Murdock Elementary lockdown extends voting time

 

A brief lockdown at Murdock Elementary School has resulted in extended voting time at the polling station located there in today’s runoff elections.cobb advance voting, Cobb voter registration deadline, Walton and Dickerson PTSA candidates forum

The extra time is only brief—11 minutes, to match the period of a Code Yellow lockdown, according to Cobb government spokesman Ross Cavitt.

He said Cobb County Senior Judge George Kreeger signed an order to keep the precinct open there longer this afternoon.

So if you vote at Murdock (2320 Murdock Road), that precinct will now close at 7:11 p.m. instead of the usual 7 p.m.

We’re seeking further information about the Murdock lockdown from the Cobb County School District.

It was the second such lockdown in Cobb schools today, and that also affected voting times.

Earlier this morning, Teasley Elementary School in Vinings was locked down for around 20 minutes after reports of a man with a gun in the vicinity of the school.

Those reports turned out to be false, but the polling station at Teasley will stay open until 7:20, also after Kreeger issued an order, according to Cavitt.

 

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Cobb school calendar tops board’s 2019 legislative priorities

The Cobb Board of Education on Thursday adopted a set of legislative priorities for the 2019 session, and the contentious issue of school calendars tops the list.

Scott Sweeney, Cobb school board, Cobb school calendar
Scott Sweeney

The board voted 6-0 to endorse Superintendent Chris Ragsdale’s recommendation that the Cobb County School District determine when school years should begin an end.

The issue came up this year with the creation of a special State Senate study committee.

Some within the Georgia tourism industry have indicated that starting school in early August has had a detrimental effect on their business.

The study committee has held hearings around the state and is meeting now during a special session. Among the bills being considered would call for a statewide school start after Labor Day.

As far as Cobb schools are concerned, that should be a matter of local control.

“Whether it is giving Cobb the flexibility to test a new assessment system that has the potential to benefit all students in Georgia or allowing local communities, like Cobb, to approve school calendars that best serve the needs of their students and staff, local control is a must,” Ragsdale said in a statement.

Earlier this decade members of the Cobb school board sparred over setting the calendar. In recent years, however, it’s adopted what’s called a “balanced” calendar, with an early August start date and more breaks than a calendar with a later start time.

The balanced calendar also is strongly supported by the Cobb County Association of Educators.

In October the school board voted 6-1 to adopt balanced calendars through 2020 that have Aug. 1 start dates.

The board also included in its legislative priorities proposed changes to the “Local Fair Share” component of the Georgia Quality Basic Education Act.

In this provision, school districts are levied five mills of their local property tax rate, with the funding going to the state.

East Cobb board member Scott Sweeney noted at a work session earlier Thursday that Cobb sends $144 million annually to the state, and advocates capping the Local Fair Share amount at $100 million.

Cobb schools said that getting $44 million in return would enable it to hire 488 teachers or build two new schools.

Other priorities include changing graduation rate calculations “that more accurately reflect schools’ academic process” and pushing for a return to local control of K-12 dual enrollment programs.

Current graduation rate guidelines require school districts to count all students enrolled in a four-year period, regardless of how long they attended classes in that time.

In 2018, Cobb reported a countywide graduation rate of 85.18 percent. While that’s a record, district officials said the graduation rate would be 97.1 percent if only students who attended high school in Cobb all four years were counted.

 

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Cobb school bus camera program extended for five years

The Cobb Board of Commissioners on Tuesday approved an agreement to continue a joint school bus camera program with county courts and public schools for another five years.

The automated enforcement system issues citations to motorists who ignore school bus “stop arm” signs. The cameras, equipped on about 100 of nearly 1,000 buses in the Cobb County School District, take photos of the license plates of violating vehicles.

The agreement (agenda item here, formal agreement doc here) includes the Cobb County State Court Clerk, the camera manufacturer American Traffic Solutions and the Cobb Board of Education, which also must approve the agreement.ATS school bus camera, Cobb school bus camera program

The commissioners’ action comes after the original agreement was extended by a year.

Cobb State Court judges had not been enforcing the violations for a time earlier this year, questioning their legality. Enforcement resumed in February, but the county said the burden of handling stop arm violations required additional staffing.

In September, commissioners approved the creation of three positions in Cobb State Court and two more in the Cobb Solicitors office to start with the fiscal year 2019 that began in October.

County officials estimate more than 8,000 such cases are generated annually. Each violation comes with a fine of $300.

The fine money, which exceeded $2 million in 2017, is split evenly between the county, Cobb schools and ATS, which provides the cameras at no charge.

 

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Accidental alarm at Wheeler briefly interrupts school day

Administrators at Wheeler High School were sending out word around lunchtime that there was “an interruption to the instructional day” but that “all is fine.” Wheeler High School STEAM

We contacted the Cobb County School District for more information, and this is what a spokeswoman told us:

“An alarm was accidentally triggered at Wheeler High School today. The issue was resolved quickly. Teachers are teaching, and students are learning.”

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East Cobb Election Update: Sweeney loses Cobb school board seat; Chastain re-elected

East Cobb Election Update, Charisse Davis
Charisse Davis will be the only woman on the Cobb Board of Education. (East Cobb News file photo)

Catching you up on the day after some notable elections results in East Cobb, and starting with one incumbent who was defeated last night.

That’s Republican Scott Sweeney, who was vying for his third term for the Post 6 seat on the Cobb Board of Education that includes the Walton and Wheeler attendance zones.

He was ousted by Charisse Davis, who like many fellow Democratic challengers in local races was running for the first time.

Some additional votes came in from when when we posted early this morning, and Davis received 21,654 votes, or 51.27 percent. Sweeney had 20,580 votes, or 48.734 percent.

As we noted last night/early this morning, Davis’ win closes the GOP majority on the school board to 4-3 come January. She’s a former school teacher and now librarian in Fulton County whose children attend school in the Campbell attendance zone, some of which is in District 6.

Here’s what Davis told her supporters this morning.

As a school district, we have an opportunity to celebrate our successes while facing our issues with the goal of finding solutions. As an educator and mom of two in the district, I am committed to seeing the district become a leader in implementing solutions that can help all of our students achieve. We can, and will, do better to provide access to early learning options, provide transparency to the families in this community, and focus on the students of this district, no matter how they learn.

East Cobb News covered a candidates’ forum between Davis and Sweeney last month during what came to be a competitive election. Both were unopposed in the primaries, but she received more votes than Sweeney, whose sons attend Walton and Dickerson.

On Tuesday, Sweeney won most of the East Cobb precincts, although Davis carried the Terrell Mill precinct handily. He carried a precinct in Vinings, but she enjoyed large margins in all other precincts in the Cumberland-Smyrna area.

We’ve got a table below that breaks it down, and will be adding more reaction.

For now, she breaks the Republican lock on elected officials that represent East Cobb residents. The 6th Congressional District and State House 37th District races are still in too-close-to-call mode.

Republican Cobb school member David Chastain won a second term Tuesday, defeating Democrat Cynthia Parr to keep the Post 4 seat that includes the Kell and Sprayberry districts.

Chastain received 20,592 votes, or 53.61 percent, while Parr got 17,820 votes, or 46.39 percent.

We’ll have more later in the week on reaction from other races, including commissioner JoAnn Birrell’s close re-election, legislative results and where the Georgia governor’s race stands.

Sweeney Davis
Chattahoochee 784 2,132
Dickerson 1,169 737
Dobbins 278 1,119
Dodgen 665 317
Eastside 1 553 306
Eastside 2 994 633
Fullers Park 109 91
Mt. Bethel 1 1,772 925
Mt. Bethel 3 1,350 773
Mt. Bethel 4 1,322 737
Roswell 2 519 311
Sewell Mill 3 240 98
Smyrna 1A 446 1,493
Smyrna 2A 468 1,315
Sope Creek 1 995 561
Sope Creek 2 1,621 1,267
Sope Creek 3 1,169 613
Terrell Mill 874 1,964
Timber Ridge 1,102 573
Vinings 1 612 1,047
Vinings 2 1,262 2,131
Vinings 3 926 1,526
Vinings 4 1,350 896
Total Votes 20,580 21,654
Percentage 48.734 51.27

Brumby Elementary School food pantry opened by MUST Ministries

Brumby Elementary School food pantry
Rev. Ike Reighard of MUST Ministries opens the Brumby Elementary School food pantry with students, volunteers and staff. (Cobb County School District photos)

The 31st school in Cobb and Marietta schools to be provided with a food pantry had a ribbon-cutting Thursday. The Brumby Elementary School food pantry is now open to students as part of the non-profit’s Save It Forward initiative.

The pantries are located primarily at Title I public schools in the county to address hunger and nutrition needs for at-risk students.

Brumby Elementary School food pantry

Brumby Elementary School food pantry

In the Save It Forward program, volunteer shoppers receive weekly e-mail lists for items that cost less than $6 each. Those items, which also include toiletries, are then stocked on the shelves at the school pantries for students and their families who need them.

Partial funding for the pantries also comes from the United Way of Greater Atlanta. More than 3,000 Cobb students and their families are served by the school pantries.

On hand for Thursday’s event were Cobb Board of Education member Scott Sweeney and State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick, as well as members of the Rotary Club of East Cobb, which is involved extensively with community service projects at Brumby Elementary School.

Brumby Elementary School social worker
Rev. Reighard meets with Charlene Brisco, the Brumby social worker.

Other Save It Forward schools in East Cobb include Lassiter and Sprayberry high schools and McCleskey Middle School.

 

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Cobb CCRPI scores drop after state changes student assessment formula

Mt. Bethel ES, Cobb CCRPI scores

One of the most complicated measurements of academic progress in the state of Georgia has been streamlined in order to become less complicated. But the Cobb CCRPI scores for 2018, which were released Monday, are lower across the board than last year.

The drops include schools in East Cobb, which still had some of the highest figures in the Cobb County School District and in Georgia.

The CCRPI—which stands for College and Career Ready Performance Index—is a state accountability measure that gauges overall achievement results and how schools are preparing students for the next level of education.

Cobb’s average of 79.6 (out of a maximum score of 100) is nearly three points higher than the state average, but lower than the 82.9 score from 2017.

Student performance is assessed in several ways, and they differ according to school level. They include content mastery, progress, closing performance gaps, readiness and graduation rates.

The Georgia Department of Education made some changes to its formula in the spring (here’s a PDF that breaks it all down, but as stated above, it’s really complicated). These changes were done to reduce the number of indicators to measure.

‘They’ve redone the math’

It’s the third time in the last five years that the state has changed the formula, and both Georgia and Cobb officials are urging parents not to compare 2018 scores to those in years past.

“Whatever analogy you want to make—apples to apples, oranges to oranges—this is reflected across the state,” said John Floresta, the Cobb schools chief strategy and accountability officer. “They’ve redone the math.”

He said the changes that are being felt the most are at the elementary school level.

One was to remove “challenge points” for “exceeding the bar” activities that allowed some schools to get a score of more than 100 points.

The other major calculation that affected scores was the “closing the gap” measurement. In essence, Floresta said, there’s now a lower ceiling for the highest-performing schools, while that ceiling has been raised for lower-performing schools.

A good example is at Timber Ridge Elementary School in East Cobb, which last year had a score of 100.5, a school that “exceeded the bar.” This year, Timber Ridge’s CCRPI score is 93.3.

Like many schools in East Cobb, Timber Ridge students did very well in content mastery at 98.6 and also scored above 90 in progress and readiness. But Timber Ridge’s closing the gap number, which comprises 15 percent of an elementary school’s score, was 78.6.

“The frustration is with the principals and staff more than anything else,” Floresta said. “It’s the reality of how they’ve redone the categories. We just want to know what our kids know.”

On the other hand, Mt. Bethel Elementary School was a perfect 100 in closing the gap, along with Wheeler High School.

Those East Cobb elementary schools that had double-digit drops had closing the gap scores that in some cases were below 50 (full East Cobb school results here).

Ups and downs

Some East Cobb schools came close to the maximum in 2018: Walton High School (96.3), Lassiter High School (95.8), Simpson Middle School (94.7) and Dodgen Middle School and Hightower Trail Middle School (both 91.8).

At the elementary school level the leaders included Mt. Bethel (95.6) and Timber Ridge’s 93.3. They were among the 19 schools in Cobb that had averages of 90 or more.

Some schools did report sizable increases in their CCRPI scores from 2017. Among them are Simpson Middle School, which jumped from 89.9 to 94.7, one of the biggest moves up among Cobb middle schools.

Seven schools got perfect scores of 100 in content mastery, including Walton, Lassiter, Pope, Dickerson Middle School and Murdock and Sope Creek at the elementary school level.

“Although we are glad to see strong CCRPI scores yet again, we are more focused on supporting our teachers to identify what their students know and immediately acting on what they learn about their students,” Cobb schools Superintendent Chris Ragsdale said in a statement.

School-by-school breakdowns have been provided by the Cobb County School District, and you can click on this page to see the full table.

 

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Cobb schools student safety pledge to parents: ‘This is the most important thing we do’

Cobb schools student safety measures
Officer Phil Bradford was appointed to a new emergency management specialist role with the Cobb County School District police. (East Cobb News photo by Wendy Parker)

As they were rolling out a new website dedicated to safety issues, officials—as well as officers— from Cobb schools tried to reassure parents at an East Cobb town hall meeting Thursday that they were being proactive in dealing with a variety of threats to students, teachers and staff alike.

The new site, called Cobb Shield, includes much of the material presented to the audience of around 50 parents at the Lassiter Concert Hall.

Some of them had specific questions about threats of violence, accidents, assaults and bullying, but school officials said they couldn’t answer some of those questions in public.

One came from a Lassiter mother, who wanted more information about a report of bullet casings that were found in a classroom during the current school year.

John Adams, the Cobb schools deputy superintendent for human resources and operations, told her that a communication was sent to parents from the Lassiter administration. When she said she hadn’t received it, Adams said that he “couldn’t comment on an ongoing investigation.”

Adams said the matter “illustrates how . .. students have to be our eyes and ears” in reporting such incidents.

Being watchful was the watchword at the town hall, which featured leaders of the Cobb County School District Police force, which has 65 uniformed officers.

Many of them have years of previous law enforcement service, including Cobb Police. Capt. Wayne Pickett, a former Precinct 4 commander in East Cobb, is one of them, and he’s second-in-command to Chief Ron Storey, also a Cobb Police retiree.

Cobb schools student safety measures
Capt. Wayne Pickett of CCSD said that Code Red drills serve as “a way to surveil” how well schools are prepared for serious threats of violence.

The department average is 26 years of experience, according to Adams, and 12 officers have SWAT training. “We want mature officers who have some experience,” Storey said.

Pickett detailed how ongoing “Code Red” drills are working, especially at the high school level, which are supposed to  have one each semester.

He said the unannounced drills are designed to train staff, teachers and students to be better prepared for suspicious persons activity. During the drills, a plain-clothes officer comes to the school and tries to go as far as possible before being noticed.

“The administration has no idea we’re coming,” Pickett said. They’re told “We’re in a Code Red right now. What are you going to do?”

More than anything, he added, school police want to gauge how prepared each school is, with a checklist of around 25 items to keep in mind.

“There’s no way to pre-plan such a stressful activity,” Pickett said. “It’s snapshot of what they do. Do they know the policies for Code Red?”

After a drill, school police meet with administrators to identify successes and improvements. If there are enough problems at a school, another drill may be ordered.

A report is sent up the administrative line at the district, all the way to the superintendent.

Pickett said “we haven’t had too many that are bad. Most are exceptionally good.”

Cobb schools student safety measures
The AlertPoint system, Ofc. Phil Bradford said, “empowers every member of the staff to take action” to ensure safety.

When a parent asked about inspecting Code Red drill reports, Adams said that’s also something that’s not available to the public, for security reasons.

Officer Phil Bradford, another Cobb Police veteran, heads up a newly created position with the school police as emergency management specialist. He updated the Lassiter audience about the AlertPoint emergency communications system that’s gradually being rolled out at every school in the district.

It’s a $5 million system that was begun in the wake of the Parkland, Fla., school shootings, and features a device issued to teachers and staff. The card-type device allows them to trigger an alert to designated first responders in case of any kind of emergency, from a suspicious person to a health issue.

“The badge identifies who you are and where you are,” Bradford said. “Most important, it leads to instant action.”

Flashing lights and beeper alarms are activated in the case of a Code Red alert and the entire school is notified of a lockdown.

High school classrooms are being issued AlertPoints now, to be followed by those at the middle school and then elementary school level.

An active-shooter training video has been shown to staff for more than a year. Bradford said a safety video has just been completed for elementary students, and another for high school students should be done soon.

Those videos, and other safety-related measures, will gradually be added to the Cobb Shield webpage, said Adams, a former Cobb Police officer. That page also will include a tip line, which is expected to be fully functional by the spring semester.

He encouraged parents to contact him with suggestions at: john.adams@cobbk12.org.

“This is the most important thing we do,” Adams said.

 

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Cobb SAT scores for 2018 paced by Pope, Lassiter and Walton

Pope High School, Cobb SAT scores

Similar to what we posted last week about Cobb ACT scores, the Cobb SAT scores for 2018 are in, and three East Cobb schools led the way in the county.

Walton’s average score of 1,262 once again led all Cobb schools, followed by fellow East Cobb schools Lassiter (1,204) and Pope (1,203).

They were among 12 high schools in Georgia with a mean score of 1,200 above (out of a maximum 1,600).

Wheeler’s mean score was 1,147, followed by Kell (1,059) and Sprayberry (1,049).

Cobb’s 1,107 average outpaced both the Georgia and national mean scores (see chart below).

The SAT (Scholastic Aptitude Test) is administered by the College Board, and tests students in two cluster subject areas: Math and ERW (Evidence-Based Reading and Writing). The score grading is from 400 to 1,600.

According to Cobb schools, more than 70 percent of the 2018 graduating class in the district took the new SAT.

Two East Cobb schools had mean increases of 20 percent or more: Pope (39) and Walton (20). Lassiter’s mean score is 15 percent better than 2017.

“The growth that we have seen this year on our SAT scores is amazing. We are extremely proud of our students for the focused and intentional effort they have put into achieving a high level of success on their SATs,” Pope Principal Tom Flugum said in a statement released by Cobb schools.

“These results are a testament to the commitment of our staff and students to continually improve so that they can learn, grow, and lead both now and in the future.”

Here are the six East Cobb high school scores, as well as the Cobb, Georgia and national results. ERW is an abbreviation for Evidence-Based Reading and Writing.

# Test Takers ERW Mean Math Mean 2018 Overall Mean 2017 Overall Mean
Kell 198 541 518 1,059 1,091 (-32)
Lassiter 480 602 602 1,204 1,189 (+15)
Pope 307 608 596 1,203 1,164 (+39)
Sprayberry 255 540 509 1,049 1,040 (0)
Walton 528 628 634 1,262 1,242 (+20)
Wheeler 273 576 571 1,147 1,153 (-6)
Cobb 5,472 563 544 1,107 1,088 (+19)
Georgia 542 522 1,064 1,050 (+14)
National 536 531 1,068 1,060 (+8)

 

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Cobb teachers of the year honored at rally-style celebration

Cobb teachers of the year, Keelan Seabolt, Lassiter
Lassiter students cheer on science teacher Keelan Seabolt, who’s also the school’s STEM coordinator.

Submitted photos and information are from the Cobb County School District about Tuesday’s special celebration for Cobb teachers of the year on a countywide basis.

We’ve posted before about Fred Veeder, the Dodgen Middle School seventh-grade math teacher who was named the county’s teacher of the year for 2018.

He was on hand for the celebration at Roswell Street Baptist Church, and so were students, staff and each school’s teacher of the year. Teachers also were honored for Marietta City Schools, Chattahoochee Technical College, Life University, Georgia Highlands College and Kennesaw State University. Jayne Becker, East Side ES, Cobb teachers of the year

The event was put on by the Cobb Chamber of Commerce as part of its “Give Our Schools a Hand” program.

The individual teachers of the year for all East Cobb schools are listed below:

  • Debbie Burdett, Addison ES, (2nd Grade)
  • Sayonara Aybar, Bells Ferry ES, (Special Ed)
  • Mandy Spence, Blackwell ES (Physical Education)
  • Shirley Davis, Brumby ES (ESOL)
  • Susan L. Cronin, Daniell MS (6th Grade Social Studies, ESOL)
  • Nancy Parsons, Davis ES (Target)
  • Sunny Williams, Dickerson MS (6th Grade AC ELA)
  • Fred Veeder, Dodgen MS (7th Grade Math, Cobb Teacher of the Year)
  • Addison Brooks, East Cobb MS (Special Ed)
  • Jayne Becker, East Side ES (1st Grade)
  • Lida Sacia, Eastvalley ES (2nd Grade)

    Fred Veeder of Dodgen Middle School, the Cobb Teacher of the Year, and Superintendent Chris Ragsdale.
  • Sharon Hanna, Garrison Mill ES (1st Grade
  • Kaitlin Hankinson, Hightower Trail MS (Special Ed)
  • Sarah Dupuis, Keheley ES (Media Specialist)
  • Lauren Hines, Kell HS (Physical Ed/Health)
  • Sheila Hitt, Kincaid ES (3rd Grade)
  • Keelan Seabolt, Lassiter HS (Science)
  • Libby Lippincott, Mabry MS (6th Grade Math
  • Carin Wilkes, McCleskey MS (PE/Health)
  • Missy Bain, Mt. Bethel ES (2nd Grade)
  • Ashley Montejo, Mountain View ES (3rd Grade)
  • Susann Peck, Murdock ES (Kindergarten)
  • Katherine Hines, Nicholson ES (Special Ed)
  • William Blythe, Pope HS (Science)
  • Oscar Tromp, Powers Ferry ES (5th Grade)
  • Laurie McGillis, Rocky Mount ES (Speech and Language Pathologist)
  • Anne Bernard, Sedalia Park ES (3rd Grade)
  • Lynn Boland, Shallowford Falls ES (Music)
  • Mary Colclasure, Simpson MS (8th Grade Math)
  • Rebecca Dershowitz, Sope Creek ES (Special Ed)
  • Marykay Wright, Sprayberry HS (Math)
  • Staci Carper, Timber Ridge ES (1st Grade)
  • Joni Adams, Tritt ES (3rd Grade)
  • Laura Speer, Walton HS (Math)
  • Michael Sawyer, Wheeler HS (U.S. History)

Susann Peck Murdock ES, Cobb teacher of the year

Laura Speer, Walton HS, Cobb teachers of the year

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Cobb schools safety town hall meeting is Thursday at Lassiter High School

A Cobb schools safety town hall meeting that will include district officials and public safety leadership will take place Thursday at Lassiter High School. Cobb schools parent portal, Cobb schools safety town hall

The town hall is scheduled for 6-8 p.m. at the Lassiter Concert Hall (2601 Shallowford Road).

Here’s what CCSD is saying about the town hall:

Parents will have the opportunity to participate in the conversation about student safety with members of Cobb’s public safety team and CCSD officials.       

“We believe the combined efforts of the police department and school administrators with the support of the superintendent’s office and the school board has resulted in our district having safe schools,” said CCSD Captain Wayne Pickett.

It’s been a little more than a year since Cobb schools unveiled the AlertPoint security system at select schools, including Bells Ferry Elementary School in Northeast Cobb.

Earlier this year, after the Parkland, Fla., high school shootings, Cobb school superintendent Chris Ragsdale announced that the district would be stepping up unannouced code red drills to measure the effectiveness of safety preparations.

In March, some school students around the county, including East Cobb, staged a walkout for gun control and student safety that was not endorsed by the district, and that earned them in-school suspensions.

In August, Campbell High School was placed on a lockdown after three students made what were termed non-specific threats of violence over the school’s walkie-talkie system.

The AlertPoint system was triggered and a code red alert was issued during that incident. All students and staff were safe, and those responsible were detained but not formally charged.

 

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East Cobb Elections Preview: Post 4 Cobb Board of Education

Post 4 Cobb Board of Education

The Post 4 Cobb Board of Education contest pits Republican incumbent David Chastain against Democrat Cynthia Parr, a first-time candidate.

They were both unopposed in the primaries.

Chastain, a logistics analyst in the aeronautics industry, is completing his first term representing the area that includes the Kell and Sprayberry attendance zones. He and his wife are Wheeler High School graduates, and their three grown children also graduated from Cobb schools.

Parr is a pastor at Faith Presbyterian Church in Canton, and her son graduated from the Wheeler STEM magnet school.

Chastain has served as the chairman and vice chairman of the Cobb school board in his first term. He has touted his experience, not just on the school board

He is in favor of eliminating the Georgia Milestones tests, and has been endorsed by Educators First, which advocates for teachers.

In a recent Cobb County School District podcast, he said maximizing educational opportunities for students may not necessarily be due to smaller class sizes but to have staff and technology in place to meet those needs on an individual basis.

“If the teacher has the tools and people available to help address the situation, that’s where we’re headed,” he said.

On her campaign website, Parr said the Cobb district ideally should balance individual learning styles with local, state and federal standards.

She also supports “an environment that nurtures and encourages parental involvement as doing so decreases behavior problems and increases graduation rates.”

Candidate websites

 

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New Cobb schools parent portal to be introduced in January

Press release:Cobb schools parent portal

During the October 18 Board of Education meeting, Cobb County School District leaders discussed the January launch of a new parent portal—CTLS Parent—that will show parents what their child knows and provide resources to help their child master other content areas. Initially, CTLS Parent will roll out to a select group of schools to serve as a proof-of-concept. The District will collect feedback from parents and teachers before CTLS Parent is expanded to all schools. 

CTLS Parent is part of the Cobb Teaching and Learning System (CTLS). The innovative digital platform empowers teachers with information on what each student knows and what they don’t know so the educators can realign instruction time to help students achieve success. 

The new parent portal was developed with input from parent focus groups. Parents helped District leaders understand what Cobb parents want to see about their children. The system will not only provide information, in real-time, about the progress their students are making, CTLS Parent will also give parents access to on-demand resources so they can support their children at home. The thousands of District-vetted resources will make up Cobb’s Learning Object Repository (LOR) within CTLS Parent. 

“Parent engagement is critical to the success of the educational process,” said Cobb Superintendent Chris Ragsdale. “We have talked to parents. We have talked to teachers. With their help, we have developed a system that will help each student succeed, and I think CTLS could be used as a model to help students outside of Cobb succeed too.”  

The Cobb County School District has already taken steps to pilot CTLS as the foundation of a new assessment model for Georgia. Learn more about Cobb Metrics here. 

 

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Wildwood tax abatement explained to Cobb school board

Earlier this month, Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal announced that Smyrna-based Floor & Decor, a do-it-yourself home improvement retailer, was moving its headquarters to a nearly-vacant office building at the Wildwood office complex.Wildwood tax abatement, 2500 Wildwood, Floor and Decor

The 16-story, 329,000-square-foot building at 2500 Windy Ridge Parkway, where Coca-Cola Enterprises once had office space, has only one current tenant.

That’s meant that the commercial tax digest has dropped to nearly nothing since Coke and other tenants moved out over the last two years.

Floor & Decor has applied for a tax abatement with the Development Authority of Cobb County, which is slated to act on the request next week.

Floor & Decor, which has agreed to a 12-year lease to expand its headquarters and add a projected work force of around 500 employees, is seeking $16 million in development-issued bonds.

A 19-year-old company that operates more than 90 stores in 26 states, Floor & Decor has built a major distribution facility in Savannah and launched an initial public offering, according to Bisnow.

With a 10-year abatement, Floor & Decor would pay 10 percent of its tax obligation in the first year, with that figure rising 10 percent a year until the full rate is paid at the end of that period. During that time, the development authority would hold title to the property, which would be taken off the public tax rolls.

Another tax abatement request, by Home Depot, is seeking nearly $50 million in bonds for a long-term office lease in the Cumberland area and would bring in 700 new jobs.

Part of the abatement request process is briefing the Cobb Board of Education, and both were presented Thursday.

Amy Gerber, an executive with the real estate firm Cushman & Wakefield, said at a school board work session that before Coca-Cola and other tenants moved out, the assessed tax value of 2500 Wildwood was around $23 million. Now it’s around $17 million.

But the tax benefit to the Cobb school district has plummeted, she said, estimating around $100,000 in annual lost revenue for schools in the last two years.

The Development Authority doesn’t need school board approval to issue bonds, but chairman Clark Hungerford and executive director Nelson Geter provided information and answered questions.

School board member Randy Scamihorn of North Cobb asked if the district would lose out if Floor & Decor gets the abatement and then leaves.

Hungerford said the district is currently losing out now, and that deriving greater tax revenue as the abatement decreases is a win for the schools.

“You don’t lose anything, you achieve increased revenue,” he said. “You have not given anything back.”

If a building stays empty or nearly vacant, Hungerford added, then there’s a problem due to “continued deterioration. . . . That would be a loss.”

East Cobb school board member Scott Sweeney concurred: “It really is in our best interest to see the commercial tax digest in our county grow.”

The Floor & Decor and Home Depot requests are coming up as the Cobb Development Authority is involved with another tax abatement issue in the Powers Ferry corridor that’s going to court.

Earlier this summer, the authority issued $35 million in bonds for Kroger, which wants to build a superstore at the new MarketPlace Terrell Mill mixed-use development.

In June, East Cobb citizen Larry Savage, a former Cobb commission chairman candidate, contested the issuance of those bonds. In September, a Cobb judge invalidated the bonds, ruling that the proposed economic benefits don’t justify a tax break.

Kroger is appealing. (Here’s more from the school board about that project.)

MarketPlace Terrell Mill developers Eden Rock Real Estate Partners and Connolly Realty have purchased the entire 24-acre tract at Powers Ferry and Terrell Mill roads. That includes the former Brumby Elementary School, where the Kroger would be located.

Ground-clearing for the rest of the complex, which includes restaurants, small retail and a luxury apartment complex, has just gotten underway.

 

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Cobb ACT results for 2018 led by Walton, Pope and Lassiter

Cobb ACT results

Walton, Pope and Lassiter High School students paced the Cobb ACT results for 2018, as the Cobb County School District surpassed the Georgia and national averages for the 13th consecutive year.

The district released the scores Wednesday, and they’re results from students in the Class of 2018. Across the CCSD, students averaged a composite score of 22.8 out of a maximum possible 36 points.

That’s 1.4 points higher than the state average of 21.4 and nearly two points above the national average of 20.4.

Walton’s composite score of 26.7 led all of Cobb schools, while Pope was second at 25.7. Lassiter was third, at 24.8.

Wheeler’s composite score for last year’s seniors was 23.4, followed by Sprayberry at 21.0 and Kell at 20.6.

“Seeing our students outperform their peers in the state and across the nation for more than a decade is a testament to our team’s focus on helping each and every student succeed,” Cobb schools superintendent Chris Ragsdale said in a statement.

Cobb had the second-best composite ACT score in the metro Atlanta area, trailing only Fulton County at 23.7.

Cobb schools said 51 percent of the Class of 2018 took the ACT, or a little more than 4,000 students. Ten students received perfect scores of 36, including seven from East Cobb schools: three from Lassiter and two each from Wheeler and Walton.

The ACT is a standardized test that tests high school students’ aptitude in a broad range of subjects: English, math, reading and science. It’s considered one of the major tests, along with the SAT, for college-bound students.

More than 56,000 Georgia students took the ACT in 2018, and nearly 2 million nationwide.

Walton had 441 students take the ACT this year, more than any Cobb school by far.

The CCSD chart below breaks down how each Cobb school performed in each of those categories.

Cobb ACT results, 2018 Cobb ACT scores

 

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High Meadows School marches in Roswell Youth Day Parade

High Meadows School, Roswell Youth Day Parade

Thanks to the High Meadows School for the photos from the 68th Roswell Youth Day Parade on Saturday, in which students, staff and parents took part.

High Meadows School, Roswell Youth Day Parade

High Meadows School, Roswell Youth Day Parade

High Meadows School, Roswell Youth Day Parade

High Meadows School, Roswell Youth Day Parade

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Commissioners approve funding for new Cobb parks master plans

Cobb parks master plans, Ebenezer Road

After a delay, Cobb commissioners last week voted to approve spending more than $89,000 for Cobb parks master plans for newly acquired green space.

That includes more than 18 acres of land on Ebenezer Road near Canton Road that’s slated to become a passive park (above), and that was open to the public this summer at a special preview event.

BIOME Projects, a Decatur landscape architecture firm, will receive around $14,300 to develop a master plan for the Ebenezer Road park, with funding for the construction of the park to come at a later time.

The land, formerly owned by the Strother family, features a lake that may allow for recreational fishing activities.

Commissioners have spent more than $27 million over the last year to purchase nearly 500 acres across the county with funds allocated in the 2008 parks bond referendum.

The only other land bought in East Cobb was part of the Tritt property next to East Cobb Park, which is being left as green space for now and so there is no master plan in the works.

The commissioners vote was 4-1, with Bob Ott opposed. He represents part of East Cobb and Smyrna-Vinings and said there are two parks in his District 2 now that aren’t open because there’s not funding for their maintenance.

“How are we going to pay for the parks we have as we build new parks?” he asked.

Commissioner JoAnn Birrell of Northeast Cobb pointed to Mabry Park, that’s being built on Wesley Chapel Road in what used to be her district (and is now in Ott’s).

It’s a decade since the county bought the land, part of the former Mabry family farm, and it sat undeveloped during the recession. A master plan was developed in 2011, and construction was finally approved last fall.

“We have to have a plan and guidance,” she said. “I support this.”

Also last week, commissioners approved a measure to spend $19,590 to replace a metal roof on the historic Hyde Farm house on East Cobb.

Cobb parks director Jimmy Gisi said the roof has been leaking and the replacement look to match other structures on the property, located off Lower Roswell Road.

The funding comes from the 2011 Cobb parks SPLOST account.

 

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Dodgen teacher Fred Veeder honored by Cobb Chamber of Commerce

Dodgen teacher Fred Veeder

On Thursday it was the Cobb Chamber of Commerce’s turn to pay tribute to Dodgen teacher Fred Veeder, the Cobb County School District’s 2018 teacher of the year.

We posted earlier about how he got the news in a big surprise right before the school year about being the district’s middle school teacher of the year, and then the overall recipient.

With that latter designation comes a special “Give Our Students A Hand” event sponsored by the Cobb Chamber of Commerce on the Marietta Square, along with honorees from Marietta City Schools. Due to the rainy weather, they weren’t able to make the presentation outdoors, as is the custom, but repaired indoors instead to the Strand Theatre.

Here’s more about Veeder from Nan Kiel of CCSD, who also passed along the photo above, as he’s flanked by Cobb Chamber CEO Sharon Mason and Cobb schools superintendent Chris Ragsdale.

Veeder also was joined by his principal, Loralee Hill, and previous Dodgen associates also gave testimonials to his dedication as a 7th grade math teacher. Explained Veeder:

“On the first day of school, I always promise my kids two things: I promise them that I will never yell at them and I promise them to do my best every day, and, ‘I’m expecting your best every day.’” 

There’s another related event coming up on Oct. 23, a Cobb Teacher of the Year pep rally at Roswell Street Baptist Church. Every school’s teacher of the year will be honored, and Veeder and other finalists will get to pick a car from the Ed Voyles dealerships that they’ll get to drive free for a year.

 

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Another Wheeler Magnet School student scores composite 36 on ACT

Ava Reau Autera, Wheeler magnet student

Thanks to Maureen Klinkmueller of the Wheeler Magnet School for the info and photo:

Ava Reau Autera, a junior at The Center for Advanced Studies at Wheeler High School in Cobb County, scored a 36 Composite score on the ACT. In 2017, 2.03 million high school students took the ACT, and only .136% earned a composite score of 36.

Autera joins fellow magnet student Alessa Culinan, whom we posted about back in August.

More school news

 

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Cobb school board candidates discuss academics, safety and more at forum

Cobb school board candidates, Scott Sweeney, Charisse Davis

What was billed as a meet-and-greet turned into something of a debate. The Cobb school board candidates vying for the Post 6 seat met at Mt. Bethel Elementary School Tuesday night, and offered differing views on how they would tackle challenging issues facing the Cobb County School District.

Organized by the Mt. Bethel PTA, the forum, which took place in the school’s media center, drew a couple dozen citizens. They asked some occasionally pointed questions after the candidates made their opening statements.

Scott Sweeney, a two-term Republican incumbent, said he wants to continue the progress he said the district has made in the eight years he’s served.

His challenger, Democrat Charisse Davis, is a first-time candidate, mom, former teacher and librarian who said voices like hers are needed on the seven-member Cobb school board.

Davis, a proponent of more Pre-K offerings in Cobb schools, said she was prompted to run because she’s heard from parents that the school district, over the last eight years, “is becoming less competitive for some people.”Charisse Davis

She said after a school board meeting she talked to one mother who withdrew her child’s enrollment from the district out of frustration. Davis also thinks the board and district could be more transparent.

“They feel like no one is listening to them,” said Davis, whose children attend Teasley Elementary School and Campbell Middle School. She works at the Wolf Creek Branch of the Atlanta-Fulton Library System.

Post 6 includes mostly the Walton and Wheeler clusters. Sweeney, whose sons now attend Walton and Dickerson Middle School, took issue with Davis’ contention, and said Cobb is considered one of the best public school districts in the state and the country.

Sweeney also said transparency isn’t an issue: each Cobb school board meeting is televised and available on a live stream, and discussions conducted in executive session are voted in public meetings.

He also touted the tens of millions of dollars in capital improvements the district has invested during his time in office, including rebuilds of Walton, Wheeler, East Cobb Middle School and Brumby Elementary School, and future improvements scheduled at other Post 6 schools.

Davis noted that the Cobb school board could become all-male in January, since Susan Thayer, the only female currently serving, is not running for re-election. In another East Cobb race, Post 4 incumbent David Chastain is being opposed by Cynthia Parr.

“Representation matters,” Davis said.

“Well, I’m a dad,” said Sweeney, a financial executive with InPrime Legal Services of East Cobb. “The fact that I’m a male doesn’t disqualify me.”

(The Fulton County Board of Education, which also has seven members, is all-female.)

Candidate websites:

The candidates had different views on the school walkouts that took place at several Cobb schools earlier this year, including at some East Cobb high schools, in response to school shootings.

Scott Sweeney Davis said the Cobb school district, which didn’t endorse the walkouts and threatened punitive action for unexcused absences, missed a “teaching moment” that took place in other metro school systems.

Students who walked out were typically given a one-day in-school suspension, and later some of them lashed out during the public comment session at a school board meeting.

” ‘Please help us to be safe,’ that’s all they were saying,” Davis said in support of the suspended students.

Sweeney said while he supported students’ free expression rights, sometimes those actions have consequences, and that the school district shouldn’t get involved in political debates.

“The school district isn’t the place for that,” he said.

Both candidates said they oppose arming teachers. Sweeney said Cobb has one of the best-staffed and trained school police forces in the state, with armed officers at every high school and middle school and some elementary schools.

Davis said she thought the district could do better than to be mostly reactive: “What are we doing to make sure something like this doesn’t happen again?”

As for making academic success a more variable thing, Davis said she wants Cobb to create a career and college academy similar to what’s been done in other metro school districts. The pressures some students feel, even at good schools, to live up mainly to test scores can be overwhelming, and make them feel left out.

While schools in East Cobb are among the best in the state, she asked if “we are meeting the needs of all our students?” Test scores alone, she said, is “not what makes a great school. A family feeling is better than any rating.”

Sweeney said he supports the reduction of what he called “the burden of standardized testing.”

Cobb is among those districts in Georgia that has applied to the state for create alternatives to some currently required tests, including the Milestones, which are released during the summer.

Here’s more on the Cobb Metrics program, which was announced earlier this week.

The candidates are scheduled for at least one more forum before the Nov. 6 elections, at an event next Monday in Vinings at the Cochise Club (3795 Cochise Drive), that starts at 6:30 p.m.

(East Cobb News photos by Wendy Parker)

 

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