High-priority campuses are ready to welcome teachers, counselors, and media specialists who are passionate about accelerating learning and whose heart lies in helping students succeed no matter what. Those who are interested in making a move to one of these 84 schools to meet the challenge and earn additional compensation of up to $18,000 can take advantage of the open transfer window that is open until April 24.
Working at a high-priority campus has benefits beyond making a difference. Eligible teachers serving at high-priority campuses in the upcoming school year can:
Earn up to 10 additional DTR points on the Teacher Excellence Initiative Scorecard
Earn additional stipends. Current stipend amounts are shown in the chart below:
Principals at HPCs have begun making recommendations to Human Capital Management for the 2024-2025 school year. To be considered, teachers, counselors, and media specialists must first show their interest by applying online using their EAD login at www.dallasisd.org/careersusing the “Current Dallas ISD Employee” link. The district’s open transfer window will close on Wednesday, April 24.
Interested teachers are encouraged to participate in an upcoming job fair to connect with HPC campus principals. Sign up for one of the district wide job fair events by visiting www.dallasisd.org/hcmjobfair.
Helping students find their voice and their passion for cooking are some of the things that motivated Rosilind Coleman, culinary arts teacher at Moisés E. Molina High School, to go into education. Known as Chef Coleman, she didn’t start off on that path, but being raised around a family of educators, in what Coleman calls a “full circle moment,” is what made her take that leap of faith to become a teacher about 10 years ago.
“You don’t look at it when you’re in it until you look back and see how all these things came together to make you who you are,” Coleman said.
While Coleman didn’t initially start off teaching, she said she always had that desire to want to help, to impart knowledge, and to share with others. She has also always had a love of cooking her entire life, and remembers cooking with her grandparents when she was growing up.
She had originally worked in the advertising industry and has a master’s degree in business from Michigan State University. One of her areas of expertise is project management—skills that are necessary to manage and run a restaurant, which Coleman’s students are learning through the school restaurant they manage.
The culinary arts and hospitality program at Molina High School is one of the largest in the district. One of the ways in which the program is unique is that they have a nice state-of-the-art commercial kitchen. Coleman has been growing and trying to evolve it into a program that they’re really proud of, she said.
She says her business experience is something that she can help impart on her students and help them when running their in-house restaurant at school. She teaches them how to market it and manage it, and said that many of her students go on and find opportunities and desires to open their own businesses one day. She describes her line of work as very satisfying.
Students also learn how to operate a restaurant on campus, and even offer dining for staff members at the school at the restaurant, which is open at least twice a week. Among the services provided include outside catering events. Coleman says students learn skills such as counting money, making deposits, how to work a contract, and how to put out an estimate for catering, and looking at your books to see what’s coming in and going out.
For Coleman, it’s important to reward and support your staff—in this case it’s her students—in order to make them feel valued and appreciated for doing all the hard work..
In her class she teaches global food education, such as understanding and planning the menu. The students also have input, and she takes their suggestions into account during the planning process. Among some of the favorite foods that the students have experienced are beignets, which Coleman compares to those that are found at the famous Cafe du Monde in New Orleans. Through food, she helps elevate their taste buds, which Coleman explains are different from adults.
Another fan favorite is the french fries, for which the restaurant has its own special seasoning blend. Students learn how to fry the fries the proper way, resulting in a tasty recipe that no one can resist. Coleman allows the students to taste the food they make.
She recalls a moment during the pandemic when things were challenging, and the school was having cooking classes via Zoom. She said when some of the students began to come back to in-person learning, one of her students told her that being in her class helped him find his passion for food, and he knew that this is what he wanted to do.
“That just made my heart full,” Coleman said. “After that, we helped him get into culinary school at Dallas College, and now, he is working at the Gaylord and running his own kitchen.”
Coleman said that some students are more interested in the business aspect of culinary arts than cooking. She recalled a student that got inspired through her class to pursue a degree in the hospitality industry. She’s now studying hospitality at the University of North Texas and wanted to be a planner and event designer for corporate events. She said helping students find their calling, even if it’s not being a chef, is one of her favorite things about this work.
For over 40 years, Glenda Clark has inspired Dallas ISD students by not only imparting knowledge but also fostering a spirit of creativity and critical thinking as a teacher. Along with Principal Angela West, she created the B12 Committee, a group of 12 dedicated educators determined to spread optimism and appreciation throughout Skyline High School.
Born out of a desire to combat waning morale in the aftermath of COVID-19, the B12 Committee embarked on a mission to create a nurturing and supportive environment within Skyline, said Clark, a teacher of Advanced Journalism Yearbook and Newspaper.
From initiatives like Teacher/Employee of the Month and Random Acts of Kindness to the creation of Skyline’s own version of the State Fair of Texas, the committee has left an indelible mark on the school community.
“The enthusiasm of B12 members has created a ripple effect of positivity throughout our campus,” Clark said.
However, the journey hasn’t been without its challenges. As a self-funded committee, the B12 team often faced budgetary constraints. Yet, through resilience and resourcefulness, they overcame these obstacles, finding creative solutions to ensure the success of their initiatives.
“When we pull our resources, it’s amazing what we can come up with!” Clark said.
Looking ahead, Clark sees the B12 Committee as a model for the future of education.
“In the journey of education, let us remember the importance of fostering a nurturing environment for ourselves, our colleagues, and our students,” she said. “By shining a spotlight on achievements and celebrating the brilliance within our educational community, we inspire one another to reach new heights of excellence.”
Gary Walker, a member of the B12 Committee, shared his perspective on the impact of their work: “As we lean forward into the future of education and truly focus on bridging the gap to student engagement and our teacher’s sense of belonging, we believe that’s where we, as an educational community, will thrive. B12 is not only servicing faculty and staff with awesome events and engagement opportunities but also involving our students so they can understand what being a part of a positive learning community is like.”
Nicholas Brewer, another member of the B12 Committee, reflected on what the committee means to him: “The B12 Committee represents a spirit of teacher appreciation that lasts an entire school year. With so many demands in our profession, B12 uses a variety of kind gestures to represent encouragement for our colleagues.”
Brewer also shared insights into what B12 means to students and staff at Skyline: “A spacious campus with thousands of people at a time such as Skyline High can understandably create an impersonal experience. B12’s acts of service provide gentle reminders that despite the sheer size of our campus, each individual faculty and staff member is worth genuine appreciation.”
On Monday, April 8—a regular work day for Dallas ISD schools and offices—a total solar eclipse will sweep across Texas and be observed in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. In an effort to provide students with a safe opportunity to view the eclipse, The Perot Museum of Nature and Science has provided all Dallas ISD students and campus team members with a free pair of solar viewing glasses.
The solar eclipse glasses were distributed thanks to the efforts of Katie Gagne of the Perot Museum and STEM Environmental Education Center Director Mark Broughton, who also worked together to coordinate astronomers from the Carnegie Institute of Science to visit 40 campuses to teach students about the eclipse and the science behind it. The glasses are critical to prevent retinal harm while viewing the eclipse. The total solar eclipse start and end times will be as follows:
Total Solar Eclipse Start & End Times
Start of Partial Eclipse
12:24 p.m.
Start of Total Solar Eclipse
1:41 p.m.
End of Total Solar Eclipse
1:44 p.m.
End of Partial Eclipse
3:02 p.m.
Here are some required safety guidelines to follow during a total solar eclipse:
View the sun through eclipse glasses or a handheld solar viewer during the partial eclipse phases before and after totality.
Younger students may require a practice round of how to properly wear the glasses before the actual eclipse occurs. It will be important to show them how to observe the eclipse safely, and remind them of the importance of wearing the glasses before and throughout the eclipse. The glasses may be folded to fit smaller faces.
Keeping your skin safe is also important. Even during a partial or annular eclipse, or during the partial phases of a total eclipse, the Sun will still be very bright. If you are watching an entire eclipse, you may be in direct sunlight for hours. Remember to wear sunscreen, a hat, and protective clothing to prevent skin damage.
The spring semester can get busy for school district employees, and with many responsibilities comes stress. But while stress affects almost everyone, it doesn’t have to affect your life. And sometimes, it can be a good thing because it can give us the energy we need to meet challenges. How can you tell if the stress in your life is becoming a problem?
The common symptoms of stress include difficulty sleeping, headaches, neck and back aches, stomach pain, irritability, depression, and mood swings. Some people also may begin to abuse alcohol, illegal drugs, or prescription drugs during periods of extreme stress. You need to get the opinion of a medical professional or counselor if any of these symptoms feel familiar. If you have recently experienced these, you could be under stress.
There are things you can do to help alleviate some of the common causes and symptoms of stress in your daily life. Here are five tips that can help.
Tip number one:
Try to identify the source of your stress and find a practical way to resolve it. If you’re worried that your manager is concerned about your performance, ask them if they have any feedback for you and if there is anything you can do to improve your work. If your to-do list is out of control, you can review it and then block out time to tackle it. Often addressing the source of your stress will minimize the impact it has on your life.
Tip number two:
Accept that some problems and challenges can’t be solved directly. Instead, you may need time to come to terms with them. Some sources of stress—such as caring for an older relative—require us to make an attitude change rather than fix an external problem. Reaching out to a mental health professional will help you gain perspective.
Tip number three:
Stop overscheduling. Feeling constantly stretched is a major stressor. Make a plan for a calm morning and make sleep a priority in the evening. By slowing down, you can tune in to what your body needs and build resilience for the challenges you have to face.
Tip number four:
Take care of yourself. Eating a healthy diet will help you find the energy you need to cope with stress. Exercising regularly can also help keep it under control. This is because exercising for as little as 20 minutes a day can rev up your endorphins, which are natural feel-good chemicals in the brain that help to reduce stress. Practicing mindfulness and relaxation techniques might help you ease the tension in your life. You can find resources on both by searching the Support and Resources section of the assistance programme website.
Tip number five: Make time for family and friends. Research shows that having strong ties to others has a positive effect on a person’s ability to cope with stress.
These five tips are drawn from the knowledge and first-hand experience of our well-being experts who are helping clients round the clock every day.
If you need additional support, Dallas ISD team members can take advantage of the Employee Assistance Program by LifeWorks. The confidential, secure platform has countless resources available online for free, including on-call counselors who are available seven days a week, 24 hours a day. Reach out to LifeWorks at (972) 925-4000, or visit www.dallasisd.org/benefits and click on Benefits Resources to access online EAP information.
Dallas ISD students who don’t have film programs at their schools are getting the opportunity to become filmmakers through a partnership with their school and a program through Pegasus Media Project, a nonprofit arts organization.
The program, Youth Portable Film Program, is led by local filmmaker Christopher Sonny Martinez, a Dallas ISD alum. The program currently serves students at H. Grady Spruce High School, Yvonne A. Ewell Townview Center, and the Victory Meadows Youth Center, which serves students in the Emmett J. Conrad High School feeder pattern. Martinez has been working with the students since last semester in teaching them film language, film history, and how to create their own stories using film.
PMP was founded in 2012 by artist-educator Niloo Jalilvand, who was a teacher at Booker T. Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts, for 21 years. In 2015, she launched the student-led Pegasus Film Festival to inspire and empower young people to pursue their passion for filmmaking.
The Youth Portable Film Program is funded through grants such as the Texas Commission for the Arts and is free to the schools. At Spruce, Martinez has been working with the students in collaboration with Miriam Sharp, their graphic design teacher.
“Working with Pegasus has been a fun journey because the students love taking part behind and in-front of the camera,” Sharp said. “It has taught them about themselves and their peers in an atmosphere where they can be themselves,” she said.
Approximately 12 tenth grade students participate in the program at Spruce.
Tamitha Curiel, from PMP, who is also a filmmaker and a Booker T. Washington alum, says the goal is to give students ideas for the way stories can be told in the visual medium, as they are already manipulating color and their own designs in their graphic design class.
“In any job you could go into, you have the skill to tell the story with the visual,” Curiel said. “They are building on those skills and just taking that to the next level—to a moving image –and giving them tools, because those skills can be utilized in many different areas.”
She says that even if students don’t become professional filmmakers, those skills will be useful, as there are people such as dentists, lawyers, and other professions who are making films and TikTok videos to promote their businesses.
Curiel says that so far, students have interviewed each other, edited their own interviews, as well as filmed b-roll, which is footage that supplements main video footage.
“In the beginning, I don’t think the students really had a good understanding of what the work entailed, but I think they were kind of excited about getting their hands on the equipment,” she said. “One of the students said something about feeling powerful during the editing process.”
The work the students have done to carve out their own stories has also led them to collaborate with other students outside of their class. They recently filmed the Spruce dance team, which performed a piece titled “My Mind.”
Curiel says that future plans include the students working on their own film—but for now they are creating their student profiles through film, highlighting some of the things they like at their school.
All of the classes take place during school hours and Curiel says that PMP wants to continue this collaboration with schools to empower students to tell their stories.
When Heather Houston, an eighth-grade science and astronomy teacher at Jesús Moroles Expressive Arts Vanguard, found out the solar eclipse was going to happen on a Monday, she suggested to her principal that it become a schoolwide event.
One of the things that motivated Houston was remembering how she watched partial eclipses when she was a Dallas ISD student and thought it would be an exciting experience for the students. Houston attended Booker T. Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts and graduated from Sunset High School.
“I’ve been sitting back watching the kids just take charge,” Houston said. “I’ve seen some kids that were really shy step up, and it’s been really neat to watch them turn into little teachers,” she said.
As Houston was looking for materials for her students, she remembered that one of her students wanted to be a writer, so she asked him if he was up for the challenge. Cash C., her student, wrote a book about how to safely watch the solar eclipse. It included simple facts and illustrations, and students created lesson plans around the book and models that they had created.
Houston’s students took their work outside of their classroom and taught the younger grade levels, pre-K through fifth grade, about how to watch the solar eclipse in a safe way.
At Moroles, all grade levels will watch the solar eclipse together, with the exception of the ones whose parents signed the opt-out letters that were sent home with the students.
Going into this, students weren’t sure exactly what to expect and wondered if they would be able to answer all the younger students’ questions or if they would behave– but they did–and the “student” teachers did an excellent job, according to Houston.
“When students are passionate about science, I love it,” Houston said “And if I have a student that changes their mind about science throughout the year and turns out to like it, that makes my year,” she said.
You may have already caught Houston and her students on the local news, as they have recently been featured doing this important work.
Here’s some links to their story that ran in local news stations:
School Librarian Appreciation Day is on April 9, and Dallas ISD is celebrating the highly trained professionals who cultivate a schoolwide culture of literacy, inquiry, and innovation that empowers students to become lifelong learners.
To commemorate the day, Dallas ISD’s Library Media Services Department is highlighting some of the great work librarians are doing in supporting learning in their schools.
Vernetta Lockridge, librarian at John W. Runyon Elementary School
Vernetta Lockridge is known for her collaborative approach to literacy instruction. When a second grade-teacher sought a lesson on Greek mythology, Lockridge accepted the challenge with a smile. Her can-do spirit and dedication have earned her the trust of her teachers, leading to invitations for hour-long “library on the go” lessons in their classroom. From exploring character traits to reinforcing the parts of a story, delving into math graphs, and discovering Greek mythology, Lockridge seamlessly integrates literacy into engaging lessons that support her teachers’ Amplify curriculum.
Nicole Williams, librarian at T. G. Terry Elementary School
Nicole Williams creates an environment that is conducive to active and participatory learning. To support real-world experiences and science content, Williams has a small aquarium with tadpoles which teachers and students visit regularly. The students use the district-purchased online resources to take their learning about amphibians a step further. Williams also provides engaging opportunities for students to use technology in the learning process. She leads the students in producing the virtual announcements for her school once a week.
Carrie Bruce, librarian at E.B. Comstock Middle School
At E.B. Comstock Middle School, students are combining literacy with innovative tech tools for more engaged learning. Carrie Bruce organized a lesson centered around fairy tales and used Strawbees—a STEAM technique that uses connectors and building straws that are placed together to build unique creations– to build representation of the stories. This approach enhances the students’ literacy skills, creativity, critical thinking, and the practice of using technological tools for learning. Puss in Boots built a chair and footstool for the King, Little Red Riding Hood built a closet for the wolf to hide in, and Cinderella built a pumpkin, her pink dress, and a magic wand. Kudos for innovative teaching taking place in the Comstock library.
LaShonda Roberson, librarian at Yvonne A. Ewell Townview Center
To support her Marvin E. Robinson School of Business and Management at Townview students, LaShonda Roberson participates in the student run entrepreneur space. The “library booth” is an opportunity for the library to circulate books, Social Emotional Learning activities, has a creative writing station, promotes the Dallas Public Library, and helps students build their personal home library with free books. The library booth is updated monthly.
For information about school libraries and happenings in the Library & Media Services Department, follow Dallas ISD Library and Media Services on X, formerly known as Twitter, at @DISD_Libraries or visit their website at https://www.dallasisd.org/librarymediaservices.
For 16 years, Armina Wrice has been an important member of Dallas ISD, influencing future generations since relocating from the Philippines in 2008 to pursue her passion in education by becoming a teacher.
In addition to her teaching responsibilities, Wrice participates in other activities and clubs within the district. As a coach of the TMSCA since 2016, she has led Henry W. Longfellow Career Exploration Academy students to consistent success, qualifying in state championships under her guidance.
“I really like to impart knowledge about math and real life,” Wrice said.
Wrice lives by the mantra “The only permanent thing in this world is change,” a philosophy that drives her to constantly seek new ways to engage and inspire her students. Recently, Wrice was honored with the Dallas Retired Teachers Association Award, a recognition that came as a surprise.
“The first time I ever heard of this award was very recently when my principal announced it,” she said. “I saw it as an opportunity to grant my students a new experience.”
Wrice’s inspiration stemmed from a desire to introduce her students to pen tablets, revolutionizing the way they interact with math assignments.
“I wanted them to experience the ease of use and creative possibilities,” she said.
Thanks to the award funds, Wrice was able to purchase a class set of 30 pen tablets, which has increased innovation and creativity in her classroom.
“It’s a dream come true, personally,” she said. “And professionally, it reaffirmed my belief that if there’s anything else I want to pursue for the benefit of the children, there will always be support out there.”
Wrice is thankful for the support of her principal, Michael Tatum, whose encouragement and guidance were essential in her journey to receiving the award. Wrice is so pleased with what she has been able to do with the award, she encourages her fellow educators to apply for grants.
“Anyone else who would like to make some of their dreams come true should consider applying for awards like this,” she said. “The delight in the eyes of a child when they see how we make things more interesting and equitable for them is priceless.”
Assistant Principals are campus leaders who support their principals, teachers, community and other team members to make sure the day-to-day operations are carried out successfully and efficiently.
Dallas ISD will celebrate National Assistant Principals Week April 8-12 by bringing awareness and celebrating these unsung heroes in our schools.
“As the second in command, assistant principals play a crucial role in the success of our schools,” said Nancy A. Bernadino, Associate Superintendent. “In Dallas ISD, our assistant principals work closely with students, teachers, and families to improve academic outcomes, strengthen social-emotional learning, and create a positive climate and culture for all. We are grateful to have leaders committed to excellence and equity for all children.”
Here are a few tips from the National Association of Secondary Principals to thank and celebrate your AP:
Students, team members, and community members can write a thank you note with specific examples on how their AP made an impact.
Read testimonies from students, parents, and teachers during school announcements.
Send them ane-card to let them know they are appreciated.
Art, music, and theater classes (specials) can do a small group project to honor your AP.
Share the activities your school is doing to celebrate your assistant principal via social media.