Category Archives: Blogs

DPS closed Wed. Jan. 30

A message sent on behalf of Superintendent Maleyko-

Due to extreme temperatures and wind chills all Dearborn Public Schools will be closed on Wednesday, January 30, 2019.

If weather conditions persist as predicted, the district will most likely remain closed. However, a decision on the status of school for Thursday will be made at a later time and most likely shared with the community on Wednesday.

Please be careful and dress appropriately if you are headed outside.

NO After School Activities Tues. Jan. 29

After school activities alert

[NOTICE]  Due to extremely cold temperatures and wind chills, all after school activities for Tuesday, January 29, 2019 are cancelled.  This includes all parent meetings, concerts, athletic competitions and practices.  Adult and Community Education classes will also be closed this evening (1/29/19).

The District will make an announcement later today regarding the status of school on Wednesday, January 30, 2019.

School Board Appreciation Month

Trustees recognized during Board Appreciation MonthSchool board smaller 2019

As part of School Board Recognition Month, Superintendent Dr. Glenn Maleyko took time at the January 14, 2019 School Board meeting to thank the Trustees for their service to the community.

“School Board Trustees dedicate a lot of time sharing their expertise to benefit the students and families of our district.  They are very knowledgeable about the workings of our district and the latest issues impacting education.  As superintendent, I truly appreciate the diversity of experience and professionalism our trustees bring to the table,” commented Maleyko.

School Board members in Dearborn develop policies and make tough decisions that help shape the future of instruction in the district. They bear responsibility for the third largest district in Michigan with an annual budget of more than $200 million, an enrollment of 21,000 students, and 2,600 employees working in 34 buildings.

In addition, Dearborn School Board trustees also serve as trustees for Henry Ford College. They are the only school board trustees in the state that also serve as trustees for a local college.  This dual responsibility means trustees spend twice the amount of time dedicated to serving the community.   They evaluate both the superintendent and college president, attend twice the number of meetings, and must keep abreast of issues, laws, and legislation impacting both P-12 and the college.

Read by Third Grade

#Students1stDbnSchs-Press Release #21 Dearborn creating Read by Third Grade community task force

Press Release #21/2018-19
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: December 17, 2018
Contact: Jill Chochol, Executive Director of Student Achievement
(313) 827-3026 chochoj@dearbornschools.org
David Mustonen, Communications Director
(313) 827-3006 MustonD@dearbornschools.org

Dearborn creating Read by Third Grade community task force

Dearborn Public Schools is creating a parent and community task force to look at the Read by Third Grade law scheduled to take full effect next year.  Under the law, any third grader who is considered more than a year behind in reading must be recommended to repeat the grade.

The task force will allow the community to learn more about the complicated law and offer input on how the district addresses it.

“The goal is to strengthen the planning process and to ensure that the community is informed and engaged in the success of every student,” said Jill Chochol, Executive Director of Student Achievement for the Edsel Ford Feeder Track.  She is also spearheading the district’s Read by Third Grade initiative.

Since the law’s passage in 2016, administrators and teachers in Dearborn Public Schools have worked diligently to ensure as few students as possible are held back.  Reading instruction and extra assistance have increased for lagging students, starting as young as kindergarten.  Teacher training has become more focused, and additional summer and afterschool programs were added.

Community members who are interested in participating on the committee are encouraged to visit the district website at https://www.dearbornschools.org to sign up.  The website also has a link to a blog where the district will provide updated Read by Third Grade information as it becomes available.  Visitors can subscribe to the blog to stay up to date.

The current second graders are the first students who will be retained under the law. Those recommendations will be based on their spring 2020 Michigan Student Test of Educational Progress (M-STEP).   However, the Michigan Department of Education has yet to define what it will consider a year behind grade level.  About 56 percent of the state’s third graders were considered “not proficient” on the 2018 M-STEP.

There are several reasons students could be exempted from repeating third grade such as as newer English language learners, special education students, students who show they are proficient in reading via a different standardized assessment, those who have previously repeated a grade, and children who show they are at grade level in math, science and social studies.  While the district has increased its instruction efforts, having parents and the community involved is critical to each child’s success, Chochol said.  On an individual level, getting kids off videos and video games and into any kind of book, or even just engaged in conversation and hands-on experiences, are critical to language development.

“As in all things, Dearborn Public Schools needs the support of families and the community to help us help students reach their full potential,” Chochol said.  “We are looking for that support for individual students and as a community on the Read by Third Grade task force.  Together, we will address the changes brought by this new law.”

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PR21 Read by 3rd grade Maples students –Two kindergarten students at Maples Elementary look through books during reading time.  Dearborn Public Schools provides extra reading instruction as early as kindergarten for struggling students.  Now the district is inviting the community to join its new Read by Third Grade task force.