Quantcast
breaking news

Hundreds Of Students Could Be Moved To Ease Overcrowding

By: Brendaliss Gonzalez
Updated: January 24, 2013
watch video
Come next year, there could be fewer kids running around this playground.

Seventy seven fewer to be exact.

That means teachers like Julie Brown will be missing about two students in their classrooms, but that could be a good thing.

"You do kind of notice it as you're grading papers and filing and getting folders ready, every two make a little bit of a difference," said the first grade teacher.

For now this is all a possibility.

It's yet to be decided whether children at schools like Jackson Elementary will have to transfer somewhere else.

It's supposed to be a way to bring some relief to more crowded schools like this one.

"It's like any type of public gathering, the less people that are involved or the less crowding it is, the more that you're able to see individuals," said Roy Sharp, principal at Jackson Elementary.

It's a bitter sweet change for many of the faculty.

"We don't want to lose them, but they understand the big picture and they know that they're going to be going to a great school," said Sharp.

And while the amount of fewer students per classroom wont be much, it will still make a difference to teachers like Brown.

"Even having one fewer kid at the table gives someone else more chances to read and to answer questions," she said.

So in this case, it's a question as to whether or not less is, in fact, more.

Parents will be able to voice some of their concerns and ask questions during a series of public meetings held at the following schools:

January 24: Reagan Elementary located at 5340 Hartford st.

January 29: Dyess Elementary located at 402 Delaware.

January 31: Bassetti Elementary located at 5749 Hwy. 277 South.

The changes will only affect elementary students.

Members of the Abilene Independent School District school board will decide on whether to instill the changes on Feb. 11.

Comments

Readers Feel...

hello
Related Content

Life in Texas towns affected by the Cline Shale oil boom is bound to change in a big way, but people from all over the area met Thursday at McMurry University to create a Cline Shale Consortium. The...

An Abilene woman battling a life-threatening lung disease has waited years for the perfect match of donor lungs, and she made it all the way to the operating table twice just to find the lungs...

Industrial Outfitters, a family-owned business in Abilene, is collecting water and monetary donations to send to tornado victims in Moore, Okla....

A married couple who graduated from Hardin-Simmons in 2009 has opened a food truck. They are haoping "The Smokery," located on the corner of Shelton and North 1 street, will become an Abilene ...

The Institute of Medicine is recommending that schools provide students with an hour of exercise every day, not just for health but for the sake of their grades....

Stephen Doran, a former Massachusetts State representative and math tutor, has been charged with dealing meth....

35-year-old Gabriel Flores was taken to the Taylor County Jail after firing a gun in the direction of his wife three times....

David Olson is no ordinary man. ...

Texas public universities awarded more than 50,000 bachelor's degrees in spring 2013, an increase of more than 5,000 from 2012, according to preliminary data from the Texas Higher Education...

This session, the Texas Association of Business put a focus on legislation related to criminal justice, as it advocated for bills aimed at helping ex-offenders get jobs. Here's a look...

 
Find Articles Here
 
End
      Page 684 of 640
 
Search BigCountryHomepage.com