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Greeley School Board discusses state adequacy study findings, teacher pay and class-size targets

AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

At a work session the Board of Education of Greeley School District No. 6 reviewed results of a recently published state-funded adequacy study that recommends smaller early-grade class sizes, more tutors and counselors, extended learning time and higher teacher pay; board members discussed implications for local advocacy and funding.

The Board of Education of Greeley School District No. 6 in the county of Weld heard a summary of state-funded adequacy-study findings and discussed local implications during its work session. Director Campos Spitzi said the studies outline recommended staffing and funding changes that would affect classroom sizes, support services and teacher pay.

The studies — described by board members as two state-funded analyses released earlier in 2025 — recommended a K–3 class-size target of 15 students per teacher and a 4–12 target of 25 students per teacher, expanded tutoring and counseling, extended summer…

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