Posted in 2009

Parents speak out on school realignment proposal

Click here for the article

Before administrators proposed to move eighth-graders to the middle school, Bill McVeagh considered moving out of the Springfield Township School District so his rising eighth-grader would not have to go to high school earlier than would be appropriate.

“Many of the people in the community for years have been concerned with eighth grade in high school,” he said. “Many of the parents in the community were concerned at the point to thinking of pulling students out and putting them in private school.”

These concerns are that socially, developmentally and maturity-wise, eighth-graders are experiencing one of the most difficult times in their lives, he said.

At that age, the experience of being the “top dogs” of the middle school might give them the confidence to excel both academically and in their transitions to ninth grade, he said.

He added that he has “nothing but kudos” for the school district administration.

Some of the other parents who spoke at a Sept. 24 public forum for middle school parents agreed with McVeagh and administrators that the proposal to restructure the school district is a good idea.

Others were concerned that bringing fifth-graders to Erdenheim Elementary and eighth-graders to Springfield Township Middle School would take away the opportunities these students have now.

A few parents urged administrators to consider how a change would affect the gifted program for fifth and eighth grades if the school board were to pass the proposal, which will be up for a vote later this month.

One parent said that her children, graduates of Springfield, valued spending their eighth-grade year in high school because it exposed them to the arts early.

Other parents asked the administrators to keep in mind that some students are actually ready for more responsibility as eighth-graders.

Another concern was that children missed out on the more focused and grade-appropriate academic instruction that administrators promise the restructured system would allow.

According to administrators, one of the benefits of restructuring the schools would be higher academic achievement. Students would have schedules appropriate for their instructional needs, and it would be easier for teachers in the same grade level to work together because they would all be in the same building, they said.

For fifth-graders, this means more time for language arts instruction, which is difficult to schedule when adhering to a middle school schedule, said Superintendent Wendy Royer.

If fifth grade is moved to elementary school, students would be instructed by one teacher all day, rather than having a schedule with a few different classes and instructors, she said.

The new structure would increase rigor across all grade levels, administrators said.

Some parents asked if present fifth-graders are not having enough language arts instruction, and if there would be a curriculum adjustment so next year’s sixth-graders could receive language arts instruction comparable that proposed for next year’s fifth-grade class at Erdenheim.

The middle school faculty and staff have been targeting the language arts curriculum in order to heighten student performance, said Alice Snare, principal of the middle school. They already have adjusted the fifth-grade schedule to improve language arts instruction and made sure that the time allocated for the subject would not be interrupted, she said.

For example, a library tutorial might take place during a different class, Snare said.

“Because we want to do better doesn’t mean our students aren’t being served,” said Carol Rohrbach, director of curriculum and staff development. “We are doing a very good job … we want to do even better.”

Royer said Sept. 25 that she does not think there will be any changes to the proposal before the school board members discuss it at their next meeting.

“The meetings gave us a lot of insight into what the parents’ concerns were,” she said. “I felt that we gave parents their assurances that academic programs would not be compromised by the restructuring of schools.

“There seems to be a lot of sentiment for returning fifth-grade to elementary, and that didn’t surprise me.”

About 40 parents spoke during the elementary school meeting and about 21 at the middle school meeting, Royer added.

“I know the administration was really pleased with the turnout and the comments that they got from parents and the community,” she said.

The school board will discuss the proposal at its Oct. 6 meeting and vote Oct. 20. Once the board takes action, school district officials need to get started quickly to prepare for the change, Royer said.

Her plan is keep parents informed during the entire process, she said.

Dentists win 2009 Acorn Award

Read it online

When Susan Zemmel and Larry Schiff moved their dental office to 813 Bethlehem Pike, Erdenheim, they planted new trees that attracted song birds. Their neighbors were so pleased to see the new species that they sent thank you notes.

Last month, the owners of Schiff & Associates Aesthetic & Family Dentistry were recognized for another contribution to the area. On Community Day, Sept. 13, the Friends of Historical Bethlehem Pike presented its third annual Acorn Improvement Award to Schiff and Zemmel and their architect, Banny Jesudason of JLM Design Group on Germantown Pike.

The award honors property owners and designers who address historical preservation, pedestrian consideration, beautification, environmental improvements and appropriate economic development.

“It’s always nice to be recognized,” Schiff said at his office Sept. 17. “We very much support their efforts to get the Bethlehem Pike historical feel.”

“We think we did a good job fitting into the community,” Zemmel added.

Mimi Leitzel, the Wyndmoor-based interior designer for the project, nominated the building for the award in June. Leitzel, one of Schiff’s patients, heard about the Acorn Award and thought the property would be a great candidate.

“This building shows potential inspiration for other renovations on the pike, and provides not only a service to patients, but newly renovated spaces for other tenants to build thriving businesses,” she wrote in her letter of nomination to the Friends.

Schiff and Zemmel, who were married in 1986, bought the Bethlehem Pike property in 1990, although planning for the renovations did not begin until two years ago, when they had grown out of their space.

“It was an eyesore with old systems, and we wanted to be able to incorporate all of the new technology available in our field,” Zemmel said.

Not about to leave their strong ties with the Erdenheim community, Schiff and Zemmel explored ways to develop the property. The most viable option was a multimillion-dollar project to build on and around the current structure.

Workers broke ground in June 2008. Throughout the construction, Schiff and Zemmel continued their normal operations from their second floor office, as did the Twisters Wellness Center, located on the bottom floor of the building.

“It was a little bit of a challenging project for us, mainly because we had to add a third floor without adding a disturbance to the two lower levels,” Jesudason said in an interview Sept. 18. “We had to come up with a very unique structural system to construct a third level.”

This process included building a third floor supported by six corkscrew-shaped steel stilts, called helical piles, which were drilled into the ground. A concrete slab was placed on top of the piles, columns added and steel beams installed across the existing building to make the floor.

Then, the new and old windows had to be matched and everything with a stone base, Jesudason said.

“This approach still has a residential quality and scale, but is inviting and suitable for a commercial building solution,” Leitzel wrote in her nomination letter.

Schiff and Zemmel moved into the new third-floor office Jan. 20. The new space can accommodate modern and environmentally friendly technology. The interior is the ultimate in high tech, Zemmel said.

The office is completely digital, save for a back room with folders of hard copies of documents. All lights in the office are activated by motion sensors, and doctors use a digital X-ray machine because it emits less radiation and energy than other models.

“We are much more efficient now than before,” Schiff said.

Patients sit in ergonomic massage chairs during their appointments and can watch cable television — or the work going on in their mouths — on overhead monitors. The individual exam rooms are soundproof.

“When it’s comfortable for the patient and you take that stress out of the visit, everything is simplified,” Zemmel said. “You can offer the highest-quality dentistry available.”

The building also has its own water supply sanitized in a plant within the office. Everything in the sanitation room can be opened by the tap of foot-level lever or light kick with the knee.

The Acorn Award is on display at the coffee bar across from a bamboo fountain in the lobby.

“Winning the award is a great thing,” Jesudason said. “We honor that and hopefully it will give us the opportunity to reach out to other potential clients in the area who will look at the building and come to us.”

Both originally from New York, Zemmel and Schiff met when she was a graduate student at the University of Pennsylvania and he was a faculty member. Their children were born here. Schiff played Santa Claus one year for the Erdenheim Civic Association and delivered presents to local children on Christmas Eve.

Holy Martyrs shows the neighborhood a good time

The paintball shed at the annual Holy Martyrs Church carnival looks different from the average game at the fair. It’s a wooden shed with no flashing lights, save a red emergency light steadily turning and flashing on the roof.

Observers hear only the “pows” and the “dings” of small, paint-filled balls smacking into targets, instead of the music and computer-generated sounds they would hear at the standard toss ’em, pop ’em and squirt ’em games at traveling carnivals. Those games are across the parking lot.

Rustic and original, the paintball game rounds out a hometown section of the fair, where church volunteers manage small carnival games and local restaurant workers serve festive cuisine like hamburgers and ice cream.

“We set up the garage and hang our beloved collection of targets, which we selected over the years,” volunteer John O’Brien said Tuesday, the carnival’s opening night. “And man, the kids love to shoot paint balls.”

“Yes they do!” said his co-volunteer Delores Serianni, who has been working at the paintball booth for about eight years.

Hanging from the wooden rafters and splattered with greenish-yellow paint are street signs — a stop sign, library sign, a no parking sign — a firefighter’s boot, a Direct TV satellite dish and a fire alarm bell.

Those who want to test their aim pay $1 for five shots and $5 for 30.

Nine-and-a-half-year-old Colin Quinn had already loaded and pumped his paintball gun. He was aiming for the perfect target.

“Hit one of those lights that’s hanging,” O’Brien said. “That will give you a good ding.”

Quinn aimed and fired, then turned around to share his content after hearing the gratifying ding.

“I wasn’t sure if I hit the target, but I was sure when I heard a bang and I saw it move,” Quinn said.

The carnival at Holy Martyrs Church in Oreland runs through Saturday evening. Hours are 6 to 10 p.m. until Friday night, and 3 to 10 p.m. on Saturday.

“We come every year. It seems like it gets bigger and bigger each year,” said Colin’s mother, Vickie Quinn, of Oreland.

In addition to the rides and games there is music, and dinners donated by a different restaurant each night.

Through Friday, visitors can pay $10 for a meal donated by a restaurant that is either local or has a relationship with the parish, said Donna DeMarco, a parishioner who has been managing the carnival’s food operations since 2004.

Tuesday night featured Halligan’s Pub. Other restaurants represented on the menu will be O’Towne Tavern on Wednesday, Winnie’s Le Bus on Thursday and Roberto’s Trattoria on Friday.

A filet mignon dinner courtesy of Fleming’s Prime Steakhouse and Wine Bar will cost $12 per meal on Saturday.

“It includes a nice meal, drink and desert. You can’t beat it,” DeMarco said.

One of the most popular attractions each year is a dunk tank on Friday and Saturday nights, Pastor Mike Ryan said.

“Our principal sat in it one year and drew a big crowd,” he said.

Over at a play-till-you-win Winnie the Pooh-themed game, Briana Vetter, 11, and Megan McGrath, 12, were compensating for a slightly smaller-than-usual turnout with their own energetic enthusiasm.

“We love the church and it’s for a good cause,” Vetter said. “And Father Ryan is a very nice person.”

Parents assess school realignment plan

Parents at a town hall meeting Monday said they value the caliber of faculty and staff in the Springfield Township School District, but they have questions and some reservations about the proposed plan that would restructure schools for the 2010-2011 school year.

The meeting, which that took place at Springfield Township High School, gave parents of elementary school students a chance to ask questions or raise concerns about the proposal. For administrators, it was an opportunity to consider parents’ ideas.

The plan was created to provide equal resources for all students and handle projected high enrollment numbers, according to school administrators. If the plan is implemented, all kindergarten and first-grade students in the school district will attend Enfield Elementary School next year, and second- to fifth-graders will attend the new Erdenheim Elementary on Haws Lane. Fifth-graders would move to Erdenheim from Springfield Township Middle School, and eighth-graders would move to the middle school from the high school.

Parents and administrators discussed how restructuring would affect the students’ academic, social and personal development. Some of the public comments referred to keeping class sizes small, maintaining close relationships with the schools and how physically changing buildings would affect the students.

Some parents said they worried young children would be overwhelmed by moving from Enfield to Erdenheim after only two years in school. They suggested that a school for kindergarten through third grade might be more suitable.

“I think K through second at least would be more developmentally appropriate with the needs maturity-wise, social and academic,” said Lisa Antinucci, a parent of a third-grader at Erdenheim. Antinucci works with school districts throughout Montgomery County on transition activities with kindergarten children.

According to state guidelines, kindergarten through third grade is referred to as early childhood and elementary education, she said after the meeting. “Kindergarten through first, it just seems like we’re narrowing down too much,” she said.

Kindergarten, first and second grades would not fit into Enfield unless the district sacrificed small class sizes, and fourth and fifth grades would not be an ideal fit for Enfield because there would be too much leftover space, Superintendent Wendy Royer said,

Developing the restructuring proposal has been a difficult process because the administration has to consider the option that is both best for the students and the most economical, Royer said, likening the process to piecing together a puzzle.

“We are not going to sacrifice instructional programs to do this,” she told parents.

For the fifth-graders, a benefit to moving to the elementary school is that test scores would increase because there would be more time for teachers to focus on language arts and math, said Carol Rohrbach, the school district’s director of curriculum and professional development. “We have an opportunity to tighten our focus.”

The instructional capacity will only be enhanced by the teachers working together in the same building, she said.

Some parents were also concerned about losing the small-school atmosphere at the elementary schools.

According to enrollment projections, there will be about 600 to 700 students in Erdenheim next year, should the district implement the proposal, Royer said.

“I love the fact that the principal knows my kid’s name,” said Noah Eisenman, a parent of a second-grade student at Erdenheim and a daughter who will enter kindergarten next year.

Under the proposal, Eisenman’s daughter would begin school at Enfield next year, but he would prefer that his two children be at the same school to ease the transition for his youngest.

“There’s got to be a better solution,” he said after the meeting. “I think it needs to be really carefully thought out. They could have done a better job planning for the future. Space is always an issue.”

Walter Lapidus, a candidate for school board, supported the measure.

“My opinion is that it’s a good solution given the constraints,” he said. “It would be nice for all of the kids to enjoy the brand new school.”

One of the benefits of the proposal is that it would do away with redistricting and give families a sense of certainty that they know where the student will attend school each year, according to administrators.

The proposed plan would also unite all students as a Springfield “cohort,” rather than keep students split between the two elementary schools until they reach middle school, they said.

“The relationships that students will be able to form in the community are a powerful part of going with this cohort model,” said Chris Bradley, principal of Erdenheim. “They would have developed these relationships from their early years. I know that we have a phenomenal staff, so I have no doubt that we will all come together.”

The downside of the cohort is that there would be no opportunity for students to break away from stereotypes and negative relationships, one woman said in the meeting.

Martin Ryan, an Erdenheim parent and a member of the PTO’s Erdenheim Elementary Playground Fund, said the merging of two school communities provides an opportunity to increase their fundraising efforts to build a playground for all students. “If there is a community equal to our size at Enfield, they don’t know we don’t have a playground. We’re ready to work with the other half of the future Erdenheim community.”

Administrators said they will create a document of frequently asked questions to keep parents informed as the process continues and address such related issues as the effect on bus schedules. The document will be on the school district Web page, www.sdst.org.

School officials will hold another meeting in the high school auditorium on Sept. 24 at 7 p.m. to discuss realignment at the middle school.

Suspect charged with felony terroristic threats waives preliminary hearing

James Gallagher of Wyndmoor will be arraigned in county court in November for posting threatening material on an online social network.

Gallagher, 22, is accused of posting death threats and hate messages on his Facebook profile. Acting from a tip, a detective with the Springfield Township Police Department created an undercover Facebook account and “friended” Gallagher for access to his Facebook profile.

The detective found Gallagher published statements such as “I will destroy Springfield no1 here got guns like me,” and “White Pride, World Wide,” and displayed pictures of himself holding an AR15 rifle and an AK47 bayonet, according to the affidavit.

Gallagher is charged with terroristic threats, a third-degree felony; possessing an instrument of crime, a first-degree misdemeanor; and disorderly conduct, a summary offense.

Defense Attorney Michael F. Dunn said Gallagher had no violent plans.

“When he put this on Facebook, he didn’t realize it would be accessible to others,” Dunn said Tuesday after Gallagher waved his preliminary hearing at Montgomery County District Court in Oreland, with District Judge Robert Saraceni presiding.

Gallagher is being held on $1 million cash bail, which reflects the seriousness of the offense, Assistant District Attorney Nathan J. Schadler said.

“We felt it had risen to the level of terroristic threat,” he said after the proceeding.

According to a receipt of seized inventory, police found the rifle and bayonet at Gallagher’s home in addition to other weapons including a crossbow, knives, a stun gun and ammunition. Police also found two Nazi flags, according to the inventory.

The district attorney’s office is continuing investigations into all aspects of the case, including whether the guns are registered in Gallagher’s name, Schadler said. In response to the case, the Springfield Township School District sent a letter to parents saying that there were no threats against the schools, but all principals reviewed safety procedures with students Tuesday afternoon.

At Springfield Township High School, which Gallagher formerly attended, faculty and staff reminded students to be diligent of their surroundings, and the administration urged staff members to stay abreast of activities going on in the building, Principal Otis Hackney said Tuesday.

“There have been no threats against the high school at all,” he said.

Tagged , ,

What’s New

Springfield district considers realigning schools

Published: Tuesday, September 8, 2009

The Springfield Township School District might see a change in the structure of schools next year, a move that administrators propose would help to accommodate larger enrollment numbers and benefit the educational and extracurricular experiences of current students.

The proposed plan for the 2010-2011 school year is to make Enfield Elementary a facility for only kindergarten and first grade. Students in second through fifth grades would attend Erdenheim Elementary. This would move the fifth-graders from Springfield Township Middle School to elementary school.

Grades six through eight would be in the middle school, and grades nine through 12 would attend Springfield Township High School. Currently, eighth-graders attend the high school.

“There are a lot of things to consider and we want to make sure to get parent input,” Superintendent Wendy Royer said Tuesday at the school board meeting.

Public forums on this proposal will take place later this month.

Space is the main concern behind the proposal, as increased enrollment in the school system has created an immediate need for more classrooms at Enfield, according to officials.

“This year we have exactly enough classrooms” said Karen Alston, principal of Enfield. “Our classes have gotten bigger over the past four years, and by all indications will continue to go in that direction. We’re just feeling the pinch.”

There are currently 413 students enrolled in Enfield, but the building is designed to accommodate 350 to 375, Alston said. Over the past few years it has been difficult to find space for all of the classes, and teachers have had to hold class in areas not designated as instructional spaces, like foyers and hallways, she said.

If this proposal were to become a reality, it would be necessary to add six classrooms to Erdenheim, Royer said.

“The additional classrooms have been a possibility since the beginning of the project,” she said. “As a result of increased enrollment and program need, it’s more fiscally responsible to put them on now as opposed to three years from now.” Administration will look into the costs of adding these classrooms.

With its current enrollment numbers, the new Erdenheim Elementary School on Haws Lane will open next year with hardly any extra rooms to accommodate larger classes in the future, Royer said.

If no steps are taken right now, the administration will need to review attendance boundaries each year, and perhaps have to make changes in the future, she said.

In addition to increasing enrollment, another reason for the proposal is to form a cohesive student group through kindergarten to 12th grades. The current structure of two elementary schools separates students until they reach middle school.

“The principals feel very strongly that having all of the students together is a huge benefit to this plan,” said Royer.

“I tend to favor it,” said school board President Malcolm Gran. “I think one of the issues that I see at Springfield is that Springfield is not simply one community. There are distinct sections that I feel don’t have communication with the others that they should.”

Other reasons for the proposal include the need to address facility and program inequity between the two elementary schools and to increase resources and ensure more consistent class sizes, Royer said.

There are also educational and extracurricular advantages of moving fifth-graders to elementary school and eighth-graders to the middle school, she said. The proposal reflects research that eighth-graders are more appropriate in a middle school, rather than at a high school, she said.

Springfield Township High School senior Rebecca Davner said that attending high school as an eighth-grader offered a beneficial transition period that helped her become accustomed to high school before her grades began to count on her transcript toward college admission.

“I think that having that leeway time is really important because I know it helped me adjust to a new schedule,” she said. “You’re more adjusted when you get into the ninth grade and you can choose an elective, you can choose a language and you’re ready for that kind of stuff.”

Community member Colleen Robinson voiced concern that restructuring the school would make it difficult for families with child in kindergarten or first-grade in Enfield and an older child in Erdenheim.

A town hall meeting on the proposal as it related to the elementary schools will be held Sept. 21 at 7 p.m. in the high school auditorium. There will be another meeting Sept. 25 for parents of seventh-graders.

Amanda Glensky, Multimedia Journalist

I’m a 22-year-old general assignment multimedia reporter covering Springfield Township, a town located in the nearby suburbs of Philadelphia

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.