Students and staff showcase programs at Ralston Public Schools board-appreciation night

Ralston Public Schools Board of Education · February 24, 2026

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
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

Board-appreciation night featured performances and program presentations including the Ralston High Rush Show Choir, middle-school FCS projects, the art department’s student work, the HOPE Squad mental-health peer program and the Inclusive Practices Academy co-teaching showcase.

At its regular meeting the Ralston Public Schools board hosted an annual board-appreciation program featuring student performances, demonstrations and short presentations by district teachers.

Vocal music teacher Susie Carney said the Rush Show Choir is ‘‘about 70% through our competitive season’’ and recently made finals at Wahoo; the choir performed excerpts from a desert-and-water themed set. Middle-school Family and Consumer Sciences teacher Jasmine Blakey described a foods and sewing curriculum that yields student projects such as fabric bookmarks presented to board members. High-school art teachers displayed student-made coasters featuring student artwork and invited students to describe their projects.

Middle-school HOPE Squad sponsors and student members described peer-support activities, including ‘‘stress shredder’’ exercises, spirit weeks and pocket-the-positive message campaigns designed to help students identify trusted peers and reduce stigma. A teacher-sponsor said the group was formed after the school lost students to suicide and emphasized peer listening and early-intervention activities. The Inclusive Practices Academy presenters outlined co-teaching models, universal-design-for-learning strategies and a ‘‘seed packet’’ metaphor for focusing on student strengths in IEP planning.

Why it matters: The program highlighted classroom instruction, extracurricular success and school-based mental-health supports. Board members received district-branded portfolios and thank-you cards; staff said the evening is intended both to thank board members and to put student work and programs in front of district leaders.