gender and size filled the SBISD boardroom late last week, clothing donated by the SBISD community for staff and families displaced by Hurricane Harvey.

Those staff members who came were encouraged to fill bags with as much as much in their size as they could carry. Many looked for a checkout table as they left – volunteer Minda Caesar would ask “Do you want to check out? Check! You’re out!”

Caesar said the idea for the impromptu bazaar came about as she was helping a teacher friend in West Houston who had lost her home and belongings when flooded by release waters from the Addicks and Barker dams.

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Caesar said her friend told her that she knew other teachers who needed help. Caesar reached out to SBISD Council of PTAs president Suzanne Stiles and SBISD Community Relations Officer Linda Buchman and got the ball rolling.

The call for donations went out but weren’t accepted until 9 a.m. on Thursday, Sept. 7. But there was a problem – there was a meeting for district counselors going on in the boardroom. An army of student and adult volunteers stood ready to accept, sort and display donations, but wouldn’t be allowed in the boardroom until 1:30 that afternoon.

Stiles swung into action, calling principal Bryan Williams at Spring Branch Middle School and asking if he had space where volunteers could temporarily work. Williams said sure, you can use the cafeteria.

So the staging moved over to Spring Branch Middle, where volunteers spent the morning sorting the donations and getting them ready to display on racks retrieved from Memorial High School that are normally used for its annual garage sale. (“We owe [MHS principal] Lisa Weir and [parent] Carolyn Bronson big,” Caesar said.)

By 1:30, the operation had moved back to the Administration Building, where racks of clothes filled the lobby and outside area near the entrance, waiting on the district meeting to end.

Three hours later, the boardroom had been converted into a boutique.

“We really wanted to (set up) in the boardroom,” Caesar said, because of location, access and that it’s well-known in the district.

Acknowledging that displaced families need more than just clothing, a “Wish List” table was set up where those with needs could be matched with those who wish to give.

Caesar said that the call for items was pretty specific, that they wanted quality clothing for staff – “something you’d want to see your teacher wear,” she said.

Volunteers were recruited through an online tool – so many showed up to help on Friday morning that most were thanked for their service but turned away.

“People right now so want to do something,” Stiles said.

Musical Duo Mom and Pop Raise Spirits at Several Schools

Younger students at Meadow Wood and Spring Shadow elementaries got a treat when they returned to school on Monday – a performance by the Arkansas-based musical duo Mom and Pop.

The interactive performances were a way to “lift the spirits” of children affected by Hurricane Harvey, said Melissa Peter of Bayou City Blessings in a Backpack, who coordinated the performances.

Using a variety of props, Mom and Pop – married couple Bobby Matthews and Virginia Ralph of Eureka Springs, Ark. – engaged the K-2 audience sitting cross-legged on the terrazzo of the Meadow Wood cafeteria with dialogue and arm movements as they performed their original children’s songs.

The musical duo used their own resources to travel and stay in the Houston area for three performances (they also performed at HISD’s Blackshear Elementary), Peter said.

“They said their main goal was to “bring the children joy and some relief from their worries’,” said Peter. “We believe they lifted the spirits of about 800 children during their three performances.”

Thursday, September 14, 2017

Westwood Elementary and Local Church Respond to Family Needs

In the aftermath of Tropical Storm Harvey’s deluge, teachers and staff at Westwood Elementary took quick steps to assess neighborhood needs for students and families.

The school also partnered with the nearby West Houston Chinese Church to provide food and clothing to families impacted by flooding.

On Sept. 2, Communities in Schools Project Manager Betsabeth Beyk and campus leaders invited families to the campus adjacent Agnes Moffatt Park to have fun, share popsicles and assess family needs.

After determining needs, CIS’s Betsabeth Beyk reached out to the nearby West Houston Chinese Church, which responded like a heavenly angel. A separate community event with the church was held on Sept. 5. Just three days later, a second donation was made to families.

“The church did a food drive for our families collecting milk, eggs, bread, canned goods, hygiene products, cleaning supplies, clothing, water and many other items,” Beyk said. “We hosted this event inside the gym at the church and had games for the kids to play and distributed books, school supplies and toys to our students. In addition, Westwood teachers made around 150 sack lunches and donated groceries as well!”

A good and generous neighbor, the church has also helped more than 150 students begin the new academic year ready to learn with school supplies.

The Tuesday event at the church was coordinated with Westwood school lunch. Westwood Elementary was a feeding site for students during the storm’s aftermath. Parents were provided sack lunches at the church’s event so that many of them could also eat lunch with their children at the school. Many families returned to the church later to receive donations.

Reports CIS’s Beyk, “I was overwhelmed with all the donations from the church and our staff. For a moment I was worried we would have a lot of items left over but to my surprise, we had a significant amount of people attend the event and we distributed everything.”

“I am immensely thankful to the West Houston Chinese Church for their generosity and caring hearts,” she adds. “They are a true blessing to our community!”

That sentiment was echoed by Principal Kay Kennard, who noted that a second donation occurred Sept. 8 after food and other supplies came to church officials from a distribution site.

“The West Houston Chinese Church has become an amazing community partner,” Kennard said. “They’ve also sponsored a Back to School supply drive that raised $3,000, and resulted in more than 150 packets of school supplies.”

Harvey Delivers Lemons, Frostwood Students Sell Lemonade

It’s hard, if not impossible, to catalog or report the hundreds of personal responses that occurred in Harvey’s wake. The responses were deeply genuine, and they often had incredible results – often at an individual or even the local street level.

In one Frostwood Elementary-area neighborhood, for example, Audrey Brown and a few other campus moms helped support a lemonade stand staffed by students.

The key goal was to raise funds for our teachers and staff impacted by flooding. Result? That little Frostwood student lemonade stand raised $1,822.35! Proceeds were to be split among teachers or staff impacted.

Lemonade stand drink makers, hawkers, pourers and cashiers included students Jack and Johnny Brown, Roman and Lauren Chang, Tia Cristini, Alec and Kai Feldhaus, Stefano and Franco Ferrier, Lily Johnson, Ava and Emmie Muras, and George Standige.

Frostwood Principal Pamela Pennington had a one word response to the effort: “Unbelievable!”

We think that there were dozens and dozens of “unbelievables” across the district in the past few weeks. Tell us about yours!

Wednesday, September 13, 2017

Hurricane Relief Tutoring Fund

In the wake of the recent hurricanes, Wyzant is donating $100,000 in tutoring vouchers to students affected by the storms.

Five hundred vouchers (each worth $200 in value) will be available—valid from now until the end of the year to help parents keep their kids on track at school in the aftermath of this catastrophic event.

If your family has been affected, complete this form to receive free, one-on-one tutoring from Wyzant for your student.

Clothing Donations Ready for Distribution to Area Families

Houston area business Gallery Furniture (Mattress Mack), along with The University of Houston Head Men's Basketball Coach (Kelvin Sampson), put out a plea to colleges and university athletic programs around the country for clothing donations to help Houston area families in need. 

Coach Sampson and Mattress Mac are happy to announce the clothes have arrived and are ready for distribution. Distribution is on a first come first served basis while supplies last.

Donation Distribution Site
Gallery Furniture (Katy)
7227 W. Grand Parkway South, Richmond, TX 77406

Thursday, September 14 from 2:00pm-6:00pm
(For students and families of Fort Bend, Katy and Spring Branch only.)

Friday - Sunday (September 15 - 17) from 8:00 am – noon
(All Houston families welcome.)

For more information, please contact Gallery Furniture Katy (281) 407-7161.

Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Low-Cost Sports Physicals for All SBISD Athletes


In collaboration with SBISD Athletics, Memorial Hermann Memorial City Medical Center is offering comprehensive, low-cost physicals to all middle and high school athletes in SBISD. Physicals are $10 for students and free to those on free or reduced lunch. 

Students should to complete the Pre-participation Physical Evaluation-Medical History form and bring a completed copy with them on Saturday, Sept. 16.


Who:
All middle and high school athletes in SBISD

When:
Saturday, Sept. 16, from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m.

Where: Landrum Middle School
2200 Ridgecrest Drive, Houston, TX  77055

For more information, please contact the Campus Athletic Coordinator at your campus or the SBISD Athletic Office at 713-251-1200.