Sudbury Catholic District School Board

Johnathan Hetu Walk For Cancer Great Success

Students and staff from St. Charles Catholic School recently participated in the ‘Johnathan Hetu Walk For Cancer’ in and around the school yard. Johnathan was a student at St. Charles Catholic School until he passed away with cancer in 2004. He was 13 years old when he passed away. The annual walk is a fundraiser for the Northern Ontario Family’s of Children with cancer which is the organization that supported Johnathan and his family during his struggle with cancer.

The school raised $5,400.00 for Northern Ontario Families of Children with Cancer. The “Johnathan Hetu Award” was presented at the end of the walk to Alexander Predon, a grade 7 student. This is the second presentation and it will become a annual event. Last year Kerissa Blacklock won the award. The award goes to a student who participates in sports and has a positive attitude.

Johnathan died of cancer in September 2004. He participated in sports even though he was undergoing treatment, in part because he was afraid of being forgotten and alone. Johnathan was remembered yesterday, and St. Charles School hopes to continue to remember him each year through this award as they help other children and families who are living with cancer.

Immaculate Conception, Topper’s Pizza Team Up for “Feed Your Mind” Reading Program

The students at Immaculate Conception Catholic School in Val Caron have been participating in the Topper’s Pizza, Feed Your Mind program this school year. The program encourages young people to set and achieve specific reading goals. The school’s goal was to read 7,500 books by the end of June, however the students were so excited about the program that they reached their target by spring.

On June 20th, Ron Toppazzini, founder of Topper’s Pizza and Kelly Toppazzini, Chairman and CEO helped serve pizza to the students and staff at Immaculate Conception Catholic School along with Mike Kaiser and Eric Woolsey from the Val Caron store. The free pizza party honoured and celebrated the school’s achievements.

Given the program’s great start, there is little doubt that the students will continue to read throughout the summer months. The staff and students at Immaculate Conception Catholic School wish to thank Topper’s Pizza for the reading program and for the generosity they have shown. In addition the school would also like to thank Mrs. LeRoy for co-ordinating the Feed Your Mind program for the past two years.

SCDSB Expands Wireless Laptop Program in its Elementary Schools

Eleven Hundred Wireless Laptop Computers will be provided to all grade 7 and 8 students, teachers and school leaders of the Sudbury Catholic District School Board in a bold move to bring more technology into the classroom this September. The Board passed a motion Tuesday night to implement Phase Four of the Wireless Laptop program. All Grade 7 and 8 students will have access to the latest computer technology both at school and at home.

Zandra Zubac, Director of Education has seen first hand the significant benefits of using grade-wide one on one laptop programming to students in British Columbia and Quebec and is thrilled that the Sudbury Catholic District School Board in partnership with Apple Canada will be the first board in Ontario to champion a new innovative and successful way of delivering education to its grade 7 and 8 students.

The Board first introduced the wireless technology into the classroom in 2003-2004 by piloting the “Learning with Laptops Program” to a wide range of students from kindergarten to grade 6. In 2004-05 the Sudbury Catholic District School Board decided to expand the wireless laptop technology into all secondary schools with the new Learning With Laptops-One to One Grade 9 Math program using Apple wireless ibooks. The mathematics-based program allows students to conceptualize the abstracts of mathematics and continues to integrate technology into the classroom setting. In its continued commitment to student success, the Sudbury Catholic District School Board has developed strong expertise in the use of technology as a resource for improving student achievement. The 2005-2006 school year saw the Board expand its wireless program again by extending the availability of wireless laptops to Special Education students under a CODE grant in an additional six schools.

I
n a presentation to Sudbury Catholic District School Board Trustees and Senior Administration, Robert Kennedy, Education Development Manager from Apple Canada noted that the introduction of the wireless laptop program in both the elementary and secondary schools has had a dramatic impact on student learning and student achievement. “Recent Provincial test results from the original five schools who integrated the wireless laptop program into their literacy curriculum indicate a 15 to 25 percent increase in their grade 5 and 6 writing achievement EQAO scores,” stated Kennedy. “The reason for this positive improvement can be directly attributed to the fact that students are engaged by technology which translates into fewer behavioural problems, better attendance, punctuality, and more time for individualized learning,” concluded Kennedy.

Paula Peroni, Chair of the Sudbury Catholic District School Board commends senior administration for their commitment to bringing state-of-the-art technology to students and staff of the Sudbury Catholic District School Board and states that, “This initiative will improve student literacy and numeracy.”

Sudbury Catholic Board Receives Increase in Provincial Funding for 2006-07 School Year

For the third year in a row, the McGuinty government is boosting its investment in Ontario’s publicly funded schools to support continued improvement for the 30,720 students in the Sudbury area, Sudbury MPP Rick Bartolucci announced today.

“We are on the side of families in Greater Sudbury who want the best public education for their children,” said Bartolucci “That’s why we’re investing an additional $8.1 million — for a total of $334 million — in our local schools to ensure primary class sizes keep shrinking, reading, writing and math achievement keeps improving, and more high school students graduate.” Bartolucci made the funding announcement at a Press Conference held at the Sudbury Catholic District School Board’s Catholic Education Centre.

Zandra Zubac, Director of Education for the Sudbury Catholic District School Board listens as Rick Bartolucci, MPP Sudbury delivers the breakdown of provincial funding for each of the City of Greater Sudbury’s four school boards for the 2006-2007 school year.

Total funding for 2006-07, and increases over 2005-06, break down as follows:

· Rainbow District School Board will receive $145,726,501, an increase of $4,892,134

· Conseil Scholair District du Grand Nord de l’Ontario will receive $40,470,725, an increase of $665,958

· Conseil Scholair District catholique du Nouvel-Ontario will receive $87,979,701, an increase of $552,791

· Sudbury Catholic District School Board will receive $62,436,880, an increase of $1,975,246

Earlier this month, the provincial government announced that the increased investment would support key government targets for higher student achievement, including seeing 75 per cent of 12-year-olds achieving the provincial standard in reading, writing and math by 2008, as well as 85 per cent of high school students graduating by 2010.

Zandra Zubac, Director of Education for the Sudbury Catholic District School Board welcomes the increase in provincial funding. “This 3.3% increase will allow our Board to continue our emphasis on the creation of an environment for the success of every Early Learner, (JK to Grade 3) and deepen our commitment to serving all Special Needs Learners. The additional funding will also allow us to expand our students’ opportunities for learning through our Wireless Laptop Program and enrich the learning experience for all students by our continued emphasis on the seven Catholic Graduate Expectations,” stated Zubac.

In 2004-05, an average of 62 per cent of Ontario students met or exceeded the provincial standard in reading, writing and math, up from the average of 54 per cent who achieved that level in 2002-03. High school graduation rates also rose to 71 per cent, up from 68 per cent.

Next September will mark the third full year of the government’s extraordinary four-year funding increase for Ontario’s publicly funded schools. As announced in the 2006 Ontario Budget in March, there will also be $200 million more in 2006-07 outside the Grants for Student Needs that will target improved literacy and math levels, French-language programs, professional development for teachers and principals, Student Success initiatives, parent engagement and safe and healthy schools. Since coming to office, the McGuinty government has increased per pupil funding by almost $1,600 — an increase of 21 per cent.

“The bigger investment we make in education, the bigger responsibility we have to the people of Ontario,” said Bartolucci. “Parents and everyone involved in education need to know how our education dollars are being spent and how that money is benefitting our students.”

2005 Grade 10 OSSLT Results Highest in Northeastern Ontario; SCDSB Proud of Staff, Students

Ontario’s Education Quality and Accountability Office (EQAO) has announced the results of its annual province-wide Ontario Secondary School Literacy Test (OSSLT) for the 2005-2006 school year. Of the 383 Sudbury Catholic District School Board students who wrote the OSSLT test for the first time, 90 percent were successful in passing. The Sudbury Catholic District School Board scores were the highest in Northeastern Ontario.

The report also profiles 17 secondary schools made notable for their progress in OSSLT results since the tests were first introduced in 2002. St. Benedict Catholic Secondary School has been selected by EQAO in the province of Ontario as one of the English-language schools that has demonstrated continued student success in the OSSLT.

The school’s success rate for students writing the OSSLT for the first time rose from 80 percent in February 2002 to 92 percent in March 2006. St. Benedict Catholic Secondary School has a population of 650 students, of whom 23 percent are identified as having special needs. Now in its 12th year, the school offers a wide variety of programming, including French Immersion, locally developed
not-for-credit courses and a Wireless Laptop Grade 9 Math program.

“Underlying the many initiatives to build school-wide literacy at St. Benedict Catholic Secondary School is the philosophy that literacy is critical for every subject,” states Guy Mathieu, Principal of St. Benedict Catholic Secondary School. “Strategies such as think-alouds and focused readings have become standard practice in every classroom. Our teachers articulate how they
will promote the development of literacy skills in the course outlines that go home with students.”

In addition to providing dedicated literacy days, the school also offers Grade 9 literature activities which focus on the literacy skills reflected in the curriculum and the OSSLT. This approach will be extended to Grade 10. In order to build capacity, the school has partnered with the local university, colleges and retired teachers to enhance support for students in need of additional assistance.
Paula Peroni, Chair of the Sudbury Catholic District School Board is pleased with the recent OSSLT results.

“I would like to congratulate our secondary students, parents, teachers and staff on their excellent results in the recent OSSLT scores,” states Peroni. “The results are a tribute to their hard work and dedication.” Zandra Zubac Director of Education for the Sudbury Catholic District School Board shares Peroni’s optimism given the latest test results. “Literacy and student success rates have always been a major priority with our Board,” states, Zubac. “We are continuing our work with our cross-curricular teams and school staff to build successful learning environments for
students to ensure continued success rates.”

A record-high 125,830 Grade 10 secondary school students in Ontario met the literacy standard this year as the provincial success rate on the literacy test continues to rise, increasing to 84% in 2006.

Wireless Laptops Enhance Curriculum at St. James Catholic School

Students in Mr. Lusk’s Grade 5 class at St. James Catholic School are not only learning to take care of their bones but they are sharing what they learned with the world. The students participated in the “Power4 Bones” program designed specifically for the Grade 5 curriculum.

Power4Bones is a FREE program that encourages students in Ontario to take care of their bones. As a final assignment they had to come up with catchy Public Service Announcements (PSAs) that could be used to educate the general public. This creative class of students went one step further by broadcasting their announcements on the World Wide Web. They recorded, edited and enhanced their PSAs using their Apple iBook laptops and some specialized software.

The students’ broadcasts were uploaded to a ‘podcasting’ site that not only allows users to listen to the broadcasts, but also to download it to a mp3 player allowing the user to listen anytime anywhere.

SCDSB Celebrates Another Successful Year of the Dearness Conservation Program

The Sudbury Catholic District School Board recently took the opportunity to thank the lead teachers and students for their ongoing efforts and commitment in helping schools conserve resources and protect the environment. The Board has been successful in accomplishing this goal with the help of the Dearness Conservation program which is a proven, practical student/staff driven environmental program that enhances curriculum, modifies behaviour, and is self financing through utility savings and waste reduction.

A field trip was organized for the participants to the City of Greater Sudbury’s water treatment plant and landfill site. Both tours allowed students and teachers to gain a better understanding of how complex the local water treatment process is, along with the importance of recycling.

The Sudbury Catholic District School Board would also like to thank the Wanapitei Water Treatment Plant Staff, Bernice Tario and Carrie Ann Marasato from the Waste Division Department/City of Greater Sudbury, INCO Limited, and Union Gas for their assistance in this event.

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