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Director Cleveland outlines curriculum and program review progress, Read Act training and new course offerings

Roseville Area Schools Board of Education · April 29, 2026

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Summary

In a study-session report April 14 summarized for the board on April 28, Director Cleveland said the district advanced program reviews across visual arts, trades, languages and literacy, completed Read Act training for about 120 paraeducators and 60 teachers, and launched a cybersecurity course to meet new graduation requirements.

Director Cleveland summarized the district’s curriculum and program review work for the board, describing progress across departments and several implementation items tied to state standards.

Cleveland told the board that departments move through four program-review phases—installation, sustainability, program evaluation and program design—and that visual arts, trade and industry, world languages and other teams have advanced through those phases. The district has added or is preparing new courses, including a cybersecurity course in business and computer technology and a personal finance class (“Managing Your Money”) to meet a new state graduation requirement.

On literacy, Cleveland highlighted the district’s focus on Minnesota’s Read Act: about 120 paraprofessionals and 60 teachers completed the required Read Act training this year; the district will offer the training again in the fall for new staff. Secondary teams will begin a second phase emphasizing morphology and cross‑content vocabulary next year. In social sciences, K–6 teams are reviewing inquiry-based curricula aligned to the 2021 standards, and 7–12 teams completed textbook purchases in preparation for full implementation in the 2026–27 school year, Cleveland said.

Cleveland also described program evaluation and alignment work in multilingual learning, dual-language immersion, media specialist equitable budgeting, and a newly required ninth-grade Earth and Space science course listed as a graduation requirement. He closed by noting Operation MetroSearch and other partnerships that support families and students.

The board received the study-session summary and no public vote was required that evening; Cleveland said more detailed materials and follow-ups will come as departments advance through evaluation and design phases.