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Wednesday, March 11, 2020

March 2020 Message from the Superintendent

In Carlsbad Unified, Every Student Matters


Is each Carlsbad Unified student getting what he or she needs to learn? Are our classrooms welcoming spaces? Does our staff have the skills and support it needs to meet each student “where they are?”

These are the important questions we are grappling with in CUSD because we believe that every student matters, every student has something to contribute, and every student is worth knowing. We therefore are committed to equity, inclusion, and diversity on our campuses.

Although we are proud that Carlsbad Unified schools graduate academically accomplished students who move successfully into college and careers, we are sensitive to the reality that some students confront special obstacles to sharing in this success. For instance, English learners, low income students, those with special needs and students confronting racial, gender, or cultural issues may struggle socially or academically at school.

It is important, of course, that schools treat all students equally in such areas as the materials available to them and the standards to which they are held. But achieving true equity at school means recognizing that each individual student has specific needs arising from different circumstances and then responding with the support that each individual needs for his or her success.

Each of our schools promotes equity in a variety of different ways. Here are a few highlights from one of our schools, Sage Creek High School (SCHS).

At SCHS, an Equity and Diversity team of administrators and teachers works on new approaches to best serve every student. A group recently participated in The Equity Symposium, and shared what they learned with staff. Adults are trying to get out of their offices to be accessible to students on campus, and to meet them where they are.

Last year the administrative team held a “Shadow a Student Day,” so teachers and administrators could learn first-hand about their students’ day, their lives at home, and the challenges they face. This year, in recognition of Black History Month, the SCHS Black Students’ Union opened a staff meeting with a thoughtful presentation celebrating black history month.The Equity and Diversity team is also surveying staff to determine what kinds of training and professional development would be most beneficial.

SCHS’s principal, Jesse Schuveiller, says, “This is ongoing work. It is our responsibility to create a home court advantage here for all. We want all students to feel welcomed, safe, connected, and valued, and our school to be as inclusive as possible. Our motto is Be Your Best for Every Bobcat Everyday.” Assistant Principal Chris Robertson added, “It is important that every student feels connected to an adult on campus.”

Across our 15 campuses, you can see many examples of the ways in which we are promoting equity. We look forward to continuing to find ways to meet the needs of every student in every one of our classrooms from preschool through high school graduation.

Wednesday, February 19, 2020

February 2020 Message from the Superintendent

Thank You, Coastal Community Foundation

Sage Creek High School Biomedical Science teacher Valerie Park’s class has new equipment to measure blood pressure. “High blood pressure can be dangerous or even fatal,” Ms. Park explains. “In my class, students work with a partner to measure blood pressure and explore factors that might affect this value. In the past, students with skinny arms could not participate in this activity because we did not have the pediatric sized sphygmomanometers. Thanks to the Coastal Community Foundation grant, we were able to purchase 11 pediatric sphygmomanometers as well as 10 automatic blood pressure monitors.”

Ms. Park is one of eighteen Sage Creek (SCHS) and Carlsbad High School (CHS) teachers who are receiving much appreciated support from Coastal Community Foundation’s EdVentures Fund. This generous grant program reaches directly into the classroom to supplement STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Math) programs with hands-on, interactive, educational projects that stimulate learning and enhance the curriculum.

“We are pleased to support the work of Carlsbad Unified’s teachers,” said Laura Fleming, Program Officer at Coastal Community Foundation. “EdVentures provides enhancements to Career Technical Education and Visual and Performing Arts Pathways projects to spark students’ curiosity, encourage creativity, and, perhaps, lead to future careers.”

At CHS, EdVentures grants will help provide new musical arrangements for Music teacher Jessie Bullock’s choir and Peter Manzi’s Band Drumline. Juliana Quinones, SCHS Music teacher, will be able to purchase ukeleles and guitars. Jessica Allen, CHS Orchestra teacher, can bring in professional string players to help students with tone development. And CHS Dance teacher Jackie Solomon’s grant will help fund Dance Extreme, showcasing all genres of dance, including hip hop, jazz, contemporary, tap, and Latin.

Also with grants from the EdVentures Fund, Art teachers Megan Herrick (SCHS) and Kelly Foulk (CHS) will pay for student mural projects on campus, and SCHS 3D Design teacher Cathryn Burroughs’s students will create a Community Totem. SCHS Art teacher Sierra Aguilar’s students are using art to send a message of change by showing how plastic waste impacts our ocean ecosystems. CHS Art teacher Elizabeth Vincelette’s students are using clay and paint to bring a uniquely designed character to life. Krista King’s CHS Photo students are hand painting their own photography backdrops. CHS Ceramics teacher Lisa Smith will fund the Empty Bowls Project, in which art students will make ceramic bowls, fill them with soup, sell them, and contribute funds raised to fight hunger.

Jillian Porter Eshelman, SCHS theatre teacher, is able to invite accomplished guest artists--such as Elan McMahon, a professional musical director for the Old Globe--to share their talents at a Drama Artist Workshop. CHS Theater teacher Matthew Fauls-Rivas’s Lancer Players will be producing Amelie: The Musical in the spring, with a student orchestra, crew, actors, stage managers, and a student assistant director. “The grant will help fund music books, the music director, and tools to build the set,” said Mr. Fauls-Rivas. “Students learn many important skills like collaboration, pitch matching, harmonizing, and acting.”

CHSTV Broadcast teacher Doug Green will be running a Saturday workshop for 5th grade aspiring journalists, taking them through the entire process of producing a live newscast, which then will be live-streamed.

CHS teacher Susie Becker’s Fashion students will use CCF grant funds for material to sew Carlsbags that they will donate to the Assistance League resale shop. And CHS Business teacher Carol King’s Virtual Enterprise students will have a new Trade Fair Booth.

EdVentures Fund projects may provide real world applications or needed classroom materials. In total, Coastal Community Foundation awarded a grant of $20,179.29 to Carlsbad Educational Foundation (CEF) from its EdVentures program. CEF receives the funding and disburse the grant awards to the recipients. The grant range per teacher is $500-$1,500.

Coastal Community Foundation manages over 80 different funds, encouraging and facilitating philanthropy by connecting donors with community needs.