Prairie Post (East Edition)

PRAIRIE ROSE SCHOOLS PRESENTATI­ON ENLIGHTING

- By Jamie Rieger jrieger@prairiepos­t.com

The following items were topics of discussion at the March 10 Prairie Rose School Division board of trustee meeting:

EBHS trip to Greece cancelled

As coronaviru­s (COVID-19) rapidly makes its way around the globe, decisions have to made in regards to travel, particular­ly internatio­nal travel. Students from Eagle Butte High School were to embark on a trip to Greece during their Easter break in April, but trustees voted at their March 10 meeting to cancel the trip.

“Four weeks from now, staff and students are to travel during Easter break to Greece, the same trip students took last year. We recommend today as the executive team, to cancel the trip for the Eagle Butte students,” said PRSD superinten­dent Roger Clarke, who discussed COVID-19 with the trustees.

“We anticipate it will hit our area at some time. There are things recommende­d by Alberta Health to mitigate the exchange of germs, but we don’t have the answers yet from Alberta Health. We know as individual­s what we need to do, but this is about the whole school. If students or staff come in contact with it, we don’t have those answers yet.”

“Some places have shut down. Everybody is starting to react. It’s a very fluid scenario,” he added. “China and South Korea have crested. Other countries have not.”

Trustee Graeme Dennis made the motion to cancel the school trip “for the safety of the students, the staff, and the community.”

Prairie Mennonite Alternativ­e School presentati­on

Principal Tracy Frank told trustees that after a visit by representa­tives from the Alberta School Council Associatio­n, the school is now an official member of the organizati­on.

Frank talked about having secondyear nursing students attend the school twice a week for eight weeks to teach the students about food and nutrition.

The school received a grant from Ever Active Schools that has been used for games on the playground, activities at recess, and for DPA (Daily Physical Activity) kits.

They recently held their first Scholastic book fair and raised close to $2,000, $1,100 of which is being used to purchase books for their popular new library.

Four Grade 9 boys presented a short film to trustees of daily activities that take place at Prairie Mennonite Alternativ­e School, showing students playing floor hockey in their new gymnasium, which is widely popular with the students as they did not have a gym at their old location in Redcliff.

When asked what they liked best about their new school, the boys said the gym, library, and having more space in the classrooms was the best features.

Frank told trustees that the space provides more opportunit­ies for learning, such as hands-on learning for Science.

When the Mennonite Alternativ­e School was located in Redcliff, it relied on the Redcliff Library for resources, so having their own library at the new school has been meant a lot to the students.

Frank also told trustees that they hope to have over 100 students enrolled for the next school year.

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 ?? Photo by Jamie Rieger ?? Tracy Frank, principal at Prairie Mennonite Alternativ­e School, along with students (from left) David, Cornelius, Bennie, and Willie answer questions from PRSD trustees following their presentati­on on March 10.
Photo by Jamie Rieger Tracy Frank, principal at Prairie Mennonite Alternativ­e School, along with students (from left) David, Cornelius, Bennie, and Willie answer questions from PRSD trustees following their presentati­on on March 10.

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