Citizen Portal
Sign In

Lifetime Citizen Portal Access — AI Briefings, Alerts & Unlimited Follows

North Marion highlights gains and gaps in SIA report; district to expand language supports and collaborative teams

North Marion School District 15 Board · September 16, 2025

Loading...

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

District administrators told the board that SIA-funded work has produced gains (third-grade ELA from 17% to 27%, eighth-grade math from 8% to 23%) but that English learners lag; leaders described Spanish-speaking parent advisory teams, expanded coaching, and teacher collaborative teams to sustain growth.

At the Sept. meeting, district staff delivered the annual Student Investment Account (SIA) integrated-plan report, describing how braided funding streams support high school success, well-rounded education and student engagement. Des, a district administrator presenting the report, said staff had set longitudinal growth targets and are tracking progress with state and local metrics.

Des summarized recent gains: third-grade English language arts proficiency rose from 17% to 27% year over year and grade-8 math proficiency moved from 8% to 23%, she said. Des also noted attendance has improved from about 62% to 66.5% for one monitored subgroup but emphasized persistent gaps for English learners and the need for systemwide language supports.

District actions and strategies: the SIA report highlighted efforts to expand family engagement through YouthTruth surveys and to develop Spanish-speaking parent advisory teams at each building; staff said principals are implementing collaborative-team protocols during Wednesday early-release time and piloting targeted interventions (PDSA/change ideas) to drive measurable growth.

Principals from the primary, intermediate and middle schools described classroom- and building-level practices. The intermediate school detailed SPARK (structured physical activity) scheduling and a focus on team norms; the middle school described embedding ELD instruction in sixth-grade social studies so language learners can access electives. Staff said educator-effectiveness tools and brief post-observation surveys will help align feedback and build a culture that supports instructional improvement.

What’s next: staff will post the full SIA metrics and progress markers online and bring further documentation to future meetings; board members asked for continued updates on subgroup performance and implementation of language-development professional learning.