Beacon's Teachers Spent Professional Learning Day Creating At-Home Learning Tools For 2-Week School Closure

Students in the Beacon City School District were off for a scheduled Professional Learning Day for teachers. Consider it a practice day for the anticipated two-week school closure due to the Dutchess County State Of Emergency declared on March 13, 2020, in an effort to reduce the coronavirus/COVID-19 spread. For a district that had virtually no snow days (fact-checking this… can’t recall if there was one snow day, or just a delay), parents aren’t getting off that easy. Kids, however, are ecstatic. At least in this closure, there is no snow to shovel, which is what usually happens with snow days. Unless we get a blizzard too. And if that happens, well, we’ll deal with it.

Beacon’s Superintendent Matt Landahl announced that teachers had been preparing for a two-week closure, and took the Professional Learning Day to create the materials that kids can use to log into classes from home. According to the announcement, elementary school students will be given access to Chromebook laptops at home.

School principals will reach out to parents on Monday, using the school messenger by Monday afternoon. Parents and students also have access to online and app-based communication tools with teachers that they have already been using.

Superintendent Matt Landahl ended his update with a cheer: “We will keep updating you with information next week and hang in there!”

Beacon City School District Closes Schools For 2 Weeks - Why This Is Good (Words From A Doctor In Italy)

Parents and community members have been waiting for the declaration about Beacon City Schools to follow several other districts in New York State. Gov. Andrew Cuomo was reluctant to close schools, with the economic impact it has on parents to continue to go to work, or work from home. In New York City, Mayor de Blasio was concerned about the food programs that exist in the public schools statewide that get food to low-income families. Dutchess County Legislator Nick Page has indicated that both New York State and the federal government are working on aid packages.

With Dutchess County’s State of Emergency declared today, all schools in the county must close. While kids are being regarded as (thankfully) not having severe symptoms, thoughts are being revisited as to if keeping the schools open is a good idea. The podcast Unchained (normally a cryptocurrency podcast) dedicated their entire show today to data-based insights on coronavirus, and recommended that readers read this essay in Newsweek, written by a doctor in a major hospital in Western Europe. He writes from Italy (which is under quarantine and the streets are empty, just in case you hadn’t read that yet):

 

From Newsweek:

“I'm a doctor in a major hospital in Western Europe. Watching you Americans (and you, Brits) in these still-early days of the coronavirus pandemic is like watching a familiar horror movie, where the protagonists, yet again, split into pairs or decide to take a tour of a dark basement.

”The real-life versions of this behavior are pretending this is just a flu; keeping schools open; following through with your holiday travel plans, and going into the office daily. This is what we did in Italy. We were so complacent that even when people with coronavirus symptoms started turning up, we wrote each off as a nasty case of the flu.”

 

The Beacon City School District is off today anyway for a professional day, so kids have been home in a practice day off. More news is to come of what sort of preparation plans the District has for students.

Superintendent Matt Landahl’s letter to parents:

 

Dear Beacon Community:

Due to the Dutchess County State of Emergency, the Beacon City Schools will be closed for classroom and extracurricular activities for the next two weeks due to Coronavirus/COVID 19. This school closing lasts through March 27th. We have been preparing for this potential and we will share some of our plans with you in the coming days. I want everyone to be safe and be kind to each other. I will update the community soon.

Matt Landahl

 

Beacon City School District Superintendent Matthew Landahl Updates Community After Governor Cuomo's Message

Governor Cuomo spoke on Monday morning about New York State and the coronavirus, COVID-19, after declaring a state of emergency over the weekend. Several schools in New York City have closed, including places where someone who tested positive for COVID-19 either attended, or worked at, or is a spouse of someone who was regularly in the building.

Scarsdale, in Westchester County, announced Sunday evening that it would close the district until March 18 (just under a two-week period), and that they would explore e-learning options for students. A teacher at Scarsdale’s middle school tested positive for the virus and was experiencing “mild illness” according to Scarsdale’s message to parents.

This gets parents worried, of course for the safety of all persons, but also for the disruption to normal life. Work culture doesn’t usually allow for such duration of sick days. Plus, Beacon schools’ spring break is right around the corner (April 6-13), and there would be big disruption to the curriculum and activities that teachers have planned for children, which sometimes include grant-funded field trips and opportunities.

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio agrees, and said in a news conference on Monday: “We would only consider closing any particular school for very specific reas‎ons, and for as brief a period of time as possible,” as reported in The New York Times. “I think parents want to see the schools keep going so long as it’s safe, want to see their kids getting educated.” Mayor de Blasio also said that evidence indicated that coronavirus presented “minimal risk” to healthy children, and said “the schools are not the place we’d be looking first” to mitigate the virus. Read why Mayor de Blasio says that closing schools is a last resort.

Governor Cuomo issued guidance on school closures, stating that “if a student in New York tested positive for the virus, their school would be closed for an initial 24 hours while health officials assessed the situation,” according to the New York Times article.

Beacon Superintendent Matthew Landahl issued a letter to parents, which is posted to the district’s website here in English and here in Spanish. In it, Landahl stated: “If we have a positive test for COVID-19 with one of our students or employees, I will notify the school community after getting the information from the health department. Per Governor Cuomo today, schools will be closed for a 24-hour period if a student or employee tests positive, to clean and make further decisions. I will determine next actions in consultation with health and government officials.”

He also let the community know that day and evening custodians are working extra time during the week to make sure all high-touch surfaces get wiped down and disinfected. “They will be working Saturdays for the foreseeable future to help keep school buildings clean. The transportation department is disinfecting buses on a regular basis as well,” he stated.

Elementary schools have had small adjustments made by principals to the kids’ schedule “to allow students more time to wash their hands properly before lunch and at other times of the day.” At the secondary level, students are being educated and encouraged to wash their hands as often as possible.

What To Do With This Information

If you are a parent of young children, the Scarsdale closure might have had you panicking. This direction from Beacon Superintendent Matthew Landahl, Governor Cuomo and Mayor de Blasio might have you reassured. But you’ll still want to prepare mentally and physically:

Mental Prep

We’re going to lighten this mood by taking you back to 1978 in Columbus, Ohio. This blogger’s hubby was just a young lad then, in 7th grade. He experienced a two-week school closure after a blizzard dumped a lot of snow on already existing mounds of snow. Learn more details and see pictures in this article. His teachers taught their students by broadcasting on the TV. Days of broadcast! He remembers thinking his teachers were celebrities.

Blizzards make your physical life out of control. But they also can make acceptance of being snowed in a little easier. Translate this into voluntary closures and self-quarantining.

Headlines: Read the full article. Don’t just read a headline and keep going. The media (and yes, ALBB is part of the media and we try to headline responsibly) is using grabby headlines in some cases, which create anxiety. So read the full article before forming your opinion.

Lists: Make lists of things you need to do, and stick very closely to them. Working with small kids around you is distracting, but if you have your list, it’s easier to hunker down lightning-fast when you have moments when your kids are safely engaged in something. In those short bursts, you may actually have a more productive work day/week then you’ve ever had.

What To Do With Young Kids

Start making a list of what you would do with your young children while at home (if it were for two weeks… but so far we might be looking at 24 hours). Ideas include taking a walk. Learning to roller-skate. Enjoying the sunshine. You may not need to resort to this daily schedule, but having ideas helps.

Benefits Of This Possible Snow Day Series

Remember… We are thinking of it like snow days - which are out of our control. If home-schooling starts for the Beacon School District, this means:

  • Recess could increase from 20 minutes in your backyard or nearby park to 40 minutes (or more!)

  • You don’t have to shovel snow.

  • You could relax on your front porch or stoop and work or read.

Most important, is to take breaks from pressing the Refresh button on your coronavirus Google search. Step away from the computer. Step outside. Enjoy life. People are working on tests and vaccinations and best practices. You do you. Do your clean things. Don’t expect stores to give you wipes (supplies are out for everyone, so just wash up when you get home!). Stay informed but continue on.

How To Predict School Closures and Delays Due To Weather And Snow In Beacon

Photo Credit: Katie Hellmuth Martin

Photo Credit: Katie Hellmuth Martin

The past few years in Beacon have seen relatively frequent school closures, but this year, not so much. In past years, by February, parents would be on edge with any prediction of snow, having their work disrupted, kids’ routines wrinkled, or figuring out how to get home from New York City on a train in time for an unexpected early pickup due to canceled programming.

A Little Beacon Blog took to examining the source of how school closures and delays are called in Beacon. On a personal note, I have exited out of all group predictions and penny bets in social media, as the stakes are too high; I need to preserve my adrenaline for issues that are more important. On a positive note, from our research last year for this article, I have been able to devise a private prediction system that you may benefit from.

By the time this article was written in 2019, the season of school closures had blissfully ended, so the post remained in Drafts. We are publishing it now - post Groundhog Day 2020, while spring bulbs have sprung in February - just in case you need a quick reference to make a prediction.

How The Beacon City School District Predicts A Closure Or Delay

The superintendent makes the call on whether there is a closure or delay. In years and superintendents past, this may have included foggy conditions. It also included a double early dismissal - which means an early dismissal is called, and then a few moments later, an even earlier dismissal is called. This can make life unsettling for commuting parents who have limited backup plans and little or no family in the area to retrieve their children.

This is how current Superintendent Matthew Landahl makes the call, as told to A Little Beacon Blog when we reached out to him last February during a particularly bad winter season:

 

On a regular school day, we have bus runs in-district and out-of-district that run from about 6 am until the last elementary student is dropped off around 4 pm. We actually have a couple of runs that start before 6 am and sometimes we don't wrap up until after 4 pm.

We start checking roads at about 3:30 am in the morning. A small team from our Transportation Department does this. Since I live here in Beacon, sometimes I join in on the fun. For instance, this morning (back in February 2019) we found a lot of areas still icy where our buses go, causing our own vehicles to slip around, thus causing a call for a delay.

Our main concern on any day is whether we can run buses safely between 6 am and 4 pm (this does not include after school/evening activities).

Calls based on forecasts are usually much tougher and are much more open to criticism or feedback from folks. The decision is mine alone and entirely based on whether we feel our buses can run safely. We subscribe to a very good weather service and I look at other forecasts, but in the end, it is my call with input from the Transportation Department.

I totally understand that my decisions cause inconvenience at best for everyone (including my family). It is definitely a no-win part of the job, but I always focus on travel safety with my decision-making.

 

How The City Of Beacon Plows and Salts The Streets

So now you might be wondering how the streets are plowed by the City of Beacon. What time do they start? We wondered the same thing. Here’s what Beacon’s City Administrator, Anthony J. Ruggiero, M.P.A., told ALBB:

 

That is a tough one to answer, and there is no easy answer.

There are a lot of factors that go into responding to a snow storm:

  • time of day

  • temperatures

  • the type of precipitation (snow, or mix of snow and ice)

  • and amounts predicted

No two storms are alike. With storms that start overnight, the Highway Department will be dispatched by the Police. Generally speaking, it is at this point that 5 trucks with sanders/salters are assigned areas citywide and treat roads with salt.

Typically for larger storms, all roads are treated with one application of material to help snow and ice bonding to blacktop. Once snow accumulates to about an inch, all plows are sent to designated areas (typically 24 vehicles, including large trucks with plows and sanders and small trucks with plows) to scrape the roads. This continues until the snow stops and then everything will be treated with one final application of salt. For smaller storms, it may be just salting, possibly followed by a scraping if necessary.

The City of Beacon Highway employees have always taken great pride in the way snow removal and servicing the residents of the City is conducted to assure roads are safe.

 

How This Writer Tests The Weather To Determine Freezing Streets

If slippage at 3:30 am is a main issue, then one must determine if the roads will be frozen at 3:30 am, possibly before plows or salt trucks are out. This year, in February 2020, there has been very little snow, but a lot of rain. Last week, a few snow flakes showed up in weather apps on smart phones, yet with a 39 degree prediction. Parents starting making backup plans and predictions for a two-hour delay. This writer came up with the following test:

  • Ask yourself, has the ground been frozen for a long time? Or has it been over 35 degrees for many days?

  • Step outside. Wave your arms in the air to feel the degree of coldness for yourself.

  • If it feels kind of cold, but mainly warm and wet, and if the ground has not been frozen for days or weeks, and if the little bulbs have been popping out of the ground, then chances are, the snowflakes we’re seeing in the weather app will not accumulate or freeze when the prediction is 39 degrees, thus causing little to no slippage (though be careful on your front porch steps).

  • If it has been under 32 degrees for days, and if there is a little snowflake icon in your weather app, and the percentage of precipitation is above 50% in the early morning hours (between 12 am and 4 am), then you can gauge a 70% chance of a school delay (unless it’s a storm with constant snow into the morning and afternoon).

  • PLEASE NOTE: This is a very unsophisticated, nontechnical method that does not employ the weather tracking system that the District uses, but has been effective in making unprofessional predictions.

On this particular night last week, using this test method, the prediction of no two-hour delay was correct.

Hopefully this helps you plan and understand how calls are made. Keeping your blood pressure down, and your mood up. If there is a delay, that just means you’ve got time to make chocolate chip pancakes!

Beacon's Superintendent Encourages Everyone To Take 2020 Census - Explains Benefits

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It’s Census 2020 time, which is an opportunity for the City of Beacon and the Beacon City School District to benefit from new financial opportunities and incentives. Beacon’s Superintendent, Dr. Matthew Landahl, published on his Superintendent’s Blog a message encouraging people to participate in the Census.

The Census begins on April 1, 2020, and every household in the country can participate in it. “An accurate count is critical as the results will be used to determine funding for a range of programs, including many that our students and our school districts rely upon. Unfortunately, many households did not participate in the 2010 Census and that number is expected to increase this year,” said Dr. Landahl in his blog post.

”Some households are concerned that their responses will be shared with other government agencies,” he continued. “This is not the case and respondents should know that their participation can only benefit them, their families, and their communities.”

To learn more about the process and how it benefits public schools, visit this link.

Beacon's Superintendent Hosts Listening/Discussion Sessions For 2020/2021 Budget Planning

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The Beacon City School District is preparing for the 2020/2021 budget and potentially a new Capital Project, according to the Superintendent’s Blog by Dr. Matthew Landahl, who is hosting different listening/discussing sessions with different stakeholder groups as he has done in previous years.

Meetings will be held with school PTOs, student groups from grades 5-12 in all of Beacon’s buildings, and meetings with faculty and staff. “Listening to the BCSD community is the most important thing I do as we make plans for the future,” said Dr. Landahl.

The schedule for the PTO meetings the Superintendent will be attending:

  • Rombout Middle School Wednesday, February 5 at 6:30 pm

  • Glenham Elementary Thursday, February 6 at 3:30 pm

  • JV Forrestal Elementary Tuesday, February 11 at 4 pm

  • Beacon High School Wednesday, February 12 at 7 pm

  • Sargent Elementary Thursday, February 20 at 7 pm (this may change slightly, we will update if it does)

  • South Ave. Elementary Tuesday, March 10 at 6 pm

Elementary School Children Share Art In Howland Public Library Show

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Walk to the back of the Howland Public Library, past the teen section with the neat origami book design on the shelves, and enter the Community Room to see the “Art Is Elementary” show put on by the art teachers of the four elementary schools in the Beacon City School District. The show continues through Saturday, February 1, 2020.

From the Howland Public Library’s Instagram: “Thanks to Mrs. Farkas, Mrs. Pezzo and Mrs. Wurtz for sharing your students’ artwork with us. Such a great show. We have so many talented young people in Beacon!”

The children work with many mediums of art, including pencil, tin, marker, and others.

Beacon City School District Elementary School Art Show at Howland Public Library January 18

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The Howland Public Library is pleased to present Art is Elementary, the fourth annual exhibition of student artwork from the Beacon City School District elementary schools. A reception for the students and teachers will be held on Saturday, January 18, from 2 to 4 pm. All are welcome. The exhibit will be on view in the Community Room through Saturday, February 1.

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One of the library’s most colorful exhibits, Art is Elementary features work from students at J.V. Forrestal, Glenham, Sargent, and South Avenue elementary schools. The annual exhibit is organized in collaboration with art teachers Sallie Farkas, Cathy Pezzo and Susan Wurtz. Eight pieces of art were selected to represent each of the four elementary schools. The exhibit is just a small sample of the wonderful art being done by students of all ages throughout the Beacon City School District. Stop by the reception to show your support for the young artists and see their creative works.

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The Howland Public Library is located at 313 Main Street in Beacon, N.Y. The Community Room is open during regular library hours. Please note the gallery may not be accessible during some library programs. Please call the library at (845) 831-1134 or consult the library calendar at beaconlibrary.org before planning your visit.

Trade Us A Plastic Bag For An ALBB Tote Bag At Back To School Block Party

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This Saturday is the 5th Annual Back To School Block Party and School Supply Drive from I Am Beacon, in partnership with Key Food at the South Avenue Park, just up the hill from the basketball courts and Beacon Dental. There will be games, food, music, and basketball!

A Little Beacon Blog will also be there, and wants to trade you one of our tote bags for a plastic bag! While supplies last (we have 19!), you can have a free tote bag when you bring one plastic bag. One tote bag per person. We’ll collect the plastic bags and stuff them into the plastic bag collection bin at Key Food.

Plastic bags don’t go into home recycling cans because they float around the recycling center and get into the machines, causing major problems. Start carrying a collection of totes, and skip the plastic bag - from anywhere! It’s a tricky habit to start when you’re in a restaurant or a store, and pulling out a tote bag isn’t commonplace. Or if you’re in Walmart with those rotating wheels of plastic bags. But give it a try!

Free tote bags for the first 19 plastic bag trades, and then we’ll have them on sale for $10 (normally $18 on this website).

See you soon!

Teacher Learning Days :: What Beacon Teachers Learn On Learning Days

Photo Credit: Katie Hellmuth Martin

Photo Credit: Katie Hellmuth Martin

Editor’s Note: We’d planned for this article to come out in March, when the Professional Learning Day happened for Beacon City School teachers, but time got the best of us. With the recent passing of the Beacon City School budget, we’re publishing it now so that you can see how budget items relate to what teachers prepare for during the year.

When Teacher Learning Days happen in the winter, at first blush, they create extra long weekends - or weeks, if there are snow days abutting the Professional Learning Day. A parent hardly thinks about what the teachers are actually learning and why there is a day off. The day is just another day off, and another day to figure out what to do if you are a working parent who needs to juggle around a childcare schedule.

What happens inside the classrooms of Beacon schools on Professional Learning Days had mostly been a mystery to parents in the district. But then Beacon’s new-ish Superintendent, Dr. Matthew Landahl, started sending regular email updates, giving a glimpse of what teachers work on during those student days off.

Below is a breakdown of the main agenda items on a Professional Learning Day in March 2019, with clarification provided by Dr. Landahl or the actual agenda itself:

Responsive Classroom Training - What Is This?

On the learning day, 25 teachers participated in the Responsive Classroom training. But what is a “Responsive Classroom?” There is a website for it, and according to that website, it is defined as: “Responsive Classroom is an evidence-based approach to education that focuses on the strong relationship between academic success and social-emotional learning (SEL). The Responsive Classroom approach empowers educators to create safe, joyful, and engaging learning communities where all students have a sense of belonging and feel significant.”

Sounds neat, so we asked Dr. Landahl what Responsive Classrooms mean for Beacon: “Responsive Classroom is a model that teachers can implement in their classrooms that focuses on the power of teacher language, interactive modeling, and Morning Meetings. When I was an elementary principal in Virginia of a very diverse school, we worked extensively with Responsive Classroom.”

Morning Meetings! My third-grader has persistently pestered me to be more on time - and earlier - to school drop-off so that she can get to her Morning Meeting. The last minute of drop-off is at 9:01 am, and the school doors of our building open at 8:40 am. During that time, Morning Meeting transpires, and the kids take it very seriously.

Dr. Landahl continued: “Teachers raved about the training and they were able to bring a deeper sense of community to the classroom and the entire school. Our hope is to have many of our teachers trained in the model in Beacon to find ways to increase social/emotional learning for all of our students, and to build communities in our schools.”

Restorative Practices for Middle School Teachers

Restorative Practice trains in how to respond to challenging behavior.

Coding in the Classroom

Teachers are implementing coding into their classrooms, with events such as a Coding Night held at South Avenue Elementary earlier this year by the school librarian, Mr. Aaron Burke. During this portion of Professional Learning Day, teachers from all grade levels got to look at various websites and resources that promote computational thinking and problem-solving, using computer coding strategies and skills. Robots were incorporated, including the Dash robot, Ozobots, and the Sphero Bolt. Teachers were able to brainstorm ideas for to how these resources could be used in the curriculum.

Using 3D Printers - Did Not Know Beacon Schools Had Them!

This is exciting news. According to the learning day agenda, every school in the Beacon City School District has a 3D printer. If you’re a parent in the district, you’ll know how much paper in different colors comes home as flyers, homework assignments, lunch menus, etc. These are run on a regular printer. But what can a 3D printer make? Teachers were able to find out during this training session, also led by South Avenue’s librarian, Mr. Burke, that included learning the basics of how 3D printers work. With Mr. Burke’s assistance, teachers could design a simple project using Tinkercad.

Using Google Docs and Google Classroom

Lots of collaboration going on with Google in our schools. In my day, this was with Apple, where Apple computers dominated the computer labs, and Word and Excel from Microsoft also tried to dominate as software. Now we have Google’s Chrome Books in the classrooms, and Google’s Drive platform, which is basically Word and Excel online where people can connect in the documents and share writing and creation experiences.

Teachers were trained in Google Classroom and other tools including Google Slides and Google Docs (both parts of Google Drive, functioning similarly to PowerPoint and Word) in the primary grades. According to the learning day agenda, teachers were trained in: “Google Slide tools for projects such as creating signs, ebooks, stop-animation videos, collaborative projects, interactive presentation, and choose-your-own adventure stories. Tips for helping students create more effective presentations will be included as well.”

I could use some tips from my 9-year-old on how to make better slide presentations, or an ebook!

Side Note Opinion: What does this classroom tech mean for privacy? This does mean that Google can now track a lot of our behavior and data. As can Apple with our phones, and every single app that we use, yet Apple has tried to brand itself as a protector of privacy. So far, Facebook is the main platform I avoid strongly, as they have proven time and again, and continue to prove with new editorial decisions every day, that they aren’t responsible with our information. So far, my hope and trust will remain with Apple and Google.

Collaborating with Dia: Beacon

Beacon students benefit from Dia: Beacon’s presence just down the road, overlooking the Hudson River near the Metro-North train station. An arts and education program between Dia: Beacon and BCSD has been in place for 18 years. Many opportunities exist, including the Teen Art Program we just wrote about. Additionally, Beacon’s second-graders take a field trip to the museum. (Parents are invited to attend, to help manage the kids.)

Teachers were able to explore the galleries and collaborate with Dia artist educators in preparation for spring programming. The arts education program provides K-12 students with an intimate setting to respond critically to the art and programs at Dia:Beacon through multisession workshops both at school and in the galleries. 

Elementary Science/STEM Curriculum Training

Curriculum trainers, along with TEQ, facilitated a walk-through of the science/STEM curriculum unit that was developed and revised during this school year. In addition, TEQ will provide professional development on the Engineering Design Practices of the new New York State Science Learning Standards.

Mindfulness for Educators: The What, Why, and How

This workshop was an opportunity for “teachers and other school staff to slow down, step back, and consider the fast-paced world of the classroom from a new perspective.” According to the learning day agenda, teachers face a variety of stresses, both in and out of school, which can impact their professional performance as well as their social and emotional well-being. “The growing body of research continues to suggest that teachers who participate in mindfulness training and practice regularly are more likely to feel personally and professionally fulfilled and more connected to their students - critical factors in creating a school-based culture of mindfulness.”

Data-Driven Conversations for High School Teachers

Data usually sounds dry and impersonal, but for those of us who do study it, it can be revealing about human behavior and how we can deliver what people want. Teachers were trained in this concept, and how to use the data to improve learning efforts.

So now we know - Professional Learning Days are intense! Meanwhile, parents are making pancakes and organizing play dates or other adventures for kids who are happy to have the day off.

Final Free Pop-Up Concert From Howland Chamber Music Circle Featuring Beacon High School Musicians

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The Howland Chamber Music Circle is a collective of musicians who appear in the world’s greatest concert halls, and also right here in Beacon at the Howland Cultural Center for their regularly scheduled concerts. The HCMC’s Pop-Up Series offers four opportunities to enjoy the chamber music circle at different locations around town.

This Sunday, June 2, 2019 at 3 pm, the musicians will be performing their final pop-up concert for the season at St. Andrew & St. Luke Episcopal Church. This concert is part of their Vent Nouveau program, a partnership with Beacon High School to expose students to chamber music. The performance will feature several high school students.

About Vent Nouveau, Beacon High School, and Howland Chamber Music Circle

Vent Nouveau has been Artist-in-Residence at Beacon High School since 2017, and has worked closely with the school’s band program to enhance their music education and expose students to the wide world of chamber music. Vent Nouveau is dedicated to bringing attention to the wide variety of chamber repertoire for winds, brass, and percussion instruments.

Vent Nouveau is composed of musicians who have performed with some of the country’s leading symphony orchestras, including the New York Philharmonic, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Houston Symphony, Louisville Orchestra, Dallas Symphony Orchestra, San Diego Symphony, and New World Symphony. These artists first collaborated with one another in the prestigious West Point Band, and now put their virtuosic talents toward exploring chamber music from the traditional to the obscure. Offering versatile concert programs that range from two- to twelve-member ensembles, it is the first group of its kind in the NYC-surrounding area. More information on Vent Nouveau and upcoming events can be found at www.ventnouveauny.com

About The Howland Chamber Music Circle

The Howland Chamber Music Circle is recognized as a leading arts organization in the Hudson Valley, bringing world-class music to the Hudson Valley. Musicians who perform for the Circle regularly appear in the world’s greatest concert halls. Each season the Circle presents eight chamber music concerts, a four-concert Piano Festival, a very popular Classics For Kids concert series, and a free concert series, the Pop-Up Concerts, to the Beacon community.

In 2016 the Howland Chamber Music Circle was awarded the Dutchess County Executive’s Arts Organization Award through Arts Mid-Hudson for its exceptional music programming and community reach, and for enriching the lives of Hudson Valley residents through music. Through its educational outreach program, the Howland Chamber Music Circle brings enjoyment, knowledge, and skill in music to many young people in the area. In partnership with local school districts and community groups, the Circle has sponsored artist residencies throughout Dutchess County, most recently in the Arlington and Beacon High Schools.

Beacon 3rd Graders Receive Annual Dictionary Donation From Beacon Elks - For 15th Year

Third-graders in the Beacon City School District receive dictionaries donated by the Beacon Elks Lodge. Photo Credit: Katie Hellmuth Martin

Third-graders in the Beacon City School District receive dictionaries donated by the Beacon Elks Lodge.
Photo Credit: Katie Hellmuth Martin

If you’re a parent in the Beacon City School District, you may have seen this yellow dictionary come home this past winter in your child’s backpack (this article got backlogged a bit). Where did the dictionary come from, you may have wondered? The teachers, administrators and PTA/O parents are always finding ways to send kids home with free treats, so what’s the story on the yellow dictionary?

For the past 15 years, third-graders in the Beacon City School District have each received one donated dictionary from the Beacon Elks Lodge. Says Carl Oken to A Little Beacon Blog about the donation: “Studies have shown that the third grade is the identified grade for the best results in expanding the youths’ vocabulary. Nationwide, 1,900 Elks Lodges have been distributing dictionaries to third-graders across our country (approaching 2 million dictionaries distributed) to help students’ literacy. Here in Beacon, we have been donating dictionaries to our third-graders for over 15 years and we have now donated over 4,000 dictionaries. We look forward to expanding the dictionary project to Haldane, Garrison and Fishkill Elementary Schools.”

Beacon City School Budget Passes - The Highlight Reel of Budget Items - What Students Can Expect

Photo Credit: Katie Hellmuth Martin

Photo Credit: Katie Hellmuth Martin

The email came in from Dr. Matthew Landahl, Superintendent of the Beacon City School District, at 10:24 pm, just hours after polling had closed and the votes were counted. He was announcing the passing of the BCSD budget and additional buses for kids in the district. We asked him for his highlights of the budget, in a Cliffs Notes fashion. You can read the 2019/2020 budget presentation in full here.

Proposition 1 - The Budget

Beacon City School District 2019 Vote Results:

Proposition 1 Budget
Yes- 749
No-193
Total- 942

Proposition 2 Buses

Yes 727
No- 243
Total- 970

Proposition 3- Capital Transfer

Yes- 740
No- 232
Total- 972

Board Election
Meredith Heuer-814
Michael Rutkoske- 786
Antony Tseng- 678

Highlights Include:

  • Additional Class Size Reduction: Teaching position at the elementary level. “We have added seven of these positions the previous two years,” says the superintendent.

  • Music: Continuation of the currently grant-funded fourth-grade instrumental music program with district funding of the band teacher position. A Little Beacon Blog wrote about that here when it started.

  • Business: Addition of Business teacher position at the high school to begin a Business education program for high school students.

  • Art + Computers: Addition of a half-time Art teacher position at the high school to begin some digital design programming.

  • Social Worker: Addition of a full-time Social Worker position at the high school to complement the social worker and psychologist already there. “We are hoping to hire someone with expertise in drug and alcohol counseling. The position would also work with middle-school students,” said the Superintendent.

  • Professional Development: Greatly expanded professional development for teachers.

  • 1:1 Chromebook Initiative at the high school for all students.

  • Interactive Whiteboards in all high school classes.

  • Farming and Food: Expanded partnership with Common Ground Farm and continued partnership with Hudson Valley Seed.

  • School Garden at Rombout Middle School.

  • Additional coursework at the high school which will not necessitate additional staff.

From the Budget Power Point, there will be additional high school programming in these areas:

  • Business Education Program - Planning year for internship model for 2020-2021

  • PLTW - Computer Science Program - Year 1 Computer Science Essentials

  • Italian Course

  • Art Coursework - Architecture Design, Interior Design, Sculpture

  • English Department

  • AP Language & Composition Course

  • Magic Realism in Literature

  • Media Literacy

  • Research Literacy

Proposition 2 - The Buses

What does a vote of Yes mean? It grants two buses that can seat 72 passengers each, and four buses that can seat 20 passengers.

Speaking of buses, the April deadline of getting in your request for your child to be bused has passed. But maybe there’s still hope? So you better get on it if you need busing. This is for kids who live in the designated busing areas, or are bused to childcare locations.

Proposition 3 - Capital Transfer

When A Little Beacon Blog inquired as to the details of the Capital Transfer, the superintendent explained: “The Capital Transfer allows us to move money from a Capital Reserve to our Capital Project, namely to fund lights at the new turf field behind the high school being built this summer. Lights will help us use the field more often and also will allow the community to use the field more as well.”

In his email to Beacon families, and on the Beacon City School District website, Dr. Landahl concluded: “I want to give a huge thanks to the community for supporting our budget this year. We can't wait to start the new programs in this year's budget to help our students!”

Beacon Career Fair A Success With Teens, Businesses and Organizations

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There was great turnout at Beacon High School’s Career Fair today! Plenty of interested students asked questions... and foraged for free cookies. A Little Beacon Blog bribed passers-by with stickers, and for the writers and bloggers in the house (they are usually very shy and quiet when approaching the table), we gave writers our tote bag.

Each year we are happy to engage with teens to show them the resources they didn’t know about yet, like our recent article about the (free) Dia Teens Art Program, and the Open Sketch session at the Beacon Library. One student who visited the table is about to be published in the Poughkeepsie Journal for an article she wrote!

Salon Dae (the salon near Dutchess Airport) was in attendance with opportunities for hair stylists, and did braiding on the spot. Next to Salon Dae was Twins Barber Shop from Beacon’s Main Street, clipping away. The Twins always draw the largest crowd!

Across the way were the fire 🔥 fighters, who were giving demonstrations using a smoke machine. Antalek & Moore Insurance brought their corn hole game and had quite the competitions going on. For the rest of us, it was hard to compete with all that action!

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The EMS Education table was in a good spot to reach interested prospective first responders, who need the education first to even get into the field. Other first responders included the Beacon Volunteer Ambulance Corps and the Beacon Police.

A Little Beacon Blog’s table was in between Wingate’s caregivers table, answering questions for men and women who might want to go into nursing and caregiving, which we learned provides job security as there has been a shortage of nurses, we were told. Dutchess County Tourism was on our other side - where we learned all sorts of things like how they are organizing workshops for businesses to help educate about best practices, like ADA compliance for websites. Good stuff, those busy bees are doing over there!

If you’re a business who wants to represent at the Beacon Career Fair next year and reach the students, email the organizer, school counselor Michele Polhamus at polhamus.m@beaconk12.org. The notification about the Career Fair usually goes out in March-ish for this annual May event.

Yearly Form To Request School Bus Due For Students Who Ride School Buses

A message from the Beacon City School District:

If your child is going to a child care location for the 2019-2020 school year, and will need transportation to or from that site to their school, please submit a new transportation request form by April 1, 2019. By law, a new request is required each year by April 1st for the following year.

If your child will attend a non-public school for the 2019-2020 school year, and will need transportation, NYS law requires a written request each year. Please submit this request to the school district registrar's office before April 1st. Transportation to non-public schools may be provided by law for a distance of 15 miles.

Forms are available here on the district website or from the registrar's office at 10 Education Drive, Beacon, New York.