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  • Schools Outline Goals

    Boston Globe
    Nov. 15, 2007
    http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/200 7/11/15/schools_outline_goals/

    Schools outline goals
    November 15, 2007
    Needham
    School officials have announced the district's goals for this academic
    year. The 16-page document lists three objectives: advancing
    standards-based learning, developing students' social and emotional
    skills, and promoting active citizenship. The aim is to benchmark
    academic progress and create a school culture that helps students to
    find their voices and become leaders. The schools will also focus on
    community service projects that connect back to curriculum
    requirements, according to the announcement, which is posted on the
    district's website, http://www.needham.k12.ma.us/

    - Laura Colarusso
    WALTHAM

    TEACHER STUDIES IN ISRAEL - A Gann Academy physics teacher was one of
    10 American educators selected to participate in the Schwartz
    International Leading Science Teachers Seminar in Rehovot, Israel,
    last summer. Amy Kumpel spent nine days at the Davidson Institute of
    Science Education, part of the multidisciplinary Weizmann Institute of
    Science. Kumpel's 26 fellow participants were from Israel, Germany,
    the United Kingdom, and Singapore as well as the U nited States. The
    seminar aims to promote cooperation and the exchange of ideas among
    science teachers and give them the chance to learn about cutting-edge
    teaching methods and research in their discipline. - Stephanie V. Siek

    WATERTOWN PROGRAM ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE - To help sort out the Armenian
    genocide controversy that has been widely debated in recent months,
    the World in Watertown, the town's former No Place for Hate Committee,
    the Wayside Youth Coalition, and the Armenian National Committee of
    America will join to host a program for the public on Nov. 28. The
    presentation and discussion will focus on the history of the mass
    killings, in which up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed by Ottoman
    Turks between 1915 and 1923, and its impact around the world, with
    Turkey disputing the death toll and its characterization as
    genocide. A short film featuring survivors will be shown. George
    Aghjayan and Sharistan Melkonian, with the Armenian National
    Committee, as well as professor Henry Theriault, director of the Human
    Rights Center at Worcester State College, will speak. The free program
    will be held in the Watertown High School auditorium from 7 to 9
    p.m. - Christina Pazzanese

    Wellesley
    RACHEL CARSON OBSERVANCE - The Wellesley Natural Resources Commission
    will celebrate the 100th birthday of pioneer conservationist Rachel
    Carson with a ceremony on Saturday. A National Book Award winner and
    contributor to the New Yorker magazine, Carson won acclaim for drawing
    attention to the dangers of DDT and other chemical pesticides in the
    1950s, when the federal government was endorsing their widespread
    use. The commission's celebration will include a short talk and
    documentary film about Carson's life, as well as a discussion of how
    to reduce pesticide use on lawns today. The presentation will take
    place Saturday at 10 a.m. at the Wellesley Free Library. Coffee and
    refreshments will be served. - Lisa Keen

    PLAN TO SETTLE SENIOR CENTER DEBATE - Some people thought a proposal
    concerning a senior center in Wellesley might have become one of
    Special Town Meeting's most contentious issues. One group wanted to
    consider building a new center, others wanted to renovate the
    Wellesley Community Center to improve the space now used by
    seniors. But a last-minute agreement took the issue off the table last
    week and a step closer to resolution. Selectwoman Harriett Warshaw
    announced during Town Meeting that her board and the trustees of a
    bequest to provide $825,000 for a senior center agreed to work on a
    plan to renovate the Community Center to meet the needs of the town's
    elder citizens. If the two boards can agree on a proposal, Warshaw and
    trustee Gail Kingsley said, the selectmen will decline the bequest and
    the trustees will contribute the money toward the renovation. If no
    agreement is reached, the Board of Selectmen will accept the bequest
    and return to Town Meeting next spring for permission to proceed with
    a study for turning the American Legion post on Washington Street into
    a new senior center. The bequest was made by a longtime Wellesley
    resident, Mary Esther Tolles, who died in July 2005 at age 94.
    - Lisa Keen

    WESTON
    EXAMINING FIELD SCHOOL - The School Committee is looking for one
    community member and two parent volunteers to serve on the newly
    formed Field School Facility Committee, charged with making a
    recommendation about whether the grade 4-5 school should be renovated
    or replaced. Chaired by School Committee member Edward Heller, the
    Field panel will review information about town demographics, the
    condition of the school building, its grade configuration, and the
    findings of a recent feasibility study. Its work would begin next
    month, with its final recommendation to be delivered to the School
    Committee during the 2008-'09 school year. Residents can apply for a
    seat on the facility board by sending a letter of interest to Maryanne
    Rogers, chairwoman, Weston School Committee, c/o Weston Public
    Schools, 89 Wellesley St., Weston, MA 02493. The committee prefers
    that applicants send information by regular mail, and that it be
    received by Monday.
    - Stephanie V. Siek

    around the region
    Bellingham
    GREEN SIDEWALKS - Planning Board members last Thursday discussed a
    balance between environmental impact and safety as they considered
    whether Cedar Hill Estates, a proposed cul-de-sac of four
    single-family homes, needs a sidewalk. The town planner, Stacey
    Wetstein, suggested that the subdivision could have a marked
    pedestrian lane on the road, rather than a sidewalk, with the smaller
    paved area allowing more rain to replenish the ground water. "We're
    trying to achieve a measure of green design. You kind of have to
    start thinking about where you need additional pavement, and where you
    don't," Wetstein told Planning Board members. Most agreed that a
    pedestrian lane would be sufficient, especially since the cul-de-sac
    would be expected to have little traffic.
    Board member Glenn Wojcik expressed the most concern, saying that
    young children should have sidewalks on which to ride their bikes. The
    discussion of Cedar Hill Estates is to be resumed on Jan. 10.
    - Alexandra Perloe

    berlin
    SUPERINTENDENT SEARCH - The Berlin-Boylston Regional School Committee
    last week appointed an 18-member panel to oversee the search process
    for a new superintendent. During its meeting Wednesday, the panel
    appointed local educators and School Committee members to the search
    team, to be joined by Jackie Healy, representing Berlin Memorial
    School parents; Grant McGimpsey, representing Boylston Elementary
    School parents; Julia Hucknall, for Tahanto Regional Middle High
    School parents; and Heidi Schwehr of Berlin and Heidi MacDonald of
    Boylston as community representatives. School Committee chairwoman
    Christine Keefe said she expects the search panel to have its first
    meeting in the middle of next month, and the district to have a new
    superintendent starting in July, she said. A retired superintendent,
    Joseph Connelly, is serving as the interim schools chief this year. -
    John Dyer

    Dover
    SUPERINTENDENT SOUGHT - The school committees for Dover, Sherborn, and
    the Dover-Sherborn regional district are recruiting candidates for
    their soon-to-be-vacated position of school superintendent. Perry
    Davis will be retiring in December, and his position will become
    available on July 1, with Robert Couture having been hired to fill the
    gap as the interim superintendent. Applications for the position are
    being accepted through Nov. 28. The search is being conducted through
    a Beverly consulting firm, Future Management Systems.
    - Nadia Salomon

    Lincoln
    POLICE CITE RASH OF BREAK-INS - Police are asking town residents to
    keep their eyes open after a string of home break-ins recently. Late
    last month, an unidentified suspect broke into a home on Morningside
    Lane through an unlocked garage window and got away with jewelry and
    electronics. Police believe it is connected to a string of burglaries
    in the area. Anyone with information is asked to contact police at
    781-259-8113. - John M. Guilfoil

    MARLBOROUGH
    BID TO BLOCK CASINOS - The City Council could vote as soon as its
    meeting Monday to restrict any casino development in Marlborough. "I
    haven't heard any opposition to it at this point from any of the
    councilors," said the council's president, Arthur Vigeant, who
    initiated the measure. "It's basically allowing the city to make a
    choice. It's a little insurance policy for us. It gives us an option
    if someone wants to bring a casino to the city." If the council
    approves the ordinance, a developer with plans for a casino would
    first have to request the ordinance be changed, since it would
    prohibit any uses not explicitly allowed by law already. There is no
    formal casino development proposal, but Marlborough is considered to
    be among the potential locations if Governor Deval Patrick's
    recommendation to allow such gaming is approved by the state
    Legislature. - Lisa Kocian

    MILLIS
    STUDENT-RISK STUDY RESULTS - Seventy percent of Millis High School students
    said they have drunk alcohol and 36 percent said they have used marijuana,
    according to a MetroWest Community Health Care Foundation study presented to
    the School Committee last month. The study, which also looked at bullying,
    eating habits, and tobacco use, is available online at _millis.k12.ma.usw_
    (http://millis.k12.ma.usw/) . - Calvin Hennick

    Northborough
    TRAIL INTERPRETED - The Sudbury Valley Trustees organization has
    unveiled a new interpretative trail in the Crane Swamp, part of the
    2,225-acre Cedar Hill and Sawink Farm Reservation in Northborough and
    surrounding towns. A brochure that guides hikers through the trail and
    identifies plant species and geologic formations may be downloaded
    from the group's website, _sudburyvalleytrustees.org_
    (http://sudburyvalleyt rustees.org/) , or picked up at the Beeman Road
    parking lot and other trailheads. - John Dyer

    Sherborn
    VERIZON DEAL IS A GO - The Board of Selectmen has approved an
    agreement allowing Verizon to provide cable television service to the
    town, competing against Comcast. Verizon already offers telephone and
    Internet service. Verizon spokesman Philip Santoro said residents can
    expect service to be available within a few weeks. The 15-year
    contract calls for the town to receive $131,000 From Verizon to
    support local public, educational, and government programming, with
    $58,000 paid after 90 days, $58,000 paid on the first anniversary, and
    $3,000 paid each of the last five years of the agreement. - Nadia
    Salomon

    Southborough
    IN LINE FOR ATV FROM SETTLEMENT - The Fire Department is applying for
    a Polaris Ranger, a two-man all-terrain vehicle that resembles a dune
    buggy, through a grant from the US Smokeless Tobacco Co. Emergency
    management director Neal Aspesi said the Ranger would help first-aid
    responders gain access to the 17 miles of trails and railroad tracks
    in town that are inaccessible to normal emergency vehicles. The
    tobacco company offers the vehicles to municipalities as part of a
    court settlement agreement, Aspesi said. He said he hopes to hear back
    on the application in late spring. - John Dyer
    (http://www.amazon.com/As-World-Burns-Simple- Things/dp/1583227776)
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