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Home » News » News » South Portland School Board May Restructure Elementary Schools to Improve “Diversity”
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South Portland School Board May Restructure Elementary Schools to Improve “Diversity”

The Committee has proposed forcibly "diversifying" elementary schools in SoPo
Libby PalanzaBy Libby PalanzaDecember 27, 2023Updated:December 29, 202313 Comments8 Mins Read1K Views
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The South Portland Board of Education is considering ways to improve “diversity” and reduce racial and socioeconomic “segregation” across the City’s five elementary schools.

During a Board meeting earlier this month, the Elementary Boundaries and Configurations Steering Committee presented several suggestions aimed at achieving this goal, most of which would involve a significant restructuring of the City’s elementary school system.

At the beginning of this year, the Committee was tasked by the School Board with conducting “a transparent, collaborative community process to review current school grade-level configurations, school catchment areas, and the possibility of Pre-K expansion.”

Meeting for the first time in February 2023, the Committee has held multiple public forums and has provided several progress updates to the Board of Education over the past several months.

Although the Committee was originally expected to make formal recommendations to the Board by May of 2023, they have since extended their timeline.

The Committee now plans to present its recommendations and proposals to the Board on January 8th of next year and continue to receive community input until March, at which the Board tentatively plans to vote on any proposed changes.

Currently, the Committee has scheduled a Virtual Community Forum for January 16th at 6pm.

Slide from the Committee’s Presentation to the Board of Education on December 11, 2023

On December 11th, Committee members Mindy Aloes, Kathy Mills, Lynne McKeown, and Mohammed Albehadli presented their work thus far to the Board.

Their presentation focused primarily on the potential ways they could reduce the “uncomfortable differences between” the elementary schools throughout the City in terms of their racial and socioeconomic “diversity,” or lack thereof.

Members also shared with the Board some feedback they have received from stakeholders about the work they are doing and the suggestions that are currently on the table.

“Back in February, the Committee jumped right into learning detailed demographics of all five elementary schools based on race, socioeconomic status, multi-language learners, and specialized programing — such as special education and Pre-K,” Aloes said. “We learned past, present, and predicted future enrollment data, the number of classrooms and capacity at each school. We learned current class sizes and board policy on recommended classroom sizes.”

“We faced challenges such as enrollment unknowns due to temporary housing, and the fact that diversity is not geographically distributed throughout our city,” Aloes continued.

For the 2023-24 academic year, 55.37 percent of students at Skillin School are non-white, compared to just 24.27 percent at Small School, according to data collected by the Committee. Their data also shows that 27.67 percent of Dyer School, 37.22 percent of Brown School, and 49.71 percent of Kaler School are non-white as well.

The Committee also collected data on the percentage of “economically disadvantaged” students in each elementary school this academic year. While only 22 percent of students at Small School and 24 percent of those at Dyer School fall into this category, this figure rises to 27 percent, 46 percent and 51 percent at Brown School Kaler School, and Skillin School respectively.

Slide from Committee Meeting on December 14, 2023
Slide from Committee Meeting on December 14, 2023

Following Aloes’ introduction to the Committee’s work, Mills came forward to discuss “potential solutions” to the differences that exist between the City’s elementary schools that are currently under consideration by the Committee.

Some of the possible changes discussed in their presentation included altering attendance zoning, switching up school configurations, introducing magnet programming, and implementing a form of citywide open enrollment with “equity thresholds in mind.”

Slide from the Committee’s Presentation to the Board of Education on December 11, 2023

The first suggestion Mills made in the presentation was to “redraw the boundary lines with equity in mind” in order to reduce “segregation” in the South Portland school system.

“Segregation doesn’t have to include just race — socioeconomic and academic segregation also happen. Those are things,” Mills said. “And if we’re considering the diversity of our elementary schools and how they differ from one another, then its important that South Portland schools reflect the full diversity of the South Portland community.”

Mills also proposed potentially re-configuring the elementary schools to consist of four Pre-K through Grade 2 schools and one school for all of the City’s 3rd and 4th Grade students.

Another configuration for South Portland elementary schools that was suggested during the presentation was having one school for all Pre-K students, three Kindergarten through 2nd Grade schools, and one 3rd and 4th Grade school.

Adopting a Norwegian school model — which was explained during the meeting as a system in which students are sorted into grades based on birth year and remain with the same teacher for several years of their education — was also put forward as a possible path forward for the district.

Mills also presented suggestions from the Committee that South Portland elementary schools may benefit from the introduction of a magnet program — where different schools specialize in various subtopics of instructions alongside basic subjects — or a form of open enrollment designed around “equity thresholds.”

“That’s the uncomfortable part, right,” Mills said at the close of her remarks during the presentation. “The change.”

McKeown then shared a handful of takeaways from the input that has been offered from South Portland residents concerning the work that is being done by the Committee and the changes they have proposed thus far.

Slide from the Committee’s Presentation to the Board of Education on December 11, 2023

According to McKeown, many residents noted that “data is showing our schools are racially and economically segregated, and that an achievement gap exists between low income and minority students and their higher income and white peers.”

“We have heard many express that they value walkability and neighborhood schools and are concerned that will be disrupted,” McKeown continued.

McKeown also explained that there were a number of those who expressed a desire for the process to be slowed down and requested that a “needs assessment” be conducted before going forward with any changes.

It was also noted that some wanted the Committee to take into consideration “equity for who has bus rides and how long they are” should any of these changes be implemented.

Additionally, McKeown noted that there was “some worry that implicit bias and privilege is holding the community back from moving forward to create more equitable schools.”

McKeown also said that there were residents who expressed a desire for the Committee to conduct more research on impact of transitioning between schools for students before officially recommending any plans to make structural changes to the City’s elementary school system.

South Portland Superintendent Tim Matheney then added that Skillin School and Kaler School look different from Small School and Dyer School — and Brown “to some degree otherwise” — in terms of the percentage they each have of “students of color,” “multilingual learners,” students who are “meeting learning expectations,” are “economically disadvantaged,” “affected by mobility,” and “live in close proximity to their schools.”

“We shouldn’t have a district in 2023,” Committee member Albehadli added, “where economically students are concentrated in just one group and then you have four other schools that are not dealing with that issue. That’s one thing.”

“And of course the racial diversity. I don’t want to have districts where there’s one school that is greatly diverse, has great racial diversity, and then there’s another school lacking that,” Albehadli continued. “We’d be depriving other students of that opportunity to go to class with a classmate who’s from Congo or from Iraq or from somewhere else.”

“That’s a learning opportunity that would be missing for someone to go to a school that is not as diverse as another school,” Albehadli said.

The U.S. News and World Report rankings for South Portland’s five elementary schools are wide ranging.

While Small School ranks 8th in the state, the second-highest placing elementary school — Dyer School — ranks 87th.

Brown School ranked 129th, and Kaler School placed 158th. Skillin School came in so low on the list that it earned an unranked position between 164th and 219th.

Neither the Committee nor district administration has any decision-making authority with regard to changing boundaries or grade level configurations. Any recommendations made by the Committee must be approved by the City’s Board of Education before they can take effect.

If the Board decides to pursue any significant changes to the elementary school system, they will likely not take effect until the 2025-26 academic year.

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Libby Palanza

Libby Palanza is a reporter for the Maine Wire and a lifelong Mainer. She graduated from Harvard University with a degree in Government and History. She can be reached at palanza@themainewire.com.

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<span class="dsq-postid" data-dsqidentifier="24180 https://www.themainewire.com/?p=24180">13 Comments

  1. Ken Frost on December 27, 2023 4:56 PM

    What drag queen story library not enough diversity

  2. ME Infidel on December 27, 2023 4:58 PM

    Pull your kids and grandkids immediately out of the public school indoctrination camps.

  3. Jack on December 27, 2023 8:49 PM

    Looks like parents will be moving further out of Portland.

  4. Islander on December 28, 2023 6:31 AM

    Just homeschool your children, if possible. Besides bussing is so 1970’s,

  5. TC on December 28, 2023 6:35 AM

    Imagine if these half-wits on the school board put this amount of time and effort into something constructive, like improving actual instruction or school standards.

  6. publicxxer on December 28, 2023 9:46 AM

    So going to school with an Iraqi is gonna make you read better?

  7. MAINE VOTER on December 28, 2023 10:04 AM

    SOPO at its finest! The link provided to the Board’s website (in Paragraph 2, “Elementary Boundaries and Configurations Steering Committee,”) is very useful. The 1st 2 Guiding Principles of the Board as stated are ” 1. Foster excellence and EQUITY of educational programming. 2. Provide every elementary student with the opportunity to EXPERIENCE SCHOOLING WITH DIVERSE PEERS” !!!!

  8. Old Mainer on December 28, 2023 11:19 AM

    The education system is a complete failure and these corrupt half wits dont belong anywhere near our children, nor should they hold sway over any aspect of their future or society in general. They have admitted that social/emotional/diversity training is more important than fundamentals, like reading, math, science, history,and critical thinking. They no longer feel the need to disguise their treachery.

    Race is no excuse for failure in education. It lies directly with the capabilities of the teachers and the system that guides them.
    You are evil corrupt minions and should be publicly shamed for what you have done and continue to enact upon our children. Usurping the education of children and using them as pawns is one of the most despicable aspects of the game you play for total control, second only with your pedophiliac tendencies and attempting the normalization there of.
    When the torches and pitchforks come out, which is inevitable, I hope you take responsibility for your actions with as much pride as you do during the victory laps you display currently. You feel safe now because the system protects you, but they only need your help until certain checkpoints are reached. The same creatures who invented the terms “racism”, “sexism”, “feminism” also utilized “useful idiots”. Some of you realise that which is why more schools are pushing back, or demanding “moderate” reforms. But its too late for that.

    As a side note: The Muslims you keep shoveling into the state dont agree with a majority of your compulsion with gay and trans agenda, denying their children true academic skills, nor do they appreciate the expectation of voting for the destructive policies to collapse the “American Dream” they sought out when they came here. Fundamentalists dont write letters to “representatives”. I dont believe violence is the answer, but the notion itself will cause many of these cowards to slither back into the shadows.
    Best of luck to the moms and dads out there, the children need your strength and resolve now. Our future rests on their shoulders.

  9. poppy on December 28, 2023 1:01 PM

    As someone noted above, here comes the plague of “bussing” for equality all over again. That worked so well long ago. And SoPo should add in the B for “belonging,” which Brunswick has included in its motivations.

    Who knows what wondrous new challenges, problems, skirmishes, redistributions, and spending increases this will drive? It will never end, because it is chasing something you can never catch. Before you know it, the teachers and administrators will demand reassignments based on the new student redistribution.

    Amazing how racism is good when the right people call for it, isn’t it?

    The levels of imbecility that “public servants” will go to as they chase the uncatchable is mind-blowing. And destruction of the American notion of a “melting pot” virtually overnight.

    It might be better if we returned to the days before public schools, and parcel out the funds saved to households based on so much per student. In Brunswick, more than $15,000 per student is spent per year.

    You might be able to hire some good help with those $.

    Remember that “if you can read, thank a teacher” bumper sticker? I’m going to get some new ones printed up: “if you can’t read or add or write, thank a Marxist.”

  10. Beachmom on December 28, 2023 7:43 PM

    It’s because the illegals from Africa are dragging down numbers in Skillin and Kaler.
    This way they can spread the misery. Punish the children of citizens instead of closing the door to taxpayer money sucking illegals.

  11. Ryan J Murdough on December 28, 2023 11:29 PM

    This is not about ‘illegals’ or ‘legals’. This is solely about race and intentional White displacement. Think about what your enemies are doing to you. They are forcing your children to go to school with muds and non-Whites and they don’t want you to be able to oppose it in any way. Why is access to White people a guaranteed right for these invaders? Wake up White man and push back. Your children’s future depends on it.

  12. Boxcar on December 29, 2023 6:03 AM

    Isn’t basing everything on a persons skin color the sign of a bigot???? Just wondering.

  13. frederickgragg on October 23, 2024 2:07 AM

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