Complete the survey concerning school accountability by midnight tonight (23-JAN-17).
As a reminder, the 84th Legislature passed HB 2804, changing the school accountability system so every campus and district receives one of five ratings from A – F. The law requires schools and districts to be graded based on five different areas of performance or “domains,” and those five grades must be combined into a single overall rating.
The following are A – F domains:
I: Student Achievement
II: Student Progress
III: Closing the Gaps
IV: Postsecondary Readiness
V: Community and Student Engagement
For more information on A – F or HB 2804, go to
http://tea.texas.gov/A-F/ or http://tea.texas.gov/2804implementation.aspx
Please Write-A-Check
Parents, last year’s check drive was a huge success. Because of your generosity the PTSA was able to continue supporting programsthat can benefit all students. A few of the programs the monies supported were:
- Drug Awareness with Red Ribbon Week
- College Fair
- Magnificent Marauders Student Recognition Program
- New Word Wall in the Marcus front hallway
- Teacher Appreciation
- Katie Greer – Cyber-Safety Assembly
- Senior Scholarships
We are once again asking for your help with a check drive of $10 to MHS PTSA to help support the following programs:
- 180 Abstinence Program
- Winning the Fight, Not Me
- Internet/Technology Safety
- TedEx Event
- Drug Awareness
- College Fair
- Magnificent Marauders Student Recognition Program
- Teacher Appreciation
- Senior Scholarships
Your MHS PTSA strives to continue all of the programs and opportunities MHS & MHS9 students have come to expect.
Have your student drop in the PTSA lock box at either campus or Mail to:
Michelle Lloyd
3817 Fairfax Way
Flower Mound, TX 75028
Kindly send in your donations by February 17, 2017.
100% of your donation will go towards helping our students!
Vote of General Membership on February 13 at 6:30 PM at Marcus High School
The Marcus High School PTSA executive board is proposing the following bylaws changes for our organization for better a better organizational structure, more resiliency and to better align with the Marcus High School schedule.
Add a President Elect board position.
Current
ARTICLE VII: Officers and Their Election
Section 2. Officers and their election
a. The officers of this Local PTA shall be a president, three (3) vice presidents, a secretary, a treasurer , a historian and a parliamentarian.
Proposed
ARTICLE VII: Officers and Their Election
Section 2. Officers and their election
a. The officers of this Local PTA shall be a president, president elect, three (3) vice presidents, a secretary, a treasurer, a historian and a parliamentarian.
Proposed – add a section with president elect duties and renumber existing sections.
ARTICLE VIII: Duties of Officers
Section 2. The president elect shall:
a. be the aide-to-the-president; and
b. learn the role of the president, to become familiar with the programs of the Association and its governance
c. preside in the absence of the president (in their designated order).
Increase the number of nominating committee alternates from 1 to 2
Current
ARTICLE VII: Officers and Their Election
Section 3. Nominating Committee
a. There shall be a nominating committee elected by the membership at a regular meeting prior to the election meeting. Student members shall not constitute a majority of this committee. Elections shall be by plurality. The committee shall be composed of three (3) members. One (1) alternate shall be elected to serve in the event a member is unable to serve. The committee shall elect its own chair immediately following the meeting.
Proposed
ARTICLE VII: Officers and Their Election
Section 3. Nominating Committee
a. There shall be a nominating committee elected by the membership at a regular meeting prior to the election meeting. Student members shall not constitute a majority of this committee. Elections shall be by plurality. The committee shall be composed of three (3) members. Two (2) alternates shall be elected to serve in the event a member is unable to serve. The committee shall elect its own chair immediately following the meeting.
Adjust the membership meeting schedule to align with the Marcus High School schedule
Current
Proposed
Posted 13-JAN-2017 3:00p CT – Contact Lorna Gibson, Marcus HS PTSA President with any questions.
Here are a few of the things you’ll learn about this month:
- LISD rejects TEA rating system
- How you can help improve ratings
- New traffic guidelines
[wc_button type=”primary” url=”https://marcusptsa.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/Marcus-PTSA-Newsletter-2017-10-01.pdf” title=”Read It!” target=”self” position=”float”]Newsletter[/wc_button]
Reminder
PTSA Senior membership for MHS PTSA eligibility due by Tue, January 31, 2017.
PTSA Senior Scholarship Applications are due on Wed, April 20, 2016.
Welcoming in 2017 and looking forward to a great second half of the year.
Seniors
You need to be a member of the Marcus HS PTSA by 31-JAN-2017 to be eligible to apply for the PTSA scholarships.
Join Now
LEF Scholarship applications are due by 27-JAN-2017 4:30p CT.
A representative from the Lewisville Education Foundation (LEF) will be on campus Friday 12/6, to assist students in completing their scholarship applications. This would be a great opportunity to make sure your application is ready to submit. She will be on campus all day tomorrow from 8:10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. in B202. No appointment is necessary. Students are free to come-and-go or just drop in. However, students are not allowed to ask their teacher(s) to leave class to see the representative UNLESS they have a student assistant position and they are not needed for a specific project. Senior In or Senior Out would be a great time to drop in.
Learn MoreMHS Parent Education Program
When: Wednesday, 07-DEC-16 from 6:00p – 7:00p
Where: MHS Library
What: Student presentations on teens & social media
Free childcare is available.
State Assessment for Academic Readiness
Texas PTA will advocate for a reduced emphasis on state-mandated testing, focusing on grades 3-8, and monitor changes to STAAR for high school students, and limits on benchmark testing for all tested grades.
Background
Texas PTA has worked for several years to reduce the number of and the emphasis on state-mandated tests. We were part of a strong team that reduced high school end-of-course tests from 15 to 5 and have sought to reduce the number of tests that are required in the elementary and middle school grades. We will continue to look for opportunities to pursue these reductions during the next legislative session.
Texas PTA seeks to extend the graduation committee structure created last session through House Bill 149, one in which students who have passed all the courses required for graduation but have been unable to pass up to two of the end-of-course exams required to graduate, can participate in a rigorous process to demonstrate that they have learned the required curriculum. The committee that assigns extra activities, and reviews the student’s work must agree unanimously in order for the student to be allowed to graduate.
Read more about the history of efforts to reduce STAAR.
Oppose Vouchers
Texas PTA will oppose vouchers including Education Savings Account Programs (ESA Programs) and Tax Credit Scholarship Programs that allow state funds to be utilized in private schools not accountable to the taxpayer or the state.
ESAs are a form of voucher that allows eligible parents to use a portion of the funds the state expends for their student’s public school education to fund private school tuition, tuition at eligible institutions, distance education, home schooling materials and curriculum. The remainder of the funds, generally around 30%, are kept by the public school the student previously attended.
Corporations can earn tax credits by donating money to a scholarship program that uses the dollars to pay for private school tuition for students.
Vouchers:
- Do not ensure accountability – They send public dollars to private schools that are not accountable to the public for producing results.
- Provide choice for some, not all –
- Vouchers disproportionately benefit students living in urban areas due to limited access to private schools in rural Texas.
- Vouchers do not address many needs of low-income, at-risk students such as transportation, free and reduced lunches, textbooks, assessment of special needs, access to additional remediation programs, full cost of tuition.
- Violate separation of church and state
- The US Constitution prohibits any government “establishment of religion.” Tax dollars directed toward public schools of religious origin violate that principal.
- The US Constitution ensures “free exercise of religion”; no government has proper authority to dictate a religious community’s expression of faith. Regulation and oversight always accompany allocation of public tax dollars, thus violation religious freedom.
Did You Know?
Only a portion of your property taxes, which is marked for schools, actually goes to your local school district. There is a tax rate cap on those funds that go to your local school district. The remaining funds are sent to the state for legislators to spend at their discretion. Often these remaining funds are spent on other state expenses like transportation.
Wouldn’t it be great if the state reinvested those remaining funds back into our public school system, so that our students will have more access to resources and facilities that they need to be successful? While reinvesting these funds back into public school will not solve all of our public school challenges, it would be a great jump start in improving the education of our students.
To learn more about how school financing works, you can access many articles and presentations online, or invite the CFO of your school district to explain how school financing works and what it means for your school district. Then join us at Rally Day February 27, 2017 as PTA and community members from across the state come together to advocate for these funds to be reinvested back into public schools, as well as many other issues that affect the education, well-being and the safety of our students.
The scholarship application is NOW open for all LISD Seniors.
The deadline is 4:30pm on Friday, January 27, 2017.
More Information
One application puts students in the running for over 275 scholarships!