Legislature(2021 - 2022)BUTROVICH 205

02/10/2021 09:00 AM Senate EDUCATION

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Audio Topic
09:04:06 AM Start
09:04:38 AM Presentation: School District Perspectives on Educating During the Covid-19 Pandemic
10:38:53 AM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
-- Presentation Will Continue on 2/12/2021 --
+ Presentation: TELECONFERENCED
"School District Perspectives on Educating
During the COVID-19 Pandemic" by Superintendents:
- Deena Bishop, Anchorage School District
- Kerry Boyd, Yukon-Koyukuk School District
- Bobby Bolen, Bering Strait School District
- Jason Johnson, Dillingham School District
- John O'Brien, Kenai Peninsula Borough School
District
-- Testimony <Invitation Only> --
**Streamed live on AKL.tv**
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
                    ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE                                                                                  
              SENATE EDUCATION STANDING COMMITTEE                                                                             
                       February 10, 2021                                                                                        
                           9:04 a.m.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Senator Roger Holland, Chair                                                                                                    
Senator Gary Stevens, Vice Chair                                                                                                
Senator Shelley Hughes                                                                                                          
Senator Peter Micciche                                                                                                          
Senator Tom Begich                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
All members present                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
COMMITTEE CALENDAR                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
PRESENTATION:  SCHOOL DISTRICT  PERSPECTIVES ON  EDUCATING DURING                                                               
THE   COVID-19  PANDEMIC   BY   SUPERINTENDENTS:  DEENA   BISHOP~                                                               
ANCHORAGE  SCHOOL  DISTRICT;  KERRY  BOYD~  YUKON-KOYUKUK  SCHOOL                                                               
DISTRICT;  BOBBY  BOLEN~  BERING STRAIT  SCHOOL  DISTRICT;  JASON                                                               
JOHNSON~  DILLINGHAM  CITY  SCHOOL DISTRICT;  AND  JOHN  O'BRIEN~                                                               
KENAI PENINSULA BOROUGH SCHOOL DISTRICT                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     - HEARD                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
No previous action to record                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
WITNESS REGISTER                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
DEENA BISHOP, Ph.D., Superintendent                                                                                             
Anchorage School District                                                                                                       
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  Gave her  district perspective  on education                                                             
during the pandemic.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
KERRY BOYD, Superintendent                                                                                                      
Yukon-Koyukuk School District                                                                                                   
Fairbanks, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  Gave her  district perspective  on education                                                             
during the pandemic.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
BOBBY BOLEN, Ph.D., Superintendent                                                                                              
Bering Strait School District                                                                                                   
Bering Strait                                                                                                                   
Unalakleet, Alaska                                                                                                              
POSITION STATEMENT:  Gave his  district perspective  on education                                                             
during the pandemic.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
JOHN O'BRIEN, Superintendent                                                                                                    
Kenai Peninsula Borough School District                                                                                         
Soldotna, Alaska                                                                                                                
POSITION STATEMENT:  Gave his  district perspective  on education                                                             
during the pandemic.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
JASON JOHNSON, Superintendent                                                                                                   
Dillingham City School District                                                                                                 
Dillingham, Alaska                                                                                                              
POSITION STATEMENT:  Gave his  district perspective  on education                                                             
during the pandemic.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
ACTION NARRATIVE                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:04:06 AM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  ROGER   HOLLAND  called  the  Senate   Education  Standing                                                             
Committee meeting  to order at 9:04  a.m. Present at the  call to                                                               
order were Senators Begich, Stevens,  Micciche, Hughes, and Chair                                                               
Holland.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
^Presentation: School  District Perspectives on  Educating During                                                             
the COVID-19 Pandemic                                                                                                         
 Presentation: School District Perspectives on Educating During                                                             
                     the COVID-19 Pandemic                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
9:04:38 AM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR   HOLLAND  announced   the  presentation   School  District                                                               
Perspectives on  Educating during the COVID-19  Pandemic and that                                                               
the  committee was  planning to  hear from  five superintendents.                                                               
The  committee did  not  have time  to hear  from  all 54  school                                                               
districts, but he  hoped that the conversations  today and Friday                                                               
will provide an appreciation for  the vast differences and unique                                                               
challenges the state  faces. The hearing will be held  as a panel                                                               
discussion  to gain  perspectives from  those with  boots on  the                                                               
ground. These  superintendents were invited to  speak about their                                                               
experiences in  navigating the pandemic.  He asked them  to first                                                               
focus  on the  impact of  the  pandemic on  student learning.  He                                                               
asked  the superintendents  to provide  their  insights into  how                                                               
students  have   fared,  positively  and  negatively,   with  the                                                               
transition  to virtual  learning or  whether any  schools avoided                                                               
any shutdowns and transition to virtual learning.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  HOLLAND began  by calling  on Superintendent  Deena Bishop                                                               
and  noted he  thought the  enrollment for  Anchorage was  around                                                               
48,000.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
9:05:54 AM                                                                                                                    
DEENA BISHOP,  Ph.D., Superintendent, Anchorage  School District,                                                               
Anchorage, Alaska, said that the  Anchorage School District (ASD)                                                               
now  has   about  43,000  students.   ASD  has   had  significant                                                               
outmigration to statewide  home school as well  as people leaving                                                               
the state.  There were some  silver linings with  learning during                                                               
the  pandemic. One  of  the  biggest was  the  growth in  teacher                                                               
competencies  with technology,  utilizing using  machine learning                                                               
for assessments  and building muscle around  platforms that share                                                               
online and  blended learning  and an  increase in  creativity and                                                               
engagement  needed  in  classrooms  today with  kids  growing  up                                                               
online.  Being  online and  social  media  is  not all  good  and                                                               
educators want to  teach students to use social  media skills and                                                               
technology learning in a positive way.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
DR. BISHOP  said the district  found that certain  student groups                                                               
thrived  during  this  time.  Those were  in  families  with  the                                                               
capacity  to be  at  home with  students.  This were  significant                                                               
impacts with students in pre-K to  grade 2 when their parents had                                                               
to  leave  to go  to  work.  Older  students  were at  home  with                                                               
siblings  during learning.  That was  difficult. The  district is                                                               
seeing  a lag  in certain  student groups  due to  that. Children                                                               
don't do  home school on  their own.  Families that did  not have                                                               
that ability to engage with students suffered more than others.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
DR. BISHOP shared that while  fast speed Internet is available in                                                               
Anchorage, for many families it  is not affordable. Many families                                                               
had poor  standing with a  lot of  companies. The ASD  board used                                                               
$1.5 million  of CARES  money to  take care  of the  Internet for                                                               
some children's families. The ASD  was the middle man for payment                                                               
because some families couldn't get  the service. She always wants                                                               
to  see  the  silver  linings, but  the  district  learned  about                                                               
access,  poverty, working  families,  and  second languages.  All                                                               
that impacted  the outcome for  children. If public  education is                                                               
to be  successful, it needs to  give all kids the  opportunity to                                                               
be successful.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR HOLLAND  called on Superintendent  Kerry Boyd and  noted he                                                               
thought the enrollment for the  Yukon-Koyukuk School District was                                                               
around 1,800 students.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
9:09:57 AM                                                                                                                    
KERRY  BOYD,   Superintendent,  Yukon-Koyukuk   School  District,                                                               
Fairbanks,  Alaska, said  the  Yukon-Koyukuk  (Y-K) district  has                                                               
about 4,400  students. The past  year there has  been exponential                                                               
growth in  its home school programs.  Typically Yukon-Koyukuk has                                                               
about 1,700 students  in its home school program.  Its special Ed                                                               
population  went  up  175  percent, which  has  created  its  own                                                               
challenges as  far as providing  a strong home school  program to                                                               
students. Trying  to find special  education staff this  year has                                                               
been  one  of  the  district's  biggest  challenges,  along  with                                                               
providing  strong programs  and supports  for many  families that                                                               
may or may not have home schooled before.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS. BOYD  noted that  a positive  for this year  is what  she has                                                               
seen across the  nation, the state, and her district,  which is a                                                               
great respect  for teachers. Y-K  has seen a decrease  in student                                                               
discipline. When schools  closed in March and  students turned to                                                               
remote learning,  it changed their perspective.  Students want to                                                               
be in school.  That has been nice for staff  and parents. Y-K has                                                               
nine remote schools with 300  students. Y-K opened up its schools                                                               
right  after  Labor Day.  When  the  district  has had  to  close                                                               
schools, the district  has used paper packets.  The district does                                                               
not have the infrastructure in place for distance learning.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR HOLLAND called  on Superintendent Bobby Bolen  and noted he                                                               
thought the enrollment for the  Bering Strait School District was                                                               
around 1,700 students.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
9:12:28 AM                                                                                                                    
BOBBY   BOLEN,  Ph.D.,   Superintendent,  Bering   Strait  School                                                               
District,   Bering   Strait,   Unalakleet,  Alaska,   said   that                                                               
enrollment was  correct. The numbers  stay consistent  year after                                                               
year. The Bering  Strait School District (BSSD)  challenge is the                                                               
infrastructure of  broadband and internet to  reach students when                                                               
they are  not receiving face-to-face  instruction. BSSD  has been                                                               
lucky  because it  has  only had  to close  two  schools for  any                                                               
length of  time. Now  all schools  are open except  for one  in a                                                               
modified  setting due  to a  couple  of cases.  The BSSD  biggest                                                               
challenge  is  working  with  each   village.  There  is  lot  of                                                               
apprehension  about the  virus. Everyone  is trying  to keep  the                                                               
virus out.  People tend to go  to the extreme with  the one case.                                                               
The pandemic  hasn't hurt attendance  because there are  no other                                                               
options. There  is no home  schooling except with  packets, which                                                               
are not successful.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR HOLLAND called on Superintendent  John O'Brien and noted he                                                               
thought  the enrollment  for the  Kenai Peninsula  Borough School                                                               
District was 9,000.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
9:14:18 AM                                                                                                                    
JOHN  O'BRIEN,  Superintendent,  Kenai Peninsula  Borough  School                                                               
District,  Soldotna,  Alaska, said  it  has  been a  journey  for                                                               
districts  nationwide  during  the   COVID  pandemic.  The  Kenai                                                               
Peninsula Borough School  District (KPBSD) has been  able to keep                                                               
most of  its schools open for  the majority of this  school year.                                                               
The  central   peninsula  area,   around  Soldotna,   Kenai,  and                                                               
Sterling, started with remote learning  because of a summer spike                                                               
and  went back  to remote  around  Thanksgiving for  most of  the                                                               
entire second  quarter. The first  quarter was mostly  in person.                                                               
KPBSD is  a large district  geographically and has  been handling                                                               
things  at  a  geographical  level.  Since  January,  the  second                                                               
semester,  KPBSD had  had in-person  learning. The  KPBSD started                                                               
with pre-K  through sixth grade  students and then on  January 11                                                               
went  to 100  percent  in-person learning  for  all students  for                                                               
families that chose  that option. Now that KPBSD  has returned to                                                               
in-person  learning,   more  and  more  families   are  returning                                                               
students to KPBSD  schools, which is what the  district had hoped                                                               
as the pandemic progresses and more is learned about the virus.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. O'BRIEN  said that  instructionally, he  would echo  what Dr.                                                               
Bishop  said. Some  families  have thrived  in  a remote,  online                                                               
environment,  but  that  is  not  the  case  for  most  families,                                                               
especially  those that  did not  choose that  option and  did not                                                               
have a  parent at home.  Even within families, some  parents have                                                               
shared  that  one   child  is  thriving  and   loves  the  remote                                                               
environment and the other child  is feeling socially isolated and                                                               
depressed. KPBSD  is not  focusing just  on instruction  but also                                                               
the  social-emotional   wellbeing  of  students.  The   staff  is                                                               
reaching out to  families. That is easier now  that most students                                                               
are back  for in-person learning.  It has been a  journey getting                                                               
the  community   on  board  for  mitigations   like  masking  for                                                               
athletics  to keep  students  in  schools. The  goal  is to  keep                                                               
students in school, full time for  the rest of the schoolyear, so                                                               
the district  is maintaining important mitigation  measures. That                                                               
has ruffled some  feathers in the community, but  most people are                                                               
happy students  are back in the  school and want to  keep them in                                                               
school.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR HOLLAND  called on Superintendent  Jason Johnson  and noted                                                               
he  thought  the  enrollment  for   the  Dillingham  City  School                                                               
District was 500.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
9:18:16 AM                                                                                                                    
JASON JOHNSON,  Superintendent, Dillingham City  School District,                                                               
Dillingham,  Alaska,   said  that  the  Dillingham   City  School                                                               
District has 450  students in a typical year. This  year it had a                                                               
significant  decrease  in student  enrollment,  which  was to  be                                                               
expected.  In 1919  most of  the population  died because  of the                                                               
Spanish  flu.  That  historic  knowledge did  not  go  away.  The                                                               
district honors that and made  an extraordinary effort to respect                                                               
those feelings during this process.  The district has been onsite                                                               
for about 70 percent of the  instructional year so far, which has                                                               
been  a blessing.  Some of  the positive  was a  chance to  build                                                               
relationships in  the community  and with partners.  The district                                                               
does   extensive  outreach   with   its   tribal  council,   city                                                               
government,  and   health  corporation.  That  has   enabled  the                                                               
district to  provide a  litany of  supports that  would otherwise                                                               
not have been possible.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR.  JOHNSON  shared that  the  district  has seen  a  tremendous                                                               
amount of innovation with its  instructional teams. Teachers have                                                               
been  put in  a situation  where they  were forced  to learn  new                                                               
strategies that can  be used in the future.  The biggest negative                                                               
is the  social-emotional impact. There  is no way to  replace the                                                               
bond between students  and teachers. It cannot be  done by video.                                                               
It is  not successful in  virtual school. The district  is seeing                                                               
that in its  community. The district is noting  the ACES (Adverse                                                               
Childhood Experiences) that many students  are having as a result                                                               
of  time  away  from  school.   Typically  the  district  is  the                                                               
students' biggest advocate.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
9:20:19 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  BEGICH shared  that he  was  taken by  comments made  by                                                               
Superintendent Bishop. He  asked her to expand on  what she noted                                                               
on lower income and single parent households.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BISHOP  replied that  the  ASD  is  a diverse  district;  62                                                               
percent of its student body are  children of color and 38 percent                                                               
are White. The ASD is  a high-diversity, multicultural community.                                                               
There are different experiences in  homes. The two student groups                                                               
that were  affected the most  with almost  a doubling of  D's and                                                               
F's  were  Alaska  Native  and   Pacific  Islander  students.  In                                                               
addition, economically disadvantaged  students also doubled their                                                               
rates of  D's and F's. There  was also the student  learning data                                                               
in  elementary school.  Overall the  percent of  the increase  in                                                               
negative outcomes, such as failing  grades and dropping out, grew                                                               
6 to 10  percent, but in some  groups, it was 30  percent in that                                                               
student  group, so  the experiences  were  quite different.  Many                                                               
older siblings  had to watch  the younger ones and  that impacted                                                               
their  learning  while  they  were  at home,  as  well  as  their                                                               
siblings'. Learning had  to happen at night  with parents because                                                               
parents were essential workers and  working during the day. There                                                               
were very  large gaps with  accessibility to internet  because of                                                               
the affordability and the ability to get it in the home.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR BEGICH  shared that  in Austin,  Texas, bus  drivers were                                                               
required  to set  up remote  internet stations  on buses  to give                                                               
access to  low-income families.  He asked  if she  had considered                                                               
that.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
DR. BISHOP  replied that  the district  had explored  many ideas.                                                               
The district has  MyFi and Wi-Fi access, but what  would occur is                                                               
that  families would  use that  data  in two  days because  other                                                               
family  members would  use the  data. The  district learned  last                                                               
spring that  once it released  the Wi-Fi, whole families  were in                                                               
such need  that it was  gobbled up. The district  had to go  to a                                                               
steady hard  line with  a modem  in the  household. That  is more                                                               
economical and  feasible and steady  for families. The  buses for                                                               
Wi-Fi would  go around, park,  and then leave and  sometimes were                                                               
not always there at the right  time. The district needed a sturdy                                                               
structure to build  equity around students so  that the families'                                                               
poverty did not affect students.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:25:37 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR STEVENS noted to  Superintendent O'Brien that legislators                                                               
keep  hearing about  ghost students,  students who  disappear and                                                               
drop  out. He  asked if  Superintendent O'Brien  had any  data on                                                               
that for  his districts  and whether the  district has  any plans                                                               
for summer programming.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR. O'BRIEN  replied that  there have  been such  situations over                                                               
the last  year since the  pandemic, especially when  the district                                                               
learning  was 100  percent remote.  Students disappeared  despite                                                               
multiple attempts  to reach  out to  families. Some  families are                                                               
just  extremely hard  to reach,  families that  are typically  in                                                               
transition and transient a lot. It  is a struggle to have updated                                                               
contact information for  those students. There have  been some of                                                               
those cases.  Now that the  district is  back to 100  percent in-                                                               
person learning those  students have returned for  the most part.                                                               
The big issue  with ghost students was when the  district was 100                                                               
percent remote  for the entire  fourth quarter of last  year when                                                               
the governor closed all schools through emergency declaration.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR.  O'BRIEN said  that KPBSD's  plans for  bridging the  gap for                                                               
students who have missed out  on instructional opportunities is a                                                               
robust  summer school  program and  leveraging CARES  funding for                                                               
additional interventionists  during the school  day, particularly                                                               
for   literacy  and   math  instruction,   where  students   have                                                               
experienced gaps.  KPBSD plans  to bolster  afterschool programs.                                                               
What is key  for KPBSD students, because there  are many families                                                               
in poverty  and working parents  often cannot  transport students                                                               
after school  or during the  summer, is that  transportation will                                                               
be part of summer school and afterschool remediation.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
9:28:48 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  MICCICHE   asked  Superintendent   O'Brien  if   he  has                                                               
considered  an exit  poll with  kids about  what worked  and what                                                               
didn't. One of his kids  thrived in that remote environment. When                                                               
Superintendent  O'Brien  talks  about   catching  up  and  summer                                                               
options,  he wondered  if Superintendent  O'Brien would  consider                                                               
what they  learned from distance  delivery so that  options could                                                               
be delivered at a  lower cost for a larger group  of kids who may                                                               
or  may  not  make it  to  the  building.  It  would be  nice  to                                                               
understand what worked and what  didn't from a student and parent                                                               
perspective and  to expand  distance options  for kids  who might                                                               
need some extra help.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR HOLLAND added  that he would ask  the other superintendents                                                               
the same question  about an exit poll about what  worked and what                                                               
didn't work.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  O'BRIEN  answered  that the  district  absolutely  has  been                                                               
reaching  out  to  students.   The  assistant  superintendent  of                                                               
instruction worked hard  to make sure that student  voice is part                                                               
of the district  process to learn and improve.  The district does                                                               
plan to  do an exit poll  of at least the  secondary students and                                                               
parents before the  close of school year. Dr. Bishop  talked of a                                                               
silver lining. KPBSD was on  its way to hybrid instruction before                                                               
the  pandemic,  but  this  has  provided  every  teacher  in  the                                                               
district an opportunity  to learn to how to teach  with a digital                                                               
parallel in a  hybrid format. Hopefully the district  will not be                                                               
dealing with the pandemic at the  same level in the fall of 2021,                                                               
but there are  many aspects of instruction that will  not go back                                                               
to the way  they were. The district will continue  to have remote                                                               
opportunities for families  at all levels if that  has worked for                                                               
them. There  may be  at the elementary  and middle  school level,                                                               
like  at the  high school  level, remote-only  teachers who  work                                                               
with families  who want  to be  connected to  the district  and a                                                               
neighborhood school but through a  remote option. The district is                                                               
planning a summer  school online program for  students who cannot                                                               
come in,  not only for  remediation but also acceleration  with a                                                               
lot of  elective offerings for  the summer for middle  school and                                                               
high school students.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  HOLLAND asked  Superintendent Johnson  about plans  for an                                                               
exit poll.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
9:33:21 AM                                                                                                                    
MR.  JOHNSON responded  that his  district would  not do  an exit                                                               
poll because the beauty of a  small district is that it has daily                                                               
if not hourly  communication with parents and  can make immediate                                                               
changes  to  planning.  For  example,  the  district  made  12-13                                                               
modifications  to  its  smart  start  plan.  The  district  works                                                               
closely  with   student  government  to  let   them  voice  their                                                               
concerns. A  student government representative  is on  the school                                                               
board.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BOLEN replied  that his  district  also doesn't  necessarily                                                               
have an exit  poll planned. The district has  been using advisory                                                               
education committees  a lot more  this year  than in the  past to                                                               
learn  what  is  and  what  is  not  working  in  its  15  unique                                                               
communities.  The  district's  distance  delivery  is  paper-and-                                                               
pencil packets  and knows that doesn't  work. It is not  the best                                                               
way to engage  kids. The district is trying  to incorporate other                                                               
offline technologies and platforms.  The district's youth leaders                                                               
in student government represent their  schools and let the school                                                               
district know  what it  can do  to make  things better  for them.                                                               
Most of that has centered on hands-on projects.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MS. BOYD answered  that YKSD does have an exit  poll planned. The                                                               
district  also has  satisfaction polls  to continuously  find out                                                               
what  can be  done to  improve  services. The  district just  put                                                               
another poll  out last week and  has about 500 responses  so far.                                                               
She tries to get 75 percent  feedback. Two polls are going on now                                                               
to get a better idea of  when students are leaving and where they                                                               
are going and  what to do to improve services.  The district gets                                                               
very enlightening information.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
DR. BISHOP  said the ASD  had had a system  to look at  the 4,000                                                               
fewer  students  to  see  where   they  are;  230  students  were                                                               
confirmed  dropouts, 149  had no  plan,  81 received  a GED.  The                                                               
district has  684 students it has  not been able to  contact. The                                                               
district continues to do outreach  with local partners. The other                                                               
students  did  go to  different  places.  The ASD  programs  were                                                               
designed with feedback  from last year. The first  thing was that                                                               
parents were unhappy that teachers  were able to choose their own                                                               
platforms for online learning. The  ASD had allowed innovators to                                                               
innovate, so it worked with  unions to select one platform, which                                                               
is Canvas.  Now ASD  has set  units that can  be used  across the                                                               
state.  DEED makes  it  public  to anyone.  Number  two was  that                                                               
keeping the same school day did  not work out. ASD moved the high                                                               
school start back  by 30 minutes, so the first  lesson on Zoom is                                                               
at 8. Those two items came  from parent feedback after the spring                                                               
semester. The ASD had great  success last year with summer school                                                               
to  make  sure they  matriculated  and  graduated. The  districts                                                               
heard from students that they  needed the ability for teachers to                                                               
text  them. That  could be  dangerous  and so  is discouraged  by                                                               
school district  policy. The  district worked to  come up  with a                                                               
system that  is safe and that  can be searched and  keeps record.                                                               
This  lets  students  use  smart phones  and  teachers  have  the                                                               
freedom  to  communicate  with   individual  devices,  but  those                                                               
records are kept and can be  accessed. The ASD is planning summer                                                               
school based  on parent  feedback and  the need  for face-to-face                                                               
instruction  as  well  an  asynchronous   ability  to  enroll  in                                                               
classes.  ASD's new  programs are  based on  what it  learns from                                                               
feedback.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
9:42:00 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR HUGHES pointed  out that Anchorage is  the largest school                                                               
district. Roughly $180 million of  COVID funds was distributed to                                                               
school districts  across the  state. She asked  how much  did ASD                                                               
receive and how did it spend  it. She asked what cost savings did                                                               
the district have  from such things as turning down  the heat and                                                               
turning  off  the lights  and  renegotiating  bus contracts  when                                                               
schools were closed.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR HOLLAND  said that  works for the  format as  the committee                                                               
will  switch  to  funding issues.  He  called  on  Superintendent                                                               
Bishop.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BISHOP  replied   that  in  the  initial   CARES  Act  funds                                                               
distributed last spring, the ASD  received about $12 million. The                                                               
funds expended were  board approved. That included  3.5 on health                                                               
teachers, $4.7 million on information  technology and devices for                                                               
connectivity, $1.5  million for course development,  $700,000 for                                                               
summer  school,   and  $300,000  for  PPE   (personal  protective                                                               
equipment).  In conjunction  with the  $12 million,  the district                                                               
used almost  $9 million  from its  fund balance  to add  to those                                                               
PPE,  $200,000   for  equitable  outcomes  working   with  summer                                                               
schools, $600,000  for charter schools, and  $400,000 for private                                                               
schools.  Those  were  ESSER  (Elementary  and  Secondary  School                                                               
Emergency Relief Fund) I funds from the first CARES Act.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
DR. BISHIP  said the  district hasn't received  ESSER II  yet. It                                                               
will be moved  into next year. The district has  built 80 percent                                                               
of these funds  into its budget next year and  summer school this                                                               
year to  double down on  what it needs to  do for kids.  There is                                                               
quite    a   learning    gap.   Kids    have   experienced    the                                                               
disproportionality  of  outcomes  and  suffered  in  the  social-                                                               
emotional  area  from depression  to  suicide.  It is  more  than                                                               
academics.  The district  is implementing  those  funds not  only                                                               
into starting  the school  year well but  having a  robust summer                                                               
school to work on credit recovery and skill building.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
DR. BISHOP said  that ASD immediately implemented  a hiring delay                                                               
once it knew  it was shutting down. It took  a two-tier look into                                                               
every  personnel hiring  from aides  to  teachers to  executives,                                                               
knowing that student enrollment  was being affected. The district                                                               
had  great savings  in substitute  use. All  sort of  things shut                                                               
down last spring so there  were immense savings with substitutes.                                                               
Now that  the ASD is  back in school  that account is  being used                                                               
this  year.  The  district  did  renegotiate  the  transportation                                                               
contract  because  of   reduced  utilization.  Regarding  utility                                                               
costs,  53 schools  were operating  with  programs. The  district                                                               
partnered with Boys  and Girls Club and with  their own programs,                                                               
and  so did  have  some  teachers and  students  in schools.  The                                                               
district increased  the air  exchange with  HVACS four  times, so                                                               
the air exchange units are turned  on four times as much. Some of                                                               
the  mitigation took  energy. The  district  had to  dig down  to                                                               
figure out why there were not  utility savings because that was a                                                               
district expectation.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
DR. BISHOP  emphasized that the  district had a big  success with                                                               
last  year's summer  school and  this  year there  is a  planning                                                               
committee with  project management  to design this  year's summer                                                               
school to make sure it meets the needs of district families.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR HOLLAND  asked Superintendent Boyd about  CARES Act funding                                                               
for his district and whether there were any cost savings.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
9:48:15 AM                                                                                                                    
MS. BOYD  answered this her  district received $196,000  in ESSER                                                               
funding  and $148,000  other funding.  The district  will receive                                                               
$737,000 in ESSER  II funding and will allocate that  at the next                                                               
board  meeting. The  district spent  a  large majority  of it  on                                                               
planning, professional development,  internet access for schools,                                                               
and PPE  gear for students.  The district has spent  $150,000 and                                                               
$35,000  is left  for  this  year. That  will  be  looked at  for                                                               
ongoing  sanitation when  schools  are closed.  The biggest  cost                                                               
savings have been  no travel. Some savings  were from substitutes                                                               
and   support  staff   due  to   ongoing   quarantining  in   the                                                               
communities.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BOLEN said  that Bering  Strait received  about $550,000  in                                                               
ESSER funds.  The district  spent most of  it trying  to increase                                                               
possibilities   for  student   learning.   The  district   bought                                                               
Chromebooks  for   students  and  computers  for   teachers.  The                                                               
district  bought PPE,  hand sanitizer,  plastic  dividers, and  a                                                               
machine to  make its  own cleaning solutions.  Since the  cost of                                                               
shipping  hazardous materials  to the  bush is  so high,  it made                                                               
sense to buy the chemicals and  create it onsite. There were cost                                                               
savings  with travel,  although the  district is  starting to  be                                                               
able to  get maintenance and  itinerant teachers to  schools. The                                                               
district has spent about $420,000  of its ESSER funds on teaching                                                               
supplies  and  equipment. The  district  also  spent $300,000  on                                                               
maintenance,  supplies  and  equipment,   and  about  $65,000  on                                                               
alternate ways  to provide  daily meals  even when  students were                                                               
not in school. Those numbers are  more than what the district was                                                               
reimbursed, so  it did  shift funding  around. The  district also                                                               
incurred  costs for  professional development  for teachers.  The                                                               
district is  trying to do  things with  this money that  are long                                                               
lasting  for the  district. That  is  the plan  for the  upcoming                                                               
funds, to  make investments  in HVAC and  systems like  that. The                                                               
schools are older and that is important for their safety.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  HOLLAND   called  on   Superintendent  Johnson   with  the                                                               
Dillingham School District.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR.  JOHNSON  shared that  his  district  received $138,000  from                                                               
ESSER I and  GEER I (Governor's Emergency  Education Relief). The                                                               
district used that for connectivity  and acquiring devices needed                                                               
for the instructional year and  to ensure that homebased students                                                               
and  staff had  internet  in their  homes.  The district  expects                                                               
$430,000 in  the second round  of funding. The district  is going                                                               
to  build  a robust  summer  school.  It  will not  just  include                                                               
remedial  education   but  also  enrichment,  so   a  two-pronged                                                               
approach  for the  funding. The  district is  looking at  a large                                                               
literacy  push as  a result  of the  funding. Since  most of  the                                                               
district's students identify as  indigenous or Alaska Native, the                                                               
district's push  for literacy  needs to  be strong.  The district                                                               
has  partnered  with its  local  tribal  council and  the  Alaska                                                               
Community Foundation.  The district has  spent around $1  to $1.2                                                               
million  on  digital  technology  to  ensure  all  students  have                                                               
internet in their  homes that the district pays for.  Equity is a                                                               
large issue  in rural Alaska.  The district has not  incurred any                                                               
savings  as  a result  of  COVID.  With  these other  grants  and                                                               
partnerships, the district has expended  an exceptional amount of                                                               
money.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  HOLLAND called  on Superintendent  O'Brien with  the Kenai                                                               
Peninsula Borough School District.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
9:55:43 AM                                                                                                                    
MR. O'BRIEN  said that  some of the  cost increases  were because                                                               
teachers needed a  lot more professional development  to make the                                                               
shift  to remote  learning  at a  moment's  notice. The  district                                                               
spent  a  lot  of  time   and  resources  with  its  professional                                                               
development team  and bought  programs and  software. That  was a                                                               
significant cost increase. There have  not been many cost savings                                                               
this  year other  than travel.  Only  online remote  professional                                                               
development  has  been  approved,   and  the  district  has  been                                                               
providing   in-house  professional   development   in  a   remote                                                               
environment. Last  year for the  fourth quarter the  district did                                                               
renegotiate  bus  contract  for   reduced  utilization,  but  the                                                               
district rolled out  a huge program through  the school nutrition                                                               
services department  to continue to feed  students throughout the                                                               
district and had  several dropout points, and so  used bus routes                                                               
for food delivery and delivery  of computers and laptops and MyFi                                                               
wireless devices. All spring sports  were cancelled so there some                                                               
athletic  savings such  as with  coaching stipends.  The district                                                               
didn't need substitutes when instruction  was 100 percent remote.                                                               
Overall,  there  were  not  huge  savings  and  there  were  some                                                               
increases because of COVID.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. O'BRIEN said that the  KPBSD received $2,295,953 in the first                                                               
round of CARES funding. The  district used funds for professional                                                               
development,  PPE  supplies,  and  Zoom  licenses  and  bolstered                                                               
efforts to  help families with connectivity.  The district rolled                                                               
out   a  large   scale   programs  of   MyFis  for   economically                                                               
disadvantaged families. To  address social-emotional learning and                                                               
the  mental   health  needs  of  students,   the  district  hired                                                               
elementary  counselors,  which  it  never  has  had  before.  The                                                               
district saw  firsthand the impact  of needing  counselors during                                                               
the pandemic. The district is  having a difficult time recruiting                                                               
and retaining school nurses. That  was a nonstarter in the middle                                                               
of a  global pandemic. The  district needed an adequate  cadre of                                                               
school nurses,  so the  district increased nursing  pay by  $5 an                                                               
hour. That  is still far behind  what nurses can make  in private                                                               
doctor offices or in hospitals.  There has been an increased need                                                               
for substitutes this year. The  district used some CARES money to                                                               
increase  pay   for  substitutes.  The  district   has  purchased                                                               
electrostatic  sprayers and  lots  of  disinfectant and  upgraded                                                               
school  HVAC  systems.  Schools  have  something  called  bipolar                                                               
ionization, which  helps create  a safer internal  environment in                                                               
schools. It supposedly works with  killing coronavirus after half                                                               
an  hour.  The  nurses  have  bought  many  supplies  to  monitor                                                               
temperatures  and  scanners  to  have  touchless  points.  School                                                               
nutrition services  spent CARES money on  hygienic packaging. The                                                               
home  school did  digital advertising  to compete  with statewide                                                               
programs. Wireless access points  in schools have been bolstered.                                                               
The  district  purchased  more computers  for  students  learning                                                               
remotely.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  HOLLAND  observed  that  some  of  the  answers  are  wide                                                               
ranging. He  asked that with  districts have seen a  reduction in                                                               
enrollment, whether superintendents expect  students to come back                                                               
next year. He  noted that Dr. Bishop had said  that Anchorage was                                                               
down about 5,000 students.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
10:03:43 AM                                                                                                                   
DR. BISHOP clarified  that Anchorage is down  4,500 students from                                                               
last  year. The  district  expects  75 percent  to  come back  to                                                               
Anchorage  as it  opens and  ASD is  following up  in its  budget                                                               
process  with a  survey with  all parents  and families  who have                                                               
left to see if  they are coming back. The ASD  will have a budget                                                               
adjustment before  the New Year. The  budget is built on  that 75                                                               
percent, but the  district is following that up with  a survey in                                                               
April.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR HOLLAND noted that Superintendent  Boyd had said enrollment                                                               
was up because of COVID.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS. BOYD  answered that  enrollment went  up 2,400  students. The                                                               
district expects  a 35 percent  decline, maybe even more,  as the                                                               
district expects  many students  to go  back to  their respective                                                               
schools.  The  district  is surveying  parents  now  about  their                                                               
plans. About  33 percent are  still uncertain and 45  percent who                                                               
answered  said they  are  returning, but  the  district is  being                                                               
cautious and  mindful that many  families will return  as schools                                                               
reopen.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  HOLLAND commented  that  Dr. Bolen  had  said that  Bering                                                               
Strait enrollment was flat.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
DR. BOLEN replied  that enrollment has stayed flat.  There was an                                                               
increase of about 13 students  who returned from communities that                                                               
were not doing face-to-face instruction  and the district doesn't                                                               
anticipate that they will stay.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. JOHNSON  said that Dillingham  doesn't know but not  for lack                                                               
of  communication.  The  region  was  severely  impacted  by  the                                                               
Spanish flu. That trauma is  still relevant and real. Until there                                                               
is clarity with  COVID he does not know if  the district will get                                                               
these  families back.  The district  maintains communication  and                                                               
wants to honor how they feel.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. O'BRIEN  said the  KPBSD had  an interesting  phenomenon. Its                                                               
home  school program,  Connections Home  School, normally  has an                                                               
enrollment of  750 students.  There was  a dramatic  increase. At                                                               
its peak, before the district  went back to 100 percent in-person                                                               
learning,  the enrollment  was almost  1,800. Unfortunately  some                                                               
families  chose  a statewide  home  school  program. That  was  a                                                               
double hit in revenue. If a  student is in KPBSD home school, the                                                               
district  gets at  least  90  percent of  the  revenue for  those                                                               
students. If  they choose  a statewide program,  the funds  go to                                                               
districts  where  the  families  don't live.  Trying  to  project                                                               
enrollment for  FY 22 was more  difficult for him than  any other                                                               
year. The  district took a  conservative approach because  it did                                                               
not  want  to  overextend  the   number  of  contracts  to  offer                                                               
teachers. The  district is still  considering that  many families                                                               
will be  in its home school  program. In April the  district will                                                               
do a  second recast of  its enrollment.  It will ask  families to                                                               
enroll in  April for the fall  so the district can  make staffing                                                               
adjustments in the spring. The  district hopes that with vaccines                                                               
and the  state getting  COVID in control,  more families  will be                                                               
comfortable with bringing students to  school in the fall for in-                                                               
person learning.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
10:10:13 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR MICCICHE  noted that Anchorage  and Dillingham  are above                                                               
the 10  percent fund  balance. When money  for other  programs is                                                               
distributed  most districts  will  be above  the  10 percent.  He                                                               
asked how  critical it is for  the legislature to act  to allow a                                                               
fund balance  to be above 10  percent for the next  few years for                                                               
the temporary, excess funding.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. O'BRIEN  answered that  27 school  districts carried  over 10                                                               
percent  this past  year  and Kenai  was not  one  of those.  The                                                               
borough  reduced   its  local   contribution  by   $2.7  million.                                                               
Authorizing those school districts that  need it to carryover the                                                               
funding will be an important funding mechanism for them.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. JOHNSON said that Dillingham  had about $75,000 to carryover.                                                               
It  is not  an  astronomical  amount, but  it  is invaluable  and                                                               
prudent  to  have legislation  that  allows  this. With  so  many                                                               
unknowns  and  the  needs  of   students,  it  is  impossible  to                                                               
prudently  spend  money for  the  unknown.  With flexibility  the                                                               
district  can  do  diagnostic  testing to  find  out  and  target                                                               
student needs.  The district could  be surgical in  its spending.                                                               
With  the  change in  the  school  bond debt  reimbursement,  the                                                               
anticipated increases  in local  contribution have  not occurred.                                                               
The district expects the local  contribution to stay flat because                                                               
of that.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BOLEN  said  it  would  be helpful  to  have  some  type  of                                                               
flexibility  because of  the uncertainty  in  rural Alaska  about                                                               
what will come next. It could  become an issue with other revenue                                                               
streams. The district  wants to use those  before district funds.                                                               
The flexibility would  be vital to school districts  so the funds                                                               
could be available at a future date.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
10:14:21 AM                                                                                                                   
MS.  BOYD said  that she  wanted  to speak  about enrollment  and                                                               
projections  in  uncertain  times.  The  department  has  a  nice                                                               
process  in   place  for  districts   to  send   in  projections.                                                               
Superintendents  meet   on  a   regular  basis  and   talk  about                                                               
projections. It  is so  difficult right now  to identify  what it                                                               
will look  like with so  many unknowns, but districts  have given                                                               
it their best shot. Seven districts  are looking for some type of                                                               
floor  through hold  harmless.  They are  suffering  and will  be                                                               
looking   for  support   from  the   department  and   maybe  the                                                               
legislature. As  far as the  10 percent carryover, she  can speak                                                               
for  many   superintendents  as  the  president   of  the  Alaska                                                               
Superintendents   Association   and   say   that   passing   that                                                               
declaration is  critical so that  districts can be  good stewards                                                               
of the  funding and have  ample time  for planning. This  will be                                                               
the  first time  in  her  district that  it  will  exceed the  10                                                               
percent. Many  superintendents would appreciate extending  the 10                                                               
percent carryover.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
DR. BISHOP said  that with the Anchorage economy  of scale, these                                                               
look like big  numbers. The Anchorage carryover is  a little over                                                               
10  percent,  which is  about  $64  million.  As a  large  school                                                               
district,  there  is a  city  ordinance  that doesn't  allow  the                                                               
district to spend.  Six percent of the district  reserve needs to                                                               
be kept  in savings for its  triple AAA bond ratings.  That is by                                                               
city  ordinance,  so it  is  not  spendable.  That is  about  $26                                                               
million  of  the  $64  million.  There is  $30  million  that  is                                                               
unassigned, which is about five  percent. Anchorage has that much                                                               
money for  its savings account  emergency; $8 million of  the $64                                                               
million is built  into the budget for FY 21  to create a balanced                                                               
budget.  Senators   Begich  and  Holland  as   local  legislators                                                               
understand the  impact of  the city vs.  district policy  and how                                                               
they  work  in  conjunction  to bring  taxpayers  the  best  deal                                                               
possible for  bonds. The  emergency order  is not  just essential                                                               
for the fund  balance. The school district  just completed 11,000                                                               
vaccines for  people 65 and  older. Commissioner Crum as  well as                                                               
the  local hospitals  have donated  those. The  ability to  scale                                                               
that emergency order  has given the ASD the ability  to give back                                                               
to the community.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR HUGHES  observed that all  alluded to some  learning loss                                                               
by some  students who struggled  with remote learning.  She asked                                                               
if they  will be  able to  catch those students  up and  how long                                                               
will it take.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
10:19:28 AM                                                                                                                   
DR. BISHOP  responded that she  appreciated the focus  on student                                                               
learning  and  achievement.  Absolutely  there is  a  gap.  As  a                                                               
certificated  teacher she  sometimes substitutes  at schools.  In                                                               
speaking  to teachers  and looking  at data  for curriculum-based                                                               
measures, pre-K-2  students are significantly behind  in reading.                                                               
The amount  of vocabulary  and learning in  a classroom  of early                                                               
fundamentals has fallen significantly.  This will be generational                                                               
when it  impacts pre-K-2.  Alaska was  already suffering  in this                                                               
area.   All  of   them  have   been  dissatisfied   with  reading                                                               
achievement. Children  learn to  read to read  to learn.  That is                                                               
why she  says that it  is generational.  Going back to  normal is                                                               
not good  enough for Alaska  and its young readers.  She supports                                                               
the reading  bill and getting  kids in  as soon as  possible. The                                                               
ASD used $1.2  million in its reserves of the  $8 million just to                                                               
boost pre-K  learning because of  the learning loss  last spring.                                                               
ASD   plans  on   building   capacity   for  learners.   Evidence                                                               
demonstrates  that  it  pays  off to  get  learners  in  earlier.                                                               
Nationally,  some  predict  a  15  percent  decrease  in  reading                                                               
outcomes across  the board. Compared  to their peers  in previous                                                               
generations, there will be 15  percent impact nationwide. Fifteen                                                               
million young  people have  been out of  school, not  learning to                                                               
read. It is a crisis. The  district intends to build capacity. It                                                               
has  afterschool reading  programs  now and  will continue  those                                                               
through the summer for many years, for as long as it takes.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS.  BOYD  shared that  it  has  been  a  big challenge  for  her                                                               
district. The  district monitors students at  least quarterly and                                                               
progress  monitors.  The  district   saw  dramatic  decreases  in                                                               
assessment  results in  rural schools  from March  and from  when                                                               
students were  back in school in  September, but not in  the home                                                               
school   families.   They    were   already   receiving   virtual                                                               
instruction. She  is encouraged by  what she is seeing  now. They                                                               
are catching up,  but there was a significant  drop. The district                                                               
is  planning a  robust  summer school  program.  The district  is                                                               
putting  in infrastructure  in villages.  When GCI  and DRS  were                                                               
generously donating  internet and MyFi,  it did not  help because                                                               
there was  no connectivity equipment  in place. The  district and                                                               
school  board have  used some  of  the funding  to building  that                                                               
equity  in learning  so  students can  have  university and  Zoom                                                               
courses and have access to all  those resources they have not had                                                               
before. Some  of the  things the  district is  doing now  to help                                                               
students  catch up  are  sending literacy  buckets  on a  regular                                                               
basis to  all families and  hiring reading and  math specialists.                                                               
The district  has a team  of administrators and teachers  to look                                                               
at  targeted  areas  where  students  may  have  challenges.  The                                                               
district  has  a  systemic  reading program  that  will  only  be                                                               
strengthened  if  the legislature  passes  the  reading bill.  If                                                               
students go  below a  certain level, parents  are notified  and a                                                               
plan is developed for a  tiered learning program. The district is                                                               
trying to  partner with  Head Start  so it can  take part  in the                                                               
district's  professional development.  The  district has  offered                                                               
free rent  to Head Start  to encourage  little kids to  get ready                                                               
for school.  The district is seeing  what it can do  to help Head                                                               
Start and the  Parents as Teachers program. The  district has had                                                               
90-95  percent teacher  retention  this year,  which is  unusual.                                                               
That has  been a priority  of the board and  administrators. Some                                                               
administrators  and   teachers  are  tutoring   one-on-one  after                                                               
school.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
10:27:44 AM                                                                                                                   
DR. BOLEN shared that his district  is also trying to look at MAP                                                               
(Measures of  Academic Progress) data and  other checkpoints. The                                                               
district has  struggled getting additional data.  If students are                                                               
not coming  into the school  as much,  it is more  difficult. The                                                               
district curriculum  team created lessons to  specific standards.                                                               
All  teachers  can  access  that   and  use  that  for  learning,                                                               
especially   for  distance   learning.  The   district  purchased                                                               
FastForWord,  which slows  down  speech and  allows students  who                                                               
have  difficulty with  hearing  and speech  to  more engaged  and                                                               
learn  sounds and  phonetics.  The district  is  using DEED  21st                                                               
Century  Community  Learning  Centers grants  for  K-5  ingenuity                                                               
classes.  These  are  supplemental  to  the  instruction  in  the                                                               
classroom,  but it  is tied  to MAP  scores. That  is helpful  to                                                               
catch students up  who may have deficits. The  district does have                                                               
afterschool tutoring for student  with low-risk designations. The                                                               
district  plans to  have a  summer school,  but the  challenge is                                                               
keeping teachers  in rural communities once  their contract ends.                                                               
That limits  the numbers  the school district  can address.   The                                                               
Alaska Staff Development  Network has done a  great job providing                                                               
online  professional  development.   The  district  has  provided                                                               
stipends  for curriculum  instruction  facilitators for  optional                                                               
Saturday  professional development.  The  district  is trying  to                                                               
address the gaps in multiple ways.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
10:31:13 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR HOLLAND  passed on  a suggestion  from Senator  Begich that                                                               
any  superintendents  who  are listening  in  can  provide  their                                                               
thoughts in writing to the committee.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. JOHNSON  said he wishes that  he could be there  in person to                                                               
answer this  specific question  so that  the committee  could see                                                               
his  fire  and  passion.  The   district  will  absolutely  catch                                                               
students up. That  is why every superintendent is  there today to                                                               
speak  to  the  committee.  In Dillingham  the  district  has  an                                                               
extensive network  of afterschool tutors who  can work one-on-one                                                               
with students. The district runs  multiple risk assessments daily                                                               
so  that staff  can reach  out to  students falling  slightly off                                                               
pace. The district  makes immediate contact with  any student who                                                               
is  falling below  a C  and the  student's parents.  The district                                                               
does not  wait weeks or months.  It is that day.  The district is                                                               
able to  do that in  a small community.  The district did  find a                                                               
group of  seniors struggling to  get English credits and  found a                                                               
teacher to teach an additional  class after school so that cohort                                                               
will graduate  on time.  To ensure  kids are on  track will  be a                                                               
three-to-five-year  process  in  Dillingham.  The  district  will                                                               
focus on  a strong K-2 literacy  program. A big portion  of kids'                                                               
development  at  that  age  is   socialization.  That  cannot  be                                                               
replicated online or in a  virtual format. The districts wants to                                                               
bring kids  in the summer  or after school,  if it can,  for that                                                               
play-based learning. The  district has a robust  RTI (Response to                                                               
Intervention) program.  The district  has already  hired multiple                                                               
interventionists  to work  with the  students. The  district will                                                               
implement  the  same  strategic  approach  to  support  students'                                                               
social-emotional needs.  The district  has counselors  onsite who                                                               
are  partially funded  with a  grant.  The district  has lots  of                                                               
tools and supports in place to  elevate kids who are facing these                                                               
difficult situations.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
10:34:27 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. O'BRIEN  commented that that is  the question of the  day. He                                                               
hopes that educators  can catch students up in  three years. That                                                               
is an ambitious goal. Dr. Bishop  was spot on when she alluded to                                                               
this being a  generational issue that the nation  will be facing.                                                               
A lot can be learned from  studies from Hurricane Katrina and the                                                               
impact on those  students in New Orleans. Some  students were out                                                               
of school  for over a  year. The  global pandemic is  a Hurricane                                                               
Katrina on  a national and  global scale.  Kenai will be  using a                                                               
lot   of   the   strategies  his   colleagues   have   described.                                                               
Superintendents meet regularly  and are working hard  as a united                                                               
group on this  question of how they can  address the generational                                                               
impacts this  will have  on students.  Kenai will  leverage CARES                                                               
Act funding  of about  $9 million  over the  next year.  Kenai is                                                               
pleased to  be able to  use that over two  years. Its plan  is to                                                               
spend the  majority of  the funding  addressing this  question of                                                               
how  to catch  students up  and provide  them with  opportunities                                                               
that have  been lost  during this  global pandemic.  The district                                                               
will  hire additional  interventionists to  address literacy  and                                                               
math  skills. Those  are  the  building blocks  that  need to  be                                                               
immediately  address that.  He applauds  Superintendent Johnson's                                                               
focus on  the social-emotional. No  one can forget that  there is                                                               
not only instructional impacts that  have occurred because of the                                                               
global pandemic. Many  families are in crisis as a  result of the                                                               
pandemic.  Students are  experiencing  that trauma  as well.  The                                                               
district will continue funding  elementary counselors and perhaps                                                               
provide more  mental health  support for  middle school  and high                                                               
school students. The district will  offer extensive summer school                                                               
and   afterschool  programming.   For  Kenai   transportation  is                                                               
critical  for families  who cannot  get their  students to  these                                                               
programs. The  district will provide students  the opportunity to                                                               
get there  and return home and  also be fed and  meet their basic                                                               
physiological needs while they are learning.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  HOLLAND   thanked  the  five  superintendents   for  their                                                               
detailed and candid answers. The committee learned a lot today.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
10:38:53 AM                                                                                                                   
There being  no further  business to  come before  the committee,                                                               
Chair Holland  adjourned the Senate Education  Standing Committee                                                               
at 10:38 a.m.                                                                                                                   

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