The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Gwinnett County Public Schools seeks input for 2020-30 priorities

- By Arlinda Smith Broady abroady@ajc.com

With the year 2020 quickly approachin­g, Gwinnett County Public Schools is gear- ing up to set a vision for its next decade. The school system is forming community focus groups to help craft strategic priorities for 2020- 2030.

Similar to what the district did a decade ago, these goals are not a plan, but will be used to “communicat­e the direction in which the school district is moving.”

Twelve focus groups, consisting of small groups of high school students, parents and guardians, district employees and community members, will meet Feb. 19-21 to assemble a document the district will use to guide the district’s work in the coming decade.

Participan­ts will be asked to share feedback on 10 categories the priorities will be divided into: Students; employees; parents and guardians; governance and leadership; curriculum, instructio­n, and assessment; facilities and operations; financial stewardshi­p; informatio­n management and technology; communicat­ion; and public image and community pride.

“The strategic priorities for 2010-2020 document has served us well, and we want to continue that positive momentum with our 2020- 2030 version,” said J. Alvin Wilbanks, CEO/superinten- dent of Gwinnett County Public Schools. “Only by listen- ing to the perspectiv­es of our community members can we understand their wants and needs. Our goal is to update these priorities to reflect the qualities and characteri­stics our stakeholde­rs believe are desirable for their school district.”

With the demographi­c makeup of the school system going from an overwhelm- ing majority of white students (80 percent) in 1995 to a more diverse mix (26 percent white, 31 percent black, 29 percent Hispanic and 10 percent Asian) in 2015, commu- nity leaders have expressed concerns that the priorities should reflect all racial and ethnic groups.

“Strategic priorities are not a strategic plan,” said James Taylor, president of Black Men United for Children & Humanity, a Gwinnett-based advocacy group.

Taylor cited Fairfax County Schools in Virginia as a system with action steps and well-defined goals.

“GCPS’ strategic priorities are nothing more than ‘belief statements’ with no real course of action attached to them,” he said. “They will develop a list of so-called ‘priorities’ and there will not be an action plan to effectuate change.”

Penny Poole, president of the Gwinnett branch of the NAACP, agreed. “I guarantee that their handpicked proletaria­ts will be among the crowd,” she said.

For the first time, the school district will employ an outside agency, K12 Insight, to manage the process.

The sign-up doesn’t ask questions about race, ethnicity or gender.

K12 Insight will randomly select participan­ts from people who go online and fill out the survey.

To take part in the survey, go to https://survey.k12insight.com/r/GCPS2030.

Registrati­on is open through Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States