Las Vegas Review-Journal

No pop quizzes; just pomp, circumstan­ce

Clark County pupils welcomed back to class

- By Meghin Delaney Las Vegas Review-journal

Paul Givens and John Jackson dream of exploring what’s beyond the Milky Way.

As more than 322,000 students countywide began classes Monday, the two 8-year-olds started third grade at Kelly Elementary School filled with big hopes and dreams. Both said math is their favorite subject and that they’re looking forward to harder topics, which they’re sure will help them when they pursue their space dreams.

“I want to get the hardest questions (in math) right,” said Paul, decked out for the first day in a Golden State Warriors jersey. John was wearing a NASA shirt, and both carried new backpacks.

Kelly Elementary students were welcomed by a Runnin’ Rebels red carpet, lined with politician­s and community leaders who doled out high fives, fist bumps and warm welcomes. The event, in its third year at Kelly, is put on by Nevada Youth Network, run by Michael Flores.

“It’s no secret there’s not enough male role models

SCHOOL

over here,” Flores said of the school, which is surrounded by low-income housing units.

Principal Alaina Criner got a surprise of her own, as philanthro­pist Robert Ellis gave her a $10,000 check and added Kelly to his roster of adopted schools. Ellis and his wife, Sandy, had a school open in their honor on Monday, as well.

Kelly will be the 26th school in the district whose students receive a new pair of shoes and a gift before winter break from the couple.

“These kids have got to get a role model,” Robert Ellis said. “We’ve got to get more people involved.”

Negatives intrude

While the school year was beginning on a hopeful note at Kelly, the harsh realities of modern education also were on display with word that two Henderson high school students had been arrested in separate incidents involving allegation­s of threatenin­g behavior.

Mack Middle School in east Las Vegas was locked down as police searched for a robbery suspect on East Karen Avenue near Boulder Highway. Nothing occurred on campus.

Four new schools were among 360 that opened to students Monday in the nation’s fifth-largest district. More than 41,000 employees were on hand.

The district began the year with 535 teacher vacancies and 63 bus driver vacancies.

Yet 94 percent of the district’s buses delivered students to school on time, Superinten­dent Jesus Jara said in a midday update.

Innovative programs

Officials celebrated at Gehring Elementary, one of three district schools transforme­d into magnet schools with a focus on science.

Jara unveiled the new sign for the Las Vegas school, now officially the Gehring Academy of Science and Technology.

As part of a federal grant, Gehring students in first through fifth grades will each receive a Chromebook laptop.

At Cimarron-memorial High, the robotics team showed off for Gov. Brian Sandoval, Tesla officials and other dignitarie­s.

Tesla recently announced its first batch of grants, as part of a $37.5 million investment in education in Nevada, and Cimarron-memorial was awarded the Tesla Spark 2018 Inspiratio­n Award for leadership in the field of robotics.

Contact Meghin Delaney at 702-383-0281 or mdelaney@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @ Meghindela­ney on Twitter. Reviewjour­nal staff writer Amelia Pakharvey contribute­d to this report.

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