shooting

Education News for 01-03-2013

State Education News

  • Green Twp. couple takes reins in Columbus (Cincinnati Enquirer)
  • Lou and Debe Terhar laugh at the suggestion that they are Southwest Ohio’s new power couple in the state capital…Read more...

  • Trainer deal benefits hospital, schools (Columbus Dispatch)
  • After the day’s final bell rings at Fairbanks High School, the student-athletes cram into the locker room, and the wrist tape and ankle wraps soon fly…Read more...

  • Geauga County studying school districts, could consider consolidation (Willoughby News Herald)
  • Will some Geauga County school districts be facing consolidation or other alternatives in light of unrelenting money problems?…Read more...

Local Education News

  • SWL considers its policy for students, staff charging school lunches (Newark Advocate)
  • Southwest Licking Schools might soon have a policy governing the maximum number of meals students in the school-lunch program can charge, even though the amount of unpaid charges were reduced dramatically in November…Read more...

  • Heights must adjust snow removal plans in wake of spending cuts (Newark Advocate)
  • Licking Heights has had to revamp its snow removal policy in the wake of budget reductions, and the move could influence the cleanliness of classrooms…Read more...

  • Response ‘overwhelming’ to armed teacher program (Springfield News-Sun)
  • A free program to train teachers and school administrators on how to use firearms has gotten an overwhelming response…Read more...

  • Attorneys For Teen Charged In Chardon School Shooting Want Trial Moved (WBNS)
  • Attorneys for an Ohio teenager charged in the school shooting deaths of three students are renewing their effort to move the trial out of the grief-stricken community…Read more...

Education News for 12-17-2012

State Education News

  • Attorney General Mike DeWine urges schools to submit safety plans after Connecticut school (Cleveland Plain Dealer)
  • The shooting Friday morning in an elementary school in Newtown, Conn. that left 20 children and seven adults dead, including the shooter, prompted Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine to remind the remaining 145…Read more...

  • Most schools soon will let some kids skip gym (Columbus Dispatch)
  • By next school year, most districts in Franklin County will let students bypass gym class if they play a sport or participate in marching band or cheerleading. State law has allowed the option since 2006…Read more...

  • West Geauga School District offers programs for children with disabilities (Willoughby News Herald)
  • In accordance with operating standards for Ohio's Schools Serving Children with Disabilities, the West Geauga School District is seeking to identify, locate and evaluate all children with disabilities in the district…Read more...

  • Chardon reacts to Connecticut school shooting (Willoughby News Herald)
  • Memories of the Feb. 27 shooting at Chardon High School came flooding back with a vengeance for many area folks Friday, following news of the Connecticut elementary school slayings…Read more...

  • State committee and liberty school board set to meet (Youngstown Vindicator)
  • Local and state officials are hoping to create a new road to financial recovery for the Liberty school district…Read more...

National Education News

  • Oklahoma student arrested in alleged school-massacre plot (Columbus Dispatch)
  • Oklahoma police arrested a high-school student on charges that he was plotting to carry out a shooting and bombing massacre at his school…Read more...

  • Teachers, parents brace for day (Columbus Dispatch)
  • Jessica Kornfeld drove her children to their elementary school this past weekend. She wanted them to feel reassured that it was still safe, despite a horrific shooting in New England that killed 20 students close to their own age…Read more...

  • State Chiefs to Examine Teacher Prep, Licensing (Education Week)
  • Twenty-five state schools chiefs are vowing to take action to update their systems of teacher preparation and licensing, with an eye to ensuring teachers are ready the minute they take charge of their own classrooms…Read more...

  • Neighboring region's schools address security concerns (USA Today)
  • Schools in the Lower Hudson Valley in New York are working to find a balance between frightening children with worries about their safety and being ready to offer comfort for the nervous…Read more...

  • Autistic excel at detail, repetition (USA Today)
  • An estimated 1.5 million people in the United States have autism spectrum disorder, so chances are you may be affected by autism in some way…Read more...

  • Sandy Hook victims shared love for life, learning (USA Today)
  • NEWTOWN, Conn. -- The horror wrought by a lone gunman on this close-knit community crystallized Saturday afternoon as the 26 victims of the Sandy Hook school massacre were publicly identified…Read more...

Local Education News

  • Luxottica buys 540 laptops for high school (Cincinnati Enquirer)
  • Another Cincinnati Public School is going high-tech. Withrow University High School, an 880- student, 9-12 school in Hyde Park has partnered with Luxottica, a global eyewear company whose retail office is based in Mason, to buy 540 new laptops…Read more...

  • For former Cleveland schools leader Barbara Byrd-Bennett, Chicago is the final challenge (Cleveland Plain Dealer)
  • Chicago -- When Mayor Rahm Emanuel asked Barbara Byrd-Bennett to run the nation's third-largest school system, she didn't exactly jump at the chance…Read more...

  • Unorthodox approach working for Reynoldsburg schools (Columbus Dispatch)
  • Ask Reynoldsburg Superintendent Steve Dackin what’s behind the innovation in his district, and he’ll point to a set of beliefs shared by the school board, teachers and administrators…Read more...

  • Columbus students’ credits now in question (Columbus Dispatch)
  • The state is investigating whether Columbus schools awarded grades and credits to students who did not earn them…Read more...

  • Area educators shocked, but say they're prepared (Findlay Courier)
  • Northwestern Ohio school officials said Friday they were as shocked as anyone by the Connecticut school tragedy, but they are as ready as possible for something similar…Read more...

  • School officials, experts provide tips on discussing school shooting (Marion Star)
  • It’s likely children may have questions following today’s mass shooting at an elementary school in Newtown, Conn. School officials and counselors offered some tips on how to address their concerns…Read more...

  • Facebook post prompts school district “all-call” (Springfield News-Sun)
  • A post on a student’s Facebook page created safety concerns for Shawnee High School today…Read more...

  • Weathersfield teachers upset with contract talks (Youngstown Vindicator)
  • Weathersfield Local Schools teachers took up informational pickets of the schools to let the community know they believe they are being treated unfairly in contract negotiations…Read more...

Editorial

  • Cleveland schools CEO turns to parents (Cleveland Plain Dealer)
  • Now that Cleveland has passed a 15-mill levy slated to bring in millions for the district, this is no time for Clevelanders to sit on their hands…Read more...

  • Goosing up gigabits (Columbus Dispatch)
  • “Ohio is really cool.” That’s the upshot of what a new, lightning-quick broadband Internet network means for this state, Ohio State University President E. Gordon Gee…Read more...

  • Too little, too late (Columbus Dispatch)
  • The sudden interest of the Columbus Board of Education in its internal auditor is appropriate, but overdue…Read more...

Education News for 12-07-2012

Local Education News

  • Buchtel students experience day on job with AT&T (Akron Beacon Journal)
  • Buchtel High School juniors Elijah Graise, Tylor Williams and DeMontrell Hill got a first-hand look Thursday at trouble-shooting a problem on the job…Read more...

  • T.J. Lane's admission about Chardon High shooting should not be used at trial, his lawyers argue (Cleveland Plain Dealer)
  • T.J. Lane's admissions that he killed students at Chardon High School should not be used at his trial next month because the youth failed to fully understand his rights when officers questioned him…Read more...

  • Olentangy may not need new school (Columbus Dispatch)
  • New enrollment forecasts in the Olentangy school district cast doubt on the need for a new school approved by voters last year…Read more...

  • Berea schools' new hours next year concern some parents (Sun Newspapers)
  • Parents showed up at Monday’s school board meeting to express concerns about the district’s new time shifts, which begin next year…Read more...

  • Toledo Public Schools weighs 3 candidates to audit its performance (Toledo Blade)
  • As Toledo Public Schools ramps up efforts to have an audit of its operations performed, the process of hiring an organization to conduct the audit has widened…Read more...

  • Champion plans cuts if next levy fails (Warren Tribune Chronicle)
  • While the Board of Education will wait until January to officially act on placing a school levy on the ballot in 2013, a plan to slash finances by $602,000 was mapped out this week…Read more...

  • Math Night brings kids, parents together in Springfield (Youngstown Vindicator)
  • Springfield students and parents went on a camping adventure Thursday night. Although the tent was indoors, there were real problems. Math problems, that is…Read more...

Education News for 10-29-2012

State Education News

  • Privilege issue stalls hearing in suit over schools’ private discussions (Columbus Dispatch)
  • After its in-house attorney told members of the Columbus Board of Education in July that they couldn’t hold private meetings to discuss an unfolding data-rigging investigation…Read more...

  • Ohio Attorney General honors Chardon High School shooting first responders (WEWS)
  • Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine honored a packed house…Read more...

Local Education News

  • Some of the best will help kids learn to read (Cincinnati Enquirer)
  • A who’s who list of local business leaders is about to kick off an early childhood literacy campaign that seeks support from every workplace in the region…Read more...

  • District changes evaluation process for top officials (Hamilton Journal-News)
  • Fairfield City Schools will change how it evaluates its treasurer and superintendent, giving those officials the first evaluations they’ve had in some time…Read more...

  • Charter school’s scores outperform Springfield’s (Springfield News-Sun)
  • Two of Springfield’s three charter schools fared worse than the city’s traditional public schools, and a third school outperformed Springfield City Schools…Read more...

  • $23M Pettisville school goes green in big way with building project (Toledo Blade)
  • Low emission and fuel-efficient cars get premium parking spots outside Pettisville’s new K- 12 school building…Read more...

  • T.J. Lane using rarely successful plea in Chardon shooting (Willoughby News Herald)
  • After Keith Ledeger killed custodian Peter Christopher and wounded three other adults at Wickliffe Middle School on Nov. 7, 1994…Read more...

  • Choffin school faces discipline issues after influx of Career Academy students (Youngstown Vindicator)
  • A teacher believes the addition of Career Academy students to Choffin Career and Technical Center is causing disruption for other students…Read more...

Editorial

  • Poor excuse (Columbus Dispatch)
  • The second round of state Auditor Dave Yost’s probe of attendance-record-keeping practices in Ohio schools reveals two important things…Read more...

  • Facing facts (Columbus Dispatch)
  • The bad news is that graduation rates have fallen for most Ohio high schools on the latest state report cards…Read more...

  • Local school districts dealing with huge financial challenges (Youngstown Vindicator)
  • Here’s a sobering reality about public education in Ohio that should open the eyes of voters in the Nov. 6 election…Read more...

Crisis and recovery in Chardon

We were lucky enough to snag a copy of OEA's latest "Ohio Schools" magazine. Reading through it yesterday, we came to this incredibly powerful and moving piece on the Chardon shootings. Here it is.

CAREFUL RESPONSE AND COMPASSION MAKE THE DIFFERENCE IN THE AFTERMATH OF THE NATION'S DEADLIEST HIGH SCHOOL SHOOTING IN SIX YEARS

On February 27, a 17-year-old student sat down at a cafeteria table at Chardon High School and pulled a gun from a bag. Then he stood up and began shooting. Minutes later, those at the 1,100-student school said they heard screams, as the first 911 calls were made, teachers locked down classrooms, and students started sending text messages to friends and parents.

Student Daniel Parmertor, 16, died of his wounds hours after the shooting. Student Russell King Jr., 17, died early February 28; and Demetrius Hewlin, 16, died later that day. Wounded students, Joy Rickers, 18, and Nick Walczak survived that attack.

The defendant in the shootings, T.J. Lane, a sophomore at Lake Academy, an alternative high school for at-risk students, was arrested after being chased out of the cafeteria by a teacher. He later confessed to authorities that he fired 10 rounds from a .22-caliber pistol and had chosen his victims at random.

Lane has been charged as a juvenile with three counts of aggravated murder, two counts of aggravated attempted murder and one count of felonious assault. His next scheduled court hearing is on April 3, when the judge will determine whether he should be tried as an adult. Under Ohio law, if the Geauga County Prosecutor can show probable cause that Lane committed the crimes he is charged with, the teen's case will move to adult court where Lane could be sentenced to life in prison without parole if convicted.

RAPID RESPONSE

As the students, educators and residents of Chardon have struggled to understand the nation's deadliest shooting at a high school in six years, each has been part of the critical recovery effort that began on February 27 and will continue for a long time to come.

The response to the tragedy involved the collaborative and careful response of first responders, school administrators, the Chardon Education Association (Local President Tammy Segulin), Chardon Association of Classified Employees (Local President Ferd Wolfe) and Auburn Career & Technical Association (Local President Bob Hill), OEA Labor Relations Consultants (LRCs) Todd Jaeck and Kim Lane (Mentor office) and the OEA Crisis Response Team.

Immediately following the shootings on February 27, high school students were evacuated one room at time with assistance from law enforcement. Parents were notified to report to Maple Elementary School via ConnectEd and staff organized a sign- out procedure to reunite students with their parents. Parents of the injured students were privately notified.

Later that morning, Chardon High School staff met with the administration and law enforcement for updates on the injured and on the suspect.

On February 28, a District Response Team including building administrators, the district communications director, heads of law enforcement, mental health professionals, local clergy and local association representatives assembled to outline plans for the remainder of the school week.

Two days after the deadly shooting the district called faculty and staff together for updates from the administration and law enforcement and for grief counseling. On March 1, staff returned to the school buildings and parents and students were invited to return to the high school for a walk- through and to meet with counselors. On March 2, all schools reopened.

As the Chardon tragedy unfolded, 0EA's 16-member Crisis Response Team began its work with locals and made preparations to meet with staff when they returned to work. A group of OEA staff and one school counselor, the Crisis Response Team is trained to provide intervention services for education staff in the immediate aftermath of a disaster or violent incident that occurs while students are in school or that is otherwise related to a school or campus site.

Although school staff and students had practiced lockdown drills and evacuation procedures with local law enforcement during the past three years, they had hoped that these would remain drills. Local leaders like Chardon Education Association President Segulin explained that they had never practiced how to handle the aftermath of a real crisis.

On March 5, team members Kim Lane, Bill Pearsol, Cindy Petersen, Tom Williams, Lori Morgan and therapy dog, Bella—assisted teachers and education support professionals at Chardon High School and at the Auburn Career Center as they began the healing process. Key to their work was offering resources and emotional support to help restore a sense of safety and security within the schools and community.

"Many of the members were still in a state of disbelief and running on pure adrenaline," Lane said. "Individually, they shared their feelings of anger, grief and a sense of helplessness."

The following week, Crisis Response Team members Lane, Betty Elling, Suzanne Kaszar, Morgan and Bella continued to assist staff at both the high school and middle school as the reality of the incident was beginning to sink in.

"Many times a major crisis starts to emotionally break down a staff to the point where members leave the building or profession altogether," Segulin said. "Members of the Crisis Response Team were stationed in several of our buildings and were able to discuss personal matters as well as reassure members that being together is an important part of the staff's long term healing and cohesion. Students eventually graduate and move on, yet the school staff that remains must foster the positive growth and healing well after the tragedy."

Through the end of the school year, local law enforcement will be present at the high school and grief counselors and therapy dogs will be on site to assist students and staff. Substitute teachers will also be available for any teacher who needs time away from the classroom.

Segulin shared the gratitude of the locals for the help of the OEA Crisis Response Team, LRCs Jaeck and Lane, OEA Communications and Political Action Consultant Gary Carlile and the NEA for their assistance and resources. She said the NEA Crisis Guide, http://crisisguide.neahin.org/crisisguidet has proven especially beneficial and that the Chardon administrative team, communications director, mental health professionals and teachers have since incorporated its guidelines and ideas into their crisis plan.

"While there is no perfect model for handling a crisis," Segulin said, "the guidelines provide a meaningful and thoughtful approach to helping Chardon heal and memorialize our fallen and injured students."

COMMUNITY COMPASSION

For those who teach and work and learn in Chardon, an unspeakable tragedy has been met with an unprecedented outpouring of compassion and support from both neighboring and distant schools and communities and from the nation at large.

Messages have arrived daily from people around the world. Sympathy cards and words of encouragement line student lockers, signed banners stretch through the school and flowers and potted plants offer color and cheer. A red-and-black paper chain made by Chardon elementary school students extends down each hallway.

For staff, Segulin said, "We had no idea that simply being together was most important on our grief journey." They are grateful to fellow teachers and community agencies that provided breakfasts, lunches and goodies that allowed them to replenish their bodies, sit down with one another, listen and make plans for the future.

No one knew whether students would be strong enough to face their fears and return to the building. "That was dispelled three days later when the Class of 2012 and their parents led a school-wide march from the Chardon town square to the school as a symbol of solidarity," Segulin said.

Neighbors lined the streets, cheering as the students entered the building and cafeteria with tears streaming down their faces. Staff greeted them with applause and hugs. "Parents thanked us for keeping their children safe," Segulin said, "as we thanked the students for having the courage to come back."

Education News for 03-01-2012

Statewide Education News

  • ODE Files Waiver From No Child Left Behind Act – NBC-4, Columbus
  • The goal of the “No Child Left Behind Law” was to have 100 percent of all students proficient in math and reading at every grade level by 2014. But is it working in Ohio? Ohio is now joining 25 other states filing a waiver with the U.S. Department of Education saying the standards need to be updated. The states are also asking to be allowed to develop their own standards. View and Read here…

  • State wants to drop parts of No Child Left Behind Act - Lorain Morning Journal
  • The state has is requesting a waiver to key portions of the No Child Left Behind Act that it said would give school districts more realistic goals. On Wednesday, the Ohio Department of Education stated it sent an application to the U.S. Department of Education asking for a waiver of key portions pertaining of the law, according to state Superintendent Stan Heffner. Read More…

National Stories of the Day

  • 26 States Plus D.C. Apply for NCLB Waivers in Second Round – Education Week
  • Twenty six more states, plus the District of Columbia, are applying for waivers under the No Child Left Behind Act, which would free them from many of the core tenets of the law in exchange for adopting key reforms backed by the Obama administration. Already, 11 states have won this new flexibility. Read More…

Local Issues

  • Teachers, Staff Return To Chardon High School – Ohio News Network
  • Wednesday marked the first day back for teachers and grief counselors at Chardon High School. One staff member said it would be hard to be in the building with books and papers still on the floor from the shootings on Monday, reported ONN's Cristin Severance. Read More…

  • Firm to highlight district – The Vindicator
  • The Austintown School District is rolling out a plan to retain current students and bring back ones who have left for open enrollment or charter schools. The district hired The Wixey Network, a marketing firm based in Toledo, to bring district highlights and accomplishments to the forefront, Superintendent Vince Colaluca said Wednesday during a luncheon with local media representatives. Read More…

  • School District to Send Parents to Collection Agencies – ABC 6, Columbus
  • Columbus City School District parents who rack up debt on their children's school lunch accounts could be getting a call from debt collectors. The district says any parent more than $50 in debt will be reported to a collections agency. Read More…

  • More school threats in wake of Chardon High School shooting – WKYC, Cleveland
  • Schools across Northeast Ohio are reporting threat incidents involving students in the wake of the Chardon High School shooting. In North Royalton, a 9th grader has been removed from the high school after a girl overheard the boy making threats and talking of possessing weapons. Counselors at the school called police who secured the building and removed the boy from the grounds. A search of the school turned up nothing. Police continue to talk to the boy. Read More…

  • City schools get some good news for future building plans – Chillicothe Gazette
  • After climbing more than 100 spots on the Ohio School Facilities Commission's equity list in the past nine years -- and with favorable legislative changes possibly on the horizon -- the Chillicothe City Schools could receive school construction funding sooner than expected. Read More…

  • School shooting suspects usually fit profile – New Philadelphia Times Reporter
  • Students who have gone on shooting rampages at schools and universities in the past have often displayed similar behaviors, area mental health professionals say. Those behaviors can include an inability to fit in with others, a preoccupation with violence or weapons and a change in their normal behavior — becoming more aggressive or more withdrawn. Read More…

  • Panel: Government savings are in shared services
  • Local officials were warned Wednesday not to expect Ohio to rapidly restore funding taken away after the state budget crunch. More than 50 city leaders, township trustees and county officials met at Longview Center for a session on coping with the loss of state revenue. The panel discussion was sponsored by the Richland Community Development Group. Read More…

  • TPS, agency square off in bid to run Head Start – Toledo Blade
  • A night's sleep didn't seem to cool tempers a day after the growing dispute over who should run Toledo's Head Start program took a public, confrontational turn. The Toledo Board of Education voted 5-0 Tuesday to authorize Superintendent Jerome Pecko to apply for the $13 million grant to run Head Start, a move that dozens of supporters of the grant holder, the Economic Opportunity Planning Association of Greater Toledo, protested. The planning association 's supporters criticized what they consider an attempt to dismantle one of the few remaining black institutions left in Toledo. Read More…

  • Walsh aims to raise city IQ – Canton Repository
  • Walsh University will be the first international Intelligent Community Forum (ICF) Institute in the area of education. The announcement was made at Wednesday’s 46th annual Business and Communications Club luncheon in the Barrette Center. Read More…

Editorial & Opinion

  • Free the Cleveland schools from weight of bureaucracy: Plain Dealer
  • So, it's not just theoretical. There really does come a time when an organization gets so thoroughly mired in rules and bureaucracy that it can no longer do the things it was established to do. There really does come a point at which the mission shifts so profoundly that the original purpose of the organization is lost entirely. Read More…

  • New approach – Columbus Dispatch
  • Congress’ failure to fix fundamental flaws in the No Child Left Behind law leaves states little choice but to seek relief from its unrealistic demands, but those states should not weaken the accountability requirements that are at its core. Ohio has joined the parade of states seeking waivers from the 2002 law, which has been up for renewal since 2007 but has remained unchanged. Add to Congress’ many failures its inability to agree on how to improve this far-reaching law. The U.S. Department of Education so far has granted waivers to 11 states; 37, including Ohio, have applied. Read More…

  • Chardon shooting – Columbus Dispatch
  • Parents in Chardon saw their teenagers off to school on Monday morning, believing it was a typical start to a typical week. How heartbreaking that several of those youngsters never came home. The Dispatch sends condolences to the victims’ families and to the entire community. Read More…