image description

North Adams Schools Unveil New Website

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story
The school district's new site is colorful and user friendly.

NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The public schools unveiled a new website on Tuesday that's designed to be informative and user friendly.

The older site was limited and difficult to update, so the school district has been researching for a suitable vendor for several years.

"Edlio was the least expensive and seemed to be the most user-friendly and it was our choice," said Superintendent James Montepare at Tuesday's School Committee meeting. The Los Angeles company specializes in customized school websites.

The initial cost was $6,000, he said, but Business Manager Nancy Ziter got it down to $1,500.

"I think it's going to be very beneficial," Montepare said.

Assistant to the Superintendent Ellen Sutherland, who with network administrator Moty Nevo has been trained and populating the site, took the School Committee through its features.

The colorful, photo-filled site has district and School Committee information, pages for each school and certain programs with links to staff and faculty, informational pages for interior departments such as food service and health, along with calendars, employee information such as handbooks and contracts, news, menus and alerts like school closings.

Teachers will also be able to create their own pages to communicate with parents and display student work.

"Parents can follow a certain teacher," Sutherland said. "There are so many options, so we're excited to begin working on that."

The site also has different layers of access to provide security to the site overall.

Sutherland said information from the older site was migrated to the newer one, so they've been working to ensure information is up to date.

"It's a work in progress. I think it's a great product," Sutherland said. "It was just so easy to do. I think teachers are going to really like it."

Vice Chairwoman Healther Boulger was pleased with the final product.

"I'm the one who really pushed this," she said. "It's so important to have up-to-date technology when you're trying to promote your school, your community, your city."

The committee also heard an overview on the school district's visual, performing and arts program from Aldonna Girouard, a Drury High music teacher and fine arts coordinator.

Girouard said the arts curriculum is being integrated into the elementary schools through working with math and English language arts teachers.



"The principals have been really supportive in giving the teachers flexible grouping," she said. The teachers have been adding language and math activities filtered through an arts process to their instruction.

The teachers are being given training to learn some arts protocol, she said, but the efforts will start slow to see where an arts curriculum can fit.

The Drury Performing Arts Center also has a long list of performances planned for the coming year, including an ambitious performance of the "The Music Man" in December.

Aldonna Giraourd gives an update on the district's fine and performing arts activities.

Drama teacher Kathy Caton wanted a production that would involve the whole school community, Giraourd said. "The really cool thing about Kate's vision is she wants to get as many kids as possible."

Already confirmed are some musical football players.

There will also be a number of public musical performances at and outside the school, some with experienced performers and conductors.

"We try to give the kids as many experiences out in the public as possible and we have some guest artists," Giraourd said. Student performers, such as the jazz band, are being encouraged to develop their own repertoires based on analyzing their audiences and venues.

The department is also looking into a several-days intensive choral festival across grades with a guest conductor.

Students are also expanding Drury TV and have taken over some of the work of NBCTV in recording high school events and productions.

Jazz band and theater are now in-school class activities and Giraourd said the department in considering how to do a long-term resident artist project, something that might go over two years.

Mayor Richard Alcombright said he was impressed that what had once been electives and after-school programs were being integrated as curriculum programs.

"Right now, you're shaping careers," he said.

In other business:

The committee heard an update on Colegrove Park School. Paving of the grounds should be done by the end of the week, the roof will be done in November and windows have been ordered. A walk-through for committee members and others is planned for next Friday.

The committee approved raising substitute teacher rates from the current $60 per day and $65 per day after 10 consecutive days in a placement to $75 and $85, respectively. The school district has had trouble attracting substitutes because of higher rates in other school districts. The rates are effective in the next pay period.

Drury High teacher Stephanie Kopala introduced herself as the new president of the teachers' association.


Tags: fine & performing arts,   music,   website,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Clarksburg Applying for Home Rehabilitation Program

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
CLARKSBURG, Mass. — The town is applying for Community Development Block Grant funds for a housing rehabilitation program. 
 
Clarksburg could get $850,000 or more depending on if it partners with another community. 
 
Brett Roberts, a senior planner with Berkshire Regional Planning Commission, presented the options to the Select Board at its last meeting. 
 
"We were looking over our portfolio, and you're a town that we haven't reached out to in quite a while, and I wanted to change that," he said. "You have a pretty competitive score with the state so we wanted to see if you'd be interested in the grant."
 
The grants, funded by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and administered by the state Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities, help small cities and towns undertake projects that benefit low and moderate-income residents. Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll recently announced more than $4 million coming to Berkshire towns for fiscal 2025. 
 
This is slightly different than Home Modification Loan Program presented to the North Adams City Council earlier this month that focuses on accessibility.
 
Roberts said funds would be used to repair homes, bring them up to code, do lead mitigation or update roofs, windows, and septic. Eligible recipients would have income up to 80 percent of the area median income. 
 
View Full Story

More North Adams Stories