The Farmington School Board summarized outcomes of a half-day summer retreat on July 17, reporting a self-evaluation of board practices, agreed draft goals for the 2025-26 year and requests for administrative follow-up on enrollment and strategic-vision work.
Why it matters: retreat outcomes shape board priorities for the year and set expectations for superintendent performance goals, school accountability and community engagement.
Chair Christiansen reported the retreat's reflections and said the board treated the meeting as public work. The board identified strengths including timely communications of key information, open public participation, well-understood structures for board work and respectful dialogue in meetings. Board members also identified areas for improvement: board-member readiness (preparing thoroughly for meetings), clearer annual priorities and stronger accountability for administration on outcomes.
The board listed four draft goals to guide annual work: 1) reinforce standards and expectations for board-member readiness, 2) develop clear and consistently revisited board and superintendent goals and priorities, 3) grow engagement with staff, families, community members and students, and 4) deepen understanding of feedback modes and strengthen financial health and strategic direction with measurable indicators of success. The superintendent has provided a draft of his goals and board members said they will finalize goals in August.
Administrators were asked to provide more detailed enrollment data after board members reported that a recent review suggested four out of five students who live in the district attend ISD 192 schools, while the total school-age population in the area has declined and homeschooling and charter enrollment have risen. The board asked administration to gather additional information on those choices to inform efforts to strengthen ISD 192's appeal to resident families.
The retreat also included discussion of aligning the district's governance plan with its management plan and updating the district strategic vision. The board said it will pursue some of that work in the coming year without adding new costs and will return with recommended action steps and progress reporting.