Redmond, WA. Lake Washington Schools
Foundation has awarded over $300,000 in grants to teachers and schools across
the Lake Washington School District for the 2013-14 school year. The foundation
is funding the school district’s New Teacher Support Program for the first time, while
it continues to support the rollout of the new STEM (science, technology, engineering,
and math) -based
Signature Programs and to fund long-standing programs such as Reaching for Success classroom
innovation grants, the LINKS mentoring program and the Access Fund for
low-income middle and high school students. Grants awarded to the school
district from the foundation included a $49,000 Aspire grant from the AT&T
Foundation to support high school completion and college-readiness for low-income
students. Read More >>
For the first time, the foundation is
partnering with the Lake Washington School District to support 80 second-year
teachers in 36 schools through the district’s highly effective and
award-winning New Teacher Support Program (NTSP). Foundation funding of $18,000
per
year for three years replaces a state grant which is no longer available.
Research from the New Teacher Center shows that teachers in their second year
make their biggest growth in
instructional practice when provided with strategic and focused learning.
Peter
Kirk Elementary teacher Christa Fagan said, “The NTSP helped me become a better
teacher because I had constant support from my mentor, and release days to
observe experienced teachers. My mentor was always there to help with lesson
planning, to give me ideas and just be a listening ear when I needed to talk.
Being able to see other teachers at work has been extremely beneficial to my
teaching practices because for me, one of the best ways to learn is by watching
how other teachers teach.”
Lake Washington Schools Foundation raises
funds from community members, local government and businesses, civic groups and
private foundations in order to support academic excellence and success for all
students across the Lake Washington School District.
The foundation is most visible
through its Reaching for Success
grants, which fund programs and equipment valuable to students and teachers
such as online math practice, student leadership opportunities, and musical
instruments. This year, schools are receiving the largest investment in Reaching for Success grants in the
foundation’s history, with over $84,000 awarded to five
high schools, eight middle schools and 21 elementary schools. Each year,
teachers submit more applications for innovative grant projects than the last.
Increased donor support would allow more of these projects to become a reality.
At $22,000, the Access Fund is
also being funded at the highest level in foundation history, and at $7,000
over last year, due to additional funding from the AT&T Foundation’s Aspire
grant. The Access Fund empowers low-income middle and high school students to fully
engage in school by helping them pay for school-related supplies, fees and
extracurricular activities.
Redmond High School counselor Ellen Zambrowsky-Huls administers her
school’s Access Fund, nicknamed RHS
Help. According to Zambrowsky-Huls, “We want everyone to experience the stuff
that makes high school, high school. Granting a $15 or $20 request to cover
half an ASB card fee or a class fee can mean the difference between taking or
not taking a class for some of our kids.”
“RHS Help, and the other initiatives we have begun that form the
array of services to students in need, is vitally important to our school,”
Redmond High School Principal Jane Todd adds. “Not only because it creates
equity of access, but also because it teaches our students that it is not a sin
to be poor and that we are a community which cares about all its members.”
The school district’s new Signature Programs were the focus of Lake Washington Schools
Foundation’s 2013 Legacy for Learning
spring fundraiser and the foundation has given nearly $300,000 to support these
programs over the last two school years. This total includes a $70,000 grant
for this school year, in addition to a $225,000 grant received from Waste
Management in 2012.
STEM-based Signature Programs are innovative, three-period block
classes available to high school students in a number of subjects. They combine
rigorous academics with real-world applications of learning on projects
centered on issues like global health and sustainability. Students have the
opportunity to learn about careers directly by working with business partners
such as AT&T, Evergreen
Health and Swedish Hospital.
The LINKS mentoring and tutoring program, which is run by the
school district and primarily funded by the foundation, is being funded at
$72,200. LINKS volunteers spend one hour per week in classrooms as mentors,
tutors and classroom helpers. Last year, 892 students across the school
district were paired with 294 LINKS volunteers, an 8% increase in students
helped over the previous year. Currently,
LINKS has over 50 students in all grade levels ready to be matched with a
volunteer mentor.
Community members interested in
supporting student growth and success can take part in the foundation’s Back to
School campaign, which is
more than halfway to its goal of raising $22,000 by December 31, or give to
Lake Washington Schools Foundation through their United Way or workplace giving
campaign. Visit www.lwsf.org/donate to give.
For more information about specific
grants and other programs funded by the foundation, visit www.lwsf.org/programs.
About the Lake Washington Schools Foundation
Lake Washington Schools
Foundation is a partnership between parents, business and community leaders,
and the education community. Founded in 2005, the foundation’s mission is to
support academic excellence and success for all students, and it has granted approximately
$1.6 million for programs that have reached all of our district’s 51 schools. The Lake Washington School District serves
students in the Kirkland, Redmond, Sammamish, and Woodinville communities.
For more information about the
Lake Washington Schools Foundation, please contact Executive Director Kristina Williams
at (425) 936-1317 or Kristina.williams@lwsf.org, or visit www.lwsf.org.
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