|
Bessemer to revive 6th grade
By Peter Strescino
April 12, 2000
The School District 60 board of education voted Tuesday
to establish a sixth-grade class at Bessemer Elementary beginning in
August, a return of the sixth-grade to the elementary-school setting in
District 60 for the first time since 1971.
The
board also heard a proposal to scrap its Lindamood-Bell reading clinic
for fourth-graders, also located at Bessemer, and place the successful
reading program in 14 additional district schools, including all high
schools. That will put LBLP in 21 district schools.
Bessemer
staffer Rhonda Holcomb told the board, minus President Jack Rink, who
was not in attendance, that the school wanted a sixth grade to help its
students mature and give them a more solid academic footing before they
move on to middle school.
The
old school on Mesa is one of the star academic institutions in the
state because of its astounding improvement over the past three
years.
Principal
Gary Trujillo said that in a Bessemer parent survey, more than 60
percent of the respondents said they wanted their children to remain at
the school for a sixth year, rather than go on to middle school. About
20 percent said that their kids will move on, mostly to Corwin Middle
School.
Between 24 and 28 students will attend the sixth grade at Bessemer, he said.
Holcomb
said that a 15- to 30-percent academic drop is expected when students
change buildings during their school years. She said she hopes that one
more year in the elementary setting would put the kids on better
footing as they enter middle school.
Bessemer
will add a teacher and a half-time counselor, who will also teach a
Lindamood-Bell intensive class, and get its books from middle school,
Trujillo said. Board members, who voted 4-0 for the plan, said
extensive information pertaining to the later academic achievement of
Bessemer sixth-graders against those who go to the traditional middle
schools must be gathered to see if the extension of elementary school
would be beneficial to all students.
Earlier
in the day, the board was told that nine elementaries out of 21
District 60 elementaries would be amenable to adding a sixth grade to
their schools. But Bessemer is the only one thus far make that request
formally.
Lindamood-Bell
will be placed in Freed and Pitts middle schools, all five high schools
and Irving, Somerlid, Columbian, Park View, Fountain, Beulah Heights
and Goodnight elementary schools under a plan put forth by the division
of instruction. The cost will be the same $1.3 million the reading
clinic and seven district schools employing LBLP cost this year, said
Flo Lenhart, the district's literacy director.
The board may vote on the proposal at a later meeting.
|