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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Black
Butte School: Smaller is sometimes better John Sheldahl
won re-election to the board of Black Butte School District last week. His
12-vote victory over challenger Doug Curtis wasn't exactly front-page news,
even in Central Oregon. In fact, the district rarely makes headlines anywhere,
and many residents like it that way.
This preference stems partly
from gratitude that the district continues to exist. By normal odds, it
shouldn't. One of the smallest districts in Oregon, it defies conventional
educational wisdom that the best schooling is provided by systems large
enough to offer a full K-12 curriculum. Black Butte offers K-8.
The bigger-is-better notion
has propelled two major rounds of school consolidation in Oregon. The
most recent, triggered by 1991 legislation, cut the number of districts
in the state from 300 to the current 201.
Black Butte was nearly caught
in the merger net. But it used a combination of charm and political clout
to help push through an exemption that allowed about 20 small districts,
mainly east of the Cascades, to stay independent. Half a dozen Black Butte
students and their teacher, Toni Foster, were in the crowd smiling over
Gov. John Kitzhaber's shoulder in 1995 as he signed the exemption bill
that preserved their district.
Despite its name, Black Butte
School District has nothing to do with Black Butte Ranch, the famed residential
resort just up Highway 20. Black Butte School District covers 194 square
miles, with far more trees than people, in the southwestern corner of
Jefferson County. It serves Camp Sherman and the surrounding community
that stretches along the Metolius River in the shadow of Black Butte,
the mountain.
The district has 224 registered
voters. By contrast, neighboring Sisters School District has about 4,400.
John Sheldahl, 61, came to
Camp Sherman as postmaster in 1988 and was appointed to the school board
soon afterward. As he prepares to embark on his fourth term, he and his
board colleagues face two major problems, one old and one new.
The older, almost perpetual
problem is maintaining enough enrollment to run a good program. The two-room
concrete block school just across the bridge and up the road from the
Camp Sherman Store has only 19 students this year. Seven years ago it
had 37. One reason is that as Camp Sherman area property values keep rising,
it becomes harder for middle-class parents of school-aged children to
buy in.
But Sheldahl is philosophical
about it: "Historically, (enrollment) varies so much. It depends on who
moves into town and who leaves. This last year we were down but it will
come back up."
The second problem facing
the district is that Toni Foster, who personifies the school and has been
its Head Teacher since 1980, is retiring. This year, she is not just the
Head Teacher, she is the school's only teacher.
In fact, Foster has already
officially retired, prompted in part by worries over the future of PERS
(the Public Employees Retirement System.) She is working on an indefinite
contract now, but the board hopes to find a replacement during the coming
year.
All Camp Sherman students
in kindergarten through grade six study at Black Butte School. Those in
grades seven and eight are given the option of staying or going to middle
school in Sisters. All of the high school students go to Sisters. Black
Butte pays the tuition for all of its students who attend Sisters schools
and counts those students as its own for purposes of state support funding.
If schools still depended
primarily on local property taxes as they did before Measure 5 turned
Oregon's fiscal world upside down in 1990, Black Butte would be one of
the wealthiest districts in the state. Its taxable assessed value per
student is about $1.2 million, compared with $780,000 in Sisters, $480,000
in Bend and $290,000 in Redmond.
Because of its property wealth,
the district has a low "permanent" property tax rate of $3.01 per $1,000
of assessed value. The rate in Sisters is $4.09, in Bend $4.76 and in
Redmond $4.09.
This fiscal muscle has kept
property taxes low in the past but doesn't do the district much good in
the new era of statewide equalization. It receives the same $5,000 per
student that other districts receive from the state. But one result of
its local assets, and its tradition of frugality, is a collection of reserve
funds that protect it from a variety of eventualities. This year's general
fund is about $340,000 but the district holds reserves of more than double
that amount.
Black Butte students are blessed
with a rich educational environment. The school stresses parental involvement,
but does not have to twist arms to get it. Volunteers, a number of whom
are retired teachers living in Camp Sherman, are a constant presence.
Parents sign a release at the beginning of the year authorizing Foster
to take their children on field trips whenever and wherever an opportunity
arises, which is often.
Foster runs "a very rigorous
work-sample program in which students have to do 10 work samples a year
and submit three to community assessment teams."
Foster is a big fan of the
Internet, and her school is equipped with ample means of exploiting it.
"There's anything you'd ever
want on there; it's incredible the kinds of things we have access to.
We offer kids high school Spanish I and Spanish II, and my crop of seventh
graders this year, most of them have had two years of Spanish so they're
taking Latin."
The Latin class is new this
year, beamed in from Kentucky. The Spanish classes come from South Carolina.
"People in the district feel
strongly about art, they feel strongly about music, they feel strongly
about foreign languages and they feel strongly about reading," Foster
said.
How do the students do? Quite
well, even though the school doesn't show up on annual state assessment
reports because it rarely has six students taking a test in a given subject
and grade. Black Butte buys its own assessments from a testing company.
An informal gauge of success
is provided every year by the performance of former Black Butte students
at Sisters High School. Foster says they do very well but doesn't want
to give out grade averages for fear of appearing to brag. |
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