Waterville High School nurse named Maine School Nurse of the Year

Nurse of the Year 2017
Left- Deborah Braxton, Maine Association of School Nurses, SNOY Chair Center- Ann Bouchard, Maine School Nurse of the Year 2017-18 Right-Patricia Endsley, SNOY 2016-17

The Maine Association of School Nurses has named Ann Bouchard Maine’s 2017-2018 School Nurse of the Year. A registered nurse for 40 years, the last 17 of them as a school nurse at Waterville Senior High School in AOS 92, Bouchard received her Bachelor’s of Science in 1977 from Boston College where she majored in nursing and sociology. She was commissioned as a Captain in the United States Air Force in 1978 and completed trainings in USAF Air Command and Staff College, USAF Squadron Officers School, the Flight Nurse course, and the Nurse Oncologist Certification course.  Ann worked concomitantly as a flight nurse for the NY Air National Guard, nurse consultant for Albany Medical Center, and adjunct faculty lecturer for Russell Sage College.  She earned a Master’s of Science in Nursing in 1983 from Russell Sage College and a Master’s degree in Leadership Studies from the University of Southern Maine in 2010.

In addition to working full time, Bouchard is an active volunteer in her community, an experienced lecturer and has published some of her written work. She serves on several school committees, in addition to the Kennebec Valley Community Action, Hardy Girls, Healthy Women, Alfond Youth Center Board of Directors, docent for Colby College museum and has been a clinical supervisor for University of Maine Orono nursing students.

Bouchard has received numerous awards including awards from the Waterville Board of Education, Faculty Renaissance Award, Outstanding Educator, United States Air Force Air National Guard Nurse of the Year, Air Force Commendation Medals with Oak Leaf Cluster, as well as a Yearbook dedication from the Waterville HS Class of 2005.

Her colleagues frequently describe her as “dedicated, unselfish, committed to the needs of all students, and willing to help with anything at a moment’s notice.” According to the nurses who nominated her, “Her leadership style is transformational and defined by deep and authentic connections.”

As School Nurse of the Year, Bouchard receives a cash award of $500 and will be acknowledged as the Maine School Nurse of the Year at the National Association of School Nurses annual meeting in Baltimore, MD in June 2018. The program is administered by the Maine Association of School Nurses. Nominations for School Nurse of the Year are accepted each year beginning in March.

PRIORITY NOTICE: Protocol for school cancelations due to recent storm

School Administrative Units (SAU) that canceled school days due to circumstances surrounding the recent storm should treat those cancelations the same as any other weather related school cancelation.

The state of emergency issued by the State of Maine was expressly to provide utility work crews relief from federal highway regulations in order to restore power to those who have been impacted – it does not result in an automatic excusal of missed school days.

As part of the standard procedure for meeting requirements for instructional days, written requests for waivers for storm days may be submitted by the district school board in the Spring when districts have a better sense of storm days used.

Resources:

School Bus Purchase Program Applications Open November 1, 2017

The Department is accepting applications for the Maine School Bus Purchase Program beginning November 1, 2017.  Program applications will close on November 25, 2017 with no extension.

The program application is available on the NEO Transportation data system.  Instructions to submit a request are located on the NEO Dashboard.  Refer to pages 20-23 of the PowerPoint entitled School Bus Purchase Program – How It Works.  School Bus Purchase Program subsidy can be used towards the purchase of new school buses.

If you have questions about the School Bus Purchase Program, contact Pat Hinckley at Pat.Hinckley@maine.gov .

Register for Alternate Assessment Workshops by Nov. 6

Teachers may register for PAAP (MEA Alternate Science ) and MSAA (MEA Alternate Mathematics and ELA/Literacy teacher administration through November 6th at https://iregister.measuredprogress.org/client/

Training locations include:

Location Date Meeting Venue Address
Presque Isle 11/14/2017 Hampton Inn 768 Main Street  Presque Isle, ME 04769
Orono 11/15/2017 Black Bear Inn 4 Godfrey Drive  Orono, ME 04473
Auburn 11/16/2017 Hilton Garden Inn 14 Great Falls Plaza  Auburn, ME 04210
Portland 11/17/2017 Clarion Hotel 1230 Congress Street  Portland, ME 04102

Please contact Sue Nay for more information at sue.nay@maine.gov, or 624-6774.

Federal Funds and Teacher Qualifications

As a direct result of the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), by the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) of 2015 (2015) teacher certification language was revised and amended. Current education law, requires educators to achieve full State certification and licensure.

The enactment of the ESSA removed the federal Highly Qualified Teacher (HQT) requirements.  Although no longer a requirement in general for the majority of educators, HQT continues to be a requirement for special educators in Maine. This is due to the language contained within Chapter 101 of Maine Unified Special Education Regulations (MUSER).   The Maine DOE is planning to remove HQT language when the rule is revised again , likely during the 2018-19 legislative session.  In the meantime, NEO, Maine’s Data System will continue to ask for HQT information.

School Administrative Units (SAUs) are required under §  1112 of ESSA to inform parents of their right to know and request professional teacher qualifications for all teachers and paraprofessionals in all public SAU’s in the State of Maine.

If requested SAU’s are to provide the following information :

  1. if the teacher has met State certification and licensing requirements for the grade levels and subjects for which the teacher provides instruction:
  2. if state certification and licensing requirements have been waived (is not being required at this time) for the teacher under emergency or temporary status;
  3. if the teacher is teaching in the field of discipline for which they are certified or licensed;
  4. if the teacher has met State-approved or State-recognized certification, licensing, registration, or other comparable requirements These requirements apply to the professional discipline in which the teacher is working and may include providing English language instruction to English learners, special education or related services to students with disabilities, or both; and
  5. if your child is receiving Title I or Special Education services from paraprofessionals, his or her qualifications.
HQT Required Comment
Yes No
Teacher Must meet full certification requirements
Paraprofessional If working with Title I students OR a Title I Schoolwide Program
Special Education Teacher

If you have questions regarding Highly Qualified Status or Teacher qualifications please contact Jan Breton, Director of Special Services at jan.breton@maine.gov  or Charles Lomonte, Title II Coordinator/ State Ombudsman at charles.lomonte@maine.gov

MaineCare Q417 Seed report review delayed

Due to the continued data access and quality issues integrating the student data from Infinite Campus to NEO, the Maine Department of Education is delaying the MaineCare report review for Q417.

Q417 MaineCare Seed recovery efforts will be delayed until December 2017.

Previous notification has been sent about reports moving from Infinite Campus to NEO and can be viewed by clicking on the link below.

https://mainedoenews.wordpress.com/?s=NEO

Once the reports have been moved to NEO, additional communication will be forthcoming and will include new instructions for SAUs to access the quarterly MaineCare reports.

This will change the scheduled MaineCare Seed recovery for Q417 from November to December 2017.

Q118 will remain scheduled for Seed recovery in January 2018.

Please direct any questions to Denise.towers@maine.gov.

PRIORITY NOTICE: Misinformation Diminishes Opportunities for Students

The Maine Department of Education responds, point-by-point, to a recent article in the Sun Journal that contains numerous inaccuracies about regionalization. Many stakeholders agree that finding efficiencies through regionalization efforts is a good idea for students and school communities. We hope that our clarifications will allow the positive conversations to continue.

KINGFIELD — The Regional School Unit 58 board of directors faced a no-win situation, deciding to accept a Maine Department of Education $31,000 penalty, rather than partnering with another school district to develop a regional service center.

The state has provided a highly flexible, locally-driven regionalization opportunity that every district should be able to participate in and thereby receive the incentive funds.

The problem wasn’t that the district couldn’t find a partner district and develop a plan, Superintendent Susan Pratt told the board Thursday night. The problem was that they were facing a six-week deadline to find another school willing and ready to form a long-term agreement without receiving any guidance from the state. 

The current deadline is only for regional centers slated to be operational as of July 1, 2018. In these cases, in order for the Department to include the incentive funding for the 2018-19 school year, we must stick to a tight timeline. Districts can pursue a regional partnership for 2019 or later if the current deadline is not feasible. Also, while the regional partnerships are meant to be long-term and durable, the programs and services can start small and be expanded over time.

She and other district administrators attended a Sept. 8 presentation at the Augusta Civic Center hosted by the Maine School Management Association and the Drummond Woodsum law firm. The MDOE proposal was reviewed and explained, but she waited nearly another month for the actual MDOE application form to become available online, she said.

“I just got the application last Friday,” she said.

The application has been divided into two sections; Part I is due by November 30, and Part II is due by April 15. The first part, which asks for concept-level information, allows districts to notify the Department of their intent to form a regional center. The second part asks for a longer, more detailed plan, including the interlocal agreement.

Similar to consolidation efforts begun by former Commissioner of Education Susan Gendron in January 2008, the MDOE’s goal is to save money by reducing the administrative costs and to take advantage of shared services, including transportation, special education, professional development and financial services.

The Department’s goal is more precisely to improve educational services for students. This can be achieved by repurposing savings to enhance existing educational programs or to develop new programs, which can save more money in the long run by better serving students.

Gendron’s plan was to reduce the number of school districts and local school committees from 290 to 26 by July 2008. Many districts chose to pay penalties rather than give up local control, and by July 2008, 215 individual school districts remained.

The state is not asking districts to pay penalties; we are giving districts who regionalize additional funding. This is not mere semantics. All districts will see incremental reductions in state funding for district-level administration as a result of legislation prompted by the Citizens Initiative. These reductions will occur regardless of whether a district participates in a regional center. At the same time, however, more state money will be directed to teaching and learning; this along with other changes in the biennial budget will result in nearly all districts in the state seeing significant increases in funding. Forming a regional center is an opportunity to earn an extra incentive allotment.

With this 2017 regional services plan, Pratt explained, each new interlocal partnership in the state would have to screen and hire its own executive director, who would not be part of the Maine State Retirement System.

The Department believes that it is in the best interest of regional center members to define the role of the executive director based on the services provided, and to retain local control over hiring an executive director.

The MDOE will pay for 55 percent of the employee’s salary and related financial expenses, but the partnering districts will be responsible for benefits and obligations that are as yet unknown, Pratt said. Without the MDOE providing guidance for the executive director’s job description, she said, each interlocal partnership’s new board would have to that job on its own. 

These details all have to be decided before the new partner districts can send the application to the MDOE, Pratt said.

Chapter 123 of the biennial budget states that the State will pay 55% percent of the executive director’s salary and benefits. The Department is actively looking into addressing concerns about participation in MEPERS for employees of regional centers.

The MDOE has awarded grants in 2017 to encourage cost-saving initiatives. Enabling Maine Students to Benefit from Regional and Coordinated Approaches to Education, known by the acronym EMBRACE, was launched in response to Executive Order 2017-001, issued by Gov. Paul LePage, for promoting Regional Efforts to Achieve Efficiencies in Delivering Educational Services. 

Although Pratt said she agrees with LePage’s goal of sharing resources with other districts, RSU 58 already does something similar. The district is part of the Western Maine Educational Collaborative, which provides its 13 member school systems with opportunities to share professional development, purchasing power and educational resources.

The MDOE plan would not recognize the nonprofit WMEC as a regional services partner, Pratt said.

The Western Maine Education Collaborative is a great model for a regional center. We do not know the source of the information that the WMEC would not quality as a regional center if it meets the requirements. It’s possible that this misunderstanding is a result of confusing the regional center opportunity with the Fund for the Efficient Delivery of Educational Services (FEDES) grant, a separate regionalization opportunity. WMEC could not be the main applicant for the FEDES grant; however, they could be part of a regionalization project as a contracted service provider.

The board approved delaying any partnership plans with other school districts and accepting the $46-per-student penalty for the coming budget year. 

Districts that do not form interlocal partnerships in 2018-19 will pay a $92-per-student penalty.

Some neighboring school districts’ boards have not even seen the MDOE plan, Pratt said, and she’s hearing that many superintendents and school boards are voting not to participate in the governor’s mandate.

Many school boards rely on their superintendents and association to inform their decisions. To support the dissemination of accurate information, the Department launched its EMBRACE information center shortly after the biennial budget was passed and continues to add and update information. Many of the resources added to our website are in response to conversations that superintendents have had with Commissioner Hasson and his team during the Commissioner’s Continuing the Conversation Tour. Several districts are eager to begin discussions and have requested one of our trained expert facilitators to help potential partners brainstorm and plan. School Board members and others are encouraged to visit the site to learn about the funding opportunities and be inspired by the exciting regional programs other districts have implemented in the first round of EMBRACE initiatives.

Please feel free to contact Jennifer Pooler, Regionalization Project Manager, to set up a meeting or ask questions. And we encourage you to meet the Commissioner at the 44th Annual MSMA Fall Conference and attend the Department’s clinic on Friday, Embracing Regionalization: The Options. We welcome all conversations.

 

 

 

 

 

 

EPS Student Enrollment and Special Education Child Count data certification deadline extended to November 7

Due to the continued data access and quality issues integrating the student data from Synergy to the EPS reports in NEO, the Maine Department of Education is extending the certification deadline from October 31st to November 7th for Essential Programs And Services (EPS) Student Enrollment and Special Education Child Count (EF-S-05 Part 1).

Subsequently, the upload period has been extended from October 23rd to October 30th. Therefore, changes to data will continue to automatically refresh the EPS and Special Education Child Count reports in NEO up until October 30th, after that point in time, any changes will require a manual refresh.  Enrollment certification reports cannot be submitted until October 30th, and are now due by November 7th. 

IMPORTANT NOTE: As of today, Special Education Child Count EF-S-05 Part 1 student data is not syncing correctly to the summary table in the October EPS Student Count report in NEO.  We are working on that fix and hope to have that corrected very soon. 

If you have further questions or if you are not sure how to upload or enter your data, or if you need access to Synergy or NEO, please contact the helpdesk at medms.helpdesk@maine.gov or at 624-6896.

 

PRIORITY NOTICE: ESSA training available for all Maine schools and districts

As a reminder, the Maine Department of Education (DOE) has announced a partnership with TransACT Communications to support compliance with the new Parent and Family Engagement requirements under the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) and to help schools meet the civil rights obligations of schools in working with English Learners (EL) and their families. TransACT Parent Notices gives you unlimited access to an online library of ESSA compliance resources. Your subscription, funded by the Maine DOE, includes access to guidance on required notifications, recommended timelines for distribution, and more than 100 legally reviewed parent notifications across 21 categories, including:

  • Parent and Family Engagement
  • Teacher and Paraprofessional Qualifications
  • English Learners
  • Title I and Title III Programs
  • Migrant Education
  • Homeless Education
  • Foster Care

TransACT will be providing schools with professional development and training including online live help, phone and email support, webinar trainings, and two (2) in-person trainings.  These trainings will be held on November 2nd in Lewiston at Green Ladle and on November 3rd in Brewer at Jeff’s Catering. Please visit the following URL to register for one of these in-person trainings:  https://goo.gl/forms/3AxrjYdOmU2rkTb62

At the time of this notice, your district subscription to TransACT is live.  If you need to distribute required parent notifications prior to next month’s training or simply wish to explore this new resource, please follow the instructions below to activate your district subscription:

  1. Visit http://www.transact.com/;
  2. Click on “LOGIN/REGISTER” at the top of the screen; 3. Find the TransACT ParentNotices logo and click the “Login” link below it;
  3. Click “New User? Register for Access!” and continue with the required information prompts; 5. Discover what new resources are available to you! You will receive a registration confirmation email which includes the login link, your username, and password. If you have any questions or run into any trouble, please be sure to contact TransACT Customer Support at (425) 977-2100, option 3, or via email at support@transact.com.

If you have additional questions, please contact Janette Kirk at Janette.kirk@maine.gov or (207) 624-6707.

Synergy progress and updates

The Maine Department of Education is continuing to assist School Administrative Units (SAU) as October 1st student enrollment counts are being uploaded into the new Synergy State Edition Student System.

Thank you for your patience and understanding as the Department answers requests, resolves issues and continues to work through the transitionary period.

Below are a few updates and reminders as we move forward.

Reminder of policies:

All data must be entered by the primary enrollment school.

To help to prevent duplication issues, students with the same First name, Last name, and date of birth (DOB) will need to have stateids resolved manually through the Synergy system.

Students who are enrolled in another district (overlapping enrollments) need to be resolved between the two districts involved.

Once a student has been identified as an English Language learner (EL), the student cannot be exited from EL until he/she has tested out.  The Maine DOE now enters the exit date for the student, based on ACCESS For Els scores.  This resolves the issue of the student being incorrectly exited from EL.

Resolved issues:

  • Missing or mismatched language codes.
  • Inconsistencies with uploading student names that contain punctuation.
  • Segment range overlapping with existing special ed disabilities.
  • Districts are now able to obtain ids through uploads to resolve delays in obtaining a student id for new students.

Note: A webpage with known issues is being created to post new issues and resolutions to existing issues. Be on the look-out for further information.

To better assist district users and help save time, the Help Desk will post instructions for how Synergy users can update their own password within the system, more information will be forthcoming.

For further information and questions, please contact the Data Help Desk at 207-624-6896 or medms.helpdesk@maine.gov.