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Spring Branch ISD names Executive Principal for two area campuses

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Patricia Thomas has been named to the new role of executive principal of both Ridgecrest Elementary and Landrum Middle schools. Landrum Middle is a district-charter collaboration site for the SKY Partnership that includes KIPP Courage at Landrum Middle School program.

Principal Thomas has served 25 years in education including 15 years in Spring Branch ISD as a special education teacher, school improvement specialist, assistant principal and principal.

In 1982, Ms. Thomas earned her bachelor of science degree in psychology from Texas A&M University. She later received a master’s degree in bilingual education in 1994 from Houston Baptist University, and then earned principal certification in 2004 through the University of Houston.

She taught first-grade bilingual education for 10 years in Houston ISD before joining the Spring Shadows Elementary staff as a bilingual special education teacher in 1999. In HISD, she managed a computer lab, and she was the instructional coordinator at her campus. At Spring Shadows Elementary, she provided instructional support for math, science and technology and, in 2002, was named the math instructional specialist there.

In 2004, she was named assistant principal at Ridgecrest Elementary. She has served as Ridgecrest’s principal since 2006. In January, she took on the role of interim principal at Landrum Middle School, due to a principal retirement.

“I truly enjoy working with students of diverse backgrounds, and I always strive to create an environment of safety and educational growth for all children,” Principal Thomas says of her past and current position.

“I am excited about continuing the collaboration between the elementary and middle schools and the SKY Partnership in my new role. I’m committed to creating exemplary learning environments at Ridgecrest and Landrum for the students and staff in the community,” she also says.

The leadership teams, faculties and staffs at Landrum Middle and Ridgecrest Elementary are committed to working together to assure that every student is equipped with the academic and life skills to meet the district’s key goal known as Spring Branch T-2-4.

The T-2-4 goal calls for all our students to successfully complete some form of higher education after graduation – military training, technical certification, or a two-year or four-year college degree.

Principal Thomas holds state certifications in Principal (Grades EC-12), Generic Special Education (Grades PK-12), Bilingual/ESL (Grades PK-6), and Elementary Self-Contained (Grades PK-6).

Spring Branch ISD names Woodview Elementary School leader

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Pamela Pennington has been named as the new principal at Woodview Elementary School. She has 28 years in education including 17 years in Spring Branch ISD as a teacher, diagnostician, instructional specialist and assistant principal.
Principal Pennington earned her bachelor of science degree in elementary education and special education from Iowa State University in Ames, Iowa, in 1984. One decade later, she received her master’s degree as an educational diagnostician from the University of Houston.
In 2004, she earned Principal Certification in educational administration through a program offered by the University of St. Thomas in Houston. 
She taught for eight years in Houston ISD schools, then served three years as an educational diagnostician in Aldine ISD before joining the staff at Wilchester Elementary in 1997 as a resource teacher. Beginning in 2004, she served for four years as an educational diagnostician at Spring Branch Middle and Meadow Wood Elementary schools. For the past four years, she was assistant principal at Bunker Hill Elementary.
“In my career, I have worked with children from the ages of 3 through 21, and I truly enjoy every age. I believe in teaching the whole child with love and high expectations. No matter the circumstance, a child comes to school with the desire to learn and be successful. It is my job, our job, to make that happen,” Principal Pennington says.
“My professional goal is to lead the hard working and passionate staff at Woodview with vigor, pride, consistency and positive energy,” she also says. “Teaching is one of the most difficult jobs in the world, and I strive to be a source of personal and professional encouragement and optimism.”
“I want us to work together, to pool our resources and expertise to help each other grow, learn and become even better than we are today. I want the children of Woodview to know how capable and amazing they are. I want the parents to know that every single child on our campus is important, and not just to me, but to every single employee he or she interacts with every day,” Principal Pennington adds.
Woodview Elementary School’s entire leadership, faculty and staff are committed to working together to assure that every student is well equipped with the academic and life skills to meet the district’s key goal known as Spring Branch T-2-4.
The T-2-4 goal calls for all our students to successfully complete some form of higher education after graduation – military training, technical certification, or a two-year or four-year college degree.
Principal Pennington holds state certifications in Principal (Grades EC-12). Educational Diagnostician (Grades PK-12), Elementary Self-Contained (Grades 1-8), and Mentally Retarded (Grades PK-12).
At home, Principal Pennington and her husband of 25 years are the parents of two sons, and the family includes two pet Labradors. Her hobbies and interests include gardening, jogging, cooking and boating.
She replaces Principal Neda Scanlan, who retired recently.

Spring Branch ISD names new Memorial Middle School principal

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Dave Parker has been named as the new principal at Memorial Middle School. He has 17 total years in education including 15 years in Spring Branch ISD as a teacher and assistant principal at two secondary schools.
Principal Parker earned his bachelor of science degree in education from Nicholls State University in Thibodeaux, La., in 1997. He received his master’s degree in educational administration & supervision from the University of Houston in 2008. 
After teaching two years at Thibodeaux High School in Louisiana, Mr. Parker joined the staff at Stratford High School in 2000 as an English teacher and as an assistant tennis coach. Since 2004, he’s served as an assistant principal at Memorial High School.
                                                                                        Among leadership qualifications, Mr. Parker completed his administrative internship at Stratford High. He was a member of the 2008 SBISD Leadership Institute and a member of the Memorial High CIT (Campus Improvement Team). He is currently a member of a cohort of SBISD educators enrolled in the Rice University Educational Entrepreneurship Program, known as REEP.
For the past five years, Principal Parker has played a key role in the district’s summer programs serving as state testing coordinator and instructional principal. For the past two summers, he’s acted as the program director for secondary summer programming in SBISD.
“I am both honored and humbled by this appointment,” Principal Parker says. “Memorial Middle School is steeped in a rich tradition of excellence, and I am thrilled to join a family of such dedicated, professional educators, along with a community that offers unparalleled support for its students.”

“I am committed not only to continuing those traditions of excellence, but also to pushing forward with new and innovative ways to ensure that our students continue to be positioned for success and excellence at the next level,” he also says.
Memorial Middle School’s entire leadership, faculty and staff are committed to working together to assure that every student is well equipped with the academic and life skills to meet the district’s goal known as Spring Branch T-2-4.
The T-2-4 goal calls for all our students to successfully complete some form of higher education after graduation – military training, technical certification, or a two-year or four-year college degree.
Principal Parker holds state certifications in Principal (Grades EC-12) and English (Grades 6-12).
In his family, Mr. Parker comes from a long line of educators and ministers. His mother retired following a 30-year education career as a teacher and assistant principal, and his father retired after a long career as a Baptist pastor.
Principal Parker is an avid sports enthusiast, and an animal lover who volunteers time at a local animal shelter. He also loves to travel.
He replaces Principal Lisa Weir, who was recently named Memorial High School’s new principal.

Spring Branch ISD names new Memorial High School principal

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Lisa Weir has been named as the new principal at Memorial High School. She has 22 total years in education including 17 years in Spring Branch ISD as a teacher, assistant principal and principal at Memorial Middle School.
Principal Weir earned her bachelor of science degree in education from the University of Texas at Austin in 1990. She later completed a master’s degree in educational administration in 1997 through the University of North Texas in Denton.
Her 17 years of service at Memorial Middle School includes five years as a math teacher and coach. She later served five years as an assistant principal and seven years as principal at Memorial Middle.
Elsewhere, she taught for three years at Highland Park High School in Highland Park ISD, then served as dean of schools and associate principal for four years, also at Highland Park High.
“I’m very excited to continue working with the community at the high school level, building a culture that helps prepare our students for their future,” Principal Weir says.
Memorial High School’s entire leadership, faculty and staff are committed to working together to assure that every student is well equipped with the academic and life skills to meet the district’s goal known as Spring Branch T-2-4.
The T-2-4 goal calls for all our students to successfully complete some form of higher education after graduation – military training, technical certification, or a two-year or four-year college degree.
Principal Weir holds the following state certifications: Mid-Management Administrator (Grades PreK-12); Elementary Self-Contained (Grades 1-8); Elementary Mathematics (Grades 1-8); Secondary Health Education (Grades 6-12); and Secondary Physical Education (Grades 6-12).
Outside of school, Principal Weir loves to travel and spend time with family and friends. She replaces William Lakin, who has retired.

50 Students Attend First Spring Branch ISD Code Camp

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Spring Branch ISD students gathered on July 28 at the Technology Training Center to begin a four-day camp revolving around what many believe to be the language of the future — coding.

Led by SBISD Educational Technology Director Sheri Alford, Code Camp is the first-ever, computer science-based coding camp in the district. It was started with the help of computer science advocate and former teacher Karen North and Spring Branch parent liaison and STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) advocate Janice Teske.

“Coding is the next literacy and I think people are just now starting to see the importance of it. The camp was created to familiarize students with computational thinking and get them interested in computer science as a whole,” North said.


Open to students in grades 4-8, Code Camp housed 50 campers from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. with breaks throughout the day. The students were divided into two different groups by grade level.

 The fourth-and fifth-grade group was taught by Nottingham Elementary third grade teacher Annie Mitchell and Memorial Middle tech apps teacher Shanda Fraser. The older group — grades 6-8 — was taught by Westchester Academy for International Studies (WAIS) technology teachers Cheryl and Shaun Wegscheid, a mother and son duo.

While the students were separated by age, some of the fourth-and fifth-graders were moved up to the older group due to their knowledge of coding and computer science as the week progressed.

Ryan Stanicic — an incoming fourth-grader at The Spring Branch School for Highly Gifted Students (SHGS) — joined the elder group shortly after the first day began.

“So far Code Camp has been the best thing I’ve done this summer. While I am here, I hope to learn more about Java and Tynker [two different computer programs],” Ryan said during his lunch break on the first day.

“You can do anything you want through coding. You can build anything, create anything; it is incredible really,” he added.





The older coders began their camp adventures with Tynker, a relatively new online software that teaches important computer science concepts. These include repetition, conditional logic, computer drawing, app creation, problem decomposition, algorithmic thinking and automation.

Tynker and many of the other programs used during Code Camp and similar camps across the nation are recommended and made available through Code.org.

 “Tynker is pretty similar to Scratch [a program created in 2007 by the MIT Tech Media Lab] except they [Code.org] have taken away what some people didn’t like about Scratch and then reworked it to be easier on some levels,” Cheryl Wegscheid said.

 “Not having this camp set by skill level allows us to meet them wherever they are with their interest and knowledge of computer science, specifically coding. We want to introduce a variety of programs and give them resources that they can go to and continue learning from even after the camp ends,” she adds.

Code.org is a nonprofit dedicated to expanding computer science education in schools and increasing participation of women and other underrepresented student groups in the field.


Backed by a number of major corporations such as Facebook, Google and Apple, Code.org has had more than 39 million people participate in an “Hour of Code,” a campaign aimed to familiarize computer science by encouraging millions to try just an hour of coding.

Buffalo Creek Elementary participated in the campaign during Computer Science Education week last December, after which the school received a $10,000 technology grant from the organization.

Alford and other involved educators have already begun planning next summer’s Code Camp. As a result of a large pool of applicants this year, they are hoping to expand the camp so that more students can participate.


For more information on Code Camp and the topics explored during its duration please visit:

http://edtech.springbranchisd.com/et/campcode/tabid/31162/default.aspx

http://code.org/

Code Campers Include:

Elementary-
Hank Davis, James Grossman, Joshua Harris, Jude Jamison, Ryan Lamprecht,  Cameron Longo, Bradley Marrs, Camilla Pearson, John Perkins, William Rother, Benjamin Saterbah. Danielle Semine, Faris Soliman, Ryan Stanicic, Sophia Tang, Caleb Tatum, Alex Teske, Lorenzo Toro,  Camila Trujillo, Christopher Vukadin,  Megan Xie, Caleb Xu, Logan Zaozirny

Middle-
Nathan Bender, Alyssa Bommer, Camron Carr, Carson Foster, Chandler Gartner, Daragh Haddon, Nicholas Herrmann, Brady Hoffman, Thomas Hughes, Ava Leitner, Phillip Liou, Thomas Moll, Julia Paulik, Zane Pramudji, Gavin Sharp, Craig Tarco, Alex Lamprecht, Samuel McClintook, Evelyn Silsby, Charlie Simpson, Susanna Teske, Gabriel Toro, Finn Haddon, Sean Healy, Gerald Hoffman, Robert Peterson, Trinity Tang

Communications Intern Kali Venable wrote this story.

Texas Tax-Free Weekend 2014: Save Money While You Prepare for Back to School

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Whether you're shopping online or in stores, block out your calendar to save on Back to School items this weekend The 2014 Texas Sales Tax Holiday is this weekend, August 8-10. Many malls and stores -- including Memorial City Mall here in Spring Branch ISD -- plan to host extended business times or special events, so check with your favorite shopping spots to see what opening and closing times or special sales events will be this weekend.

On Saturday, Aug. 9, for example, Memorial City Mall will partner with KPRC TV2 and the Children's Museum of Houston to present Students Rock the City -- a back to school fashion runway "extravaganza" show featuring both professional and student models showing "what is cool" for school this fall. The show begins at 1 p.m. on Saturday. Beginning at 12:30 p.m. on that same day, Spring Branch ISD high school cheerleaders and team mascots will be on hand to spread team spirit and offer photo opportunities for area families.

Featured will the Stratford Spartanaires, Memorial Markettes and Arista Dance Company, among other performers. The show will be held near the Memorial City Mall west entrance near the American Girl store and the Skate USA rink.

During the three days of Texas Tax-Free Weekend, most clothing, footwear, school supplies and backpacks priced under $100 are exempt from state sales and use taxes. That equals about $8 savings for every $100 spent. Texas State Government says subject to some criteria, "all sales of qualifying items made during the holiday period qualify for the exemption, including items sold online, or by telephone or mail."

What items are exempt and what are taxable?
It gets a bit more complicated so do shop smartly. For example, some sports gear like golf cleats and track shoes are taxable, but tennis shoes and swimsuits are exempt. Headbands and helmets are taxable, but baseball caps are exempt.

Click the link below for more information on what items are eligible for Tax-Free Weekend: http://www.window.state.tx.us/taxinfo/taxpubs/taxholiday/m/

Happy shopping!

Registration Open for Fall 2014 Community Education

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Register now for SBISD Community Education’s roster of Fall 2014 classes. You can enroll and register online, by mail or in person. Classes will begin Sept. 8, 2014.

What’s new in our Community Education classrooms? Check out the courses on computer use and software, bankruptcy and legal rights, SAT prep., dance, arts  and English as a Second Language, to name just a few learning opportunities.

To view offerings, please visit the district’s Community Education site online or at this address:

For more information, please call the Education Center at 713-251-1695. Or visit department offices at this address:

SBISD Department of Community Education
9016 Westview
Houston, Texas 77055

The Community Education offices are located behind the Spring Branch Education Center on Westview. Follow the signs and drive to the building’s north west side parking lot.

YES Prep at Northbrook Middle School names new program director

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Texas native Jeremy Jones has been named new director of the YES Prep at Northbrook Middle School program. Northbrook Middle School is a district-charter collaboration site for the SKY Partnership that includes the YES Prep program option for middle school students.

Mr. Jones has served 11 years in education including roles as a Teach for America instructor, charter principal, YES Prep math teacher and founding director of the YES Prep Talent team, and an administrator with the Achievement School District in Tennessee, which has a goal of moving lowest performing schools to the top quarter academically by 2018.     

A graduate of Georgetown High School in Georgetown, Texas, Mr. Jones earned a bachelor’s degree in political science and economics in 2004 from Texas A&M University in College Station.

A Teach for America recruit, he taught special education math for a year at Stella Worley Junior High in Westwego, La., a Westbank New Orleans campus, before joining YES Prep and teaching math for three years at the North Central Campus, a middle school in Houston. He also served three years as the founding director of YES Prep’s Recruitment/Selection division.

Elsewhere, he served one year as an elementary principal at Los Suenos Academy in San Jose, Calif., an elementary Rocket Ship charter school. He worked two years with the Tennessee Achievement School District.     

Director Jones is excited to be back in Texas and working with the YES Prep and SBISD partnership.
“Northbrook Middle School is a unique opportunity to influence the future of 1,100 students in this whole building, not just in YES Prep,” he says. “The stakes are really high for all of our kids. They need to view their middle school years as the start of a seven-year commitment, not just three years.”

At Northbrook Middle, he will work closely with Northbrook Middle Principal Valerie Johnson. The two campus leaders have already made a commitment to higher combined performance.

“We have an ambitious goal to be ranked among the top 10 schools in Texas over the next four years. We aren’t underestimating the amount of work to get there, or the work that will needed by all of our teams to get there. But I believe that this goal is possible,” he says.

The leadership teams, faculties and staffs at YES Prep Northbrook and Northbrook Middle are committed to working together to assure that every student is equipped with both the academic and life skills to meet the district’s key goal known as Spring Branch T-2-4.

The T-2-4 goal calls for all our students to successfully complete some form of higher education after graduation – military training, technical certification, two-year or four-year college degree.

Outside YES Prep, Mr. Jones believes in high personal performance goals, too. He has run marathons in a variety of locations, including Nashville, Tenn.


Director Jones replaces the former director, Cendie Stanford, who retired earlier this year.

Tina Young Softball Field dedicated

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More than 100 Memorial High School parents and students joined high school coaches and district leaders on Aug. 6 to recall and honor Tina Young, a much loved and well respected former softball and volleyball coach.
Memorial High Head Athletic Director Gary Koch lifting his hat in honor of Tina Young. 
Memorial High’s softball field will be known as the Tina Young Field after the community ceremony held on Wednesday evening at the playing field. Coach Young died after a 4-year battle with lung cancer. She was 47.
Coach Young was a Memorial High teacher and coach for a decade, and she served 25 years overall in education and coaching.
District Executive Director of Athletics Paige Hershey and Memorial High Athletic Director and Head Football Coach Gary Koch made dedication remarks, as did seven girls who were coached by Tina Young.
Her former players’ memories are poignant, funny, warm and all inspiring. (See student remarks below)


The Memorial High athletes and graduates who spoke included Leslie LeJune, Erin Rudd, Taylor Stewart, Blanche Schwabenland, Mackenzie Meador, Amy Houser and Brittany Chaney. Several special remarks shared at the field dedication include the following:

Former students of Tina Young commenting on the time they spent with her in the Memorial softball program. 

Paige Hershey, SBISD Executive Director of Athletics
We are here to honor the spirit of someone that we all dearly loved and admired, so while there may be some tears, they are tears of thanksgiving that we had the chance to know a person of such passion, exuberance, dedication to her craft, great humor and self-assuredness about who she was and what she was about.
My comments will be brief because we have the opportunity to hear from those most important, Tina’s former students, who will share with us their thoughts and memories about their time with her. They are her legacy, and as such, all that she was about lives through them. That is why teaching is such an important and noble profession—the work that you dedicate your life to, the raising up of young adults is eternal work, it knows no bounds.
We have a banner with Tina’s name on it tonight, but very soon a sign will be placed above the scoreboard that will denote this as the Tina Young Field. There are benches that have been purchased that have been placed at this site and by the gym by Christi Rees. We want to think her for this wonderful gesture and means of remembering and honoring Tina.
I can tell you this. I was extraordinarily proud of the person and educator that Tina was. I can say without hesitation that she was one of the very best that we've ever had in our system. She is an example of who I wish all coaches could be—dedicated to their students, in love with what they do, a positive force to be reckoned with.

I will never forget this evening that we shared at the Memorial gym. What an example she was for us all that night and throughout her journey. What a gift she was to us, and what a gift this community was to her. That we could all be so fortunate to get to say the things that we want to say to the people who mean most to us as Tina got to do that night. Of course, there was a reason that gym was packed the way it was and that was because we loved who she was and she felt the same. Can there be anything more than to know what your life’s work is, to know where you belong, and to whom? Such is an indication of a life well-lived.
I think of Tina often and of the lessons embedded in our time with her. She reminded us that in the midst of great challenge and struggle, we can live life to the best, with exuberance, joy and gratitude for what is, even as we know our time on this earth grows to a close. Thanks to everyone who is here tonight, for all that you did for Tina, her family, our student-athletes, our coaches. We are left with love at the end, love, love, love, and so tonight is that, a way of honoring the legacy and memory of a extraordinary individual.
Blanche Schwabenland – 2010 Graduate and Memorial Drive Elementary fifth-grade teacher
I think back to high school. I think of softball and all the time I spent on this field. I am so thankful for the wonderful academics that Memorial provided me with, but I am most thankful for all of the life lessons I learned right here on the softball field. Coach Young was the greatest teacher I had at this school. She helped me improve my softball skills and turned me into a left-handed hitter and an outfielder, when I thought I was a power hitter and a shortstop. I thought she was crazy, but turns out she knew exactly what she was doing. A lot of the time she did things that I thought were crazy, but for some reason I always trusted her. I now understand that the reason it was so easy for me to trust her was because she had so much confidence in me. The way she believed in my teammates and me was incredible.
She has such a passion for others to be successful. Her way of loving and encouraging us was definitely unique, but she was always an inspiration. I want to do my best every day because she had so much invested in me and I didn't to let her or my teammates down. That’s another thing she was great at, making us a team. Yes, we were high school girls who had some differences but she always got us to see that the important part of life is forgiving and moving on to work together.
I am so blessed that I get to be a teacher in the Spring Branch ISD, and I am hoping that I can carry on Coach Young’s legacy by teaching my students to have a passion for life, to be kind to others, to know and appreciate the importance of community and to have confidence in themselves. I remember when I was getting into different colleges and told her that I was going to be a teacher. She just looked at me like I was crazy and said, “Why would you do a crazy thing like that?”
I’m so happy to be a teacher because I had such a wonderful role model and I hope to inspire and connect with as many staff, students, and family members as Coach Young did. She truly understood the importance of community, and I am so thankful that the community will now have such a wonderful place to always be reminded of the one and only Coach Young.
Leslie LeJune – 2008 Memorial High Graduate
Coach Young has made such an impact on all of our lives. She has gone above and beyond to earn the greatest respect of having this field dedicated in her name. She was passionate about everything she put her heart to, and specifically softball. This field was her home away from home and it could be seen every day with all of her enthusiasm.
But what most people haven’t witnessed is her as a spectator. She came to one of my collegiate games and sat next to my mom. Mistake number one. I thought my mom was loud, but Coach Young gave her a run for her money. My coaches and other parents were trying to figure out who this crazy lady was, and some even thought they were sisters.
But the one thing we have all taken away from her is her key phrase she said everyday: “Make good decisions,” and dedicating the field to her is the best decision we've ever made.
Brittany Chaney – 2008 Graduate and Frostwood Elementary first-grade teacher
My name is Brittany Chaney and I graduated in 2008. I had the honor of coming to this field every day for 4 years with the best coach I have ever known. She made me love the game of softball when I thought I was ready to quit and move on to other things. Don't get me wrong, she was tough but I believe that is what made our teams for the 4 years I was here so good and so successful.
Every day of practice Coach Young showed us what it means to be passionate about something. She's a huge reason why I went on to play college softball and I will always remember the day she surprised me in Austin by coming to one of my last collegiate softball games. I was in the outfield getting warmed up before the game, then as I was walking back to the dugout I saw her and her mom sitting in a lawn chair with her big hat on and tie-dye MHS softball shirt. I cried my eyes out when I saw her.
Later on I found out she had chemo that same morning and then drove all the way to Austin just to come see me play. Coach Young was also a huge reason why I became a teacher.  Coach Young and I had a very fun relationship.  It was a lot of making fun of each other, but mostly, I think, her making fun of me! I think I speak for all of my team mates and friends when I say she was a huge mentor to all of us.
She made sure we were all "making good decisions" whether it was on the field or off the field; she never forgot to remind us of that. A phrase that always comes to mind when I think of her is "What would Tina do?" There is no other person who deserves their name to be on this field than the woman who touched so many lives, and continues to watch over us on a daily basis. I really miss her!

SBEF to Host Gala - October 25

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Spring Branch Education Foundation (SBEF) will host its second Legacies of Spring Branch Gala on October 25, 2014. Marissa and Duncan Klussmann will serve as co-chairs of the celebration. The event’s theme, Haute Homecoming, is reminiscent of a district-wide reunion of past and present Spring Brand ISD legacies.

The Gala will recognize three individuals who have gone above and beyond in their efforts to support education, says Duncan Klussmann, SBISD superintendent of schools. SBISD Distinguished Alumni Award – Chief Judge Diane P. Wood, United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit, and senior lecturer at the University of Chicago Law School – Chief Judge Wood is an alumna of Westchester High School, SBISD, and a graduate of the University of Texas, Austin (BA & JD).

SBEF Lifetime Achievement Award – Mallory and James Shaddix – Lifelong educational and community volunteers, the couple has served SBISD students through SBEF, multiple PTAs, Community Network, Academy of Finance, Mustang Mentoring, Collegiate Challenge, SpringBoard Mentoring, Spring Branch Family Development Center and Westside Homeless Partnership. Susan & Larry Kellner Champion for Education Award – Mike Feinberg, co-founder, Knowledge is Power Program Foundation and executive vice chair, KIPP Houston – Mike Feinberg co-founded KIPP with Dave Levin; today KIPP is a network of 162 high-performing public schools around the nation with 58,000 students.

In addition to silent and live auctions and dinner, the gala will include a homecoming dance featuring Molly and the Ringwalds. Individual tickets are available at $200. Tables for 10 are $1,500 to $10,000. For more information about the Legacies of Spring Branch Gala, visit springbranchisd.com/sbef or call 713.251.2381.

For regular updates, "like" SBEF on Facebook and/or follow it on SBEF93 on Twitter and Instagram.

About Spring Branch Education Foundation The Foundation’s mission is to enhance the quality of education for every student in SBISD. Founded in 1993, SBEF provides donors with a vehicle for making tax-deductible gifts to the district. The Foundation has raised more than $8 million and received the Houston Business Promise Award from the Greater Houston Partnership.

Visionary Altharetta Yeargin Gone

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We are sad to report that Altharetta Yeargin passed away Wednesday August 13, 2014. She was 93 years old and had been living the last few years with her niece in San Marcos. Mrs. Yeargin was the first art teacher for Spring Branch in 1954. She later became the Art Director for the district and was instrumental in getting art teachers in each school.

She and her husband Bob traveled the world together, going to all the continents and most countries-some as many as seven times. He was a noted Houston commercial photographer and while he took amazing pictures, she gathered artifacts, all to bring back and show her students. Her goal was to show them how much you could learn about a culture by looking at their artwork, with the materials they used and the designs they incorporated. She later donated all of her artifacts to SBISD which became the foundation of the museum.

Along with other donations, we now have a collection valued at more than 2 million dollars. Her vision and generosity will live on through all the lives of the students she touched and those that continue to be reached each time they visit AYAM.

We are forever grateful!
Visit the art museum website.

Community Eligibility Provision for 2014-2015 – Schools List

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The Community Eligibility Provision (CEP) of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) allows for Spring Branch ISD schools with high percentages of qualifying children the option to serve breakfast and lunch meals at no cost to all students on a specific campus.

These free meals are served under the National School Lunch Program (NLSP) and School Breakfast Program (SBP). Under CEP guidelines, meals are served to qualifying school children without collecting breakfast and lunch application forms. This program eliminates the need for any students at qualifying campuses to pay for a meal.

Under the Community Eligibility Provision, SBISD has elected to participate in CEP to provide free meals to all students at the schools listed below. (See campus list.) The district’s Child Nutrition Services Dept. is reimbursed by the federal government under this program.

CEP 2014-25 participating schools are: Landrum Middle School, Bendwood Campus, Edgewood Elementary, Hollibrook Elementary, Ridgecrest Elementary, Shadow Oaks Elementary, Spring Shadows Elementary, Westwood Elementary, Woodview Elementary, Spring Branch Elementary, Thornwood Elementary, Treasure Forest Elementary, Buffalo Creek Elementary, Panda Path School for Early Learning (PreK), Lion Lane School for Early Learning (PreK), Bear Blvd. School for Early Learning (PreK) and Tiger Trail School for Early Learning (PreK)

It is important to note the following under CEP rules and guidelines:

• This program operates for students only – adults at qualifying campuses will still be required to pay for meals.
• There will no longer be a need to collect free and reduced price applications for students who are in the CEP program and qualifying schools. CEP participating schools will have an “Income Survey” form to replace the no longer required free and reduced lunch applications.
• For students who have siblings or other family members who are enrolled in non-CEP participating schools, families must complete applications for those students to receive free or reduced price benefits.

SBISD believes that the Community Eligibility Provision will be good for all qualifying students and for our campuses, parents and communities. We hope to add more campuses in the future. Please visit the Child Nutrition Services website at www.springbranchisd.com/cns for related information.

For questions, please call 713-251-1150.

Spring Branch ISD graduates are honored at Vietnamese-American luncheon

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Four valedictorians from Spring Branch ISD high schools were honored recently during the Vietnamese-American Youth Excellence Recognition Luncheon held Aug. 3 at the Kim Son Bellaire Ballroom in southwest Houston.

The Vietnamese Culture and Science Association (VCSA) reports that it honored 28 regional high school valedictorians and salutatorians at the 18-year-old annual event.

SBISD student honorees included the following Class of 2014 valedictorians:

• Alyssa Nguyen and David Pham of Westchester Academy for International Studies (WAIS)
• Bao Tran Ma of Spring Woods High School
• Matthew Nguyen of Memorial High School.

VSCA is a Houston-based national organization that encourages multi-generational and cross-cultural collaborations by encouraging civic participation in the mainstream and in Vietnamese-American communities.

The recent luncheon featured an authentic Vietnamese cuisine, scholarship award presentations, cultural performances and a keynote address by Dr. Harry Dao Jr., who is an assistant professor in dermatology at the Baylor College of Medicine.

Numerous regional school district and elected civic officials were invited to the luncheon, which attracted 600 attendees, according to the organization.

Olympic Silver Medalist joins Spring Branch ISD as diving coach

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Anastasia Pozdniakova, an Olympic silver medalist in diving, joins Spring Branch ISD this school year as a district diving coach and facilitator at the W.W. Emmons Natatorium.

A 2009 University of Houston graduate, Anastasia concluded her diving career in 2012 and began coaching at the Cougar Diving Club as a Junior Olympic coach. High school coaching is what she has always wanted to be involved in, however.

 “When the opportunity opened with SBISD, I took it. I am really honored to have this opportunity and hope to get to know the athletes — their goals and dreams. We will work hard in the pool to be the best this year,” she said. Born in Elektrostal, Russia, Anastasia came to Houston in 2004 to pursue a degree in art history at the University of Houston with a full diving scholarship.

Recruited by UH Diving Coach Jane Figueiredo, Anastasia was the NCAA champion for two years in 1 meter diving. In 2008, she qualified for the Russian Olympic team.

During the Beijing Olympics, Anastasia competed in the 3 meter Synchronized Springboard diving competition with her diving partner, Yuliya Pakhalina. The diving pair finished the summer Olympics with a Silver Medal. “Coming into the Olympics, anyone has a great shot at medaling.

During our competition, I made a slight mistake in one of my dives but stayed focused and told myself that it wasn’t over until the last one,” Anastasia commented. Anastasia went on to compete at the 2012 London Summer Olympics where she competed in the 3 meter Springboard Individual event.

  Anastasia plans to utilize her 20 years of diving experience with Spring Branch athletes of all abilities. “I've always had the best role model – my coach Jane – next to me, helping me to always excel in what I do.

Having 20 years of diving experience under my belt and watching Jane coach has and will continue to help me to guide athletes to be the next champions in diving and in life,” she said. Anastasia begins coaching SBISD athletes this fall at the Natatorium.

Bendwood teacher learns from astronauts at LiftOff Summer Institute 2014: Let’s Engineer It!

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She met NASA astronauts, teamed up to design a spacecraft, and is now creating a technology lesson plan for her Gifted & Talented students using an iPad Spacecraft 3D software application.

Molly Nipper, who teaches third- through fifth-graders in the GT Spiral program at the Bendwood School, attended a nationally competitive, weeklong teacher’s study program called the LiftOff Summer Institute 2014: Let’s Engineer It.

The institute, which was held in July at the Johnson Space Center, was coordinated by NASA’s Texas Space Grant Consortium (TSGC), NASA and the University of Texas Center for Space Research. Nipper completed 40 hours of instruction in space science to support the teaching of science, technology, engineering and math (STEM).

During the institute, the Bendwood instructor met and was photographed with two former astronauts, Fred Haise and Clayton Anderson. She will bring back to all of her students new lessons and activities in physics and engineering that involve the engineering design process, circuits, interactive design, and planning for missions to Mars, among other topics.

Institute participants toured Space Center Houston in addition to NASA’s Mission Control and Neutral Buoyancy Lab.

Her favorite speaker was retired NASA Flight Director Gene Krantz, who helped bring back to Earth safely the Apollo 13 spacecraft on April 17, 1970. “His message was of commitment to his staff and astronauts, and his motto was ‘Failure is not an option.’ He shared the challenges and lessons learned from the Apollo 13 mission,” Nipper said.

“His motto is the same motto I hold for my students.” She was inspired to work in a small group on designing a spacecraft that will hit a target successfully by only using certain materials and chosen engineering design process. She is looking forward to using an iPad application, Spacecraft 3D, with students in her Gifted & Talented classes this school year. “This application will give students an opportunity to see spacecrafts in 3-D (three dimensions).

Students really enjoy using technology in the classroom, and I like to incorporate it as much as I can where it is relevant to my curriculum. It was an amazing workshop,” she said. For more information, please visit the Texas Space Grant Consortium website at: http://www.tsgc.utexas.edu/

International Baccalaureate Diplomas awarded to Westchester Academy for International Studies grads

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Eleven recent May graduates of the International Baccalaureate (IB) program at Westchester Academy for International Studies (WAIS) have earned the highly esteemed and internationally recognized IB Diploma.

WAIS, an award-winning district charter secondary school in Spring Branch ISD, offers the IB Diploma Programme (DP), Middle Years Programme (MYP) and is an IB Career Certificate Candidate School. In addition to the IB, both Pre-Advanced Placement (Pre-AP) and AP courses are offered at WAIS. The combined middle and high school campus is located at 901 Yorkchester.

To earn the IB Diploma, students devote their junior and senior years to fulfilling program requirements in English, a foreign language, math, science, history or social studies, and fine arts, as well as a Theory of Knowledge course. Students also write a lengthy research paper and fulfill other class activities, including traditional community service projects.

Two IB Diploma recipients this year earned the Spanish Bilingual Diploma. They are May graduates Yansi Arevalo and Eliza Quintana. IB Diploma recipient Helen Scott earned the highest score to date among WAIS graduates (38 out of a possible 45 points).

WAIS graduate and IB Diploma recipient Adam Kassir is now the fourth family member in a row to earn the IB Diploma while at Westchester Academy. He will be the fourth in his family to enroll at Rice University, too. His brother, Elias, graduated from Rice University in May.

Elias will soon attend Baylor Medical School. His sister, Iman, a 2011 graduate of WAIS, is studying to be a nurse practitioner. David Kassir, a 2013 graduate, is a kinesiology major at Rice. Adam is interested in pursuing a major in bioengineering.

His mother, Patricia Kassir, teaches at the Bendwood School.

IB Diploma graduates at WAIS and known college/university choices and intended majors include:
• Yansi Arevalo, Texas State University at San Marcos, finance and accounting (Spanish Bilingual Diploma)
• Emmanuelle Henriet, undecided university in France, international relations and law
• Connor June, Texas A&M University in College Station, chemical engineering
• Adam Kassir, Rice University, bioengineering interest
• Khanhtran (Anna) Levu, University of Houston
• Rachel Loving, University of Texas at Austin, biomedical interest
• Alyssa Nguyen, University of Houston, biochemistry
• David Pham, Rice University, chemical and biomolecular engineering
• Eliza Quintana, St. Edward’s University in Austin, Spanish Bilingual Diploma
• Jacob Saenz, St. Edward’s University in Austin
• Helen Scott, Texas Tech University in Lubbock, Texas

Valerie Harelson has served as IB Program Coordinator at WAIS for many years.
The district charter secondary campus is led by Jennifer Collier.

Family dogs inspire young artists at Memorial secondary campuses

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More than 50 Memorial-area secondary art students won recognition in a youth art exhibit held during the recent Houston World Series of Dog Shows. Memorial High School’s Anna Cho won both Best of Show and Best in Grade among 11th-grade student entries.

Anna, who is a Memorial High senior this year, was awarded $600 total, including $500 for Best in Show and $100 for Best in Grade. The awards were presented during the annual dog show held July 16-20 at NRG Park. Teen artists competed for prizes under the art theme, “The Dog, Man’s Best Friend,” which drew 929 separate entries from students in kindergarten through 12th grade.

Student talent from 17 school districts was displayed at the show’s 24th annual Dr. Mari Jon Filla Student Art Exhibit & Contest. The Houston World Series of Dog Shows is the city’s premier event for dog enthusiasts of all ages.

The annual show was formerly known as the Reliant Park World Series of Dog Shows. Student awards include:

Memorial High School

Best in Show/Best in Grade Awards
Anna Cho, 11th Grade, Best in Show and Best in Grade awards -- $600 total award Leslie Clark, Ninth Grade, Best in Grade Award -- $100 award

Committee Choice Awards
Mia Alfonso, 11th Grade -- $50 award Katherine Anderson, 10th Grade -- $50 award Erica Kim, 10th Grade -- $50 award Joy Lu, Ninth Grade -- $50 award

Excellence Awards
Carla Bay, 11th Grade Hope Brunner, 10th Grade Maris Calledare, 12th Grade Kayla Cecil, 10th Grade Ryan Cowell, 12th Grade Julia Delaney, Ninth Grade Lacey Dusek, 12th Grade Audrey Finck, Ninth Grade Sydney Good, 10th Grade William Herrera, 12th Grade David Hickerson, Ninth Grade Christina Hong, 10th Grade Isabel Jack, 10th Grade Caroline Jones, 10th Grade Jessica Kim, 12th Grade Alex Ramirez, Grade Not Listed Meghan Reily, 12th Grade Ashley Reynolds, 10th Grade Shermineh Roudi, 10th Grade David Salas, 11th Grade Ashley Womack, 10th Grade Zhaorong Zhan, 11th Grade Minkyung Yun, 11th Grade

Merit Awards
Christopher An, Ninth Grade Luis Antillon, 10th Grade Jennifer Demkler, 12th Grade Madeline Freeman, 11th Grade Maria Don Juan, 10th Grade Savannah Herrington, 10th Grade Israa Ibrahim, 11th Grade Anamika Kaewloyma, 11th Grade Emma Keller, 10th Grade Katherine Klaff, Ninth Grade Naoto Kobayashi, 10th Grade Nayce Kwon, 12th Grade Michelle Moore, 10th Grade Sarni Palermo, 11th Grade Kirby Rathjen, 10th Grade Biancarla Reyes, 11th Grade Noreen Saget, 10th Grade Courtney Slattery, 10th Grade Vaughn Solcher, 10th Grade Devon Stratton, 11th Grade Sydney Wallace, Ninth Grade Memorial Middle School Hannah Kim, Seventh Grade, Committee Choice Award -- $50 award

Click here to view the official Houston World Series of Dog Shows website: http://www.houstondogshows.com

Click here to view winning student artwork: http://houstondogshows.com/dr-mila-jon-filla-student-art-exhibit-and-contest-winners/

SBISD Back to School -- Bond Program Update

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When Spring Branch voters approved a $597.1 million bond program in November 2007, few could have predicted the good fortune about to befall the district. The national recession that caught hold in 2008 and 2009 was a stroke of luck for Spring Branch ISD. Lower construction costs met up with low interest rates on bond sales and by the spring of 2010, with a contingency fund of more than $50 million, trustees added a 13th school, Rummel Creek Elementary, to the list of schools to be rebuilt.
The district accelerated the building program that same spring, breaking ground on five elementary schools in May 2010 to take advantage of the lower costs.

Along the way, the district also upgraded its bus fleet, its technology, made improvements to mechanical and other systems at each district facility, and made drainage improvements at a number of campuses and facilities. “We’ve been very fortunate in this program,” Karen Wilson, associate superintendent for finance, told the Bond Oversight Committee at its August meeting.

The entrance and media center at the new Valley Oaks Elementary School get exterior touches.



Fast forward to the 2014-15 school year, and Spring Branch ISD has only a handful of projects active under the 2007 bond program. A rebuilt Valley Oaks Elementary is nearing completion and will open in January 2015, while Rummel Creek Elementary begins the school year at the South Transition Campus while its new building is constructed.

Ground will break next spring on new Cornerstone Academy and Academy of Choice buildings, on the site of the former Spring Branch High School. The work at the Spring Branch Education Center site on Westview will be the last major project of the 2007 bond program. About $16 million was budgeted for maintenance work at the facility, but the district found another $12 or so million for the $28 million to upgrade the facility.

Masons finish a wall near the Pech Road entrance to the new Valley Oaks Elementary School.
Vines Science Center will get a new roof as well as HVAC upgrades and a fresh coat of paint. Tully Stadium will get a new scoreboard this fall, rounding out the work done at the district’s main athletic facility. Previous work under the 2007 bond program included paving the parking lot, replacing the border fence, revamping the entry facing Dairy Ashford and redoing the press boxes. With about $563 million sold of the $597 million authorized, the district has about $34 million in bonds left to sell, said Wilson.

The bonds have earned $7.4 million in interest, and along with insurance settlements extend the total funds available in the 2007 bond program to about $608 million. All the bonds have been sold at interest rates of less than 5 percent, using a combination of tax-exempt, Build America Bonds (which are taxable), and variable rate, Wilson said.

The gym and a single classroom wing remain of the former Rummel Creek Elementary School.



The original assumption for the bond program was a 5 percent interest rate, said Terrell Palmer of First Southwest, the district’s bond advisor, earlier this year. “But there was not one issue over 5 percent,” Palmer said. The first issue was at 4.9 percent, he said, and the rest were below 4 percent. During the most recent issue, the district sold some bonds at a variable rate of 1.09 percent. Palmer said at that time the district has a future bond capacity of more than $350 million at the current debt service tax rate of $.3045 “If interest rates stay low and assessed value stays high, that’s a good combination for Spring Branch,” he said. With the program winding down, Bond Oversight Committee members at the August meeting praised the district’s work, particularly the decision to accelerate the program.

Crews work inside what will be the media center at the New Valley Oaks Elementary School.
While the 2007 bond program was always a 10-year program, and the new Cornerstone Academy and Academy of Choice should come online in December 2016, the district saved significant money by taking advantage of the economic downturn and its effect on construction costs and interest rates.

Committee member Gregory Krieder was particularly impressed with the acceleration and that “Spring Branch (ISD) had the heart to do it,” and said that he uses the program as an example in other work he does. The committee also praised the data-driven decisions that guided the program, the district’s adherence to the work that voters approved and the program’s management.

Elementary schools rebuilt as part of the 2007 bond program are Westwood, Hollibrook, Ridgecrest, Shadow Oaks, Wilchester, Edgewood, Spring Branch, Meadow Wood, Pine Shadows, Housman, Frostwood, Valley Oaks and Rummel Creek.

-- This story was written by Spring Branch ISD Senior Writer Rusty Graham

Spring Branch ISD new principal & district appointments

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Spring Branch ISD has announced the following new principal and administrative appointments for the school year beginning on Monday, Aug. 25.

Principal/School Director Appointments

Lisa Weir will be the Principal at Memorial High School. Lisa has served for 17 years inside SBISD as a teacher, assistant principal and principal at Memorial Middle School. She replaces William Lakin who has retired.

Dave Parker will be the Principal at Memorial Middle School, replacing Lisa Weir who is now principal at Memorial High. Dave has served 15 years inside SBISD as a teacher and Assistant Principal at two district high schools. He has served in several key roles with the district’s summer secondary programs.

Patricia Thomas has been named to the new role of Executive Principal at both Landrum Middle School and Ridgecrest Elementary School. Patricia has served 15 years in SBISD as a special education teacher, school improvement specialist, assistant principal and principal. Since January, she has served as Interim Principal at Landrum Middle, site of the district SKY Partnership with the KIPP Courage charter program.

Jeremy Jones has been named the new Director for the YES Prep at Northbrook Middle charter student program. Jeremy has 11 years in education, including instructional positions with Teach for America and YES Prep, and principal/ administrative positions also with YES Prep and the Achievement School District in Tennessee. He replaces Cendie Stanford who has retired.

Pamela Pennington has been named the new Principal at Woodview Elementary School. Pamela begins principal duties after 17 years in SBISD as a teacher, a diagnostician, and an instructional specialist. She served the past four years as assistant principal at Bunker Hill Elementary School. She replaces Neda Scanlan who has retired.

Administrative/Other Announcements

Sherri Lawson is moving from Manager to SBISD Director of Transportation. She has worked inside the SBISD Transportation Dept. for 14 years as an administrative manager, and has 28 years total in Texas public education.

Cathie Robinson has been named Executive Director of To and Through, which will include oversight of secondary counselors, registrars, academic advisors and all initiatives focused on increasing numbers of students going to and through higher education.

Lance Stallworth is moving from Director of Curriculum and Instruction to Executive Director of Curriculum and Teacher Development. He will work with Lead I-Coaches and Campus I-Coaches, as well as in areas ranging from Program of Studies and Grading to Summer School.

Elliott Witney will serve as Executive Director of Strategic Leadership and Innovation. His change of title reflects a new role in oversight of all leadership development in the district. He will continue to oversee strategic initiatives and innovation, in addition to added duties.

Steve Shorter has been selected as the Executive Director of Student Instructional Services. Steve has more than 20 years experience with Spring Branch ISD. He served the last four years as Director of Recruiting and Staff Placement in the Human Resources Department.

Allison Tennyson has been named Benefits Manager in the Human Resources Department. Allison was the Director of Human Resources with Cooperative Baptist Fellowship in Atlanta. A former student and graduate of Spring Branch ISD schools, she attended Terrace Elementary, Spring Oaks Middle School and Spring Woods High School. She replaces Amanda Kirshman who has resigned.

Rachel Martinez returns to SBISD this fall as Principal in Residence at Spring Shadows Elementary School. Rachel previously served as Assistant Principal at Treasure Forest, and was serving as the Principal at Port Houston Elementary School in HISD.

Kristi Avalos has been selected as the Assistant Principal at Spring Branch Elementary School. Kristi has 13 years experience with Spring Branch ISD where she served as a Teacher, Intervention Specialist and ESOL Consultant at Spring Branch Elementary. Kristi replaces Millie Alvarez who resigned to accept a position in another school district.

Dawn Cole has rejoined SBISD as the Associate Principal at Memorial High School. Dawn is currently the Instructional Coach at KIPP Houston High School. She is replacing Mindy Munoz, who has resigned.

Doris Gates has been named Assistant Principal at Spring Oaks Middle School. Doris has more than 15 years experience in education. She moves to Spring Oaks Middle after serving as the Instructional and Campus Improvement Specialist with the District. Doris replaces Tai Shan Jackson, who has resigned.

Robert Gonzalez has been named the Assistant Principal at Spring Oaks Middle School. Robert has more than 15 years experience in education. Robert moves to this position from Head Band Director at Northbrook High School. He replaces Michael Schwartz who has resigned.

Hillary Hiler has been named Assistant Principal at Memorial Middle School. Hillary was a teacher at Memorial High School for the past nine years. She replaces Michael Stokebrand who is new Assistant Principal at Memorial High School.

Katie Kavanagh has been named Assistant Principal at Spring Woods High School. Katie has 10 years experience with SBISD. She served the last 2 years as a Teacher Recruiter in the Human Resources Department. She replaces Candice Ayala who has accepted another position in the District.

Kendra O’Keefe has been selected as Assistant Principal at Northbrook High School. She has been a teacher in Katy ISD since 2006 and was serving at James E. Taylor High School.

Erika Rodriguez will be the new Assistant Principal at Bunker Hill Elementary School. Erika previously worked as the Interdisciplinary Instructional Coach at Thornwood Elementary School. She is replacing Pamela Pennington who is the new Principal at Woodview Elementary School.

Michael Stokebrand has been selected as Assistant Principal at Memorial High School. He was serving as an Assistant Principal at Memorial Middle School.

Gregory Tammen has been named Assistant Principal at Spring Woods Middle School. Gregory has 18 years experience in Education and has also worked at Lamar CISD where he served as a teacher for the past three years. He replaces Eric Mullens who resigned to accept a position in Hempstead ISD.

Natalia Fernandez has been selected as Administrative Intern for the System of Care in the SBISD Administration and Operations Department. Natalia has 6 years of experience in education. She previously worked at Teach for America as the Manager for Teacher Leadership Development.

Rusty Graham has joined SBISD as Senior Writer in the Community Relations and Communications Departments. Rusty served as editor of the Memorial Examiner newspaper for many years, and he knows SBISD’s schools, programs and people very well.

SBEF hosts school supplies drive

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4,000 Students Find Supplies Waiting on the First Day of School

“It’s a back-to-school tradition,” said Kim Lewis, mother of four and National Charity League (NCL) volunteer. Each year, Lewis and her daughters, one a student at Memorial Middle School and three enrolled at Stratford High School, gather in the Spring Branch ISD board room to sort and distribute school supplies for SBISD’s economically disadvantaged students.

The school supply drive is sponsored by Spring Branch Education Foundation (SBEF) and spearheaded by Patty and Becky Busmire. The event is a Busmire family tradition as well.

“Becky and I first got involved in 2006. She was in the seventh grade, and it was one of our first NCL activities. We were hooked and offered to take it on as a joint project. Now it’s our last summer activity before Becky returns to college,” Patty said.

Patty Busmire is an SBEF board member and chair of the Foundation’s Special Events committee. Becky is a junior at St. Edwards University in Austin, TX. They were joined in their efforts by members of the National Charity League, Alpha Charity Group, National Honor Societies from Memorial and Stratford High Schools and the Memorial Mustang Outreach Bunch.

“Each year, we wonder where we’ll get the supplies,” Patty Busmire said. “And each year, it comes like manna from heaven. This year, employees of Memorial Hermann Memorial City Medical Center were very generous in an employee drive. We received monetary gifts from Wells Fargo, the Northwest Harris County Retired Educators’ Association and a large number of individuals.” The Busmire Family Foundation also contributes to the drive.

Once the supplies were assembled, they were delivered to 29 SBISD schools where they were available to 4,000 students on the first day of school. Up to 60 percent of SBISD students are considered economically disadvantaged, a number that reflects the students eligible for free and reduced meal programs.




Photo (left to right): Becky and Patty Busmire ready 13 pallets of student supplies to deliver to 29 SBISD schools.

About Spring Branch Education Foundation

The Foundation’s mission is to enhance the quality of education for every student in SBISD. Founded in 1993, SBEF provides donors with a vehicle for making tax-deductible gifts to the district. The Foundation has raised more than $8 million and received the Houston Business Promise Award from the Greater Houston Partnership.
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