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Applications for Lawler Scholarship due Oct. 31

Posted at 11:57 am October 2, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

The Oak Ridge Public Schools Education Foundation is now accepting applications for the 2014 fall Dr. Adrian R. Lawler Exchange Scholarship, and they are due by October 31.

Applications are available through the Foundation’s website at www.orpsef.org under the Lawler Scholarship tab. They should be returned to the Oak Ridge Public Schools Education Foundation, P.O. Box 117 MS-22, Oak Ridge, TN 37831. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Front Page News, K-12 Tagged With: Adrian R. Lawler, Adrian R. Lawler Exchange Scholarship, Lawler Scholarship, Oak Ridge High School, Oak Ridge Public Schools Education Foundation, Oak Ridge Schools, ORPSEF, scholarship

ORHS evacuated after chemistry experiment sets off smoke detectors

Posted at 11:56 am September 30, 2014
By John Huotari 1 Comment

Oak Ridge High School Chem Lab Evacuation

Oak Ridge High School students were briefly evacuated Tuesday morning after a chemistry lab experiment in LC212 set off smoke detectors. The students were let back in about 20 minutes after the 10:30 a.m. call.

 

Students at Oak Ridge High School were briefly evacuated Tuesday morning after a chemistry experiment set off smoke detectors, authorities said.

A small amount of zinc chloride and water created water vapor that set off the smoke detectors, which then shut chemistry lab hoods, Oak Ridge firefighters said. The Oak Ridge Fire Department manually opened the vents in the room (LC212) until the smoke detector system reset. Firefighters checked the air, making sure it was safe to breathe, Battalion Chief Jody Durham said.

There was no fire, no damage, and no injuries, firefighters said.

“No student was ever in any real danger,” Durham said.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Oak Ridge, Police and Fire, Top Stories Tagged With: chemistry experiment, evacuated, Jody Durham, Josh Waldo, Oak Ridge Fire Department, Oak Ridge High School, Oak Ridge Schools, smoke detector, water vapor, zinc chloride

Letter: Encourages candidate forum groups, objects to ‘harassment’

Posted at 2:00 am September 23, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Letters 5 Comments

While state and federal elections (at least here in Oak Ridge) are somewhat uninspiring this year, with many races either uncontested or practically so, our municipal election has drawn an unusually high number of candidates. That there are several open seats where incumbents chose not to run—two on City Council and two on the Board of Education—is probably the reason for the larger number of candidates.

Ten are running for four seats on City Council, while eight are competing for three seats on the Board of Education.

The League of Women Voters is doing its usual outstanding job of hosting candidate forums, but despite standing-room-only attendance at the first of those, it’s inevitable that not everyone was able to attend. Fortunately, several other interested groups have also scheduled candidate forums or meet-and-greet events: the Oak Ridge Schools’ PTA/PTO Council, the Chamber of Commerce, and Democracy for East Tennessee.

It’s important to get to know the people who seek to represent you, to hear their views on issues of interest, and to see how they respond to questions.

Unfortunately, one member of Council who is not up for election this year is seeking to eliminate some of these opportunities, based on the fact that they’re scheduled to be held on city property. The Chamber of Commerce is situated on land leased from the city, although they own the building. The PTA/PTO forums will be held at Oak Ridge High School, and have been promoted through the schools (as most PTA/PTO activities are). [Read more…]

Filed Under: Letters, Opinion Tagged With: Board of Education, candidate forum, candidates, Chamber of Commerce, City Council, David Bradshaw, Democracy for East Tennessee, Donna Butcher, elections, Fernanda Foertter, FORS, Friends of Oak Ridge Schools, Jutta Bangs, League of Women Voters, Linda Gilpin, Oak Ridge Schools, Parent-Teacher Association, PTA/PTO council, Trina Baughn

Former president of PTO, Superintendent’s Council running for school board

Posted at 2:14 pm September 19, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Laura McLean

Laura McLean

Laura McLean, an Oak Ridger for the last 19 years, is running for the Oak Ridge Board of Education in the November 4 municipal election.

McLean and her husband Fred moved here for his work as a radiologist. Even after his work moved to Knoxville, the family chose to remain in Oak Ridge to educate their kids and be involved in the Oak Ridge community, a press release said. Both of the their children attended Oak Ridge schools their entire careers, including Oak Ridge Schools Preschool, Glenwood Elementary, Jefferson Middle, and Oak Ridge High School. Alex (ORHS Class of 2010) currently lives and works in Oak Ridge, and Emily (ORHS Class of 2012) is in her third year at the University of Virginia.

McLean has bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill.

The press release said she was an active member in school organizations during her children’s education in Oak Ridge. McLean was on the Parent Committee in the Preschool, and served in several roles while her kids attended Glenwood, including PTO president, PTO vice president, Fundraising Committee member, and classroom volunteer. At Jefferson Middle, Laura served as PTO president and vice president and fundraising coordinator. At ORHS, Laura was on several parent committees and served as vice president of the PTSO. She continues to support and volunteer at Graduation Celebration. [Read more…]

Filed Under: 2014 Election, Education, K-12, Top Stories Tagged With: Fundraising Committee, Glenwood Elementary, Graduation Celebration, Jefferson Middle, Laura McLean, mentoring, November 4 municipal election, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge High School, Oak Ridge Schools, ORHS, Parent Committee, preschool, PTO, school board, Superintendent's Council

School bus service restored Sept. 15; new routes announced

Posted at 12:48 pm September 8, 2014
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Oak Ridge School Buses at the Central Services Complex

The 1.5 parent responsibility zone, or PRZ, approved in June will end September 15. There will still be a .15-mile PRZ for elementary school students and a .25-mile zone for middle and high school students.

 

Note: This story was updated at 1:08 p.m.

The 1.5-mile parent responsibility zone approved by Oak Ridge school officials in June will end September 15. School bus service then will be the same as it was during the 2013-2014 school year.

There will still be a .15-mile PRZ for elementary school students and a .25-mile zone for middle and high school students, which is the same as last year. In that zone, parents are responsible for getting their children to and from school; bus service is not provided.

In a press release Monday, Oak Ridge Schools said parents and family members should check the appropriate school website for new bus route information. Times are approximate.

Students should be prepared to board the bus 10 minutes before the scheduled time, the press release said. All routes are dependent upon regular ridership and may be altered or suspended at any time.

“As a reminder, please make sure your child is registered for bus service at their school prior to September 15,” the press release said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Education, K-12, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: bus drivers, bus routes, bus service, elementary school, fund balance, high school, middle school, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge Schools, parent responsibility zone, PRZ

Oak Ridge Schools has Technology Town Hall on Sept. 30

Posted at 6:55 pm September 3, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Bruce Borchers

Bruce Borchers

Oak Ridge Schools Superintendent Bruce Borchers will host a Technology Town Hall on September 30.

The town hall will start at 7 p.m. Tuesday, September 30, in the Oak Ridge High School Performing Arts Center.

“Oak Ridge Schools would like to invite all community members, parents, and students to attend,” a press release said.

The town hall will include a presentation by Borchers, followed by a question-and-answer forum.

The release said Borchers’ short presentation will discuss the benefits of Oak Ridge Schools launching a Bring Your Own Device, or BYOD, platform starting the second nine weeks of school, on October 20, and the future of Oak Ridge Schools’ technology plan with a continued move towards integrating 1:1 (district-purchased devices for all students). [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, K-12, Top Stories Tagged With: 1:1, bring your own device, Bruce Borchers, BYOD, Oak Ridge High School, Oak Ridge Schools, ORS, question-and-answer forum, technology plan, Technology Town Hall, Town Hall

Oak Ridge Schools announces ACT results for 2013-2014 graduates

Posted at 11:16 pm August 20, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff 12 Comments

Submitted

The ACT college entrance examination “assesses high school students’ general educational development and their ability to complete college-level work.” Students are tested in English, mathematics, reading, and science. They receive a score between one and 36 for each test and also a composite score, which averages the performance on all four subject tests.

The ACT is widely accepted as the premier college entrance examination.

Oak Ridge Schools Superintendent Bruce Borchers said: “In the Oak Ridge Schools, we believe it is crucial for our students to perform well on the ACT examination. It is one of our Seven Keys to College and Career Readiness, and we are proud of how students perform on the ACT and of our teachers who prepare them. This year is no exception.”

The 2014 Oak Ridge High Schools graduating class significantly outperformed the state and national averages on each of the subject components of the ACT examination as well as the overall composite. In fact, Oak Ridge’s 2014 graduating class achieved higher in English, mathematics, reading, and composite than any other ORHS graduating class in the past five years. In addition, the percent of ORHS’s 2014 graduates that met or exceeded all four of the ACT College Readiness Benchmark Scores was far higher than the state and nation. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Front Page News, K-12 Tagged With: ACT, ACT College Readiness Benchmark Scores, ACT examination, ACT results, Bruce Borchers, college entrance examination, college-level work, educational development, English, graduating class, high school, mathematics, Oak Ridge High School, Oak Ridge Schools, ORHS graduating class, reading, science, Seven Keys to College and Career Readiness

Mahathy running for Oak Ridge school board

Posted at 2:33 pm August 16, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff 2 Comments

Mike Mahathy Campaign Photo

Mike Mahathy, left, a candidate for Oak Ridge Board of Education, is pictured with his family. (Submitted photo)

Mike Mahathy, who has served on two school-related councils, is running for Oak Ridge Board of Education.

It wasn’t an easy decision, Mahathy said in a press release.

“I labored over it for weeks, as I am not a politician,” said Mahathy, a health physicist at ORAU. “I’m just a citizen, a husband, a father, yet that is why I decided to run, for my children and more importantly for yours.

“When I leave this life, I hope that it can be said that Mike Mahathy made a difference for children, at least in a little way.”

The press release said Mahathy co-founded a charity that provides assistance to orphans of the Yunnan Province, China. And he now serves as volunteer Caring Kids Coordinator for another adoption, helping with daily life needs, education, and transitioning to adult life. Mahathy also assists in a children’s ministry at his church.

Mahathy said he served as an officer on the Oak Ridge Preschool advisory council in 2005 and 2006, and he has served on the Oak Ridge Schools superintendent’s PTA/PTO council since 2005. In addition, he helps, as his time allows, the parent-teacher organizations at his daughters’ schools. [Read more…]

Filed Under: 2014 Election, Education, K-12, Top Stories Tagged With: adoption, advisory council, Caring Kids Coordinator, Mike Mahathy, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge Preschool, Oak Ridge Schools, orphans, parent-teacher organizations, PTA/PTO council, school board

Eby seeks re-election to school board

Posted at 1:39 am August 14, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Bob Eby

Bob Eby

Bob Eby has qualified to run for re-election in November for the Oak Ridge Board of Education.

Eby, who is now the board’s vice chairman, is seeking his fourth term, having first been elected in 1985, again in 1991, and most recently in 2009. This is the first time Eby has run as an incumbent.

Eby was board chairman for two terms between 1991-1995, a press release said. Eby is a product of the Oak Ridge Schools (class of 1970), as is his wife of 40 years, Jean (class of 1971), his daughter Elizabeth (1998), and son William (2001).

Jean Eby is a retired teacher from the Oak Ridge Schools, having taught band, music, and third and fourth grade in the district for more than 30 years, the press release said. Most of her teaching career was at Linden Elementary School.

Bob Eby is the director for technology and process engineering for USEC Inc., and he also serves as Oak Ridge site manager for the company. He has bachelor’s and master’s degrees in chemical engineering from the University of Tennessee and completed The Executive Program from the Darden School of Business at the University of Virginia. He is active in the business community, currently serving on the board of directors for the Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, the East Tennessee Economic Council, and the KFI, an organization dedicated for the benefit of the Ronald McDonald House in Knoxville. [Read more…]

Filed Under: 2014 Election, Education, K-12, Top Stories Tagged With: Ann McNees, Bob Eby, chemical engineering, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge Schools, re-election, school board, Steve Cates, USEC Inc.

School board restores bus service this year

Posted at 8:52 pm August 11, 2014
By John Huotari 6 Comments

Oak Ridge School Bus Protest

A small group of parents and students protest the expanded “parent responsibility zone,” where bus service is not provided, before an Oak Ridge Board of Education meeting on Monday. The board agreed during the meeting to restore bus service to last year’s levels. Pictured above from left are Michelle Doka, Melanie Heiberg, Oak Ridge City Council member Trina Baughn, protest organizer Laurie Paine, and her daughter Kaitlan Paine.

 

Note: This story was last updated at 11:15 a.m. August 12.

After hearing impassioned pleas from parents and grandparents, the Oak Ridge school board on Monday temporarily restored bus service to about 1,300 students who had been affected by an expanded but controversial “parent responsibility zone.” Parents of students who lived within that zone were responsible for getting their children to and from schools; bus service was not provided.

The parent responsibility zone, or PRZ, was expanded to 1.5 miles in June as part of a move to reduce a $1.25 million budget deficit. But parents of elementary and middle school students, in particular, objected to having students as young as five years old cross busy four-lane roadways like Oak Ridge Turnpike or Illinois Avenue to get to school, or walk past the homes of registered sex offenders or down roads with no sidewalks.

Parents, including single mothers, also expressed concerns about losing their jobs because they have to leave work early to pick up their children. They also said the expanded parent responsibility zone, which some call a “walk zone,” had a disproportionate impact on low-income families and elementary school children. They were disappointed by a lack of crossing guards near their schools, where their children or grandchildren cross busy roads. (City officials say they are accepting applications for crossing guards.)

“This is too dangerous,” resident Regina Wood said. “The safest way to get these kids to school is a bus,” resident Bill Dodge said.

On Monday, after a series of protests that started in July, the Oak Ridge Board of Education agreed in a 4-1 vote to use $300,000 in one-time money from the school system’s fund balance to restore the bus routes this year and then study the issue comprehensively before the next school year—or try to obtain more funding. The Monday night vote essentially reverses the June decision.

The bus routes likely won’t be restored immediately however, and possibly not until October. Among other things, up to three school bus drivers might need to be hired for an additional six routes, and buses will have to be made “road ready.” Still, advocates of restoring bus service were pleased for now. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Education, K-12, K-12, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Angi Agle, Bob Eby, Bruce Borchers, bus routes, bus service, Chris Maczak, Dan DiGregorio, Diane Gibson, fund balance, Jenny Richter, Karen Gagliano, Keys Fillauer, Laurie Paine, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge School Board, Oak Ridge Schools, Paige Marshall, parent responsibility zone, PRZ, walk zone

Fired football coach files $1.1 million lawsuit

Posted at 1:41 pm August 10, 2014
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Don Colquitt

Don Colquitt

A former football coach and teaching assistant has filed a $1.1 million lawsuit against Oak Ridge school officials alleging that his firing in February was based upon a single “false complaint” from a student who alleged inappropriate contact—and he never had a chance to respond to the charges.

Coach Donald Colquitt suggested his reputation has been sullied by the unspecified complaint of “inappropriate contact with an Oak Ridge High School student,” and his local football career has been ruined. He filed a wrongful termination lawsuit in Anderson County Circuit Court on August 4.

“The ‘unanswered’ cloud of secrecy over the vague complaint allegedly filed against the plaintiff by an Oak Ridge High School student has caused him to effectively lose his career as a football coach in the Oak Ridge community, where he has engaged in that activity for some 19 years, and has further affected his reputation and character as a civic leader and football coach in the Oak Ridge school system,” the lawsuit said. “He will be unable to engage in such activity in the future and has sustained damages for loss of his career and future as a football coach, with damages resulting from the adverse imputation to his name, as well as his reputation in the community.”

The defendants are Oak Ridge Schools Superintendent Bruce Borchers and the Oak Ridge Board of Education.

Colquitt said he has never acted inappropriately or made any inappropriate contact with an ORHS student while employed by Oak Ridge Schools, but both the superintendent and school board have denied his right to be heard, including through a grievance hearing before the board. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, High School, K-12, Sports, Top Stories Tagged With: administrative leave, Anderson County Circuit Court, Bruce Borchers, complaint, football coach, inappropriate contact, Joe Gaddis, lawsuit, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge High School, Oak Ridge Schools, ORHS, Robert W. Knolton, teacher's assistant, termination letter, wrongful termination

Guest column: ORS made gains on most of Seven Keys to College, Career Readiness

Posted at 11:25 am August 6, 2014
By Bruce Borchers 2 Comments

Bruce Borchers

Bruce Borchers

In any transition year in which the state’s standards and/or tests change, it is difficult to make meaningful comparisons with the results on those tests from previous years. Comparisons within the year can be meaningful, such as the fact that the percentage of students in Oak Ridge Schools that were at or above proficiency is higher than the state average on nearly every test administered; or that the state said that “strong gains” were made on the high school tests, and our data shows that ORS continues to far outperform the state on every high school End of Course examination.

That being said, ORS did find areas for growth and also celebration within our results. Our overall student population did not achieve as highly as we had hoped. However, we did see significant increases in some of our subgroups. In fact, ORS closed the achievement gap in 10 of the 16 areas monitored by the state. For instance, our English Language Learners had a nearly 8 percent increase in the number of students who were proficient on the state’s mathematics examination.

So what do we do when the state changes the standards and tests? Is there a way that we can continue to monitor our progress to ensure the success of our students? Yes! We can look to the measures that we know indicate the success of our students—ORS Seven Keys to College and Career Readiness. These Keys were developed collaboratively with the community and focus on the steps needed to prepare students for the rigors of life after high school. In our Keys, we see positive gains on the majority of measures. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Guest Columns, K-12, Opinion Tagged With: Advanced Placement, AP, Bruce Borchers, End of Course, Oak Ridge High School, Oak Ridge Schools, ORHS, ORS, Seven Keys to College and Career Readiness, state standards, tests

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Classifieds

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