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Bedford board advances Ed 306‑related policy changes and keeps appeal level at superintendent
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Summary
Board reviewed a consolidated IK policy aligned to Ed 306, agreed to keep appeal decisions at the superintendent level rather than routing to the board, and discussed embedded half‑credit additions (logic/rhetoric, economics, statistics) that together add about 1.5 credits to graduation requirements.
School staff presented a consolidated policy (IK) that incorporates changes required by Ed 306 and NHSBA recommendations and sought board direction on where to place an appeals process. Lisa Jacques (Dean of Students) explained the policy merges several former policies, rescinds the IMBC procedure and relocates procedures into IK‑R (the procedure document).
Board members debated whether appeals should end at the high‑school principal, escalate to the superintendent or come to the board. One board member said it is problematic if a principal sits on the Academic Review Committee (ARC) and then is also the appeal reviewer; another argued that the superintendent is an appropriate, objective final stop before board review. After discussion, staff and several members said they were comfortable keeping the appeal level at the superintendent in the draft policy to match NHSBA guidance and the district’s current practice.
Jacques and staff also described curriculum and graduation changes under Ed 306. The draft embeds three half‑credit areas — logic and rhetoric, economics, and data analysis/statistics — into existing courses rather than creating new standalone classes. "Kids are going to get, really, 1.5 more credits for doing pretty much what we've asked them to do already," a presenter said, explaining the approach to avoid adding new classes while meeting the state rule. Staff noted the district will add asterisks and explanatory charts so students and families understand the embedded nature of those credits and avoid confusion that two half‑credits must be taken separately.
Other changes in the draft policy included revised language about FAFSA notification (removed as a requirement but retained as notification language), civics exam accommodations for students with IEPs (language reflects statutory wording), and an early‑graduation minimum that the district retained at four credits (NHSBA suggested three; Bedford preserved a 4‑credit minimum). Staff asked for a December second read so that new language is in place for eighth‑grade course selection.
A motion to accept a listed policy (IMBA) was moved and approved by voice vote; the board also approved another second‑read policy (JG) later in the meeting. Staff will return for a December second read on consolidated IK and related procedures before final adoption.
