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Spring Branch Draws Teachers From Across the Nation

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Enjoying a special meal at Chuy’s Mexican Restaurant recently were several new and recent district teachers who are out-of-state recruits. They include, left to right, Daniel Jeannotte of New York, teaching at Spring Woods Middle; Nicholas Longdo of Wisconsin, Landrum Middle; Megan Gordon of New York, Northbrook High School; Samantha Hall of New York, Shadow Oaks Elementary; Brenda Balbontin of New York City, Edgewood Elementary; and Christopher Villarreal of Kansas and California, Memorial High School.
A successful recruiting season by Spring Branch ISD’s Human Resources Department has filled 27 positions for classroom teachers with recent education school graduates from across the nation, including new hires who grew up in New York, California, Indiana and Wisconsin.

Brenda Balbontin, who grew up in Little Neck, N.Y., a neighborhood in Queens, graduated from Adelphi University in suburban New York City with a master’s degree in early childhood special education and a desire to experience something removed from the quite amazing, but crowed and rushed life pace of her native city.

She also holds a bachelor of science degree in applied psychology from the State University of New York at Binghamton (SUNY-Binghamton), a highly rated national university.

An Adelphi University reporter writing about School of Education graduates who decide to teach elsewhere asked Balbontin about her decision to join Spring Branch ISD.

“I thought, with my background in special education as well as being bilingual in Spanish – my family is from South America – I could make a better contribution where they didn’t have as many resources and [as much] diversity as we have in New York,” she said.

Read Adelphi University story about Balbontin:
Get Out of Town: Students Receive Out-of-State Teaching Offers >>


Balbontin became an Edgewood Elementary School teacher in August. She’s still working on a case of culture shock, including “the size of Interstate 10 and the fact that you drive 75 mph on some roads,” as well as drivers penchant here for viewing turn signals as optional. On the other hand, people have been incredibly kind and helpful, and you don’t find that much in New York.

“Random strangers have said hello and greeted me, while in New York it’s usually an unkind glance or total disregard. Houston . . . doesn’t have quite the hustle and bustle of New York and its boroughs, and for that I’m glad,” Balbontin said.

About 1 out of 10 new teachers in Spring Branch ISD were recruited through job fairs or related outreach efforts outside Texas. The district, like other public school systems across the state and nation, is finding it increasingly difficult to fill all its openings by “shopping” for new beginning or even veteran teachers in Texas. The district hired 356 classroom teachers this year to fill open vacancies.

In all, SBISD will employ 422 new professionals when school librarians, counselors and related degreed employees are counted.

Recognized teacher shortage areas in Texas public schools include bilingual/English as a Second Language (ESL), mathematics, science and several areas of special education. However, campus vacancies can occur in non-shortage areas depending on retirements and other factors.

Pine Shadows’ Jenna Alyea grew up on a 1,000-acre farm in rural Williamsburg, Ind., population 1,634. As graduation from Indiana University with a bachelor’s degree in elementary and special education neared, Alyea took a student teaching assignment in Spring Branch ISD.

The district has a partnership with Indiana University to accept expected education graduates as student teachers. Alyea described her student teaching as “a no-strings-attached chance to go somewhere new – to see if I should move somewhere else on graduation.”

Alyea surprised even herself, and that’s a reason why she can be found in an Adaptive Behavior class at Pine Shadows Elementary this fall.

“Little did I know that I would quickly fall in love with the diverse cultural haven that is Houston, Texas, and the wonderful teachers, staff and students of Spring Branch,” she said.

People here have helped her think of Houston as her “new” home, plus the food options are good and diverse. “Never have I ever had so many different types of tacos in my life!” she proclaims.

In August, SBISD’s Human Resources recruiting team hosted a dinner at an area restaurant. The dinner was arranged to welcome new teacher recruits to Houston.

Joining the new recruits were Samantha Hall, recruited from New York Long Island University-Post, now in her second year of teaching at Shadow Oaks Elementary, and her friend, Megan Gordon, also from New York, who teaches social studies and coaches swimming at Northbrook High School.

“Human Resources sponsored the dinner in an effort to increase both recruitment and retention of out-of-state teachers,” said Karen Heeth, a Human Resources director. “Samantha and Megan shared their stories of relocating and teaching in Texas, while the team gave advice on many practical matters for newcomers and fielded questions on a variety of topics.” 

New Memorial High English teacher and volleyball coach Christopher Villarreal grew up in two states, Kansas and California, before graduating from the University of Nebraska in Omaha, and later teaching English and speech and coaching volleyball for seven years in the same city.

A Houston Chronicle newspaper story about Memorial High Principal Lisa Weir he read led him to query about job openings. The school did have openings for an English teacher and volleyball coach. “She sounded like the type of principal for whom I wanted to work,” Villarreal said.

The traffic is rough, even for a California kid, but “the positives outweigh that,” he said. Spring Branch’s mostly sunny climate even reminds the new coach a bit of San Diego.

Nicholas Longdo, who is teaching eighth-grade English language arts at Landrum Middle School this fall, knows small towns like Alyea, too. He grew up in Colfax, Wis., and became first in his family to go to a four-year college.

Longdo graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Superior, in Superior, Wis., with a major in English education and minor in history education. A high school teacher inspired him to consider teaching, and Spring Branch ISD won him over after graduation.

His dream goal is to one day write and then publish young adult fiction.

“The vision of Spring Branch is what attracted me most,” he said. “The work that the district is doing is phenomenal, and that was something I could see myself . . . wanting to be a part of.”

Even with the match in vision and goals, rural northern Wisconsin and urban southeast Texas are not kissing cousins in culture, climate or traffic patterns and volume.

“There are huge differences between Houston and where I grew up – the weather, the traffic, the tolls and the size. The weather is very hot and humid; the traffic is insane; the tolls are still something I’m getting used to; and every day I am in awe of Houston’s size,” Longdo said.

On the bright side: Longdo is ready for a snowless and warm (by Wisconsin standards) winter!

Asked what classroom goals are most important to them this year, these three new, out-of-state recruits took on this topic with sharp, assured responses.

“I am very excited about having my own classroom,” Longdo said. “Some goals that I have are implementing various instructional strategies to meet the needs of a diverse group of students and learning how to effectively support ESL (English as a Second Language) and ELL (English Language Learner) students in my content area.”

“I want to build healthy relationships with my students first and foremost,” Alyea said. “I want to teach them content of course, but without a firm understanding in them that I care for them and that I am their biggest cheerleader, all the focus on TEKS and STAAR is pointless. I want my kids to know I care, and then I want to teach them the joys and the mysteries of learning in all parts of life.”

Balbontin has no intention of being quiet about asking for help. “I want to be able to ask for help and guidance when I need it,” she said. “New teachers constantly want to show that they have complete control and are able to handle everything, but we all have questions and concerns. So I want to work on reaching out more when I need guidance.”

If Memorial High’s Villareal sounds like a coach, well, he is. “My main goal is always the same: I want to be better tomorrow than I am today!”

Welcome aboard, new teachers!


German Summer Trip Inspires High School Students

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A group of 19 students from Westchester Academy and Stratford High School boarded a plane in June for a four-week exchange adventure in Germany. They were accompanied by German teachers Stanley Stifflemire and Juergen Mueller of Westchester Academy as well as Stratford High School teacher Rachel Crain.

The June 7th trip marked the fifth annual student exchange between SBISD high schools and a partner school, called Gymnasium Ganderkesee, near Bremen. The program began in 2006 when five students from Westchester Academy (WAIS) and Stratford High spent three weeks in the northwestern German city of Ganderkesee.

In just a few weeks, on Sept. 20, the Spring Branch ISD community will welcome 19 students and two teachers from Ganderkesee. Host families will help them experience school and everyday life in the Memorial-Spring Branch community for three weeks.

The goal of the program is to establish friendships and professional relationships between the three schools and to provide international experiences for the participating students as well as for the SBISD community.

The exchange is supported and partly sponsored by GAPP, the German American Partnership Program, which is administered jointly by the national German government, GAPP Inc., and the Goethe-Institute New York.

Funding is provided by the German Foreign Ministry and, in smaller part, by the U.S. government. GAPP exchanges focus on both academics and culture. A student’s integration into the life of the host country – Germany or United States – is the core of the exchange experience. Students from WAIS and Stratford High improve their foreign language skills, meet and live with real German families and learn about modern European life and culture.

District students returned from the trip energized. “I did notice by the end of my stay with my host family I was becoming more active in conversations and my language control was becoming less of a voluntary effort and more of an automatic thing,” said Michael Dyer, a junior at WAIS. “I really loved this experience! Personally, I would have like to have spent a bit more time with the host families since I formed such a bond with my exchange partner.”

Most students were struck by how German teenagers live and are treated in a much more adult manner – at school and home – and how the American and German schooling systems differ in culture and structure. Many students rated their overseas school experiences much higher than at home.

Stratford High senior Ezra Meyer said he was motivated to improve his German language skills this summer, and he was not disappointed.

“My German speaking ability has greatly increased and my understanding of colloquialisms has become fleshed out as well,” he said. “I intend to study German until mastery because I have become fully interested in learning and possibly working or studying in the [German] language.

Modern German life is not all that different from American life, Meyer added. “The only difference is perspective and culture. I was worried about entering a hyper strict society, but I was surprised by a warm, welcoming and curious culture wanting to learn about and improve the world,” he said.

Esther Martinez’s ninth-grade son, Alfonso, attended school in Ganderkesee and also traveled to Hamburg and Berlin with other program students. In Berlin, the students stayed in a youth hostel and visited such storied historical location as the Reichstag, the former Berlin Wall, Potsdam Platz, the Holocaust Memorial, Brandenburg Gate, and the sprawling city park called Tiergarten.

Alfonso is much more independent now, and is looking forward to welcoming a German student into the family soon, his mother said.

“We are very excited to receive the student from Ganderkesee,” Mrs. Martinez said. “My son can’t wait. He has been planning the places where he wants his [exchange] partner to visit and where to take him to eat authentic Mexican and Texas food. I think this program is great for any student who wants to learn the German language and be exposed to the German culture.”

Michael Dyer is the second Dyer son to take part in the GAPP exchange program, said Cornelia Dyer, Michael’s mom. “Each time it has been positive and enriching for our whole family. We love getting to know the German students, and the trips themselves provide a wonderful balance of experiences – living with their Ganderkesee families, attending Gymnasium school, and time for bonding as the Houston group travels and lives together.”

GAPP is the largest high school exchange program between the United States and Germany. Since 1982, more than 200,000 German and American students have participated in the exchanges.

In addition to WAIS and Stratford, Memorial High School has participated in the GAAP program for more than 20 years. Memorial High teacher Susan Sisler has organized that exchange between the local high school and Werner Heisenberg-Gymnasium in Garching, a city in Bavaria.

GAPP exchange program students from WAIS and Stratford High who traveled to Ganderkesee this summer include the following:

Stratford High: Khepri Cano and Valeria Robayo, 10th grade; Juan Carlos Estrada, Aaron Velasco and Gavin Young, 11th grade; and Matthew Hopper, Ernie Kohnke, Ezra Meyer, Noor Rajab, all 12th grade.

Westchester Academy: Alfonso Martinez, 9th grade; Kate Lynn and Nicholas Malek, 10th grade;  and Michael Dyer, Parker Jensen, Rebecca Miller, Rachel Newton, Katalin Stubits-Gallagher and Maria Fernanda Villanueva, all 11th grade.

Memorial Sophomore Named KHOU Player of the Week

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Memorial High School Girls Volleyball player Sanaa Dotson, who is a sophomore outside hitter on the two-time district champion team, was named KHOU TV 11’s Player of the Week.

Dotson’s recognition was filmed earlier this week in the Memorial volleyball gym. Interviewing her was TV 11’s Daniel Gotera. He also presented her with the weekly sports award. This honor was scheduled to be announced publicly by the station in a Sunday, Sept. 4, broadcast.

As a sophomore, Dotson, who stands 6 feet, ranks among the state’s Top 100 players and among the nation’s Top 250 outside hitters, according to one local volleyball website. Last year, district coaches named Dotson, then a freshman, as the Newcomer of the Year on the 18-6A All-District Team.

Memorial Girls Volleyball won its league for a second consecutive season with a 12-0 record in 2015. Memorial’s Maddie Phillips and Maddie Taff were also named all-district Most Valuable Player and Most Valuable Setter, respectively. The three players received half of all-district honors awarded last year.

Dotson’s stated goals for the Mustangs this year are to repeat as district champions and to move farther along in the playoffs. One of her favorite games is against Stratford, which has a healthy and ongoing SBISD team rivalry with Memorial.

Mustang Girls Volleyball is coached by Beth Gammill. School Principal is Lisa Weir. 

Muri, Feinberg: More ISD-Charter Cooperation Would Boost School Quality

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By Scott Muri and Mike Feinberg / Houston Chronicle Outlook
September 7, 2016 Updated: September 7, 2016 6:02pm

Northbrook Middle School in Spring Branch ISD shares space with the YES Prep charter network. Both entities are part of a new coalition, the District Charter Alliance. Photo by Karen Warren

There's a raging debate in Texas and our country pitting traditional public schools against public charter schools. Here's a novel thought: What if we approached it from the standpoint of doing both rather than choosing between them?

Houston needs high-quality academic choices for every child. These come in the form of quality public school districts (ISDs) and public charter schools. A Texas Tribune study shows that six years after high school, fewer than 20 percent of Harris County's class of 2007 completed any form of higher education - including technical certificate, associate's degree or bachelor's degree. This number drops to 10 percent for low-income students, 11 percent for Hispanic students, and 12 percent of African-American students.


This is unacceptable morally and unsustainable economically. If 9 out of every 10 low-income students never go beyond high school, how will the cycle of poverty ever end?


And yet, we read and hear continued discourse focused on what type of school our children attend instead of a conversation about the quality of the education inside.


We believe the best answer is when ISD and charter school leaders choose to put students' interests first and work together.


Already, more than a dozen superintendents have joined in a new coalition, the District Charter Alliance, recognizing our shared goal of excellence for future generations of Houstonians.


The Alliance seeks to grow a broad, pro-public-school-student coalition across our city and state. We pledge to make decisions in our schools and within the public policy arena based on what is best for children, including strong support for teachers in our classrooms. And we welcome the involvement of our business community to provide additional support and feedback, ensuring we are preparing our children for success in life well after their years in K-12 schools.


We already have the proof points of positive collaboration and competition right here in Houston and across the state. Aldine ISD and YES Prep are co-located on an Aldine campus. In Spring Branch ISD, KIPP Houston and YES Prep have a similar partnership with the district. Spring Branch ISD has taken advantage of the District of Innovation, made possible through a new state law to improve outcomes for students by leveraging existing charter school flexibilities. San Antonio ISD has begun offering its underused or empty school buildings to neighboring public charter schools - rent-free - and district leaders have re-envisioned their college counseling department based on lessons from charter schools. Grand Prairie ISD has a close partnership with Uplift Education, a public charter school.


Houston has the infrastructure, community support, economic strength and school-success stories needed to create world-class public schools for all. The District Charter Alliance is calling on our peers in the business, philanthropic, faith-based and school communities to join us in holding each other accountable and ensuring we collectively make student-centered decisions that greatly increase the number of quality seats in schools across our city.


Bickering over school labels is outdated, unproductive and not what our children and their families need from us.


Muri is superintendent of the Spring Branch Independent School District. Feinberg is co-founder and CEO of KIPP schools. Scott McClelland, HEB Houston president and chairman of the Greater Houston Partnership K-12 Committee, also contributed to this commentary.


Happy Birthday Valley Oaks Elementary!

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Sixty years ago today, September 10, 1956, Valley Oaks Elementary opened its doors to the community. Click on the video below to view a special tribute to commemorate 60 years of educating students. Special thanks to our past principals and other contributors to our video. Mostly, thank you to all of our past and current community members who made Valley Oaks what it is today and will continue upon our greatness in the future.

Listening to Students

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Photo courtesy of Raise Your Hand Texas

Valley Oaks Elementary Principal Gary Henry and several students are featured in the most recent blog posting and video compiled by the Austin-based public education group, Raise Your Hand Texas.

The video and posting, titled “Giving Students a Stake in Their School,” retells through Principal Henry and student voices how the school’s SPARK Park playground was rebuilt by including students in the playground design process.

“Everyone in education says they put students’ interests first. But not everyone asks students what they think, what they need, and what they want,” the blog posting states. Valley Oaks Elementary was one of 13 elementary schools rebuilt under the 2007 SBISD bond plan. The blog posting also describes how the entire community – staff, students and parents – were involved in the redesign of this new campus. The new Valley Oak Elementary opened in January 2015 at the intersection of Westview and Pech.

Raise Your Hand Texas’ recent blog posting also includes a link to a Houston Public Media radio news story about SBISD’s decision last year to become a District of Innovation. The district was one of the first public school districts in state to make such a proactive move toward greater local control and innovation.

Principal Henry is not the only SBISD leader praised by the Austin group for innovative thinking and practice. Sherwood Elementary Principal Stefanie Spencer was featured earlier by Raise Your Hand Texas in a question-and-answer style blog posting. That interview focused on her passion for giving all students access to quality education, describing her as both an “idealist and doer.”

Spencer, like so many of her SBISD principal colleagues, is a graduate of the Rice Education Entrepreneurship Program (REEP), a business certificate program for educators based at Rice University. Raise Your Hand Texas is a sponsor of the REEP program.

Raise Your Hand Texas story - Business Lessons Help Build School & Culture

Previous Raise Your Hand Texas story - Q&A With a Principal: Would-Be Lawyer Turned Educator Passionate About Giving Students Access to Quality Education


SBISD Graduates Outscore State and National Averages on 2016 ACT

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Spring Branch ISD students have posted scores higher than the state and national averages on the ACT, a curriculum-based measure of college readiness, even though test takers marked an all-time high with 1,110 district students. Four years ago, SBISD had 887 students take the ACT.

In the ACT, students are tested in English, mathematics, reading and science, and earn individual scores in each area as well as an overall composite score. The composite represents an average of the four individual scores.

The percent of SBISD students testing who qualified by ACT’s research-based measures as ready for college-level coursework far exceeded state and national averages, too, compared to college readiness benchmark scores in designated college courses.

This year’s results show that SBISD’s composite score was 23.2, far above the Texas average of 20.6 and the ACT reported national average composite score of 20.8. Possible scores on the ACT range from 1 up to 36, often called a “perfect” score.

Earlier this year, two Memorial High School students – an incoming senior and junior – received a perfect 36 on the ACT. See related story/link here. . .

“Spring Branch students continue to produce some of the highest ACT scores in the Houston area and outscore their state and national peers on average,” Superintendent Dr. Scott Muri said.

“This year’s gains are worth celebrating as we work to prepare all students for T-2-4 success in whatever they elect to do after high school – military training, technical certifications, two- and four-year college degrees.”

SBISD student performance on the ACT also topped the state averages in all five testing areas – English, mathematics, reading, science and composite. And though more SBISD students took the ACT last year, district performance went up in four of five areas (English, reading, science and composite score).

In addition, this growth reverses declines observed the previous year in the same areas. State averages, by comparison, declined in four of five areas and were flat in the one remaining area.

In college readiness measures, SBISD students posted higher than state and national scores in several areas – 71 percent ready in college English composition, 61 percent in college algebra, 59 percent college social science, and 52 percent college biology.

By comparison, the Texas averages for college readiness were 57 percent in college English composition, 42 percent in college algebra, 43 percent in college social science, and 35 percent in college biology.

National averages for college readiness among ACT-tested high school graduates this year were slightly higher than the state, but lower than the district averages – 61 percent in college English, 44 percent in college-level reading for social sciences, 41 percent for college algebra, and 36 percent for college biology, or science.

College-readiness benchmarks were 18 on the ACT English test, which indicates that a student is likely ready for a college composition course and would earn a “C” or better grade. Other college benchmarks are: 22 for college algebra and social science and 23 for college biology, or science.

Nationwide, 64 percent of the 2016’s high school graduates took the ACT, or nearly 2.1 million students, compared to 59 percent of students a year ago.

Many national news reports focused on the latest scores from the ACT as more evidence that this year’s high school graduates aren’t ready for college-level courses. On the other hand, low scores were expected due to the growing and changing demographics of the student testing population.

English
Mathematics
Reading
Science
Composite
SBISD
22.4
23.5
23.5
23.0
23.2
State
19.4
20.7
21.0
20.7
20.6
Nation
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
20.8

Five Year Trends - Average ACT Scores (ACT College Readiness Letter for SBISD - Aug. 24, 2016) >>

Don’t Miss The Miss Firecracker Contest at Memorial High

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Memorial High School is presenting Beth Henley’s comedy, The Miss Firecracker Contest for two more nights, Sept. 16-17 at 7 p.m. This critically acclaimed play takes place in a small Mississippi town. It tracks a young wannabe beauty queen named Carnelle with a goal is to win the local Miss Firecracker Contest.

Struggling with her tarnished reputation, Carnelle, along with an assortment of quirky friends and family, battles others’ judgments in order to make herself a somebody in her home community.


Cast and crew (above) photographed recently include the following students:


Standing left to right are Katherine Maykopet, Ashley Adams, Cooper Hawkins, Lily Serrata (Stage Manager), Elaine Goulden (Tessy Mahoney), Alyssa Heckler, Alex Willoughby (MacSam), Emily Deans, Meredith Rauch (Carnelle Scott), Valarie McFatter, Michael Clulow, Claire Peachee, Fischer Nordin, Beck Laake (ASM/Understudy), Ramez Shakhashiro and Jacob Wheelock


Kneeling left to right are Jade Nguyen, Hattie Krawiecki, Joy Chung, Kylie Baker, Kate Burcham, Regan Hicks (Elain), Sydney Milanesi (Popeye Jackson), Nicholas Nahm and Chloe Williamson. Students listed are all on tech crew. Not pictured is Brian Carles (Delmont)




Spring Forest Middle Earns $3,000 Health-Fitness Grant

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The Houston-based Oliver Foundation has awarded a $3,000 grant to Spring Forest Middle School to add nontraditional exercise equipment ranging from medicine balls to mini-kettle balls and agility ladders as student activity options.

The $3,000 grant award was announced on Sept. 9 to Spring Forest Middle’s Ryan Harvey, who heads up the health-fitness department and coach. Presenting it was Oliver Foundation Program Director Sandy Bristow. Principal Kaye Williams and district administrators attended the grant announcement.

“The Oliver Foundation is proud to present Spring Forest Middle School with one of this year’s Healthy Choices grants to support the Get Fit project, and we have enjoyed working with Spring Branch ISD during the past 10 years,” Bristow said.

The local nonprofit foundation is dedicated to the prevention of childhood obesity. It provides technical support, training, and nutrition and physical activity education materials to grant recipients.

Harvey’s grant request for the campus’ Get Fit project focuses on nontraditional physical activity options. The grant will fund 15 medicine balls and 15 slam balls, 50 jump ropes, 15 rubber mini-kettles, five agility ladders and chin-up bars, 15 resistance exercise tubes and several equipment and medicine ball racks.

“Our goal with Project Get Fit is to get the students in our care to a place where they are healthy, self-confident and determined to be successful in life wherever their path may lead them,” Coach Harvey said. Project Get Fit will include weekly nutritional lessons, too.

“Many kids today are not into traditional sports like football or volleyball. While they may not be excited about PE, equipment like kettle and medicine balls will give kids a new way to work out that is exciting and dynamic to them. This grant gives them a new opportunity that our students would not otherwise have,” the coach said.

The Oliver Foundation’s partnership with Spring Branch ISD dates back to 2005. Between 2011 and 2013, it partnered with Baylor College of Medicine on a two-year study tracking body mass indexes (BMI) for second-graders at three SBISD schools.

Other Oliver Healthy Choices grants awarded to SBISD include:

  • Nottingham Elementary, 2014-15
    Moving ‘N Grooving, $3,000
  • Buffalo Creek Elementary, 2014-15
    Girls on the Run, $3,000
  • Landrum Middle School, 2015-16
    Teen Advisory Board Grant, $500
  • Ridgecrest Elementary, 2015-16
    Marathon Kids, $3,000
The Oliver Foundation was founded by Mrs. William B. Oliver in 1995. The foundation began programs to prevent childhood obesity in 2004.

District Fine Arts Calendar (2016-2017)

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Student Theater and Fine Arts events announced!

Student theater, band, choir and orchestra performances will be offered this year across Spring Branch ISD. Performances will include funny puppets, a premiere production and famous children’s stories and toe-tapping musicals.

The fall high school theater season ahead includes the world premiere of What’s My Color at Spring Woods High School. The musical was written by Australian playwright, Wendy Lewis, and composer Yuval Halpern.



Lewis and Halpern will spend a week in October working with student performers on campus. The musical premiere is billed as “perfect for children of all ages, and anyone who sees the world through rose-colored glasses.”

On Oct. 20, the much decorated, regional award-winning Stratford Playhouse will begin a new season with a “triple crown” Tony winner, Avenue Q School Edition, which combines human and puppet. The musical comedy tells the story of a recent college grad named Princeton who moves into a shabby New York City apartment all the way out on Avenue Q.

Together, Princeton and new-found friends struggle to find jobs, dates, and their ever-elusive life purpose. Avenue Q promises gut-busting humor and a delightful, catchy musical score.
Avenue Q Press Release >>

Other not-to-be-missed student performances include Seussical the Musical at Westchester Academy for International Studies in early November; A Piece of My Heart, also in November, and The Velveteen Rabbit written for young audiences in December, both presented at Memorial High School.

Spring Woods High’s Safari Players will also present Clifford Odets’ drama, Awake and Sing, right before the Thanksgiving break.

Public performances announced at this time include the following:

October 2016

3, Fall Preview Choir Concert, Spring Woods High Auditorium, 7 p.m.
4, Northbrook HS Combined Choir Concert, Northbrook High Auditorium, 6 p.m.
5, SBISD Band Extravaganza, Tully Stadium, 7 p.m.
11, Choir Fall Concert, Landrum Middle Auditorium, 6 p.m.
12, Cabaret Choir Show, Northbrook High Auditorium, 7 p.m.
13, Fall Choir Concert, Spring Oaks Middle School, 5:30 p.m.
13, Fall Choir Concert, Spring Forest Middle Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
13-14, What’s My Color, Spring Woods High Auditorium, 7:30 p.m.
15, What’s My Color, Spring Woods High Auditorium, 2:30 p.m.
15, Dessert Murder Mystery Theatre, MHS Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
17, Fall Short and Sweet Choir Concert, MHS  Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
17, What’s My Color, Spring Woods High Auditorium, 7:30 p.m.
17-19, Fall Into Theatre, Spring Forest Middle Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
20, Spookfest, Spring Forest Middle Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
20, What’s My Color, Spring Woods High Auditorium, 7:30 p.m.
20-22, Fall Theater Play, Northbrook High Auditorium, 7 p.m.
20-22, Avenue Q, School Edition, Stratford Playhouse, 7:30 p.m.
21, What’s My Color, Spring Woods High Auditorium, 2:30 p.m.
24, Fall Choir Concert, Stratford High Auditorium, 7 p.m.
25, Fall Orchestra Concert, Spring Woods High Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
25, Band and Choir Halloween Concert, Spring Woods MS Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
25, Fall Orchestra Concert for Everybody, Stratford High Auditorium, 7 p.m.
26, Halloween Concert, Spring Oaks Middle School, 6:30 p.m.
27, Fall Band Concert, Spring Forest Middle Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
27-29, Avenue Q, School Edition, Stratford Playhouse, 7:30 p.m.
28, String Orchestras Concert, Memorial High Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
29, Avenue Q, School Edition, Stratford Playhouse, 2:30 p.m.



November 2016


1, ComedySportz SWHS vs. SWHS, Spring Woods High Mini-Auditorium, 7 p.m.
4-5, Seussical the Musical, Westchester Academy, 7 p.m.
5, Seussical the Musical, Westchester Academy for International Studies, 1 p.m.
8, ComedySportz SWHS vs. CyFalls HS, SWHS Mini-Auditorium, 7 p.m.
11-12, Cornerstone Academy’s Aladdin Jr., SWHS Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
11-12, Seussical the Musical, Westchester Academy, 7 p.m.
17-19, A Piece of My Heart, Memorial Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
17-19, Clifford Odets’ Awake and Sing, Spring Woods High Auditorium, 7:30 p.m.
21, Clifford Odets’ Awake and Sing, SWHS Auditorium, 2:30 p.m. & 7:30 p.m.



December 2016


1, Choir Holiday Concert, Landrum Middle Auditorium, 6 p.m.
1, Winter Orchestra Concert, Northbrook High Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
1, Cornerstone Academy Fine Arts Revue, Spring Woods High School, 6:30 p.m.
1, Winter Orchestra Dinner and Concert, Stratford High Auditorium, 7 p.m.
4, Orchestra Concert, Spring Woods Middle Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
5, Middle-High School Winter Choir Concert, Memorial High Theater, 6:30 p.m.
6, Band Christmas Concert, Spring Oaks Middle School, 5:30 p.m.
6, Winter Orchestra Concert, Spring Forest Middle Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
6, Winter Orchestra Concert, Spring Woods High Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
6, Choir Winter Concert, Stratford High Auditorium, 7 p.m.
6, Band Winter Concert, Memorial High Performing Arts Center, 7:30 p.m.
8, Winter Choir Concert, Spring Oaks Middle Auditorium, 5:30 p.m.
8, Band Concert, Spring Woods Middle Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
8, Winter Choir Concert, Spring Forest Middle Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
8, Band Winter Concert, Stratford High Auditorium, 7 p.m.
8, SWHS Bands Winter Concert, Spring Woods High Auditorium, 7 p.m.
9, String Orchestras Concert, Memorial High Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
9, The Velveteen Rabbit, Memorial High Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
10, The Velveteen Rabbit, Memorial High Performing Arts Center, 2:30 p.m.
11, LMS Choir Christmas in the Park, Spring Branch Presbyterian Church, 5 p.m.
12, Winter Band Concert, Spring Forest Middle Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
12, Spring Woods High Choir Sounds of the Season, Tallowood Baptist, 7 p.m.
13, Choir Concert, Spring Woods Middle Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
14, Band Winter Concert, Northbrook High Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.



January 2017


8, ComedySportz SWHS vs. Westside HS, Spring Woods Mini-Auditorium, 7 p.m.
12-14, Winter Musical, Northbrook High Auditorium, 7 p.m.
12-14, You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown, Northbrook High Auditorium, 7 p.m.
26-28, Winter Musical, Spring Woods High Auditorium, 7:30 p.m.
26-28, Me & My Girl, Stratford Playhouse, 7:30 p.m.
26-28, Mary Poppins, Memorial High Performing Arts Center, 7:30 p.m.
27, IB Theatre Student Showcase, Westchester Academy, 4 p.m.
28, Winter Musical, Spring Woods High Auditorium, 2:30 p.m.
28, Me & My Girl, Stratford Playhouse, 2:30 p.m.
30, Winter Musical, Northbrook High Auditorium, 7 p.m.



February 2017

2-4, Me & My Girl, Stratford Playhouse, 7:30 p.m.
2-4, Mary Poppins, Memorial High Performing Arts Center, 7:30 p.m.
3, Bobcat Factor Talent Show, Spring Forest Middle Auditorium, 4:30 p.m.
3-4, Winter Musical, Spring Woods High Auditorium, 7:30 p.m.
4, Winter Musical, Spring Woods High Auditorium, 2:30 p.m.
4, Me & My Girl, Stratford Playhouse, 2:30 p.m.
4, Mary Poppins, Memorial High Performing Arts Center, 2:30 p.m.
7, Choir Valentine Concert, Northbrook High Auditorium, 6 p.m.
7, ComedySportz Faculty Match, Spring Woods High Mini-Auditorium, 7 p.m.
23, Pre-UIL Concert, Landrum Middle Auditorium, 6 p.m.
24, Symphony Orchestra Concert, Memorial High Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
28, Choir Pre-Contest Concert, Spring Forest Middle Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
28, ComedySportz SWHS vs. St. Agnes, Spring Woods Mini-Auditorium, 7 p.m.



March 2017

2-4, Waiting for Godot, Westchester Academy for International Studies, 7:30 p.m.
4, Waiting for Godot, Westchester Academy for International Studies, 2 p.m.
7, Spring Choir Concert, Spring Oaks Middle Auditorium, 5:30 p.m.
9, Band Spring Concert, Stratford High Auditorium, 7 p.m.
28, Spring Choir Concert, Memorial High Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
28, Choir Spring Pre-UIL Concert, Northbrook High Auditorium, 6 p.m.
28, Choir Pre-UIL Concert, Spring Woods High Auditorium, 7 p.m.
30, Band Pre-UIL Band, Northbrook High Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.



April 2017


10, Band Pre-Contest Concert, Spring Forest Middle Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
21-22, Markettes Spring Show, Memorial High School Auditorium, 7 p.m.
25, ComedySportz SWHS vs. Taylor HS, SWHS Mini-Auditorium, 7 p.m.
27-28, Spring Theater Play, Northbrook High Auditorium, 7 p.m.
27-29, Brighton Beach Memoirs, Stratford Playhouse, 7:30 p.m.
28, String Orchestras Concert, Memorial High Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.



May 2017


3-6, Bobcat Theatre Spring Musical, Spring Forest Middle Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
4-6, Brighton Beach Memoirs, Stratford Playhouse, 7:30 p.m.
5, Bandoleras Spring Show, Northbrook High School Auditorium, 7 p.m.
6, Brighton Beach Memoirs, Stratford Playhouse, 2:30 p.m.
5-6, Zombie Prom, Memorial High Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
6, Zombie Prom, Memorial High Performing Arts Center, 2:30 p.m.
9, Band Spring Concert, Memorial High Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
10, Choir Talent Show, Northbrook High Auditorium, 6 p.m.
10, Choir Pop Show/Senior Solos, Stratford High Auditorium, 7 p.m.
11, Band Spring Concert, Spring Forest Middle Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
11, Pop Show, Spring Woods High Auditorium, 7 p.m.
11, Spring Orchestra Concert, Stratford High Auditorium, 7 p.m.
12-13, Choir Pop Show, Memorial High Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
15, Choir Spring Concert, Spring Forest Middle Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
15, SWHS Jazz Bands Spring Concert, SWHS Mini-Auditorium, 7 p.m.
16, Spring Show, Landrum Middle Auditorium, 6 p.m.
16, Band Spring Concert, Northbrook High Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
16, Orchestra Spring Concert, Spring Forest Middle Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
16, ComedySportz SWHS vs. Alumni, SWHS Mini-Auditorium, 7 p.m.
16-17, Band Concert, Spring Woods Middle Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
17, Band Spring Concert, Spring Oaks Middle School, 5:30 p.m.
17, Spring Orchestra Concert, Spring Woods High Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
18, Pop Concert, Spring Oaks Middle Auditorium 5:30 p.m.
18, Orchestra Spring Concert, Northbrook High Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
18, SWHS Bands Spring Concert, Spring Woods High Auditorium, 7 p.m.
22, Cluster Percussion Concert, Spring Woods High Auditorium, 7 p.m.
23, Orchestra Concert, Spring Woods Middle Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.
24, Choir Pop Show, Northbrook High Auditorium, 6 p.m.
25, Choir Concert, Spring Woods Middle Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.


Note: Special reservation and pricing policies may apply for some theater and additional campus events. Seniors who are 65 years old or older seeking STARCard discounts for events should always check special reservation and pricing policies ahead of time.

Two Campuses Earn TEA All-Distinctions Top Ratings

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The Texas Education Agency has announced that more than 400 campuses across the state – including two Spring Branch ISD schools – achieved the Met Standard rating in the 2016 state accountability ratings and also earned all seven distinction designations applicable to their individual campus.

The SBISD campuses recognized for receiving all possible distinctions are district charter middle school Cornerstone Academy and highly innovative Spring Branch Academic Institute, formerly called the School for Highly Gifted Students TEA announced the all-distinction honors for schools on Sept. 14.

Many SBISD campuses earned one or more TEA distinctions, but not all possible.

The distinction designation is awarded to a district campus based on achievement in performance indicators relative to a group of 40 campuses of similar type, size and student demographics.

Depending on campus grade levels and type, the number of potential designations of distinction can vary. Up to seven distinction designations can be earned for the following:
  • Academic Achievement in English Language Arts/Reading;
  • Academic Achievement in Mathematics;
  • Academic Achievement in Science;
  • Academic Achievement in Social Studies;
  • Top 25 Percent: Student Progress;
  • Top 25 Percent: Closing Performance Gaps; and
  • Postsecondary Readiness
In making the state announcement, TEA Commissioner of Education Mike Morath noted that earning one or more distinctions is noteworthy and should be a source of pride in a school community.

“Earning all possible distinctions is a significant accomplishment and should signal to parents that there is extraordinary work taking place on that campus,” the state’s highest education officer said.
The SBISD Board of Trustees in April unanimously approved renaming the School for Highly Gifted Students as the Spring Branch Academic Institute.


The institute operates a “school within a school” concept at three campus locations – Valley Oaks Elementary, Spring Forest Middle and Stratford High. About 80 students identified as highly, exceptionally and profoundly gifted are provided learning opportunities by meeting individual abilities, strengths and interests.

Cornerstone Academy, with about 380 students enrolled, has provided a program of high academic success since it opened more than a decade ago. Since opening, this campus has earned TEA’s Exemplary rating yearly. Students are provided a challenging and advanced curriculum in all subject areas.

In addition, advanced technology and hands-on project methods are combined to pursue individual and group projects and learning methods.

To view the 2016 state accountability and distinction designations for all districts, charters and campuses in Texas, please visit the TEA website.

Students Honored for High Marks on AP Exams

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Many eligible for college credit through testing program

The Advanced Placement (AP) program continues to grow in Spring Branch ISD, where more than 2,300 high school students scored high enough on AP Exams in 2016 to earn possible college credits in dozens of subject areas and courses.

Last spring, almost 5,700 AP Exams were taken by more than 2,600 students, an increase of more than 500 testers from a year ago.

The increase highlights efforts at every high school campus to recruit students to rigorous AP-level courses and then encourage them to take credit-level exams as courses are completed.

“It is encouraging not only to see the growth in the number of students taking AP exams, but the consistency in our scores as our AP program grows,” said SBISD Advanced Academic Studies Facilitator Amy Ellingson. “It is a testament to our Pre-AP and AP teachers, all of whom work diligently to ensure the success of our students.”

The College Board’s AP program allows high school students to take university-level courses ranging from English literature and composition to U.S. history as well as several levels of calculus and physics. SBISD students tested in 32 separate areas.

Students can potentially earn college credit by earning a score of 3, 4 or 5 on their AP Exams. In 2016, more than 55 percent of SBISD exams earned a 3, 4 or 5. The average district score was 2.76, which was much higher than the state’s average score of 2.51. The U.S. average score was 2.85 last year.

The College Board recognizes students for outstanding achievement on multiple exams with several separate award categories.

The AP Scholar Award is granted to students who receive scores of 3 or higher on three or more AP Exams. SBISD had 301 AP Scholar Award recipients in 2016, including six 10th-graders from Westchester Academy for International Studies.

The AP Scholar with Honor award is granted to students who receive an average score of 3.25 on all AP Exams taken and scores of a 3 or higher on five or more of these exams. SBISD had 93 of these award recipients last year.

The AP Scholar with Distinction is awarded to students who receive a 3.5 on all AP Exams taken and scores of 3 or higher on five or more of these exams. SBISD had 198 students earn this distinction in 2016.

The National AP Scholar Award is given to U.S. students who receive an average score of 4 on all AP Exams taken and scores a four or higher on eight or more exams. In SBISD last spring, 31 students earned this top distinction.

In all, 623 SBISD students earned one of these honors for their performance on AP Exams in 2016. By comparison, 568 students won similar honors in 2015.

Among highlights, 181 juniors from SBISD high schools who tested in spring 2016 earned the AP Scholar Award. (See below for these student names by high school)

“Our students put in countless hours to prepare, and it is so exciting to see students who understand that hard work will pay off for their future,” Advanced Academic Studies’ Amy Ellingson said.

“Fewer college classes to take means fewer classes to pay for and faster access to the classes that apply to their chosen field. Knowing that students are able to enter college with credits for classes is exciting and brings T-2-4 to life,” she also said.


AP Awards by Campus:

Memorial High School
(358 students honored)
129 students earned the AP Scholar Award
56 students earned the AP Scholar with Honors Award
148 students earned the AP Scholar with Distinction Award
25 students earned the AP National Scholar Award


Northbrook High School
(4 students honored)
4 students earned the AP Scholar Award


Spring Woods High School
(49 students honored)
40 students earned the AP Scholar Award
5 students earned the AP Scholar with Honors Award
4 students earned the AP Scholar with Distinction Award


Stratford High School
(201 students honored)
117 students earned the AP Scholar Award
32 students earned the AP Scholar with Honors Award
46 students earned the AP Scholar with Distinction Award
6 students earned the AP National Scholar Award


Westchester Academy for International Studies
(11 students honored)
11 students earned the AP Scholar Award




Current SBISD Students Issued AP Achievement Awards:


Memorial High School

Seniors who earned the AP Scholar Award: Breanna Alvarez, Rachel Amran, Timothy Bailey, Kathryn Belcher, Austin Bopp, Katherine Burcham, Amelia Caven, George Chirapurath, William Choi, Madison Dahmer, Kaveri Dixit, Elizabeth Eubank, Blaire Evans, Aidan Farmayan, William Guinn, Aria Herbst, Anthony Huynh, Rachel Jiang, Samuel Kersey, Brian Kim, Ha Eun Kim, Rebecca Kroger, David Lee, Rachel Lootens, Catherine Mastren, Marshall Matheny, Emma Mueller, Benjamin Neyland, Zabrina Nguyen, Rebecca Owens, Meaghan Pansacola-Rouch, Anastasia Papin, Jihwan Park, Ju Sung Park, Morgan Parker, Celine Patel, Nicole Rodriguez Oliva, Kyra Rubinstein, Darian Sedaghat, Frances Siller, Kate Sparenberg, Luke Tesarek, Annie Titterington, Margaret Vincent, Lauren Vu, Jing Wang, Zibo Wang, Julia Westwick

Seniors who earned the AP Scholar With Honor Award: Kaho Adachi, Richard Anderson, Alexis Bennett, Justin Bryant, Analisa Canto, Miguel Caranti, Arushi Guddanti, Christina Hruzek, Alex Hwang, Alexa Iannacone, Davis Kirchhofer, Sakurako Kobayashi, Claire Miller, Joanna Moy, Lan Nguyen, Davis Palmie, Ashley Park, Maya Prakash, Rachel Ray, Arun Ruhfus, Daniella Sanchez, Robert Trout, Liyun Xu

Seniors who earned the AP Scholar With Distinction Award: Christopher An, Devin Arrants, Elizabeth Bik, William Caesar, Carson De La Rosa, Julia Delaney, Daniel Fonseka, Joshua Gao, Joshua Glass, Connor Hanna, Max Hardy, Zachary Hattig, Trent Herndon, Yue Hu, Vincent Huang, Benjamin Hughes, Tiger Im, Jungeun Koo, Seung Mook Lee, Joy Lu, Mark Oldham, Jungwoo Park, Austin Peterson, Juliette Pferdehirt, Tucker Reinhardt, Simon Rysin, Andrew Su, Grace Winburne, Frank Yang


Stratford High School

Seniors who earned the AP Scholar Award: Madison Aycock, Arturo Benitez, Hannah Broom, Madison Bryant, Kellan Cerveny, Andrew Dawson, Michell Dias, Darius Dixon, Taylor Gee, Hasib Hamdi, Sadaf Hashemian, William Hastings, Cameron Henkel, Gabriel Herrera, Carly Keusseyan, Abigail Klasing, Ernest Kohnke, Sini Lehtinen, Claire Lewis, Patrick Lewis, Emily Lister, Bolin Mahaffey, William Manke, Elena McInroe, Nestor Mejia Velaswquez, Ezra Meyer, Alec Milazzo, Samdup Miller, Noor Rajab, Philip Salls, Tomas Samitier, Emma Silavong, Mia Trinh, Grayson Whelen, Heream Yang

Seniors who earned the AP Scholars with Honor Award: Kyle Brastrom, Jairo Cano-Farias, Caroline Crawford, Mark Duna, Matthew Hopper, Dania Khan, Alec Norman, Heavin Oh, Mary Schwabenland, Jessica Sheldon, Anna Skelly, Alyssa Stanford, Nathan Winn


Spring Woods High School

Seniors who earned the AP Scholar Award: Citlali Bataz, Bruce Beth, Christopher Call, Geoffrey Call, Preston Cheney, Christopher Kim, Amanda Lee, Joel Melendez, Tracy Nguyen, Courtney Obermiller, Heather Obermiller, Pamela Ortiz, Miguel Portillo, Dean Ramirez, Gloria Sparks, Lisa Tran, Quinn Walstead, Karah Welch, Xsana Yusef

Seniors who earned the AP Scholars With Honor Award: Katherine Koslan, Jeremiah Menslage

Westchester Academy for International Studies
(11 students honored)

Juniors who earned the AP Scholar Award: Kimberly Amaro, Jasmine Anderson, Samuel Escamilla, Daniel Jaimes, Marco Medina, Catalina Row
Seniors who earned the AP Scholar Award: Carmina Escobar, Michael Facundo, Chang Jeong, Samantha Verduzco


Watch D.O.G.S. (Dads of Great Students) Form at Two Campuses

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A WatchDOG volunteer helps out in a classroom recently at Rummel Creek Elementary.
The way Chris Holmes described it to a Houston Chronicle reporter, he was often the only man in attendance when the Rummel Creek Elementary School PTA met at the school. Dads wouldn’t come.

Holmes stopped being a lonely man overnight when more than 200 other fathers packed the school’s cafeteria during an informational meeting in August for a new volunteer program called Watch D.O.G.S. (Dads of Great Students). This group operates across Texas and the nation, helping fathers engage with their children in a structured way.

Dads at the evening sign-up session at Rummel Creek consumed 60 pizzas in less than an hour. They volunteered for 172 daylong volunteer sessions at the school.
View more photos of Watch D.O.G.S. at Rummel Creek >>

“It showed me how badly dads want to be involved, but they don’t know how,” Holmes told Chronicle reporter Shelby Webb.
Read Houston Chronicle story >>

Watch D.O.G.S volunteer Richard Houston joins sons Daniel, 5th grade, and David, 1st grade, at Meadow Wood Elementary School during a morning TV broadcast.
In 2013, Meadow Wood Elementary pioneered the Watch D.O.G.S. program for dads in Spring Branch ISD. It operates in more than 300 suburban schools across Houston. Rummel Creek’s Holmes shadowed Meadow Wood program dads.
Read CW39 story and watch the video >>

Meadow Wood Principal Pamela Redd introduced this program in an elementary school in Cypress-Fairbanks ISD years ago, and then brought it to Meadow Wood Elementary, where 110 dads from about 300 families are now involved.

She believes that demographics and changes in family work-school relationships are just a few reasons why such programs should be promoted.

“Students mostly see moms in schools, and many of the teachers in schools are women. Before this year (at Meadow Wood), we did not employ a male. (This year, the school has a male teaching assistant.) Having adult males around an elementary school is great for all kids,” she said.
View more photos of Watch D.O.G.S. at Meadow Wood >>

Recent studies by the U.S. Department of Education and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show that students perform better academically and are better behaved if fathers take an active role in their lives, including at school. An involved male adult may also boost student health measures and even help the students who see active Dads transition successfully from school life to careers, some studies contend.

Last year, Meadow Wood Elementary had its 110 Watch D.O.G.S. volunteers on campus for full-day sessions that range from morning student drop-off duties to classroom observations and one-on-one tutoring. Seventy new fathers signed up recently at the 500-student elementary, and more are expected to do so soon.

Once dads like Meadow Wood’s Richard Houston, who is new, and Jason Hare, an eager returning volunteer, are on campus, there’s a really strong reason why they won’t be leaving soon.

“My boys really wanted me to do this,” Houston said. “They saw other kids and all their friends with parents here, and they wanted me to do it, too.” Houston’s sons Daniel, a fifth-grader, and David, who is in first grade, grinned widely as they were announced to the entire school along with their dad on closed-circuit television as a part of a morning broadcast.

Jason Hare, a returning Watch D.O.G., joined at the beginning when middle school daughter, Grace, attended Meadow Wood. His son Jacob and daughter Sophie are two reasons he is back. “They’re so excited that I am being a Watch D.O.G. again,” Hare said.

At Rummel Creek Elementary recently, kids slapped the hands of two volunteer dads enthusiastically.

“One dad told me he felt like J.J. Watt with all the kids high-fiving him in the hallways,” Holmes told the Houston Chronicle. “One even asked him to sign a cast on his leg.”

Watch D.O.G. Kevin Rump is in his second year at Meadow Wood as the program coordinator. “I love that my son loves it so much, but this program has also given me insight and a window into what this school and the teachers do each day,” he adds.

Several volunteers like Rump noted that they learned so much about current education and teaching by following a school day schedule as a Watch D.O.G.

Rump said duties like listening to young students read aloud were inspiring for him, and especially different than his typical workday as a pension consultant.

“It was really neat and also refreshing to me to hear a student reading to me,” he said. “I don’t hear that during my regular (business) day.”

Attend SBISD's College Night on October 11

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College Night is an evening designed especially for students and their families to learn more about the many post-secondary options available to students after high school. The evening program is organized as a one-stop “shopping” event. In recent years, up to 3,000 people have attended and we are expecting just as strong turn of a turn out in light of hosting this event on only one night this year.

We will welcome over 200 representatives from regional, state and national colleges and universities, both public and private, as well as technical and military-related institutions on October 11, 2016 from 6-8pm at Spring Woods High School.

In addition, due to the early opening of the federal and state financial aid process, we will host financial aid information tables and also welcome representatives from Wells Fargo to share information about saving for higher education.

Students and parents can review a weekly updated list of college fair participants.

October 11, 2016
SBISD College Night
6-8 p.m.
Spring Woods High School

2045 Gessner Rd. 77080

*Overflow parking will be available with shuttle service to/from Spring Woods High School throughout the evening

**SBISD regrets that College Night conflicts with the Yom Kippur Holiday. We have worked since July to try and change the date to no avail. For families impacted by this scheduling conflict, please note that Katy and Alief ISD have graciously offered our families the opportunity to attend their district events as follows:

October 5, 2016
Katy ISD College Night
Merrell Center
6-8:30 p.m.
Leonard E. Merrell Center


October 13, 2016
Alief ISD College Night
Alief Taylor High School
6-8 p.m.
Alief Taylor High School


Tips for students attending the college fair >>

Woodview Elementary Wins SPARK Park Funding

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Principal Pennington (second row, left) joined area City Council Member Brenda Stardig (second row, right) and several Woodview parents for the official announcement.
Woodview Elementary School has won new park funding. The Spring Branch ISD campus is one of 30 schools across the region named as a future location for a new SPARK park to serve as a school playground and a community park.

The schools were chosen from areas designated as “park deserts” in Harris County.

Woodview was one of nine elementaries to win funding Sept. 21 from the Houston Endowment and Kinder Foundation. The Houston-based philanthropies announced a three-year gift of $5 million to either build or “refresh” SPARK Parks. The City of Houston will contribute about $500,000 through available federal funds.

The parks will serve as dual purpose playgrounds and parks. A “park desert” is defined as an area that is more than one-half mile or a 10-minute walk from an existing county or school park.

The SPARK park group is a 33-year-old nonprofit operation dedicated solely to the improvement of school playgrounds for student and public uses. SPARK’s founder was former City Council member Eleanor Tinsley, who served the Spring Branch-Memorial area for many years.

Woodview Elementary’s parents, community and partners worked hard to raise the initial $5,000 seed money needed to jump start full project funding.

“This is huge for Woodview,” said Principal Pamela Pennington. “We have been working hard for over a year to secure funding for our Spark Park. Our students, our staff, our PTA Sister School – Hunters Creek Elementary, our parents, and our community have all worked to raise money for this much needed park.”

She said many Woodview students live with limited access to nearby green space, making park funding an “extremely important” goal for the school’s community. 

“Our goal is to develop a safe and beautiful space for students to play and exercise. We want to partner with our community so that our families have a place to gather after school and on the weekends for family gatherings or track and field activities, ball games, and to celebrate birthday parties and family events,” the principal said.

A Trust for Public Land evaluation led to the final ratings that resulted in selection of Woodview Elementary as one of the best spots for a new community park.

“Every single child in greater Houston should be able to walk to a park, to swing, to slide down a slide, to chase a soccer ball,” said Houston Endowment President Ann Stern during the Sept. 21 luncheon.

“Every neighborhood should have a place where residents and families and people can come connect, get a chance to know each other, to be in a place that contributes to the pride and character of their neighborhood,” she also said.

Principal Pennington joined area City Council Member Brenda Stardig and several Woodview parents for the official announcement.


Broadway Actor Performs Saturday

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Renowned Broadway actor Craig Schulman –the lead actor in The Phantom of the Opera, Les Misérables, and Jekyll and Hyde– will perform for one night only on Saturday, Oct. 8, at 7 p.m. in the Memorial High School Performing Arts, 935 Echo Lane.

In Les Misérables, one of the greatest musical roles in modern theater, Schulman portrayed Jean Valjean with four separate acting companies in more than 1,900 performances in three countries.

He performed in the PBS broadcast of The 10th Anniversary: Les Misérables in Concert. He has also played Che in Evita, Tevye in Fiddler on the Roof, and Archibald in The Secret Garden.

Several Memorial High and Spring Branch ISD students will also perform in the special concert Tickets are available online for the one-night performance. Please visit www.mhstheatre.com and then click on “Purchase Individual Tickets” or use the direct link here.

District theater students who are interested in attending a Master Class with Mr. Schulman from 11 a.m. until 2 p.m. also on Saturday, Oct. 8, should contact Nicole Morgan in Memorial High’s Theatre Department at this email: nicole.morgan@springbranchisd.com.

Download flyer >>

Pinwheels for Peace Spin Across Spring Branch ISD

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Pinwheels for Peace at Memorial Drive Elementary
Several Spring Branch ISD campuses took part recently in Pinwheels for Peace, an international art and literacy project best known for school yards “planted” with pinwheels and youth-written messages of peace and good will.

In a world where the images from war-torn cities like Aleppo, Syria, tear at the soul, pinwheels spinning in a school yard are simple reminders that the future can be far brighter and flush with the hopes and dreams of the next generation.


Memorial Drive, Wilchester and Woodview elementaries were among schools taking part in the international effort. On Sept. 21, Wilchester Elementary students in prekindergarten through the fifth grade designed nearly 800 pinwheels of all shapes and sizes.



Wilchester Elementary kindergarten students Alexandra and Allison Kassner, Anna Rose Poteet, Claire Osteen and Claire Brendel
Under the guidance of art teacher Stephanie Walton, the pinwheels were both public statement and art exhibit and installation. Mrs. Walton began working with Pinwheels for Peace in 2006, when she taught at Northbrook Middle School. She also helped coordinate the project this year for interested art teachers across the district.

Wilchester Elementary, where she now teaches art, is celebrating 50 years. Students and faculty tied the pinwheels there into the peace, love and happiness theme of the 1960s. Teachers put on Afro-style wigs and wore mod costumes this year to recall the decade’s fun groove.


View more photos:



Seeing hundreds of pinwheels spinning each September makes Mrs. Walton proud. “Each year, schools across the district, led by the art teachers and counselors, fly more and more pinwheels! It’s something beautiful to see a child’s face holding a pinwheel that is spinning in the wind. It’s definitely a day to celebrate. Playfulness and happiness fill the campus,” she said. 

Pinwheels for Peace was created a decade ago by two Florida art teachers, Ann Ayers and Ellen McMillan, as a way for students to express their feelings about what’s going on in the world and in their own personal lives. By one estimate, the violence of war represents only a fraction of the physical or emotional violence encountered by children in their personal and home lives.


The art teachers’ student project was an immediate success. In the first year, more than 1,300 separate locations created and displayed a half million pinwheels worldwide. Last year, it is estimated that more than 4.5 million handmade pinwheels were spinning on more than 3,500 campus and other sites ranging from the United States to Australia.


The event also coincides with the United Nation’s annual observance of International Peace Day, which is followed by many nations and governments worldwide. Woodview Elementary’s Kathy Frith says the campus “uses it more as an anti-bullying and anti-harassment lesson for students.”


Woodview Elementary students "plant" pinwheels.
Woodview last month had 650 students from prekindergarten through fifth grade take part, the fifth year that campus has participated. Fifth-graders helped the PreK and kindergarten assemble their pinwheels and then blow on them and watch them spin.

“When they blow on them and they spin, all the students will smile. That first smile is really the photograph, or the special moment, that describes what it all means, but that’s the photograph so hard to capture,” art teacher Frith said.


Leadership Announcements

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The following leadership announcements were made recently in Spring Branch ISD:

Pamela Butler will serve as the Interim Director for Westchester Academy for International Studies. Pam has 39 years of education experience. Before retiring, Pam was district Executive Director of Secondary Teaching and Learning for six years. She also founded and directed Westchester Academy for eight years.

Dale “Bruce” Dareing has been named SBISD Chief of Police effective beginning in January 2017.  He will serve in transition this fall as the Assistant Chief of Police, working closely with Chief Brawner until his retirement at the end of December.

Cristina Flores will be the new Assistant Principal at Treasure Forest Elementary School. Cristina was an Instructional Coach at Treasure Forest Elementary and has 15 years of experience in education. She replaces G. LaVonne Valcin who has accepted an administrator position with Fort Bend ISD.

Michael Francis will serve as the new Assistant Director of Child Nutrition Services. He has nine years of food service industry experience and previously worked as the Child Nutrition Program Specialist with Region IV Education Service Center. He replaces Katie Kattner, who has resigned.

Jennifer Jansky will serve as the new Director of Assessment & Student Evaluation for the Assessment & Compliance Division. She has 11 years of education experience, including as Coordinator of Testing & Textbooks for Texas City ISD. She replaces Joe Zerbe, who has retired.

Phuong Tieu has been named Chief of Academics for the Academic Performance and Support Division. She has eight years of experience in education and has worked previously as a Principal at Billy Reagan Education Center in Houston ISD.

Student Safety Patrol Honors Police Officers

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More than a dozen members of the Buffalo Creek Elementary Safety Patrol toured the Spring Branch ISD Police Department on a recent afternoon, leaving “survival kits” made by students with district officers and staff.

Health Fitness instructor Jessica Lopez, who leads a 21-student safety patrol at the Blalock Road campus, said the Sept. 20 tour of the district police station impressed students. On the tour, they saw interview rooms, holding cells, police vehicle areas and fingerprinting equipment, as well as the most popular displays of closed-circuit television of campus schools – inside and out.

They watched Buffalo Creek’s after-school visitors come and go – via CCTV monitor miles away inside the Police Station on Ruland. 

But the police station visit was important for a simpler reason. “My patrol students were able to see what it takes to monitor the district and to keep us safe. I also felt it was important to show an authentic appreciation for our officers,” she said.

In that respect, the Buffalo Creek safety patrol came to the police station with both heartfelt and homemade offerings of love and respect. They created a color banner of the SBISD Police Dept. uniform patch with the words “Thank You” printed out above the department’s State of Texas decal.



Lopez hit on another bright idea with her students through a social media search. At school, they collected snack size candy and created 35 individual gift bags for officers printed with the label “Survival Kit for Police.”

The student-assembled gifts –paper bags with blue ribbon ties – had sweet, candy inspired notes attached:
  • LifesaversTo remind you of the many times you’ve been one
  • StarburstsFor the burst of energy you need
  • PaydayBecause you are not in it for the money
  • Hershey’s KissesTo show our love for you
  • GumTo help everyone stick together
  • Tootsie RollsBecause you have to roll with the punches
  • Peppermint PattiesTo help keep your cool
  • SnickersTo remember you need to laugh at least once a day
  • MoundsFor the mounds of courage you show
Kimberly Phan, one of the Buffalo Creek safety patrols, wrote about the police department tour. Students saw their own campus on closed-circuit television, a high point for many during the tour, including the fifth-grader. She states:

“This trip was awesome! Going around the Police Department was such a great experience. What I thought was most important was the man who received calls and checked the SBISD school cameras. . .The man who checks all the cameras makes sure that we are safe and there are no strangers at our school.”

She was also impressed with the department’s general appearance. “The police had everything they needed and were very organized,” Kimberly said.

Instructor Lopez noted that the fifth-graders are also at a key age to learn through a police department tour – and by seeing holding cells or fingerprinting equipment – that “when you do something wrong, it may follow you in life.”

SBISD Police Officer Cindy Garcia, who conducted the police department tour, is a Buffalo Creek Elementary Safety Patrol fan for what the students did to give the entire department a student-level show of support.

“It makes us all feel appreciated. They are truly interested in what we do every day and that means a lot,” Officer Garcia said.

Houston Endowment Grant Supports New Strategic Plan

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Houston Endowment, one of the most well-regarded and historic philanthropic organizations, has awarded a one-year, $450,000 grant to Spring Branch ISD to help the district build capacity to execute a new, five-year strategic plan known as The Learner’s Journey.

News of the grant announcement was made public on Sept. 27 during a breakfast event for 300 community members and stakeholders sponsored in the CityCentre development. A 10th-floor, unfinished space was used for the district gathering to symbolize the strategic plan as a work in development like a new office building.

SBISD serves a diverse population of 35,000 students. The district has established a goal of doubling the number of students who complete technical certification, military training, or a two- or four-year college degree, which is known locally as Spring Branch T-2-4.

In addition, SBISD earlier this year became one of the state’s first Districts of Innovation. The strategic direction set under The Learner’s Journey focuses on meeting the needs of all district students through personalized learning.


The Houston Endowment’s grant helps supports three critical areas: leadership development; improving the use of data to inform decision making; and school redesign and process with effective and diverse stakeholder engagement.

“We are pleased and honored to be the recipients of this significant gift from Houston Endowment. This investment in our strategic plan enables us to accelerate the pace of implementation while growing the specific leadership skills our leaders need to transform the learning experience for every child we serve,” SBISD Superintendent of Schools Scott R. Muri, Ed.D., said.

Houston Endowment Program Officer Wendy Cloonan said she applauded SBISD’s leadership for its vision. “They are carefully considering what education can and should be with a strong commitment to develop each child to his or her maximum potential. We are excited that Houston Endowment can support innovation at scale: This initiative has the potential to create vibrant learning communities for thousands of students in greater Houston,” she said.

Elliott Witney, SBISD Associate Superintendent of Research and Design, said the district was incredibly grateful to the Endowment for its early support of district work.

“We’re excited about the direction we’re moving as a school system on behalf of every child we serve. We know what we’re trying to do requires new learning and innovative approaches. This investment allows us to lay a strong, durable foundation that helps us move forward more quickly and effectively than we ever would have been able to without it,” he said.

The three specific areas of grant focus include the following:

Leadership Capacity Building

SBISD has established a goal of doubling the number of students who complete either Technical Certification, Military Training, 2-year and 4-year degrees, which is known as Spring Branch T-2-4.  The new strategic plan calls for personalizing the learning experience for “Every Child.” This audacious goal and ambitious strategic plan require the district to think differently, do different types of work, and solve new challenges.  Some of this investment will go to building leadership capacity through professional learning for campus and district leaders.

Expanding and Improving Data Capability

In addition to leadership capacity, we know that the district must bring its data to life – extracting better insights from data, and whenever possible making it actionable and real time.  SBISD will use the Endowment’s investment to expand capability in both of these areas.

Building Internal Capacity for School Redesign

Part of SBISD’s work over the next several years will be to help lead its schools and school communities through a redesign experience that culminates in improved learning experiences for every child.  We will identify and learn from experts in the field who have helped schools evolve over time, and we intend to leverage that expertise to build internal capacity.

Welcome to the Journey >>

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