Monday, August 1, 2011

Tech School - Decision on Ninth Grade Coming


Decision on ninth grade coming

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Posted: Monday, August 1, 2011 5:00 am | Updated: 6:36 am, Mon Aug 1, 2011.
A decision on whether to eliminate ninth grade at Bucks County Technical High School in Bristol Township after the upcoming school year should come fairly soon.
That’s according to Harry Kramer, a joint school board member from Bensalem. He said a decision would likely come in September or October so that eighth-graders know whether to apply for entrance to the school in 2012-13.
“I have a feeling it will be handled very quickly once this coming school year gets into full swing,” said Kramer. “I don’t think it will languish.”
The technical school is committed to having ninth grade for 2011-12, and Kramer said he believes it will continue beyond that.
Bucks County Technical High School is a full-time comprehensive school offering both academic and vocational instruction for grades 9-12. It draws students from the Bensalem, Bristol, Bristol Township, Morrisville, Neshaminy and Pennsbury school districts.
Ninth-graders take academic courses and also take part in an exploratory program that entails sampling the vocational fields offered at BCTHS so they can decide which one to enroll in when they enter 10th grade.
“I don’t think eliminating the ninth grade will fly at any point in the forseeable future,” said Kramer. “I don’t think it has much support on the joint committee or on most of the school boards that send students to the technical school. I’m 100 percent against it. The people I speak to want a ninth grade there and feel the exploratory program is very valuable.”
The idea of eliminating ninth grade came from joint school board member John Doyle of Bristol. He feels it would save money and ease some of the financial burden on the sending districts, especially the two smallest ones, Bristol and Morrisville.
For 2011-12, Bristol is scheduled to pay $1,177,329 to send 60 students to BCTHS while Morrisville’s scheduled payment is $930,293 for 51 students.
Other scheduled contributions for 2011-12 are $5,929,172 for Bristol Township (516 students), $3,917,355 for Neshaminy (269 students), $3,415,301 for Bensalem (259 students) and $2,889,507 for Pennsbury (251 students).
The latest figures show total enrollment at BCTHS for 2011-12 is 1,406, a 3.7 percent increase from the 1,324 students who attended in 2010-11.
Financial contributions from each sending district do not correspond exactly to the number of students they are sending in a particular year, but are calculated under a complicated formula that equals out over a number of years, BCTHS officials have said.
Whatever the formula, representatives from Bristol and Morrisville have said it’s meant an undue burden on their districts. Morrisville withheld most of its 2010-11 payment of $767,000 until recently. The district still owes $94,861.47, and the matter will be decided by the state Department of Education, said BCTHS Administrative Director Leon Poeske.
The newspaper was unsuccessful in attempts to reach Morrisville officials for comment.
Bristol’s Doyle graduated from the technical school in 1991 when it was still a part-time school that didn’t offer academic instruction. It become a full-time comprehensive school 10 years later.
“It’s my position and the position of our entire board here in Bristol Borough that we could educate our students for less money by keeping them here for the ninth grade,” said Doyle. “I think the tech school could help kids decide what vocation to choose by pamphlets and videos and other marketing and you don’t necessarily need this exploratory program in ninth grade.”
He continued: “I have nothing against the tech school. I’m a graduate and think it’s a great opportunity for kids. We don’t want to keep our kids from going there. We just want to delay it a year.”
But eliminating the ninth grade at BCTHS would take a majority of the sending districts to agree, and Neshaminy school board President Ritchie Webb doesn’t see that happening.
“When we built the comprehensive school, it was a grade 9-12 school,” he said. “Ninth grade is where everything starts, and I think it’s important we keep the ninth grade there. I haven’t seen any financial data to prove eliminating it would save our district money. It might save money at the tech school, but would it save our district money overall? By bringing ninth-graders back here, would it require us to hire more teachers? Would it cause overcrowding?”
Webb said he’d like to see a detailed study done on the effects of eliminating the ninth grade at BCTHS.
“I certainly wouldn’t vote to do it right now,” he said. “To change my mind, I’d have to see a lot of proof that eliminating the ninth grade there would have a lot of educational and financial benefits.”
Poeske said students and parents at BCTHS are being surveyed on whether to eliminate the ninth grade. He said he expects the results back by mid-August and they will be used by the BCTHS joint board and the sending districts’ school boards to make a decision.
The next BCTHS joint school board meeting is at 7:30 p.m. Aug. 22 at the school, 610 Wistar Road in Bristol Township.
Poeske said he and other officials at BCTHS have been working hard to cut costs. The 2011-12 budget of $20,956,531 is 2.7 percent, or $580,956, less than 2010-11 budget, he said.
One of the cost-cutting measures was the elimination through either retirements or layoffs of 20 positions, said Poeske. Total staff at the school is down more than 9 percent from 2010-11, he added.
Teachers at BCTHS are still working under a contract that expired on June 30, 2010, so their salaries have remained frozen since that date. Administrative salaries were also frozen by the joint committee for 2011-12.
Poeske, who works under a separate agreement from the other administrators, said he voluntarily took a pay freeze for 2011-12, so his annual salary will remain at $138,500.

16 comments:

wanda said...

It absolutely needs to remain a true comprehensive program for 9-12 grade to gain the full experience and training and have the ability to try out other career options kids would not normally have thought of without being exposed to them during the exploratory year.

wanda said...

It absolutely needs to remain a true comprehensive program for 9-12 grade to gain the full experience and training and have the ability to try out other career options kids would not normally have thought of without being exposed to them during the exploratory year.

Anonymous said...

dum da dumb dumb
dum da dumb dumb DUMB
idea to make it 10-12

Anonymous said...

According to our MSD reps, Tech enrollment keeps going down and the budget keeps going up, and yet:

"The latest figures show total enrollment at BCTHS for 2011-12 is 1,406, a 3.7 percent increase from the 1,324 students who attended in 2010-11.

Poeske said he and other officials at BCTHS have been working hard to cut costs. The 2011-12 budget of $20,956,531 is 2.7 percent, or $580,956, less than 2010-11 budget, he said."

Anonymous said...

News flash -- lying and putting out bad information damages your credibility, erodes community trust, and tarnishes your reputation.

Anonymous said...

Like a cigarette pack wartning, that message should be on every school board packet.

Anonymous said...

Whazzup with Morrisville's recent partial payment of its Tech bill for 2010-11, based on whatever formula Hellmann felt like making up.

Did that settle the issue once and for all?

Anonymous said...

"wanda said...
It absolutely needs to remain a true comprehensive program for 9-12 grade to gain the full experience and training and have the ability to try out other career options kids would not normally have thought of without being exposed to them during the exploratory year."

You can say that again! ;)

Anonymous said...

Even PennsburyMOM agrees. Just make sure there are hand sanitizer stations set up every 10 paces.


PennsburyMOM posted at 6:42 am on Mon, Aug 1, 2011.
Posts: 537 If eliminated how many students will be sent to Pennsbury High School? This is a great tech school and those skills will be more useful than liberal arts majors and too many college grads. The teachers' unions and colleges propaganda tend to pad their own empire and tout college as the answer to everything. Hands on skills are important too. Just try to call a plumber or get something repaired.
Support the tech school.

Jon said...

"Whazzup with Morrisville's recent partial payment of its Tech bill for 2010-11, based on whatever formula Hellmann felt like making up.

Did that settle the issue once and for all?"

From the article:

Morrisville withheld most of its 2010-11 payment of $767,000 until recently. The district still owes $94,861.47, and the matter will be decided by the state Department of Education, said BCTHS Administrative Director Leon Poeske.

The newspaper was unsuccessful in attempts to reach Morrisville officials for comment.

Anonymous said...

What's the plan for 2011-12? Withhold payment all year then pony up whatever amount Hellmann makes up again?

Peter said...

Sorry for the horrendous formatting. Can't neatly post a table. But here's the breakdown, sorted by cost per student, of the numbers in the article. Based on these numbers, yes, there is clearly room for improvement on the funding formula, but this absolutely does NOT mean they should cut grade 9.

Fix the formula, keep the kids.


Cost_____Students_____Cost/Student
Bristol_____$1,177,329.00_____60_____$19,622.15
Morrisville_____$930,293.00_____51_____$18,241.04
Neshaminy_____$3,917,355.00_____269_____$14,562.66
Bensalem_____$3,415,301.00_____259_____$13,186.49
Pennsbury_____$2,889,507.00_____251_____$11,511.98
Bristol Township_____$5,929,172.00_____516_____$11,490.64
Average_____$3,043,159.50_____234_____$14,769.16
Median_____$3,152,404.00_____255_____$13,874.57

Anonymous said...

I know Pennsbury Mom didn't post her comment here, but does anyone think PSEA cares if the kids have Union Teachers at Morrisville or Union Teachers at LB Technical HS?

I agree that college is not for everyone and that schools in general encourage all students to go to college, but I don't think it is a Union plot.

I've even heard people from the Tech School brag about how you can go to college after the Tech School (so they encourage it as well)

Anonymous said...

Keep chipping away at local HS offerings and tech becomes a more attractive option. Funding formula based on average attendance over 2-3 years will keep tech share high, leading to continued vicious cycle of more local cuts and dubious unhinged holding of tech payments. Enjoy!

Anonymous said...

PennsburyMom has glugged down mucho Simon Sez Bust the Union Kool-Aid, after repeatedly washing her hands with GoJo and Purell. Gotta see a Union conspiracy in everything.

Jon said...

Because of the attendance time lag, the Tech funding formula is lousy on the way up, great on the way down. Thing is, nobody complains when it's on the way down - in our school board's case, they pat our Tech rep and themselves on the back for something they had practically nothing to do with.