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Tag: APP Education

  • Suncoast Remake Learning Days a 15-day festival to help improve student literacy

    Suncoast Remake Learning Days a 15-day festival to help improve student literacy

    MANATEE COUNTY, Fla. — Several Florida counties are coming together for a 15-day festival called Suncoast Remake Learning Days to help improve student literacy rates after the country saw a decline in 2023.

    Students and families will get resources and hands-on learning opportunities at various locations across Manatee, Sarasota, Charlotte and DeSoto counties, starting April 20 through May 4.

    One organization in Manatee County is working with parents to get their kids the materials they need to boost their reading levels. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Organizations across Manatee, Sarasota, Charlotte and DeSoto counties are coming together for a 15-day festival called Suncoast Remake Learning Days
    • Students and families will get resources and hands-on learning opportunities at various locations from April 20 through May 4
    • Soar in 4, a Manatee County nonprofit, provides free literacy tools and resources to parents who need financial aid
    • They help roughly 800 families a day with free materials

    Amanda Quirino is teaching her kids something new through a game of hopscotch.

    Playing hopscotch isn’t the typical way to improve literacy, but it works for her family. Quirino has her kids focus on enunciation.

    “This is a game we don’t see anymore to show them what we grew up with. It’s simple like hopscotch or writing their name,” she said.

    Quirino has a table filled with learning materials, like arts and crafts, she received from Soar in 4, a nonprofit that provides free literacy tools and resources to parents who need financial aid.

    “I became a mom at the age of 20. So I was a very young mom, and I just wanted to be able to find the right resources,” she said.

    For the past 10 years, Quirino has received about a dozen items each week. Her children are bilingual, and she says those supplies have helped them overcome the hurdles of learning two languages.

    “My third grader, the testing is non-stop sometimes. So she needs to be that fluent reader and she needs to be able to comprehend the questions. My kindergartener, they have sight words. So anytime I can expose them to that, it will help them,” she said.

    According to Soar in 4, 50% of Manatee County students are reading below their grade level. Sheila Halpin, one of the organization coordinators, said the materials they provide help kids improve their reading and writing skills.

    “Soar in 4 has been in existence for 10 years. We have grown and grown and grown. We are seeing that the kids who attend preschool are getting better in 3rd-grade assessment,” Halpin said.

    They help roughly 800 families a day with free materials. Halpin says more than 90% of families who have attended a Soar in 4 event are using the at-home material and are reading more to their kids.

    “Families just don’t have the funds to purchase all of these items. We teach our families that when we are jumping rope, we talk about counting again. How many? 1, 2, 3, once again. Counting leads into literacy,” she said.

    Quirino’s chidlren read every day, and she says their skills have improved with the help of the hands-on tools Soar in 4 provides.

    “I’ve seen them pronouncing the sounds, putting it together, and connecting them. Maybe they would just know one sound, and now if they have the two sounds that go together or we count out syllables, and it’s helped them in their school life,” Quirino said.

    For Quirino, having these free resources is like connecting the pieces of a puzzle.

    “We barely just became homeowners last August. We rented for 10 years with our family, so we are finally able to do bigger and better things with our family. But it was hard, so it was through our programs that we were able to connect and get resources that we needed. It was a journey,” she said.

    Community resources that help families so their kids can have bigger and brighter futures.

    Julia Hazel

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  • Bradenton teacher helps students plan next steps

    Bradenton teacher helps students plan next steps

    BRADENTON, Fla. — Kashante Mays is in her sixth year teaching at Southeast High School in Bradenton.

    It’s her 10th year of teaching.

    She teaches English and she’s the Avid Coordinator, a program that helps students make a plan for after graduation.


    What You Need To Know

    • Kashante Mays is this week’s A+ Teacher

    “Students get the opportunity to apply for scholarships, learn about different colleges, different careers,” said Mays.

    Mays takes her students on trips so they can see college campuses. This year, she planned a trip where they visited four universities in South Florida. They were able to see what campus life is like and explore where they could continue their education after high school.

    “They were super excited just to see kids on campus studying with their computers and just doing things that we require them to do in class they got to see,” said Mays.

    The students also got to learn about possible future careers on the trip.

    “Getting the chance to see STEM careers and knowing about them and getting to use the tools that they actually use. They were excited to do that. As well as the colleges. They went to FIU and they fell in love,” said Mays.

    She helps her students learn the material they need to graduate, and she wants to inspire them to have goals for the future.

    “Whether that’s graduating from high school, whether that’s graduating from trade school, graduating from college. Whatever your goal is, you can do it and just be the greatest at it,” said Mays.

    Do you have an A+ Teacher in your life? Tell us more through the nomination form on the right side of this page.

    Jorja Roman

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  • Parents concerned over Pasco County Schools’ PIP policy for students with autism

    Parents concerned over Pasco County Schools’ PIP policy for students with autism

    PASCO COUNTY, Fla. — Some Pasco County parents are worried about what may happen with their children’s PIP services, or “Private Instructional Personnel.” Primarily, families with children who have autism. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Parents want to meet with district leaders to discuss current PIP policy 
    • PIP services include things like ABA Therapy
    • The current policy allows for limits on when, where and how long services can be offered in schools

    Part of their treatment plan from their doctor often includes an ABA therapist, who goes to school with the child for a prescribed amount of time, giving them the one-on-one therapy they may need to be successful in the classroom. Now, parents are worried the therapists may not be allowed in the classrooms.

    Every day after school, Jessica Sibler and her son, Elliot, spend time together working on school subjects.

    “Elliot has autism, but he is the most intelligent kid I know. He’s wildly smart, and he loves to hug, he loves to cuddle, he loves everything else every five-year-old loves,” Sibler said.

    Before moving to Florida, Sibler worked for agencies serving children and adults with disabilities, so she knew the signs of autism, and says she had concerns early on with Elliot, but his official diagnosis came when he was four-years-old. His doctor prescribed ABA therapy, or Applied Behavior Analyst.

    “Every kid is different, they can get between 10 to 40 hours a week of therapy and so if you’re talking about a kid who is in school full time, plus they’re supposed to have 40 hours of prescribed therapy, that’s two full-time jobs, so being able to combine the two is beneficial,” she said.

    Right now, Elliot is in pre-K, and as the family prepares for him to enter kindergarten, Sibler started looking into Pasco County Schools’ PIP policy, explained in a packet.

    “This new policy says that the services are to be provided to students during non-core settings such as cafeteria, lunch, recess, bus and non-core academic subjects outside the classroom. That’s pretty significant because if you think of kids who need this ABA therapy, to say that they don’t need it in the classroom is pretty significant,” she said, as she read from the PIP packet.

    It also states the “best practice for observation is a maximum of two hours at one time in the classroom,” which concerns Sibler.

    She said right now they plan on doing Elliot’s ABA therapy after school, but if he struggles to transition to kindergarten, having his ABA therapist in school is the best option. But she worries that may not even be an option.

    “We want the option that if that doesn’t work, that we can move it into the school so he does get that therapy, or if he goes into kindergarten and struggles that he can get that therapy. Kindergarten is going to look a lot different,” she said.

    Sibler hopes to meet with district officials to review the PIP policy, so students like Elliot have access to the help they need to succeed. 

    Pasco County Schools said they follow state statute when writing the PIP policy. They say it’s a convenience to allow various therapies to be offered during school hours, and the policy doesn’t exclude a student from receiving those services, but it does give principals the right to decide when it’s appropriate to allow outside therapists into the school.

    Fallon Silcox

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  • USF receives $1 million scholarship gift for St. Pete campus students

    USF receives $1 million scholarship gift for St. Pete campus students

    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — The University of South Florida announced Monday that it had received a $1 million donation from Tampa Bay resident Johnnie Giffin to provide scholarships to students at its St. Petersburg campus.

    Giffin established the new USF Women in Leadership & Philanthropy scholarships in 2023 with a $26,000 gift to the USF Foundation. Now, more students will benefit from the scholarships.

    The WLP Fay S. Baynard Class of 1988 Memorial Scholarship is geared toward full- or part-time undergraduate students in all majors and colleges on the St. Petersburg campus, and is renewable for up to eight semesters. Preference will be given to single parents or guardians of a minor who are employed at least part-time.

    “Many of our students are pursuing their education while balancing other life responsibilities, and we work to ensure they have access to the resources and support they need to be successful during their time at the University of South Florida,” USF President Rhea Law said in a release. “Scholarships such as this one are powerful tools that help our students change the trajectories of their lives, and we are deeply grateful to Johnnie for her generosity.”

    The scholarship honors Giffin’s late mother, Fay Baynard, who died in 2017. Rising from poverty in rural Mississippi, Baynard went on to create a very successful career as a St. Petersburg Realtor, earn a degree in 1988 from USF well into her work life, become a champion sailor and immerse herself in numerous local charities, according to USF.

    “I think as a person you should always try to give back, and I’m doing this for USF and for my mom, and hopefully to help give students in need an opportunity to make their way in the world,” Giffin said, according to USF’s release.

    The donation comes one week before USF’s Giving Week, an annual event that brings alumni and friends together to raise funds for a wide variety of programs, including student scholarships. 

    Spectrum News Staff

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  • Harvard removes human skin binding from book library has had for 90 years

    Harvard removes human skin binding from book library has had for 90 years

    Harvard University has removed human skin binding from a book that has been in its library collection for 90 years and apologized for its “past failures” in managing the volume.

    The book’s first owner, Ludovic Bouland, a French doctor, bound the book with skin he took without consent from a deceased female patient in a hospital where he worked, according to Harvard Library


    What You Need To Know

    • Harvard University has removed human skin binding from a book that has been in its library collection for 90 years and apologized for its “past failures” in managing the volume
    • The book’s first owner, Ludovic Bouland, a French doctor, bound the book with skin he took without consent from a deceased female patient in a hospital where he worked, according to Harvard Library
    • The skin of the unknown woman is currently in secure storage and Harvard Library said it’s consulting with authorities at the university and in France to determine a respectful way to lay the remains to rest
    • In 2022, a Harvard committee examining human remains in university museum collections recommended the removal of the human skin from the book

    The work, “Des destinées de l’âme,” written by by Arsène Houssaye in the 1880s, is described as a meditation on the soul and life after death. A handwritten note by Bouland inserted into the book reads “a book about the human soul deserved to have a human covering,” Harvard said.

    Bouland died in 1933. A year later, the volume landed at Harvard, donated by American diplomat and hat maker John B. Stetson, an alumnus of the university.

    “After careful study, stakeholder engagement, and consideration, Harvard Library and the Harvard Museum Collections Returns Committee concluded that the human remains used in the book’s binding no longer belong in the Harvard Library collections, due to the ethically fraught nature of the book’s origins and subsequent history,” Harvard Library said in a statement Wednesday.

    The skin of the unknown woman is currently in secure storage and Harvard Library said it’s consulting with authorities at the university and in France to determine a respectful way to lay the remains to rest. 

    Harvard’s Houghton Library long made the book available to anyone who requested it. Harvard Library said that, according to “library lore,” students who worked at Houghton were hazed decades ago by being asked to retrieve the volume without being told it included human remains.

    After Harvard scientists confirmed in 2014 the book was bound with human skin, Houghton Library published two blog posts, now deleted, that struck a “sensationalistic, morbid, and humorous tone,” Harvard Library said.

    “Harvard Library acknowledges past failures in its stewardship of the book that further objectified and compromised the dignity of the human being whose remains were used for its binding,” the library system said. “We apologize to those adversely affected by these actions.”

    In 2022, a Harvard committee examining human remains in university museum collections recommended the removal of the human skin from the book.

    The review was largely driven by a reckoning with the role of slavery and colonialism in establishing U.S. universities and museum. But some discoveries, such as the “Des destinées de l’âme” volume, fell outside that area of focus.

    In all, Harvard identified more than 22,000 human remains in its museum collections, including full skeletons, bone fragments, teeth and locks of hair.

    The library began restricting access to Houssaye’s book in 2015 and placed a full moratorium on new research access to it last year. 

    Harvard Library said digital scans of the book, without the human skin, are publicly available. 

    Ryan Chatelain

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  • Polk County reading coach drives students’ success

    Polk County reading coach drives students’ success

    AUBURNDALE, Fla. — Renard Thomas wears many hats within Polk County Public Schools.

    He’s the reading coach at Auburndale Central Elementary and recently he started driving kids to and from school to help with the bus driver shortage.

    “I did that because I wanted to reduce the number of school bus referrals that we had at my school,” Thomas said. “So I did it to help with discipline as well as pursue my dream as well.”


    What You Need To Know

    • Renard Thomas, a reading coach at Auburndale Central Elementary, has jumped in as a bus driver this year
    • Thomas said it has helped him build stronger relationships with his students
    • Do you know an amazing teacher? Nominate them to be our next A+ Teacher

    He said he always wanted to become a bus driver, so when the district needed more, he stepped up. Thomas said it has helped him build stronger relationships with his students.

    “It has positively impacted my students. They come to school, they’re happy. When I pick them up, they’re happy and smiling when I get off the bus,” said Thomas.

    He said being happy helps them learn. When he gets to Auburndale Central Elementary to start the school day, he begins by reading a book over the loudspeaker. Then he works with students in small groups on their reading skills and meets with teachers individually to go over reading benchmarks for each grade.

    “Reading is fundamental. If you don’t know how to read, then you can’t really go far in life,” said Thomas.

    Thomas wants every student to go far and accomplish their goals. He is setting an example for them each day. Thomas says he became involved with the school district when he was 19-years-old in 2011. He’s held many roles since then. He’s been a para educator, a custodian and a teacher. He says those roles have helped shape him into who he is today.

    “It has been through my experiences working for Polk County Schools that I first began to understand that my life would be rooted in service and giving back to others,” said Thomas.

    Thomas says his goal is to become a principal one day.

    The sky is the limit to me, but I know that education is where I want to remain because I can make a powerful impact,” he said.

    Jorja Roman

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  • Residents can weigh in ahead of Polk County schools start time shift

    Residents can weigh in ahead of Polk County schools start time shift

    POLK COUNTY, Fla. — Before making a final decision on what the new school start times will be, the Polk County school district is giving residents a chance to weigh in.

    The Polk County District Advisory Council, a volunteer-based group, is hosting a series of town hall style meetings where experts in education and school operations will answer questions and residents can give their feedback.


    What You Need To Know

    • A Florida bill that was passed will see changes to when the school day starts
    • Florida school districts must start middle school classes after 8 a.m. and high school classes at 8:30 a.m. or later
    • The changes will be effective for the start of the 2026 school year

    In order to comply with Florida House Bill 733 that was passed last year, all Florida school districts must start middle school classes after 8 a.m. and high school classes at 8:30 a.m. or later. The changes will be effective for the start of the 2026 school year.

    Haines City High School teacher Patrick Bentley feels lawmakers didn’t listen to all sides of the argument when making this change. He agrees while some high school students start their day tired, there are many repercussions for having the county’s oldest students start almost two hours later than they currently do.

    “High school is the busiest after school group, clubs, sports, some if not all students work,” he said.

    Bentley worries high school athletes will be pulled early from classes so they can make it to games and working students won’t get home until late into the night.

    For younger students, dark bus stops and childcare issues top his list of concerns.

    “Even though the law left out elementary schools, the only viable option is to move elementary schools first,” he said. “Which means our youngest and most vulnerable kids are at the pitch black bus stops in the morning. Then they’re the first kids home instead of a high schooler to receive their kindergarten brother, for example.”

    Monday’s meeting will run from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. at the Jim Miles Professional Development Center, 4270 Wallace Rd. in Lakeland.


    Can’t make it Monday? Future Education Town Hall meetings 

    • Thursday, March 28 – Stuart Center
      1702 S. Holland Parkway, Bartow
    • Monday, April 1 – Dream Center of Lakeland
      635 W 5th St., Lakeland
    • Monday, April 8 – AdventHealth Fieldhouse
      210 Cypress Gardens Blvd., Winter Haven
    • Monday, April 22 – Tom Fellows Community Center
      207 North Blvd. West, Davenport

    Angie Angers

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  • Community college program aims to ease HVAC labor shortage

    Community college program aims to ease HVAC labor shortage

    GREENSBORO, N.C. — As skilled labor shortages persist across the state, some community colleges are working to ease the problem. 


    What You Need To Know

    • HVAC professionals say a skill gap has contributed to a labor shortage in the industry
    • More than 700 HVAC positions are listed on indeed.com in North Carolina 
    • Guilford Technical Community College held a job fair last week connecting its HVAC program students with businesses 
    • About 90 students are enrolled in the school’s HVAC program

    Guilford Technical Community College held an HVAC job fair on Tuesday. 

    Students training in the school’s HAVC program got the opportunity to be hired by local employers. 

    GTCC student Candice Foreman said it’s one of the many ways the college helps with career development.

    “You have every opportunity out there to be successful, and this job fair is pretty much bringing that to light,” Foreman explained. 

    School officials say fewer people willing to learn a skilled trade is what led to the shortage, but that is something that is starting to shift.  

    “Companies are having to pay more to retain those employees. It is a highly skilled industry, and it is getting more technical,” said Jeff Underwood, director of GTCC’s HVAC program. 

    About 90 students are enrolled in the program.

    The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics shows North Carolina is among one of the states that employ the most HVAC workers. 

    Sasha Strong

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  • Huntersville business raising money for St. Augustine’s University

    Huntersville business raising money for St. Augustine’s University

    HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. —  Kaldi’s Coffeehouse & Roastery is donating 30% of profits from its special Saint Augustine’s University coffee line to the university’s Falcon Pride Initiative Fund


    What You Need To Know

    • Saint Augustine’s University launched a Falcon Pride Initiative Fund with the goal of raising $5 million to prove the school is financially stable as it seeks to keep accreditation
    • A Charlotte based coffeehouse and roastery launched a special HBCU series, donating 30% of proceeds from its “1867” branded coffee beans to the Falcon Pride Initiative Fund
    • The owner, a fellow HBCU graduate, says she wants to do what she can to help

    St. Augustine’s launched the fund in February, hoping to raise $5 million to elevate its financial stability as the university seeks to keep its accreditation.

    Marcia Cox, Kaldi’s Coffeehouse & Roastery owner, graduated from North Carolina A&T in 2023. She said when she saw another historically Black university in need, she wanted to step in and help.

    “It just felt like the right thing to do,” Cox said. “I just felt like if that were my school, and I were a student there or an alum there, I’d want someone to do something to help out as well and bring awareness.”

    Cox launched an HBCU line of coffee beans. Roastery customers can order special North Carolina A&T, Winston-Salem State University and St. Augustine’s University branded coffee. The N.C. A&T and WSSU options will donate 10% of proceeds to the respective schools. Thirty percent of profits from the St. Augustine’s branded coffee beans will be donated to the Falcon Pride Initiative Fund.

    Cox says in two weeks, she has received more than 30 orders for the St. Augustine’s line and plans to write her first check to the university at the end of the month. 

    Alexis Bell

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  • A+ Teacher Reynaldo Sosa follows lifelong dream

    A+ Teacher Reynaldo Sosa follows lifelong dream

    ZEPHYRHILLS, Fla. Reynaldo Sosa has spent almost 10 years at Chester W. Taylor Elementary School. He says teaching has always been his passion.


    What You Need To Know

    • Reynaldo Sosa is helping fifth-graders at Chester W. Taylor Elementary School follow their dreams
    • Sosa is a teacher and tutor at the school. He started his teaching career as a substitute teacher at a daycare center.
    • He says the key to his growth is continuing to learn new things. Sosa says he’s always looking for new ways to teach.
    • Nominate an A+ Teacher

    “I always said, ‘I want to be a teacher when I grow up.’ And that’s what I became when I grew up,” said Sosa.

    Sosa has his masters in educational leadership. He says he wants to continue growing as an educator. Right now, he’s helping fifth-graders in Pasco County grow and follow their dreams.

    “Seeing the smiles on their faces every morning, I give them a fist bump every morning just to say, ‘Good morning’ and they love that. Really that’s my favorite part,” said Sosa.

    Sosa is a teacher and tutor at the school. He started his teaching career as a substitute teacher at a daycare center.

    “Then I started here as an instructional assistant in Pre-K and then slowly but surely I kept moving up and growing each year,” said Sosa.

    He’s taught PE and second grade as well. He says the key to his growth is continuing to learn new things. Sosa says he’s always looking for new ways to teach.

    “Even if I taught it for the past three years, I know I can always get better, so I’m always looking at the standards, planning with my teammates, asking questions,” said Sosa.

    He’s hoping to instill his love of learning in his students so they always want to reach for the stars.

    “They have dreams that might be out of their reach, but I just tell them to keep going and it all starts academically, behaviorally with their mindset. If they don’t have that mindset in the classroom it’s going to be a struggle outside of the classroom,” said Sosa.

    Jorja Roman

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  • More Muslim students in the U.S. are getting support as they fast during Ramadan

    More Muslim students in the U.S. are getting support as they fast during Ramadan

    While Muslim students remain a rarity in many U.S. school districts, they are a major presence in some communities, prompting public schools to be more attentive to their needs during the holy month of Ramadan when dawn-to-sundown fasting is a duty of Islam.


    What You Need To Know

    • While Muslim students remain a rarity in many U.S. school districts, they are a major presence in some communities
    • That’s prompted some public schools to be more attentive to their needs during the holy month of Ramadan when dawn-to-sundown fasting is a duty of Islam
    • For example, there’s a magnet school in St. Paul, Minnesota, serving many Muslim students from Somalia. There’s an area in the library set aside for those who are fasting so they don’t need to be in the cafeteria
    • There’s also increased awareness that Ramadan means early rising and late bedtimes for many families

    For example, in Dearborn, Michigan — where nearly half the 110,000 residents are of Arab descent — public school teachers and staff strive to make things easier for students observing Ramadan.

    “We allow students on their own to practice their faith as long as it’s not a disruption to the school day,” said Dearborn Schools spokesperson David Mustonen. “We also try to find other spaces or activities in the school during lunch for those students who may be fasting.”

    But he stressed that these students are still required to complete all assignments.

    In St. Paul, Minnesota, East African Elementary Magnet School has set aside space in the library where students who are fasting and don’t want to be in the cafeteria can spend the break doing other supervised activities like reading, said principal Abdisalam Adam.

    The 220-student school opened last fall as part of St. Paul’s public schools system, and shares that curriculum, but it also aims to reinforce cultural and linguistic connections with Somalia and other East African countries. Adam said about 90% of the students are Somali Muslims.

    Adam, who has worked with the district for nearly 30 years, said he tells his staff that accommodating observance of Ramadan fits in with an overall goal of caring for students.

    “All needs are connected,” he said.

    For school districts less familiar with Muslim traditions, resources are available. For example, Islamic Networks Group, a California-based nonprofit, provides, among other things, online information for educators about Ramadan and its significance to Muslims.

    Many districts “don’t know very much about Islam or any of our holidays,” said Maha Elgenaidi, the group’s executive director. “If they don’t know very much about it, there’s not much they can provide to students in terms of accommodation” until they learn more and the parents are actively involved in asking for accommodations.

    She says fasting students may need to be excused from strenuous activities in gym class, and should be allowed to make up for tests missed due to absence to celebrate the Eid al-Fitr holiday that follows Ramadan.

    “If they’re not accommodated at school or the school doesn’t know anything about this, they’re kind of living dual lives there.”

    Fasting is not required of young children, but many Muslim children like to fast to share in the month’s rituals and emulate parents and older siblings, according to ING. Educators also need to know of the typical changes to Muslim families’ routines during Ramadan, such as waking up for the pre-dawn “suhoor” meal and staying up late to possibly attend prayers in the mosque, Elgenaidi said.

    When Dr. Aifra Ahmed’s children were younger, the Pakistani American physician and her husband would share insight about Ramadan with their classmates, reading to them a Ramadan story and distributing goodie bags with such things as dates.

    “I realized that the Muslim families in school have to do a lot of education,” said Ahmed, who lives in Los Altos, California.

    Ahmed’s husband, Moazzam Chaudry, said goodwill gestures, such as when educators offer a Ramadan greeting, send a message of inclusivity.

    For immigrant families, “that’s the first thing that … naturally comes to your mind, ‘Are we integrated into this society? Does this society even accept us?’” he said. “These little, little things make such a huge impact.”

    Punhal, the couple’s daughter who attends a charter middle school, said she takes part in physical education during Ramadan but skips running when fasting because she would need water afterward.

    She said a few non-Muslim friends told her they would like to fast with her in companionship.

    Naiel, her brother who’s in a public high school, said he was pleased when a teacher talked to the class about Ramadan and told him that, if he needed, he could take a nap.

    He wants others to better understand why he fasts.

    “A lot of kids and teachers think … I’m torturing myself or like it’s a diet,” he said. “When I’m fasting, I just feel a lot more gratitude towards everyone around me and towards people who don’t have as much.”

    In Dearborn, 14-year-old Adam Alcodray praised the faculty at Dearborn High for their understanding during Ramadan.

    “A lot of the teachers are just like more lenient, allowing us to do less,” said Alcodray, a 9th grader. “They don’t get mad because they realize we are hungry.”

    Alcodray says he fasts from 6:20 a.m. until around 8 p.m.

    “It’s not that bad to be honest,” he said. “When you know you can’t eat, something in your brain clicks.”

    Hussein Mortada, a 17-year-old senior at Dearborn High, said family solidarity is invaluable during Ramadan.

    “In my family, everybody’s fasting,” Mortada said. “Everybody’s going through the same thing. The whole month is meant for you to get closer to God and make your religion stronger.”

    This year, Ramadan carries extra significance due to the hardships being suffered by people in Gaza amid the Israel-Hamas war, Mortada said.

    “I feel helpless just sitting here on my phone, looking at everything that’s happening,” he said. “All you can do is feel for them and pray for them.”

    Alcodray shared similar sentiments.

    “When you look at what the children are eating in Gaza, you appreciate what your mom makes,” he said. “When you’re having a bad day, realize what they are going through.”

    At the East African magnet school in St. Paul, Marian Aden — who trains other teachers there — makes it a priority to encourage Ramadan-related accommodations for fasting students.

    Aden said her youngest daughter, 4-year-old Nora, woke up excited about Ramadan’s start on March 11 — but her teachers in the suburb where they live weren’t familiar with the occasion. Aden said she’ll be relieved when Nora starts attending the magnet school next year.

    “She’ll be celebrated for who she is,” Aden said.

    Minnesota has been home to growing numbers of refugees from war-torn Somalia since the late 1990s. Several school districts have recently made Eid a holiday.

    In Washington, D.C., Abdul Fouzi has two daughters, ages 8 and 12, who have gradually learned the meaning and rituals of Ramadan.

    Growing up in Sierra Leone in the 1980s, Fouzi said he was fasting for a full day as early as age 11. But he has not pushed his elder daughter to do likewise.

    “They’re still pretty young so they’re not ready to go the whole day without food or water,” he said. “They’re not built like that.”

    Still, he wants them to get used to the idea; this year he’d like them to experiment with fasting for a half day.

    To Fouzi, more important than strict adherence to the rules at their age is their understanding of Ramadan’s meaning and the importance of praying for peace.

    “They make up their own little rules and find loopholes figuring out how they want to participate in and practice Ramadan in different ways, and I’m okay with that,” he said.

    Associated Press

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  • Beloved Pasco County school being demolished

    Beloved Pasco County school being demolished

    NEW PORT RICHEY, Fla. — It’s the end of an era for a Pasco County High school building. Gulf High School in New Port Richey is being demolished after almost 50 years. And, as you can imagine, the memories there run deep.


    What You Need To Know

    •  The Gulf High School being demolished was built in the 1970s, according to students
    •  Gulf High School students moved out of the old building after winter break into the new building
    •  The old school building is located directly behind the new school
    • The demolition project is expected to take four weeks to complete

    On Wednesday, people watched as file cabinets and mangled desks were tossed out of the window to the ground.

    A construction site is not how Cookie Kountoupis wants to remember her beloved Gulf High School.

    “I think the building is going to go down, but the memories are gonna stay there forever. And they are a lot of good memories,” she said.

    She first heard about the school being demolished from an unlikely place: her job, where she works as an office manager.

    “My boss left to do an estimate of New Port Richey and he said, ‘I’m going to look at a high school in Pasco County that they’re taking down in New Port Richey, Florida.’ And I said, ‘What high school?’ He said, ‘Gulf High.’ And I said, ‘Oh my gosh, that’s the school I graduated from,’” she said.

    It was sad news for the place that meant so much to her as an active teenager. “Oh my gosh, senior class president. I was the president, homecoming court, prom queen, all the social things,” she said.

    She said her boss made her a deal. If they got the job to tear the school down, she would get the first crack at taking the building down.

    So she took a swing on Wednesday. And then another. She quickly realized it’s not as easy as it looks.

    “It didn’t want to come down,” she said.

    About a dozen of her former classmates watched as she tried to take a chunk of the building down before the professionals took over.

    The old building is directly behind the newly built Gulf High School. Current students attended classes in the old building, according to district officials. It wasn’t until after the winter break that they moved into the new building, making them part of the history here, too.

    For Virginia Metzkez, being able to say she attended classes here is a club she’s lucky to be a part of.

    “It is a big deal. It’s the end of an era,” she said. “It’s just like it’s coming down — it’s part of my history. It’s like a house. Your first home. So it’s just sad to see something go that was a part of my life.”

    It’s the end of an era that included their infamous ramp and countless memories.

    “Homecoming week was my best memory and going up and down the ramp — and that’s a big part of this school too, the ramp — because you would always meet someone at the ramp. Hey, I’m at the top of the ramp or I’m at the bottom of the ramp,” Metzkez said.

    She showed up for a final goodbye to the school that means so much. “Goodbye, thank you for the memories, we’ll miss you. Bittersweet, sorry. We’ll miss ya. Lot of good memories,” she said.

    It’s a goodbye to a place that will live on as long as the people keep its memory alive.

    The demolition project is expected to take four weeks to complete. It’s located directly behind the new school. There is no word on what the district plans to do with the land once it’s cleared.

    Saundra Weathers

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  • ACT scores on the decline

    ACT scores on the decline

    CLEVELAND — ACT scores in Ohio have been on the decline. In 2014, the average composite score was 22, but in 2023 it was 19.2. Now, some universities aren’t even looking at ACT scores anymore for their applicants.

    Adam Smith, the vice president of enrollment for Ohio Wesleyan University, said that OWU doesn’t require applicants to submit their test scores.


    What You Need To Know

    • ACT scores across the state are on the decline
    • Some universities are “test optional,” meaning they don’t require an ACT or SAT scores for admission 
    • Some people believe that taking the exam can give students an advantage

    “We do the holistic approach where we do take the time, we’ll read the application, we’ll read the essays, the letters of recommendation,” he said.

    Smith said that the school stopped requiring an ACT or SAT scores back in 2014.

    “We really just wanted to take into consideration the student as a whole and we wanted to take their work outside of the classroom,” he said.

    Cathy Graham, who works for College Now of Greater Cleveland, explained that she believes every student should take the ACT.

    “These tests create opportunities and I don’t think students are aware of it,” she said.

    College Now helps prepare students for the ACT and SAT. The group that administers the exam said that ACT scores across the country have reached the lowest levels in over 30 years. Graham expressed that she thinks part of the reason is because students don’t care as much about their scores anymore.

    “Because of COVID so many schools have moved to test-optional, the stakes of taking this test have decreased for students so a lot of them are like ‘eh I’ll just try it and if I do okay I do okay and if I don’t it won’t matter,’” she said.

    Graham said that the test is not the end all be all, but that it does give students an advantage.

    Katie Priefer

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  • Manatee County mom to start STEAM homeschool program

    Manatee County mom to start STEAM homeschool program

    MANATEE COUNTY, Fla. — More families in Florida are choosing to homeschool their children. According to the Florida Department of Education, over 154,000 students were homeschooled in Florida in the 2022-23 school year — a 58% increase since 2018.


    What You Need To Know

    • Manatee County mother Monica Encarnacion was awarded a grant through the Tiny Fellowship Program
    • She says she plans on first starting a program and then transitioning that into a school once she has the space
    • Encarnacion’s first pilot for her homeschool program, Homeschool STEAM Fest, will be April 20 and 21 at “The NEST” at Robinson Preserve, free for the public. There will be robots, slime and other activities for kids

    Manatee County mother Monica Encarnacion is in the process of opening her own program for homeschooled students. She has been working with different materials like robotics to educate kids through science technology, engineering arts and math, otherwise known as STEAM.

    “Kids here can code or program him using just simple drag and drop blocky coding language,” she said as she worked with one of the robots.

    Encarnacion has a different approach to education. She says these materials help kids learn problem-solving.

    “I would love to use this for homeschoolers,” she said.

    It’s one of the items she will buy with grant money from the Tiny Fellowship Program. She was awarded $5,500 to kick start her new STEAM program for homeschoolers. At first, she plans on teaching kids in person at their home, but eventually wants to open her own space for kindergarten through eighth graders.

    “Ideally, I would love a team of two to three facilitators,” she said. “I’d also love to tap in the volunteers and kids themselves because kids have a lot to teach us; they are experts in technology, and I would love for them to teach the younger kids,” she explained.

    During the pandemic, Encarnacion homeschooled her children. She says her teaching experience of 15 years helped her see how STEAM projects help kids learn more effectively.

    “I was teaching kids who were learning English; English was not their first language. And now they were able to learn, along with their peers, because of technology,” she noted.

    Encarnacion also plans to bring students to local libraries to utilize rooms like this.

    “That’s when you bring them in and teach them actual coding language, and that’s when it gets interesting,” she remarked.

    Part of the Tiny Fellowship Program is catering towards underserved communities — something Encarnacion is passionate about.

    “I know the Latino population of homeschoolers is growing as well, and I’d love to provide resources in Spanish for them,” she explained.

    She says she has weekly requirements through the end of May, and then she will seek out investors to launch her STEAM program.

    “Kids are not one size fits all; they should not have a one size fits all education, that’s why I’m so motivated to bring something new that really is about the kids and what they want to learn,” she said.

    It’s a different way of learning that Encarnacion believes will broaden the horizons of her future students.

    Encarnacion’s first pilot for her homeschool program, Homeschool STEAM Fest, will be April 20 and 21 at “The NEST” at Robinson Preserve, free for the public. There will be robots, slime and other activities for kids.

    Julia Hazel

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  • Hundreds of students attend Construction Rodeo at Manatee Technical College

    Hundreds of students attend Construction Rodeo at Manatee Technical College

    BRADENTON, Fla. — More than 300 high school students from Manatee and Sarasota counties attended Manatee Technical College’s “Construction Rodeo” Thursday.

    The event was created to introduce students to career opportunities in construction and other trades. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Gulf Coast Builders Exchange sponsored Thursday’s Construction Rodeo at Manatee Technical College
    • The event included hands-on demonstrations and highlighted programs available at MTC
    • More than 30 businesses took part in the event

    There were several hands-on demonstrations, including one where students brazed copper air conditioning lines.

    “We do this in partnership with the schools, to help them get hands on activity, show the kids what’s out there, generate that interest, and they can come out of high school with a good-paying job,” said Gulf Coast Builders Exchange executive director Mary Dougherty.

    GCBX, a not-for-profit construction industry trade organization, sponsored the Construction Rodeo. The event brought together more than 30 local businesses to meet with students at Manatee Technical College to give them opportunities to experience careers that some may have never even considered.

    “My favorite was the diesel — learning how to turn on the lights and turn on the turn signals,” said Parrish Community High School senior Emily Evans. “But other than that, I liked the welding as well over there.”

    While welding was Emily’s favorite, she also tried painting. Welding won over a lot of the students, including MTC student Madison Vremer, who joined her alma mater, Palmetto High School, to watching a welding demonstration.

    “I’ve kind of always wanted to do things with my hands, for my entire life, and this I can progress and grow and all that kind of stuff,” she said.

    Currently, experts say the construction industry exceeds the current workforce, which is why organizers said it’s so important to hold events like the Construction Rodeo.

    “Not every kid is going to college, so we need to get this message to them where they live, that this is available in their community, there’s good careers, and they can do it,” said Dougherty.

    Fallon Silcox

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  • Pasco County parents petition school district to keep IAs

    Pasco County parents petition school district to keep IAs

    ODESSA, Fla. — School districts throughout the state are set to lose some federal funds next school year that were part of the original CARES Act in 2020. In Pasco County, some of that funding was used to employ instructional assistants (IAs).


    What You Need To Know

    • CARES Act that paid for Instructional Assistants set to expire next school year
    • Parents are petitioning Pasco County Schools to find the money in the budget to keep IAs
    • Pasco County school district declines to be interviewed on IAs issue

    Now, a group of parents say some IAs have already received notice that they will no longer have a job next school year, and they are coming together to petition the district to find more money in its budget to keep them.

    Angela Lee is a stay-at-home mom, and it’s a job she takes very seriously. She even launched a podcast, “From Days to Years,” which she describes as an open letter from moms to moms.

    Through her work on the podcast, and in her community, Lee stays up on what’s happening at her daughter’s elementary school. Recently, she learned the IAs’ jobs are in jeopardy when the American Rescue Plan (ARP) and Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) federal funds expire.

    “That federal grant was for three years to fund instructional assistants, IAs, and it funded kindergarten IAs, social service coordinators, academic tutors and discipline IAs and they knew that funding was going away, and unfortunately they haven’t found funding, or re-configured it so the IAs can go back in the classroom,” she said. 

    That is why she launched an online petition for Pasco County Schools to find funding to keep IAs. Lee says IAs support teachers in valuable ways, from helping students who may be struggling so the teacher can focus on the rest of the class, to helping at carline.

    “Without these IAs, the onus is going to fall on the teachers. They’re going to get pulled in so many more directions,” she said.

    Parents are speaking out. Many, including Lee, attended the school board meeting on Feb. 6, and next, Lee says they’ll start reaching out to lawmakers, letting them know how important IAs are.

    “They’re not just wiping noses, these are professionals who care about our students, who love our students, and they don’t get compensated very much to do this job. But they very much want to do this job to make sure our students have a good education,” she said.

    Lee says she’ll continue her fight for the IAs, and she hopes Pasco County Schools does too. 

    The Pasco County School District declined to do an interview with Spectrum Bay News 9 on the status of the IAs, but did provide a statement, saying in part that “the district continues to evaluate all the programs, services, and staff members currently being funded by the expiring federal ARP/ESSER dollars to determine which of these expenditures would be appropriate for continued funding using alternative funding sources that might be available in 2024/2025. With the district so early in the 2024/2025 budgeting process, it cannot make firm commitments about what ARP/ESSER expenditures can be absorbed after the 2023/2024 school year.”

    Fallon Silcox

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  • Polk County school district creates ESE parent liaison position

    Polk County school district creates ESE parent liaison position

    LAKELAND, Fla. — Polk County Schools has added a new liaison to help parents with students who have special needs.


    What You Need To Know

    • The ESE parent liaison will help bridge the gap between parents and the school district, ensuring parents fully understand the specific services available for their children
    • Since November, the ESE parent liaison has handled more than 100 cases
    • The liaison can share information about ESE resources, attend IEP meetings as needed, and provide other assistance to parents

    The Exceptional Student Education (ESE) parent liaison will bridge the gap between parents and the school district, ensuring parents fully understand the specific services available for their children.

    A Lakeland family, whose 5-year-old son will soon enter kindergarten, says having an expert go-between puts some of their worries to rest.

    The boy, Dominic Cadavid, has been a fighter since day one.

    “He was several days old here, still on the ventilator,” said his mom, Oneida, as she showed pictures of Dominic when he was days old. 

    At just 16 weeks into her pregnancy, Oneida’s water broke, and after spending another 16 weeks in the hospital on strict bed rest, Dominic was born. 

    “Once he was born, he stayed in the NICU for 10 weeks, and we almost lost him a few times,” she said.

    But each battle, Dominic fought. “He’s had a lot of developmental issues from birth,” Oneida said.

    “He’s been a struggle from the very beginning, and so now, we’re at age 5, and he has made huge achievements and has grown. I can’t even explain how good he’s done, but honestly, it has to do with all the programs that have been made available.”

    Oneida says Dominic’s biggest developmental disability now is his speech. He currently attends Achievement Academy, a public charter school for children with disabilities up to age five.

    She says Dominic has come a long way thanks to the programs at the Achievement Academy, but she still worries about his next major milestone — kindergarten.

    “My biggest fear as a parent is, ‘How is he going to transition into the regular school system?’ Yes, they provide ESE services, but now he will be among all the other typical kids,” she said.

    Trying to navigate the unknown is scarier for Oneida than Dominic, she says he’s ready for what he calls “big boy” school, but she knows he’ll need to be in ESE classes, and working with an ESE parent liaison will make a huge difference.

    “There’s one contact person and that person can help navigate through the entire system, and you have just that one person that is your go-to, versus having to call 10 different people at 10 different places to see if you can get them to all work together,” said Oneida.

    That helps put her mind at ease, knowing someone with Polk County Schools will be there to support Dominic all the way.

    Fallon Silcox

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  • Citrus County Schools to expand construction academy with new grant money

    Citrus County Schools to expand construction academy with new grant money

    CRYSTAL RIVER, Fla. — Citrus County Schools will be receiving a boost in the form of grant money, which will be coming from the workforce development capitalization incentive grant program.

    The school district was recently approved for a $2 million grant that will go towards its welding program.


    What You Need To Know

    • Citrus County Schools will be receiving a $2 million grant that will go towards its welding program
    • The new funding will support the creation and expansion of 30 programs aimed at enhancing workforce development
    • A spokesperson with Citrus County Schools says the future welding program will be available to all three Citrus high schools

    The district already has a construction academy for their high school students. The new funding will support the creation and expansion of 30 programs aimed at enhancing workforce development, which are designed to offer students hands-on educational experiences in a variety of fields, including construction.

    “It’s wonderful to see them in there with their hammers, their saws and everything that’s going on for the construction academy,” said Citrus County Schools Director of Career, Technical and Adult Education Debra Stanley. “To know that we can take it one step further with welding is extremely exciting for me and very rewarding for me, personally, because I feel like we are changing lives.”

    A spokesperson with Citrus County Schools says the future welding program will be available to all three Citrus high schools.

    It’s an intriguing prospect that has some students excited. Inside one Citrus High School classroom, students are getting a taste of what it’s like to make something with their own hands. The class is part of the construction academy at Citrus High, composed of students from various grade levels who are all coming together to learn how to build.

    “I feel like it’s more about learning how to build things and preparing how you need to do it along with many other steps,” says tenth grader Lucas Gonzalez.

    The class, Gonzalez says, has opened his eyes to the field of construction — changing his perception of building, and even influencing him to pursue a job in the field after high school.

    “I didn’t plan on it until I started taking the class at the beginning of the year, until I felt a little bit more interested in it. I kept going on with it, kept getting into it and I might take this class next year to help me get a job that I want.”

    He’s not the only one. With grant money for a welding program on the way, there’s a good chance other students will be motivated as well.

    “This grant is really going to expand the opportunities for the children to learn a trade or, at least, be exposed to it and determine whether or not it’s something they want to do as they move through high school and, maybe, even post-secondary or post high school,” says Citrus High School construction academy instructor Bobby Tester. “They can move into those technical schools and further their educations.”

    This paves the way for more equipment and further hands-on experience for students, preparing them for life after high school.

    “I actually respect this man, Mr. Tester,” said Gonzalez. “He does a lot for us, too. And I’d be grateful for that — to expand.”

    Calvin Lewis

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  • Wesley Chapel teacher finds joy in leading band program

    Wesley Chapel teacher finds joy in leading band program

    WESLEY CHAPEL, Fla. — Donald Scott has been sharing his love of music with students for 15 years.

    For 11 of them, he’s been teaching at Thomas E. Weightman Middle School. He’s the band director there.


    What You Need To Know

    • Donald Scott is this week’s A+ Teacher
    • Scott is the band director at Thomas E. Weightman Middle School
    • Do you know an amazing teacher? Nominate them to be our next A+ Teacher

    I am very passionate about music and I enjoy what I do and I love it when I see my kids going the same route as me, learning how to play an instrument, trying to write music, and just playing together as a group,” said Scott.

    Scott says music has always been a big part of his family. He was inspired to teach it by them and his band teacher at Blake High School.

    “I saw how he had so much fun and how he brought the best out of all of the kids and I was like, ‘Hey, I can do that, too,’” said Scott.

    He teaches band and guitar.

    Learning how to play an instrument isn’t easy, but he’s happy to guide his students through it each day.

    “Trying to get the breathing and the coordination and everything together, it’s tough at the beginning but once they accomplish it, it just brings joy to me because I get to see how much joy they have,” said Scott.

    Scott takes his students on field trips and prepares them for performances. He gets a lot out of music and wants the same for them.

    “Music is like therapy for the soul,” he said. “It’s like, things in the world are rocky and shaky but when you pick up your instrument and you just play for 15 to 20 minutes, you just zone out.”

    Jorja Roman

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  • Cope Notes expanding mental health services into Tampa Bay area schools

    Cope Notes expanding mental health services into Tampa Bay area schools

    TAMPA, Fla. — Cope Notes, a digital mental health support system, is working to expand into Tampa Bay area schools.


    What You Need To Know

    • Cope Notes is a digital mental health support system
    • The medium aims to reach young kids and change negative thought patterns
    • The Pasco County School District is currently in the approval process to partner with Cope Notes

    Founded in 2018, President Johnny Crowder says he started struggling with mental health as a child and hopes to give other kids access to support.

    “I think about my own life and how much different my life would be if I would have received help at a younger age rather than later,” said Crowder, who hopes sharing his past can help others heal.

    “I almost didn’t survive my youth, and I almost didn’t survive young adulthood,” Crowder said. “And I’ve made multiple attempts on my own life and I’ve survived all of them, and I feel lucky.”

    The Pasco County Schools District is currently in the approval process to partner with Cope Notes. Crowder says it’s essential to reach students in middle and high school. Faculty and staff would also get a daily note.

    “Psychology facts, journaling prompts, exercises and we’re interrupting negative thought patterns and training the brain to think healthier thoughts,” Crowder explained.

    He hopes it helps get teens talking about their mental health and reminds them resources are available.

    Melissa Eichman

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