Sudbury Catholic District School Board

Sudbury Catholic Schools Launches New Vision: “Creating Hopes and Dreams Through Excellence”

Trustees, senior administration, principals, vice-principals, teachers, students, and parents along with staff of the Sudbury Catholic District School Board joined special guests and stakeholders in launching the Board’s vision at Marymount Academy on September 16, 2008.

Catherine McCullough, the Board’s Director of Education unveiled the new vision to a capacity crowd of well-wishers who had gathered in the Marymount gymnasium with great anticipation. The unveiling ceremony included an honour guard procession by the Knights of Columbus followed by a special paraliturgy, a blessing of the banners by Deacon Steve Callaghan and a candle lighting ceremony by all of the Board’s representatives that helped create the vision.

In her opening remarks to the audience, the Director stated that the goal of arriving at a vision and a subsequent vision statement was a long and fruitful journey involving numerous individuals, groups, sectors, and partners in Catholic Education. “A vision statement is vital to any organization because it provides a sense of commonality,” stated McCullough. “A shared vision gives us a common language that binds us together. We are all connected when we share the same vision. The standards that define the individual and the entity must be clearly conveyed in this one simple message.”

Paula Peroni, Chair of the Board echoed McCullough’s comments and noted that the quest for the vision statement was an intricate and complex process due to the large number of stakeholders that this vision represented. The catalyst to develop a vision statement began by Catholic stakeholders and from the Institute for Catholic Education Symposium in March of 2007.

“It was agreed by all parties that we needed to celebrate the presence of Catholic Education in our community,” stated Peroni in her address to the crowd. “The preliminary discussions began amongst the governance of the Sudbury Catholic District School Board, including the six Trustees, two Student Trustees, and the Senior Administration team.” Throughout a series of consultations with principals, vice-principals, board office staff, teaching staff and education assistants, support staff, parents, parish partners, and students, the vision statement became increasingly refined. Each party was asked for their response to the working vision and this feedback was implemented until a consensus could be reached. The final vision statement, Sudbury Catholic Schools… Creating Hopes and Dreams Through Excellence is a culmination of insight and experience from all board representatives. “It is with excitement and optimism that we look forward to implementing our vision statement during the 2008-2009 academic year in each of our schools,” concluded Peroni.

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Sudbury Catholic Schools Celebrate Start of New School Year at Leadership Retreat

Vice principals, principals and Sudbury Catholic Schools staff joined Senior Administration at a special retreat held at the Sportsman’s Lodge on Kukagami Lake to celebrate Catholic Leadership and to unveil the launch of the Board’s new vision for the 2008-2009 school year. During the two day event elementary and secondary school principals and vice principals learned about effective leadership and were introduced to a new and powerful set of leadership tools that were developed by and for Ontario educators.

“We all know and we recognize leadership as one of our key professional responsibilities,” stated Catherine McCullough, Director of Education for the Sudbury Catholic District School Board. “However, in the face of dozens of administrative tasks, day to day problems and issues leadership often remains an abstract concept. One of the many positive outcomes of this retreat is that it provided our principals and vice principals with the Provincial leadership framework that has been tailored to their roles and responsibilities as school leaders.”

McCullough also noted that as educational leaders, principals and vice principals are contributing to one of the most exciting and challenging periods in the history of Ontario’s education system and that the targets being set and achieved in Ontario have put Ontario’s education system on the world stage as a centre of excellence. According to Patty Orecchio, Program Developer and Barbara McMorrow, Professional Learning Director for The Catholic Principals’ Council of Ontario and who also lead the group through the Catholic Leadership framework section of the workshop, no two regions, school boards or schools are exactly alike nor are their achievement targets or leadership challenges. It is for this reason that the framework has been designed to address the specific needs of both school and system leaders. It also provides a core vision of leadership and a common leadership language that will for the first time in Ontario provide a seamless alignment of leadership across the entire education system and engender a powerful collaborative approach to leadership and professional learning.

Sudbury Catholic Schools would like to thank the Institute of Educational Leadership and the Catholic Principals Council of Ontario for sponsoring the leadership retreat.

Sudbury Catholic Schools Director to Speak at CASA Leadership Conference in Halifax

Director of Education for the Sudbury Catholic District School Board, Catherine McCullough has been invited to speak at the Canadian Association of School Administrators (CASA) Summer Leadership Academy Conference in Halifax, Nova Scotia from July 10 to 13, 2008. The theme of this year’s national conference is “Literacy-Lighting the Way.”

Mrs. McCullough’s discussion will focus on the Sudbury Catholic District School Board’s extensive commitment to technology with respect to the introduction and rapid expansion of its “One to One” Apple laptop program in its elementary and secondary schools since 2002 and more specifically with the boys’ literacy program.

Sudbury Catholic Schools “Technology has quickly transformed the world around us,” states McCullough. “We know that our students need to develop different skills sets in order to live, learn and work in this digital age. As a school board in Northeastern Ontario, we decided to meet this challenge head on.” By meeting this challenge head on, McCullough is referring to the “One to One” laptop program in all of its Grade 7 and 8 classrooms, a program that was unique in the province of Ontario. Realizing that boys are visual learners and respond more positively to visual images that accelerate learning, the board is using computers and technology to support the success of this program. “We have especially observed success in the area of enhancing and engaging Boys’ Literacy through the introduction of our One to One Laptop Program,” said McCullough. “Boys thrive on the visual language of television, cartoons, and video games. Similarly, boys respond well when presented with the opportunity to present their ideas and written work using charts, flow diagrams, and other visual forms.”

Research also suggests that boys respond positively to images because boys are more oriented to visual/spatial learning. As a result, visual images accelerate boys’ learning.
(Daly, 2002, p. 16) Educators and parents may have been too quick to dismiss boys’ preoccupation with computers as a diversion from their own book-based literacy, not recognizing the computer’s capacity to empower users to gain access to, and control of, information. It is imperative that educators and parents be aware of the impact of the multimedia world, and understand the positive ways in which these new languages and cultures can be harnessed as adjuncts to book-based literacy. (Millard, 1997, p. 46)

Partners in Spirit: From the Desk of Director of Education Catherine McCullough (Vol. 1 Number 2)

It is with great pleasure that we share with you the second edition of the Sudbury Catholic District School Board newsletter, Partners in Spirit. This newsletter is dedicated to celebrating the new and exciting events that continue to take place at our Board and in our schools each and every day.

Thanks to everyone for a very successful school year. Have great summer and see you in September!

View entire newsletter.

Sudbury Catholic Schools Share Best Practices with Kenora Catholic District School Board

Sudbury Catholic District School Board members Catherine McCullough, Laura Kuzenko and Dawn Wemigwans met with their Kenora Catholic District School Board counterparts in Kenora, Ontario to share best practices in Aboriginal Education and Student Success Initiatives.

Through collaborative dialogue, both boards were able to deepen their understanding of curriculum in relation to Aboriginal learners and student success. Both teams were able to participate in purposeful team building experiences that will translate into increased success for Sudbury Catholic School students.

Longtime Teacher, Vice-Principal and Principal Recipient of Sudbury Catholic Schools 2008 Chairperson’s Award

Each year the Sudbury Catholic District School Board presents its Chairperson’s Award to the individual that embraces Catholic values, demonstrates initiative and ingenuity and contributes positively to the lives of its students and staff. “Sharon Oliver, Principal of St. Paul The Apostle Catholic School is all of those things and more,” stated Sudbury Catholic Schools, Board Chair, George Middleton before presenting Mrs. Oliver with the Chair’s Award for 2008. The award was presented at the Board’s 25 Year Employee Recognition and Retirement Party held at Bryston’s on the Park during the last week of May.

Mrs. Oliver is well deserving of this award having been an exemplary teacher, vice-principal and principal for the Sudbury Catholic District School Board for more than thirty years. Her Catholicity is evident to all students, parents and staff that have had the good fortune and opportunity to meet or work with her. Her truly caring and compassionate nature is apparent daily, beginning with prayers during morning announcements to the spiritual way in which she leads liturgical celebrations of all kinds through her gift of song and words of praise.

St. Paul the Apostle Catholic School is a recipient of the Childhood Enfance- Better Beginnings Better Futures Snack Program due to her efforts. The community is well informed of school events and frequently invited to join students and staff in the school gym for sit down Harvest Teas and Shrove Tuesday Pancake meals.

Mrs. Oliver has been involved in numerous committees and initiatives that champion the cause of Catholic Education over her many years as teacher, vice-principal and principal. As the chairperson of the NOCCC, (Northern Ontario Catholic Curriculum Cooperative) she continues to promote and encourage Catholic curriculum across Northern Ontario. She is a member of the CPCO (Catholic Principals Council of Ontario) Professional Development Committee and is also involved as the chairperson of the Liturgy Committee of her church.

Sudbury Catholic Board Balances Budget for 2008-09 School Year

Trustees with the Sudbury Catholic District School Board proved successful in passing a balanced budget for the 2008-2009 school year at Tuesday night’s board meeting. The approved budget of $67,306,178 will sustain the positive momentum that has been achieved in the Board’s new initiatives and programs such as the “Learning with Laptops” program and complies with the objectives set by the Ministry of Education with respect to the reduction of class sizes in the primary classes.

The new budget allows the Board to move forward with a number of initiatives which will continue to re-enforce our Catholic identity and system priorities at all levels of the organization. Technological and academic support has also been maintained at the board and classroom level to ensure exemplary instruction and assessment for student success.

In order to arrive at a balanced budget for 2008-2009 the Sudbury Catholic District School Board projects a draw from the Reserve for Working Funds of $504,737. This draw would represent an amount equal to .8% of the Board’s Grant Revenue Allocation and falls within the Ministry of Education’s threshold criteria. The impact of the proposed draw from the Working Funds would be offset by the $608,409 that the Board identified in its 2007-2008 budget.

Catherine McCullough, Director of Education for Sudbury Catholic Schools is pleased with the budget. “I am very happy with the fact that the Board was able to bring in a balanced budget,” stated McCullough. “The new budget will allow us to meet Ministry of Education regulation and obligations and we will continue to deliver quality services and programs to our students in order that they may achieve their maximum potential.”

Board Chair, George Middleton is also pleased with the budget. “Over the past few months, Trustees and Senior Administration have worked extremely hard to bring in a balanced budget that addresses some of the key priorities of the Board and its stake holders. This new budget will allow us to move forward on present initiatives such maintaining our Special Education Program, our One to One Laptop Program and compliancy with Ministry objectives in our primary class sizes.”

Sudbury Catholic Schools Vice-Chair Elected as Provincial President

Paula Peroni, Vice-Chair of the Sudbury Catholic District School Board has been elected as President of the Ontario Catholic Schools Trustees Association (OCSTA) at its recent Annual General Meeting (AGM) held in Niagara Falls this past weekend.

Mrs. Peroni was first elected as a Trustee for the Sudbury Catholic District School Board in 1997, serving as Chair of the Board for five years and as Vice-Chair for three years. Having held the position as Regional Director of the OCSTA for five years and two years as its First Vice-President,Mrs. Peroni is no stranger to the challenges that continue to face Catholic Education at the local, provincial and national level.

Mrs. Peroni assumed her new role as President of the OCSTA on April 26, 2008. “The Ontario Catholic School Trustees Association is an organization with a long list of accomplishments and successes to its credit and it is vital to the continued existence of Catholic Education in Ontario,” stated Peroni. “Catholic Education has been and will continue to be a Good News story in this province and I look forward to working with our many partners to continue to grow this very fine educational tradition.”

The Ontario Catholic Schools Association defines its role as the guardian of Catholic Education which has been an integral part of Ontario’s history for 160 years. For more than 75 of those years, the Ontario Catholic School Trustees’ Association (OCSTA) has safeguarded and promoted the interests of publicly funded Catholic education in Ontario. As the sole representative of Ontario’s 29 Catholic District School Boards and five Catholic school authorities, OCSTA represents the needs and perspectives of Catholic school boards to both the provincial and federal governments.

The OCSTA is managed by a board of directors made up of 16 Catholic school trustees, representing regions from across the province. Catholic schools serve the educational and spiritual development needs of more than 600,000 students and their families in Ontario.

The election of Peroni marks the first occasion since 1964 that an individual from the City of Greater Sudbury has held the position of President of the OCSTA.

Director’s Message: Catholic Education Week 2008

Catholic Education Week takes place this year from April 27 to May 2, 2008. During this week the Catholic Community celebrates the unique and distinctive contribution that Catholic Schools make to our students, our community and our Province. Catholic Education Week is a welcome opportunity to celebrate the Mission of our Catholic Schools as they strive to integrate the Gospel values of Jesus Christ in every aspect of the school’s curriculum.

This year’s theme, “We are Called” celebrates the fact that each of us has been called by God, and not just called as a collective, but called by name. “I have called you and you are mine.” (Isaiah 43:1) Amid life’s joy’s and sorrows, its challenges and doubts, these words can be a source of inspiration and a reaffirmation of faith.

Five sub-themes, one for each of the five days of Catholic Education Week help us to understand the rich meaning of this year’s theme.

Day 1…to Act Justly
Day 2…to Love Tenderly
Day 3…to Walk Humbly
Day 4…to Serve Generously
Day 5…to Live Peacefully

Catholic Education Week 2008 begins on a Sunday to highlight the partnership that remains the foundation of Catholic Education. We particularly want to underline the relationship of Catholic Schools with the broader Church community, especially with the parishes that remain the centre of the worshiping faith community.

Throughout Catholic Education Week, we encourage students, parents, teachers and staff to take pride in their 160-year plus tradition that has enriched generations through the continued support of all our Catholic partners.

View full schedule of activities.

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