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Parents
and district devise survey
Point Roberts
primary school parents were overflowing with advice for the
Blaine school district in deciphering the apparent unpopularity
of the school. They were equally zealous in demanding the district
devote the time and resources to reconnect the school with the
community.
“When
we get all this data, what are we going to do with it?” asked
Elaine Komusi, mother of a first-grader at the local primary
school, at an October 19 community meeting regarding a proposed
survey to determine community views and expectations for the
school. “We’re going to do whatever
we can to improve things,” answered Blaine school board
member Red Goodwin.
Goodwin
said a carefully developed survey would help the district get
a firm number of school-aged children on the Point and why
families feel the need to choose other educational options. “You
want to really drill down and find out where those kids go
and why,” Goodwin said. “Where are they now,
why are they there and how do we change the pattern?” The
student population at the local primary school has dropped
to 10 students this year, which some estimates have put at
less than a third of the primary-age students on the Point.
Ten parents
attended the meeting and they all agreed the school had image
problems they needed to identify and confront. “We
need to attack the whole trust issue,” said Komusi.
On one hand some parents of kids attending Blaine schools
worry primary school supporters are trying to undermine
the larger school district. “What we really want
to do is bring all the five campuses together as one family,” Komusi
said. On the other hand some parents are worried that the
shrinking budget and student population is destined to
spell the closure of the local school. “I’m
on the board and I’ve
never heard of closing it,” Goodwin said. “Let’s
move forward knowing this school is here and we want this
school open. It’s necessary.”
Blaine school
district superintendent Dr. Mary Lynne Derrington said
the proposed survey would be a tool to find out what
kinds of services mattered to parents. “Are there other
kinds of things we could look at as educational offerings on
this campus,” she
asked. “What can we do to keep this a happy, vigorous
school?” One
mother suggested she would like to see a bullying prevention
program.
Parents
said they would email Goodwin with what they thought were the
five most important questions to ask on the survey, and he
would then work with a smaller committee to develop the final
survey and its distribution list.
The school
district typically holds five meetings every school year in
Point Roberts. The next meeting will take place before the
holidays; the topic will be technology.
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