DUSD Sidewalk Project Moves Ahead

DUSD Logo

Submitted by Denair Unified School District

The beautification project that will add almost 700 feet of sidewalk and landscaping along the north side Monte Vista Avenue behind Jack W. Lytton Stadium is about to kick into high gear, Superintendent Aaron Rosander told Denair school board trustees Thursday night.

The project is a partnership between the Denair Unified School District and Stanislaus County. Supervisor Vito Chiesa, who represents the Denair area, arranged for a local company to donate the concrete work. The school district will install the irrigation system, grass and shrubbery.

Rosander said there will be a community fundraising effort to help pay for the district’s piece of the project, estimated to be about $5,000.

Grading of the strip of land already has occurred. Rosander expects the concrete to be poured sometime after Thanksgiving, depending upon the weather.

The new 5-foot sidewalk will connect with an existing walkway that now ends at the intersection of Lester Road and Monte Vista. It will provide a safer route to and from the stadium, which hosts football games and other community events.

At Thursday night’s board meeting, Rosander also updated trustees on proposed unification of Denair Elementary School and Denair Academic Avenues, a charter school that shares the elementary campus.

Principal Sara Michelena, who oversees both schools, has had initial discussions with teachers and other employees as well as parents, Rosander said. The concept, he said, is to “take the best of both campuses” and combine them into a single, high-performing charter school.

Rosander cited D2A’s enriched language and fine arts programs and DES’s music and traditional academic offerings as strengths that would be retained on a unified campus. Together, the schools have about 420 students.

He said parents and community members will be invited to a meeting before winter break at which the tenets of the new program will be laid out and questions can be asked.

DHS Students Recognized for Bilingual Skills

Seal of Multilingual Proficiency

Submitted by Denair Unified School District

Three students at Denair High School have earned prestigious recognition for their bilingual speaking and writing abilities.

Seniors Maria Martinez and Kimberly Perez Pulido and junior Alejandra Parada were awarded the coveted Seal of Multilingual Proficiency in a ceremony Wednesday night at the Gallo Center for the Arts in Modesto. The designation will be specially noted on their high school diplomas, certifying that they are fluent in English as well as Spanish.

This important recognition helps graduates when they apply to colleges, compete for scholarships or submit job applications.

“This is a verification of their skills,” said Maria Olivas, a Spanish teacher at Denair High who also serves on the language committee run by the Stanislaus County Office of Education.

This year, 319 juniors and seniors from 10 Stanislaus County school districts applied for the Seal of Multilingual Proficiency. Of that group, 154 were certified as meeting the bilingual standards, according to a release from the County Office of Education. A dozen different languages were represented.

All students must submit an autobiography in English, followed by a 300-word essay in their other language on a designated topic. Those who pass the first step then went to the county office for face-to-face interviews in both languages. The scores from the autobiography, the essay and the interviews are combined to determine which students qualify for the seal.

“Being proficient in multiple languages enhances a student’s education and value in the marketplace,” said Tom Changnon, the county superintendent of schools. “Our economy is tied to that of other nations, and Californians who participate across international borders bring strength and potential to this state’s global enterprises.”

Olivas said eight Denair students applied for the program with Martinez, Parada and Perez Pulido emerging as winners. All have taken advanced Spanish classes at the high school.

“Learning a language at home is an advantage, but if they don’t have training in class, they probably won’t pass the tests,” Olivas said. “They may lack sentence structure or grammar.”

Denair has had nine other students earn Multi-Lingual Seal recognition in the four years of the program. Seven of them currently are attending college, Olivas said.

Coyotes Crush Waterford 62-21 in Season Finale

DHS Coyotes Football

Submitted by Denair Unified School District

For the Denair High football team, the 2014 season was always going to be about more than wins and losses.

It was about a new coach with a whole new playbook. It was about the value discipline and hard work. Mostly, it was about changing a culture and restoring energy and confidence to a program that had lost its way.

Mission accomplished.

The Coyotes – who didn’t win a game last year – showed how far they’ve come with a dominating 62-21 victory over Waterford on Friday night at Jack W. Lytton Stadium.

The victory was Denair’s third in 10 games this season and punctuated the improvement that has taken place since new coach Ted Howze and his staff took over last spring.

“I think we played better than a 3-7 team at times,” said Howze. “There were at least three more games we should have won, but these kids came a long ways as juniors and seniors.

“Looking back, you’d have to be satisfied. … This is a multi-year project. No. 1, we have to change the culture with kids we have in the program. No. 2, we have to attract kids back to the program and who are at the school and not playing or have transferred out of the district. That’s our two big things. I feel like we’ve done both.”

Against Waterford, Denair left no doubt who the better team was with an impressive first half that featured three successful onside kicks in a row.

The Coyotes took the opening kicked and drove 80 yards for a touchdown, burning 8 minutes off the clock. They recovered a squib kicked, scored another touchdown … and then recovered two more inside kicks before Waterford ever touched the ball.

Denair led 27-0 before Waterford ran its first offensive play with about 3 minutes to play in the first half. Continue reading “Coyotes Crush Waterford 62-21 in Season Finale” »

A Class Act! 10 Questions for Samantha Ericksen

Samantha Ericksen

Submitted by Denair Unified School District

Name: Samantha Ericksen

Family: Husband and three daughters

School: Denair Charter Academy

Subject taught: Kindergarten through sixth-grade home school class

Experience and education: BA and teaching credential from Biola University. I spent five years as a classroom teacher in Modesto. This is my 14th year at DCA.

Why most inspires you about teaching? Seeing students make progress in areas that are challenging for them.

What are your biggest challenges as a teacher? Teaching multiple levels effectively.

What is your favorite teaching tool or activity? Using technology to create projects with my students.

How has Common Core affected your classroom strategy? I use more conversation between students to inform their learning.

What do you want your students to remember? I want them to remember that they are capable of anything. They CAN succeed.

How can parents support what you do? Participate in school work. Check their assignments. Show you care about school.

What will it take to improve academic success in DCA? A group effort between parents, teachers and students to emphasize the importance of lifelong learning.

What’s next in your classroom? We are focusing on water and energy and how we can conserve both.

What would surprise people about your job? That the time I spend on paperwork exceeds the amount of time I actually spend with students.

What do you do for fun? I became a teacher because I enjoy being with children and helping them become lovers of learning.