Opportunities: Click here to read more Experience: Click here to read more Vision: Click here to read more

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Questions and Answers

Based on the last two weeks of campaigning for School Board Trustee, I have been asked some great questions. I believe you will be interested in my responses.

1. When is advanced voting? September 9 and 14th from 8 am – 8 pm at the District Hall at 355 West Queens Road.

2. Can I vote if I don’t have kids? Yes, and you should if you live in the District. The engagement, productivity and achievement of our youth affect all of us.

3. Are school boards still important? Yes. As elected members, Boards consult with their communities and ensure that local values and priorities are reflected in public school programs, policies and operations.

4. What is your response to the funding cuts? I am disappointed and struggling to understand timing. How will schools will be able to respond with no notice? But I am not surprised as I see huge cutbacks across all sectors with hundreds of people losing their jobs. Of course I would like to see educational funding protected. Until it is, we need to:


  • Involve all the intelligent and creative people in our District to think of new ways of reducing costs, increasing revenue, and delivering quality education.
  • Continue to educate the Ministry and the Public about the true costs of education - the financial costs of today and also the longer-term social cost of kids who do not thrive.

5. Do you support school closures? Declining enrolment is real and some schools are under-utilized. If we can’t work with municipality and community to find ways to optimize the use of the school and share costs of maintaining a specific community asset, then we cannot afford to keep it open. And, if the number of students is too low, programs suffer. A critical mass of students is required to offer a variety of electives, run a vibrant extra-curricular program, and have on-site support resources.


6. Do you support school district amalgamation? We need to pursue partnerships and increased efficiency regardless of Ministry direction. Working more closely with West Vancouver will help reduce long-term administrative costs, expand program offerings to students, eliminate duplication of efforts to develop new programs and curriculum, provide teachers and staff access to a larger pool of resources and strengthen our voice with government.


7. Do you support FSA testing of all students in Grade 4 and Grade 7? I don’t believe the FSA is currently adding sufficient value to teachers or the overall school system. Even if the data collected was considered valid and meaningful by our educators, there is no process (or resources) in place to respond to the findings. When assessments are well developed and inform planning and programs, they can be very powerful. 


8. Should NVSD expand its programs of choice and excellence? Excellence must be a priority, but increased choice may not be the best way to achieve this. Expanded choice may dilute resources, quality and effectiveness of core programs. We need to remain responsive and creative, and at the same time be prudent in the implementation of any new programs. Will that new program further educational excellence for kids, can it be successfully implemented with the staff and facilities available to us, and can it be sustained over the long-term?


9. What are your views on full-day Kindergarten for all North Vancouver students and its impact on the North Vancouver School District? Before we increase the amount of time students are in our school system, we need to ensure that we doing our best for students right now. We need to more tenaciously assess learning needs and respond to them more quickly. As an example, the TOPA kindergarten literacy assessment provides good information, but the benchmark is too low (only students below 25th percentile are considered at risk), and it is not clear what actions are taken based on the results. I want to see us improve current primary education, educate parents about early learning (i.e. Smart Start Program) and partner more closely with specially trained professionals who already providing great early childhood education.


10. Really, why you? In the last 10 years, I have successfully helped many large organizations navigate complex changes. This experience, combined with my seven years as an educator on the North Shore, will help the Board work strategically with key stakeholders to develop solutions that serve us now, and for the long term. I am not running for Trustee because I have one issue to champion or because I think it would be interesting. I am putting my name forward because I plan to make a difference, for every student.

6 comments:

  1. Thank you, Sheila, for addressing the recent funding cuts to education that are obviously of huge concern to all North Shore parents. Your suggestions on how to tackle this situation are intelligent and proactive. You have my vote!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I was impressed by your interview in this week's Outlook. After reading what various candidates have to offer our school district, your background and ideas make the most sense to me.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Brenda Goebel said....I wish we had more candidates that spoke so frankly, concisely and truthfully here in Alberta! You'd have my vote, as it appears you are advocating for the child and his/her education - which is unusual today. Just beware of the politics, as every organization has them!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Sheila,

    I find all of the candidates' campaign material to be short on specifics. Could you comment on what specific motion you would first introduce at a Board meeting and why?

    John

    ReplyDelete
  5. John,
    My first motion would be to move that we more aggressively implement / advance policy 801 - Community Use of School Facilities - to ease community access of facilities (fair rates and processes), generate some revenue, share costs with the municipalities through existing (under-utilized) joint use agreements, and optimize the use of existing facilities. Based on what I have learned from voters so far, the Board has put a number of barriers in front of community groups. If we can work more closely to meet community needs, not only does the community benefit, but the school secures allies who can help us educate and influence government about the need to evaluate the current educational funding model.

    ReplyDelete
  6. A great, results-based answer which reinforces the voters' good reasons for voting for you. Congratulations!

    ReplyDelete