UIL Investigating Duncanville ISD

UIL Investigating Duncanville ISD

UIL investigating Duncanville ISD girls basketball coach LaJeanna Howard per a district admission this week.

Howard violated her UIL suspension from earlier this school year per the school district. Additionally, she violated directives from school leadership also.

UIL Investigating Duncanville ISD

The entire girls varsity basketball staff is on paid administrative leave after the UIL investigation.

Duncanville ISD cancelled Tuesday night’s girls basketball game against Dallas’ Skyline High School. School sources say this was a direct result of the latest allegations.

Duncanville ISD Superintendent Dr. Marc Smith says, “The District is taking swift and decisive steps to address the allegations.”

He continues, “If the result of the investigation reveals any wrongdoing by the Girls’ basketball coaches, Duncanville ISD will immediately self-report those issues to the UIL and institute strong corrective action.”

It is unclear if the district will move to terminate Ms. Howard or not.

No details about UIL investigating Duncanville ISD basketball programs again are available.

UIL Investigating Duncanville ISD – Again

The girls’ basketball team was suspended from this school year’s playoffs. This sanction comes for violating recruiting rules and practice restrictions.

According to the UIL, Coach LeJeanna Howard advertised she was having an open gym tryout in August. This tryout then came a full two months before practices were allowed.

At the time, Howard denied it was a try-out for the team, calling it just an open gym.

Duncanville is considered a local powerhouse for hoops and the Duncanville Field House conducts a great deal of off season preparation.

Panther Boys

UIL also hit the Duncanville boys basketball program with sanctions in October also.

The UIL ruling states Duncanville’s boys team must forfeit all games from the 2021-2022 season.

The sanction includes all postseason games and the 2022 Conference 6A State Championship. Additionally, Duncanville coach David Peavy lost a year due to suspension from competition.

Dallas ISD Wants To Educate In Utero

Educate In Utero

Dallas Independent School District is moving forward with a program to expand pre-kindergarten education from the prenatal period through to toddlers, i.e. educate in utero to eighteen.

Educate In Utero

The program was previously announced in April 2021, but is gaining traction with recent reports in Dallas Morning News and Fox4 News.

Educate In Utero, But Not After Born?

The initiative, called Start Strong Dallas, is in its early stages.

The school district said most of a child’s brain develops before they turn five years old and children have learning gaps before they arrive to Dallas public school programming in the areas of language and social skills.

Educate In Utero

Dallas ISD also hopes to develop educational programming for parents, but Dallas ISD’s record on education is poor at best.

In 2020, Dallas ISD Trustees noted students were failing throughout the district in basic areas such as reading and math. At the time a number of suggestions were made to close the gap including extending the school year – which a handful of campuses did – but there was no focus on innovative education and DISD remained with a top down central market style educational system.

Additionally, while there have been numerous examples of financial mismanagement, many Dallas ISD parents and taxpayers are concerned by the district’s handling of basic school management functions.

After Thanksgiving 2021, Dallas ISD Transportation did not have buses running correctly reminding parents of the problems with Dallas County Schools.

Last year, a student enrolled in a dual credit program had teachers who would not communicate with him. More recently there have been examples of poor management where an elementary student had a firearm at school and in another example a student orgy took place in a middle school bathroom.

STAAR Scheduled, Meaningless, Not Forgotten

The STAAR scheduled tests are on for the 20-21 school year, but Governor Greg Abbott announced that the grade promotion requirement related to the State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness (STAAR) test has been waived. This waiver for tests gives to fifth and eighth graders is only for the upcoming school year.

Typically, school systems must take into account a student’s score on the STAAR test to determine whether the student can be promoted to the next grade level. The traditional A-F rating system will remain in place, albeit with certain adjustments due to COVID19.

STAAR Scheduled, Meaningless, Not Forgotten

Students enrolled in grades 5 and 8 are required to re-take a STAAR test late in the school year, and sometimes again in the summer, if they do not meet grade level when taken during the spring. With this waiver, there will only be one administration of the STAAR grades 5 and 8 mathematics and reading assessments for the 2020–21 school year. The test will be administered in May to coincide with the administration of other STAAR grades 3-8 assessments.

“As always, our goal is to provide a high quality education for every Texas student,” said Governor Abbott. “This will be a uniquely challenging school year, therefore, this year is about providing students every opportunity to overcome the disruptions caused by COVID-19. By waiving these promotion requirements, we are providing greater flexibility for students and teachers, while at the same time ensuring that Texas students continue to receive a great education — which we will continue to measure with high quality assessments.”

Some will argue with Abbott’s assertion that STAAR provides a “high quality assessment.” There are vast differences between scores on the National Assessment of Educational Progress test and the Texas STAAR testing bringing into question the test’s overall reliability and validity.

“Parents deserve to know how well their children have learned grade level knowledge and skills in reading and math, especially in a time when education has been substantially disrupted,” said Texas Education Commissioner Mike Morath. “And educators use this valuable information to make adjustments to support students the following year. But there is no benefit to our children by requiring them to repeat a year based on a single test score given the disruptions of COVID, so we are waiving the grade promotion requirements from STAAR this year for our students.”

If the test can be exempted in the 2020-2021 school year the natural follow up question is why not do away with it altogether as a promotion mechanism? Governor Abbott and Mike Morath seem to want it both ways – they want the expensive test – but are not using its findings due to the “challenging school year.”

The new standard may offer Dallas ISD Calendar some added flexibility if the focus is not on high stakes testing. Locally though it brings into question, the Dallas Texas Excellence Initiative which ties teacher salaries to test scores in part.

Lori Kirkpatrick has several webpages about TEI on her website which may provide useful information opposing Dallas ISD’s viewpoint.

STAAR Scheduled Dates

STAAR Testing Dates

All of the information on STAAR Testing dates is available via the Texas Education Agency website or below.

Labor Day Class Open

Dallas ISD Schools are closed until Labor Day for in person instruction per an order by Dallas County Health Department Medical Director Philip Huang.

No In Person Classes Until After Labor Day

An early September return to school still seems optimistic per many teachers and parents who have begun a #NotMyKid campaign to keep their children home.

This move by the Dallas County Health Department seems to preempt next week’s Dallas ISD Board of Trustees meeting.

Labor Day Option

The Dallas ISD Calendar has been up in the air since the Texas Education Agency stipulated students must return to class despite parent and educator objections. This would seem to be one more nail in the coffin of a Fall 2020 football season making its way onto the Dallas ISD Calendar as children’s COVID19 cases continue to spread.

Reprinted with permission of Townview Magnet Foundation.