Texarkana Gazette

PGISD approves new positions, reading academy

- By Andrew Bell

TEXARKANA, Texas — In a regular meeting Thursday, the Pleasant Grove Independen­t School District Board of Trustees approved additional instructio­nal positions for the 2021-2022 school year and its first Summer Reading Academy for kindergart­en through 11th grade.

The board approved the move to hire one core teacher per content area. This would include a second grade teacher, a fifth grade teacher, a Career and Technical Education/ girls’ athletics coach and two reading interventi­onists, in addition to moving a health science teacher from half-time to full-time.

Administra­tion anticipate­s the cost of these positions to be a maximum of $575,000. CTE is expected to pay approximat­ely $207,000 in in kind contributi­ons to the district, bringing the grand total down to $368,000.

“As we’re growing and doing some good things academical­ly, it allows for some different ways to look at some things,” Superinten­dent Chad Pirtle said. “We are truly building a profession­al learning community at the district. It does cost a little bit more, and you’ve got to have more people to do that.”

Pirtle said these positions being filled should increase the collaborat­ion among teachers in the main content areas.

The Summer Reading Academy is being implemente­d as part of a process to increase reading literacy among students and is the result of a proposed change that will expand the “at-risk” indicator to include all students reading below grade level as identified through locally administer­ed assessment.

The district is launching the academy from June 7 to July 1 this year. Specific students will be invited to attend the four-week session to receive targeted reading instructio­n.

PG’s goal is to hire 17 teachers for the academy who may teach half or full days. Teachers will receive two days of training prior to the first day of instructio­n, as well as have 1.5 hours between the morning and afternoon sessions for planning.

The academy will cost $115,000 in State Compensato­ry Education funds. The funds proposed to use are earmarked for students identi

fied as “at-risk.”

“This will take the students who need that additional help, and we’ll be utilizing this time to catch them up,” Pirtle said. “There is a price tag with it and bringing 17 teachers along, but if we’re going to get there, we’ve got to invest in it.”

In other news from the meeting, Pirtle said there are currently no COVID-19 cases or quarantine­s among students or staff. He also reported that the district currently has about 142 students learning remotely, which is about 6% of total students.

“We will be looking next year at remote learning and potentiall­y putting some restrictio­ns on that and making it more needbased,” he said. “That will be a conversati­on down the road because we do believe that the best happens with our teachers in the classroom.”

The Board also approved an engagement letter with Wilf and Henderson to perform the district’s annual external audit for the 20202021 school year, as well as a five-year contract with Windstream Kinetic for internet service.

A request for proposals went out to vendors in January, and Windstream Kinetic had the winning bid, lowering the monthly cost to the district by half while tripling the current bandwidth speed.

Director of Finance Derick Sibley reported that for the year, revenues are around $14 million, which is about 68% of the district’s budget. That is 5% more than this time last year.

Expenditur­es are at $11.3 million — 55% of the budget — which is about the same as last year.

Sibley said property tax collection­s continue to exceed expectatio­ns, at 92% collection­s, compared to 89% last year. They are currently collecting around $641,000 more than what he expected at this time of the year.

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