Osseo Area School District 279

ISD 279-Osseo Area Schools is a school system in Hennepin County, Minnesota. ISD 279 provides public education from the primary to secondary levels in the following to parts of Brooklyn Center, Brooklyn Park, Maple Grove, Osseo, Plymouth, Corcoran, Dayton and Rogers. District 279 is the fifth largest district in Minnesota, with a student population of approximately 20,900 in 2019.

Osseo Area Schools (District 279)
Location
Minnesota
United States
District information
TypePublic School District
GradesPre-K - 12
SuperintendentDr. Kim Hiel
Students and staff
StudentsApprox. 21,000
Other information
Websitewww.district279.org

Overview edit

Osseo Area Schools serve all or parts of Brooklyn Center, Brooklyn Park, Corcoran, Crystal, Dayton, Hassan Township, Maple Grove, Osseo, and Plymouth. District 279 has 17 elementary schools (Pre-K-5), four middle schools (6-8), three high schools and an area learning center (9-12), and an online school (K-12).

A comprehensive PreK-12 school district, Osseo prepares students for college, post-secondary vocational training and the job market.

Elementary schools focus on reading and math achievement. Students also receive instruction in writing, research, science, social studies, physical education and the arts. Literacy in technology, media and information retrieval is taught within subject areas. Many schools offer a variety of programs such as preschool programs, Kidstop (School Aged Child Care), all-day kindergarten, multi-age classrooms and team teaching. Title 1 programs provide academic support to improve reading and math skills through an individualized plan for improvement. ELL (English Language Learning) programs provide services to students who need additional support with english learning to be successful in an educational environment.

The district's magnet school program offers value-added curriculum at three elementary schools: Birch Grove Elementary School for the Arts, Weaver Lake Elementary, a Science, Math, and Technology School, and Zanewood Community school, a Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Math school. North View Middle school and Park Center Senior High (grade 10) offer students the International Baccalaureate Middle Years Programme (applicant status). Brooklyn Middle School has a Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Math program for their students.

The middle schools offer middle-level programming designed to let students sample elective courses and advance according to aptitude. Senior highs offer more than 250 basic, advanced, online, and elective courses including calculus, advanced math and science classes. Each school provides three years of French and Spanish; some offer German.

The district has made an effort to increase technology integration in the classroom. Over 85% of the classrooms have mounted projectors as this was determined to be important classroom equipment. Many classrooms have document cameras and classroom amplification systems to enhance learning. In additional, there is wireless internet access at all sites, providing a public network for students who bring their own technology devices for educational use (BYOD). To support integration of technology into instruction, staff development is provided through the C4 Model of Learning, which has received the ISTE (International Society for Technology in Education) Seal of Alignment. In the 2016-2017 school year, all 4th-12th grade students received iPads to integrate technology into the classroom.

Each school provides a wide variety of talented and gifted program services, from enrichment at elementary level to secondary-level advanced classes in English, math, science and social studies.

District 279's highly ranked Special Education program provides services from birth to high school graduation or age 22. Whenever possible, services are provided in regular classroom settings with children of the same age.

Schools edit

Here is a complete list of schools in the Osseo Area School District 279 (from primary level to Secondary level, including magnet schools to educational learning and early childhood centers:

Early Childhood Centers edit

  • Arbor View Early Childhood Center
  • Willow Lane Early Childhood Center

Elementary schools edit

  • Basswood Elementary School
  • Birch Grove Elementary School for the Arts
  • Cedar Island Elementary School (1970)
  • Crest View Elementary School
  • Edinbrook Elementary School
  • Elm Creek Elementary School
  • Fair Oaks Elementary School
  • Fernbrook Elementary School
  • Garden City Elementary School
  • Oak View Elementary School
  • Palmer Lake Elementary School
  • Park Brook Elementary School
  • Rice Lake Elementary School
  • Rush Creek Elementary School
  • Weaver Lake Elementary School: A Science, Math and Technology School
  • Woodland Elementary School
  • Zanewood Community School

Middle schools edit

  • Brooklyn Middle School
  • Maple Grove Middle School
  • North View Middle School
  • Osseo Middle School

Senior high schools edit

Educational Learning Centers edit

  • Osseo Area Learning Center
  • Osseo Education Center
  • Osseo Enrollment Center
  • Adult Basic Education Services at Northwest Family Service Center
  • 279Online K-12 School
  • Educational Service Center

Leadership edit

The Independent School District 279 School Board describes itself as having "the duty of the care, management, and control of the public schools of the school district in accordance with the authority granted them in law."[1] See Board of education for further details on the functions of a school board. The Minneapolis Board of Education has been granted the power to carry out such duties by the State of Minnesota and the Minnesota Legislature.

Current members edit

  • Chair: Kelsey Dawson Walton
  • Vice Chair: Jackie Mosqueda-Jones
  • Treasurer: Tanya Simons
  • Clerk: Heather Douglass
  • Director: Thomas Brooks
  • Director: Tamara Grady[2]

Resignation of Robert Gerhart edit

Robert Gerhart, chairman of the school board, resigned after numerous citizens took screen shots of his public posts and comments on social media featuring racist and bigoted themes, and demanded his removal.[3] The majority of posts and comments by Gerhart had been made months and years prior. They were discovered after Gerhart proposed, in a school board meeting, that the district could engage armed volunteers [4] to patrol district schools. He'd had the idea, Gerhart said, for "years," but hadn't proposed it until then after, the Stoneman Douglas High School shooting, another of many mass school shootings across the country. Gerhart resigned a week and a half later after numerous parents, residents and groups contacted the district with evidence and complaints.[5]

Early Childhood Centers edit

Elementary schools edit

Middle schools edit

Senior high schools edit

Educational Learning Centers edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Policy 203 Operation of the School Board - Bylaws" (PDF). Retrieved November 12, 2016.
  2. ^ "ISD 279 - Osseo Area Schools - Members". district279.org. Retrieved February 2, 2018.
  3. ^ Mahamud, Faiza (March 3, 2018). "Osseo schools chairman resigns amid furor over alleged racist comments". Star Tribune. Retrieved March 9, 2018.
  4. ^ Mahamud, Faiza (February 23, 2018). "Osseo school board chair wants armed volunteers to patrol schools". Star Tribune. Retrieved March 9, 2018.
  5. ^ "Letter from Me to We Racial Healing". February 28, 2018. Retrieved March 9, 2018.

External links edit

External links edit