East Cobb’s Scott Sweeney named chairman of Ga. Board of Education

Former Cobb Board of Education member Scott Sweeney will serve this year as the chairman of the Georgia Board of Education.Scott Sweeney, Georgia Board of Education

Sweeney is an East Cobb resident who represented the Walton and Wheeler clusters from 2011-2018.

“I look forward to working with Scott and Jason to pursue continued improvements in Georgia’s K-12 public schools and expanded opportunities for our students,” State School Superintendent Richard Woods said in a statement. “They are both upstanding individuals with strong experience in education governance, and Georgia’s students will benefit from their leadership.”

Sweeney is a Senior Business Advisor for InPrime Legal of East Cobb, a business law firm recognized as one of four 2019 Small Business ROCK STARS by the Georgia Department of Economic Development and the Georgia Economic Developers Association.

“It’s an honor to serve as Chairman of the State Board of Education,” Sweeney said. “I look forward to working with Governor Brian Kemp, Superintendent Richard Woods, and my board colleagues as we all strive to do our best serving Georgia’s K-12 students, their families, teachers and administrators.”

During his time on the Cobb school board, he served as chairman and vice chairman and currently serves as a member of Georgia’s Career, Technical, and Agricultural Education (CTAE) Business & Advisory Committee and as a member of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce Government Affairs Committee.

Georgia Board of Education members are chosen by the governor via Congressional district. Sweeney represents the 6th Congressional District, and vice chairman Jason Downey of Macon is from the 8th District.

 

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Ex-Cobb school board member appointed to state education board

Scott Sweeney of East Cobb was named this week to serve on the 15-member Georgia Board of Education by Gov. Brian Kemp.Scott Sweeney, Cobb school board, Cobb school calendar

Sweeney, who represented the Walton and Wheeler clusters from 2011-18, will fill a vacancy in the Sixth Congressional District.

“I’ve been a big supporter of Brian Kemp and his focus on education,” Sweeney said. “He asked me to serve and I agreed.”

The state board of education oversees administration of policy for the Georgia Department of Education.

Sweeney will serve a seven-year term and said “it’s going to be a learning process.”

Unlike local school boards, the state board isn’t involved in budgeting matters, such as the $3,000 pay raise the legislature approved that were a central part of Kemp’s first months in office.

Sweeney said he’s still “very passionate” about educational matters and “is happy to represent the Sixth Congressional District.”

He is a financial advisor for East Cobb-based InPrime Legal, which provides legal services to business owners and small companies.

 

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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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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

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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Cobb school board candidates event slated for Mt. Bethel ES

After last week’s last-minute cancellation of a Cobb school board candidates forum, the Mt. Bethel Elementary School PTA has sent word that it has organized an event with the Post 6 competitors on Tuesday.Charisse Davis

That will be held from 6:15 p.m. to 7:15 p.m. in the media center of Mt. Bethel ES (1210 Johnson Ferry Road).

The candidates are Scott Sweeney, a Republican incumbent from East Cobb who is completing his second term in office, and Democrat Charisse Davis, a first-time candidate from the Smyrna-Vinings area.

More about them, including links to their campaign websites, in a previous post hereScott Sweeney, Cobb school calendars

The Wheeler PTSA event that was to have taken place Thursday was called off due to a previously scheduled orchestral concert at East Cobb Middle School. Thursday also was Wheeler’s homecoming parade.

Post 6 includes all of the Walton and Wheeler high school attendance zones as well as some of the Campbell area.

The Mt. Bethel ES PTA is calling this a “meet and greet” event and not a formal forum. Light refreshments will be provided.

 

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Update: Cobb school board candidates forum at East Cobb MS cancelled

Following up a story we posted last week about the Post 6 Cobb school board candidates forum at East Cobb Middle School, that was scheduled for Thursday:

It’s been called off.Cobb school board candidates forum

No reason has been given by the Wheeler PTSA, which had organized the event.

The candidates are Republican incumbent Scott Sweeney, who told us yesterday he’d been notified via text message, and Democratic challenger Charisse Davis, who’s been informing her supporters of the cancellation as well.

Sweeney also told us there is no other scheduled event for the candidates in that race before the Nov. 6 election.

Post 6 includes the Walton, Wheeler and part of the Campbell attendance zones.

On Thursday the League of Women Voters of Marietta/Cobb is holding a candidates forum for District 3 Cobb Commission candidates and those running for state senate, including District 32 in East Cobb.

 

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Wheeler PTSA to hold Cobb school board Post 6 candidates forum

Next week the Wheeler PTSA will be holding a candidates forum for the Cobb school board Post 6 race.Scott Sweeney, Cobb school calendars

That forum is Thursday, Oct. 4 at 6:30 p.m. at East Cobb Middle School (825 Terrell Mill Road).

The candidates are Republican incumbent Scott Sweeney of East Cobb and Democrat Charisse Davis of Smyrna.

Sweeney, first elected in 2010, is seeking his third term. He is an executive with InPrime Legal, which provides legal services for small businesses and entrepreneurs.

Charisse Davis Davis is a first-time candidate and has children at Teasley Elementary School and Campbell Middle School.

She is a youth services librarian in the public library system and former school librarian and classroom teacher.

She supports expanding the statewide pre-K program.

Post 6 includes the Wheeler and Walton and part of the Campbell attendance zones. A map can be found here and Post 6 is indicated in pink.

Candidate websites:

 

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Cobb school calendars adopted for 2018-2020; Sweeney lone opposing vote

It wasn’t quite unanimous, but close. The Cobb Board of Education Thursday voted 6-1 to adopt Cobb school calendars for the 2018-20 academic years after a brief discussion.

Scott Sweeney, Cobb school calendars
Scott Sweeney

The board didn’t make any changes to the calendars proposed by Superintendent Chris Ragsdale (see charts below). The first day of school for each of the next two years will begin on Aug. 1, and will include regularly scheduled breaks that have been the case in the last few years.

The “balanced” calendar had been the subject of strong board and community division in recent years, but not for this calendar scheduling cycle.

The only vote against was Scott Sweeney of Post 6 in East Cobb, who repeated comments he made at a recent work session that a large number of messages he’s received (63 percent) were in favor of a delayed start to the school year.

He also cited other issues, such as extracurricular activities, that are affected by a balanced calendar, and said he hasn’t received any evidence of academic improvements based on the adoption of a balanced calendar.

Connie Jackson of the Cobb County Association of Educators repeated the organization’s support of the balanced calendar and urged the board to use the adopted calendars to serve as a template for future years.

Also on Thursday, the board accepted the resignation of Mary Elizabeth Davis, the Cobb County School District’s Chief Academic Officer. She has been named the new superintendent for Henry County public schools.

Adopted 2018-19 Cobb school calendar

Cobb school calendars

Adopted 2019-2020 Cobb school calendar

Cobb school calendars

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Cobb school calendar adoption for 2018-20 years expected tonight

A reminder that the Cobb school calendar for the 2018-20 academic years are slated for adoption tonight.Cobb School Calendars

It’s the last item on the Cobb Board of Education’s regular meeting agenda. The meeting starts at 7 p.m. in the board room of the Cobb County School District Central Office, 514 Glover Street, Marietta. (here’s a link to the full agenda).

Earlier this month, the board discussed Superintendent Chris Ragsdale’s proposed calendars for the 2018-19 and 2019-2020 years, which would both start on Aug. 1 (previous East Cobb News post here).

While there hasn’t been the contentious reaction from school parents or on the board as in previous news, East Cobb school board member Scott Sweeney noted at the work session that he gets a lot of feedback from parents who want a later starting date.

Both proposed calendars have generally the same scheduled breaks—late September in the fall, mid-February in the winter and early April in the spring—as well as the usual Thanksgiving and Christmas/New Year’s holiday breaks.

For the 2018-19 proposed calendar, the last day of school would be May 22, and for 2018-19, the final day would be May 20 (The full calendar proposals are attached at the bottom of this post).

Also tonight, the school board will formally recognize both Dickerson Middle School and Dodgen Middle School, which were recently named National Blue Ribbon Schools by the U.S. Department of Education (previous East Cobb News post here).

The board also will honor Dickerson, which was recently given an Award of Excellence in Physical Education by the Georgia Association for Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance.

Proposed 2018-19 Cobb school calendar

CCSD 2018-19 Calendar Proposal

Proposed 2019-2020 Cobb school calendar

CCSD 2019-20 Calendar Proposal

Proposed Cobb school calendars discussed by school board members

The proposed Cobb school calendars for the next two academic years were taken up by the school board Wednesday, with none of the widely diverging differences that have marked previous deliberations.

Scott Sweeney, Cobb school calendars
School board member Scott Sweeney of East Cobb. (CCSD photo)

Cobb County School District Superintendent Chris Ragsdale has proposed Aug. 1 start dates for the 2018-19 and 2019-20 school years. It’s his intention to establish an Aug. 1-3 range for the first day of classes further into the future, but acknowledged at a work session that “there’s not going to be a template is going to make everybody happy.”

This summer, some parents objected to this year’s July 31 starting date, a protest that included an online petition seen as a way to influence future calendar dates. (There’s an ongoing petition that advocates keeping frequent breaks in the Cobb school calendar, and has generated nearly 5,000 signatures).

In their discussion, board members were generally receptive to the proposed calendars (previous East Cobb News post here), especially a consistent range of starting dates, scheduled breaks and graduation dates.

The board considers and approves calendars in two-year cycles to avoid having to go through such a process every year. At Wednesday’s work session, Connie Jackson, executive director of the Cobb Association of Educators, suggested the board consider indefinite “rolling calendars” that would have the same date range for the first day of school.

Board member Susan Thayer said she would prefer keeping a two-year calendar approval process. “I don’t want to do any more than that,” especially if the state changes testing dates or other major changes come about, she said.

Board member Randy Scamihorn asked about syncing the Cobb school calendars to those in Cherokee County, which has a later starting date. Ragsdale said Cobb’s is currently synced with Marietta and Paulding, and that “we choose ours around grading schedules.”

However, the issue of starting the school year later in Cobb continues to come up with parents.

Scott Sweeney, who represents the Walton and Wheeler high school districts of East Cobb on the school board, noted that there’s no data showing differences in student achievement results and other metrics based on a school starting date.

But he did say that “there are a lot of people who favor a later start,” and that 76 percent of the e-mails he’s received since early September “want a later start.

“This is still very much a split issue,” Sweeney said.

The board is scheduled to vote on the calendar proposals at its Oct. 26 regular meeting.