Tag: Loveland City School District

  • Loveland Schools Covid-19 Dashboard no longer “required”

    Loveland Schools Covid-19 Dashboard no longer “required”

    Loveland, Ohio – At the beginning of each week, the Loveland City School District has been releasing its latest Covid 19 Dashboard.

    The Loveland City School District has made a decision to no longer publish a COVID-19 Dashboard unless the school itself conducts the testing and the results are positive

    The District is citing that The Ohio Department of Health updated the state COVID guidance for school districts on March 10 and that the District is no longer “required to report positive COVID cases to the local health department unless the school itself conducts the testing and the results are positive.”

    “K-12 schools will no longer be required to report positive COVID-19 cases to their local health departments, unless the school tests a student for COVID-19 and the result is positive. In addition, the COVID-19 School Reporting dashboard will be archived.” – Ohio Department of Health

    The Ohio Department of Health updated the state COVID guidance for school districts on March 10. There are several changes, which you can read about by following this link. The Ohio Department of Health has also shifted to weekly COVID-19 data reporting.

    Staying up to date on COVID-19 vaccinations, including getting a booster dose when eligible, is the best form of protection against COVID-19. COVID-19 vaccinations are widely available throughout the state at no cost to Ohioans. Many providers offer walk-in appointments, or appointments can be scheduled using gettheshot.coronavirus.ohio.gov. Ohioans who want to learn more about the safety, efficacy, and side effects of COVID-19 vaccines should talk to their doctor, nurse, or pharmacist, or visit coronavirus.ohio.gov/vaccine.

    Below is the message left on the District website where the COVID-19 Dashboard had previously been published.

     
     
     
     

    Note the correction to the 10/3/ report and that community cases increased from 51 to 62.

     
     
     
  • Commentary by Rob Moore: Making it harder to be a substitute teacher might not do what you think

    Commentary by Rob Moore: Making it harder to be a substitute teacher might not do what you think

    COMMENTARY

    by Rob Moore

    On Monday, Representatives Adam Bird and Don Jones introduced Ohio House Bill 583, legislation to tighten regulations on educator licensing for substitute teachers. The bill increases the educational threshold for substitute teachers from a more broad requirement of a “post-secondary” degree to a more specific “bachelor’s” degree while creating some exceptions to this rule.

    The exceptions the bill puts forth are mainly age-related: allowing people with associate’s degrees and at least 21 years since birth to be a long-term substitute teacher, allowing people who served in the military and who have elapsed 21 years since birth to be a long-term substitute teacher, allowing people with sufficient bachelor’s degree coursework and who have spent 21 years on earth to be a substitute teacher. The bill also allows people who have spent five years as an educational assistant to be a long-term substitute.

    The bill also authorizes the state board of education to create rules for issuing educator licenses for people who do not hold bachelor’s degrees that can be used for a year.

    While the section that allows the state board of education to set rules for temporary licenses could result in a loosening of licensing requirements, overall the bill represents a tightening of licensing requirements for substitute teachers. Rather than just requiring a post-secondary degree, which could include associate’s or other non-bachelor’s degrees, the new bill raises the requirement for substitute teacher licensure to those who hold bachelor’s degrees then carves out specific exceptions for people without bachelor’s degrees.

    Increasing requirements for substitute licensure could have a few different impacts. The central goal is likely to improve quality of education provided by substitute teachers. Presumably, someone with a bachelor’s degree can provide better quality education than someone without one, with obvious exceptions, for example people without bachelor’s degrees who are trained in education compared to people with bachelor’s degrees in other fields. 

    Unfortunately, little evidence exists to confirm to us that degree attainment will lead to better teachers. While there is limited evidence that having a math or science degree may help with math or science teaching, degree attainment overall has not been definitively linked to better outcomes for students. If we can’t find this evidence for teachers, we should be even more dubious about a supposed connection between degree attainment and student outcomes for substitute teachers.

    On top of this, the bill will likely have labor market impacts for educators. Tightening requirements for substitute teachers will decrease the supply of qualified substitute teachers, which will drive up the wage needed to attract them as schools vie for a shrinking pool of substitutes. This effect could be stronger than it would be for teachers since substitutes are often actively considering competing offers from different schools, thus making their options more competitive than teachers.

    On top of this, making it harder to hire substitutes could create perverse incentives for schools. If substitute teachers are more scarce or expensive, it could cause administrators to limit the ability of teachers to take sick days or otherwise take time off.

    While raising the bar for substitute teachers makes intuitive sense, interventions like this need to be based on evidence, and the evidence of the impact of degree attainment on substitute teachers is basically nonexistent. We can hope that if substitute teachers are required to have higher educational attainment than before, that we would at least build in funds to assess the intervention after it is implemented.

  • Loveland High School Wind Ensemble performs Incantation and Dance

    Loveland High School Wind Ensemble performs Incantation and Dance

    Loveland, Ohio – On Thursday, February 24 the Loveland High Wind Ensemble performed Incantation and Dance (John Barnes Chance) during their Mid-Winter Concert.

  • Loveland High School Wind Ensemble performs The Children’s March – “Over the hills and far away” 

    Loveland High School Wind Ensemble performs The Children’s March – “Over the hills and far away” 

    Loveland, Ohio – On Thursday, February 24 the Loveland High Wind Ensemble played The Children’s March – “Over the hills and far away” (Percy Grainger) during their Mid-Winter Concert.

  • Loveland High School Symphonic Band performs Cajun Folk Songs

    Loveland High School Symphonic Band performs Cajun Folk Songs

    Loveland, Ohio – On Thursday, February 24 the Loveland High School Symphonic Band played Cajun Folk Songs (Frank Ticheli) during their Mid-Winter Concert.

  • Loveland Schools Covid-19 Dashboard for March 6, 2022

    Loveland Schools Covid-19 Dashboard for March 6, 2022

    Loveland, Ohio – At the beginning of each week, the Loveland City School District releases its latest Covid 19 Dashboard.

    Note the correction to the 10/3/ report and that community cases increased from 51 to 62.

  • [VIDEO] Meet Dave, Jessie, and Murphy at Loveland’s new Dog Park

    [VIDEO] Meet Dave, Jessie, and Murphy at Loveland’s new Dog Park

    by David Miller

    Loveland Magazine Publisher and Editor David Miller

    Loveland, Ohio – It was a chance encounter meeting Dave McGaughy, Jessie, and Murphy at Kiwanis Park Friday morning as I was heading back to the office from the bank. Instead of turning left into the Farm, I thought, “Oh, I wonder if they are installing the fencing in the new dog park,” I thought if the fence installers were there working it would make for a follow-up to the story I wrote last week announcing the dog play area. (Loveland’s first dog park coming soon to the West Loveland Historic District) I turned right – into Kiwanis Park in the West Loveland Historic District.

    The original story I wrote two weeks ago announcing that Loveland would soon open its first dog park was very popular with readers so I knew they were excited about the park and would be interested in reading about any progress about when it would open. Instead of installers, I encountered Dave, Jessie, and Murphy heading into the now completely fenced-in dog park.

    Dave, it turns out is quite the expert on dog parks and told me all about the local ones, from Miami Township to Mason. He went into detail about what he thinks makes a good one and talked about some in Florida he visits.

    Dave declared the Kiwanis Park dog park the best he’s ever taken “his boys” to and was interested to know how he could volunteer to help maintain it. He has experience volunteering at other dog parks.

    Dave lives just outside of Loveland in Goshen Township and was very pleased that the “best” place to take his dogs was so close to home. Dave is a retired custodian at the Loveland Primary/Elementary Campus.

    Read more about the new dog park: Loveland’s first dog park coming soon to the West Loveland Historic District

  • Latin Jazz at LHS on March 11th

    Latin Jazz at LHS on March 11th

    Loveland, Ohio – On Friday, March 11 the Loveland Band Program is appearing live at Loveland High School for a night of Latin Jazz Music for a dinner concert. Tahona Kitchen + Bar is catering the dinner.

    The LHS Lab Jazz Band, LHS Jazz Orchestra, and the Middle School Stage Band will be performing Latin standards.

    Tickets can be purchased at: Lovelandshowchoirs.seatyourself.biz

    Seating and dinner begin at 6 PM and the concert starts at 7.

    Dinner and Concert is $20

    Concert Only is $10

  • Loveland Schools Covid-19 Dashboard for February 27, 2022

    Loveland Schools Covid-19 Dashboard for February 27, 2022

    Loveland, Ohio – At the beginning of each week, the Loveland City School District releases its latest Covid 19 Dashboard.

    Note the correction to the 10/3/ report and that community cases increased from 51 to 62.