All Dallas ISD staff and their families are invited to learn more about the programs and resources available at the Environmental Education Center, Science Resource Center and Living Materials Center during the center’s open house on Saturday, Oct. 29.
From 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., staff can head out to 1600 Bowers Road in Seagoville to walk the nature trails at Post Oak Preserve, pet animals in the center’s barn and tour the 26,000-square-foot museum that models a forest habitat, a grassland habitat and a freshwater pond habitat. Visitors can also enjoy the nature play area or take a stroll through the garden to check out the developing watermelon tunnel.
“A lot of our students and staff live in Dallas, which is an urban setting, so many of them have never been on a hike in a forest or visited a farm,” STEM Director Mark Broughton said. “This is a chance for them to experience something they’ve never experienced before. I’ve also had teachers visit, and say, ‘I’ve come out here every year for five years, and I never knew this was out here,’ so there is always something new to explore.”
Other highlights of the open house include a fish fry, hay rides, additional walking trails and opportunities to learn about the field investigations students experience when they visit and how to access free science equipment and living specimens.
Broughton is encouraging all staff and their family members to take advantage of the free open house and get to know all of the incredible resources available to educate and inspire the approximately 25,000 students who visit the center each year. Just remember to wear comfortable shoes and bring sunscreen and bug repellent if you are planning on hiking.
The State Fair of Texas is home to fried foods, auto shows, farm exhibitions, and, this year, to the artwork of a Dallas ISD teacher.
Linda Cross, a visual arts teacher at Skyline High School, has been entering ceramic pieces into the State Fair’s Creative Arts competitions for 15-20 years. She has earned several ribbons for her ingenuity and unique artistic vision, but this year brought her a new achievement: “Best of Show.”
Cross entered three pieces in various “teachers and professionals” categories, and two of them earned awards. Her second-place piece, which she named “Trinity,” features three feathers coming up together to look like a flame, while her first-place piece—which also won the “Best of Show” ribbon—includes five individual ceramic boxes with feathers burnt onto them.
The majority of Cross’ art uses an alternative firing technique called raku, a process she discovered while she was earning her master’s of art education. Her studies culminated in a master’s exhibition thesis that featured only alternative firing techniques. Cross said she decided to center her master’s project on eagles because they are “a symbol of guidance and friendship,” and she has been inspired by them ever since.
“Everything that I do is with burning feathers in mind,” Cross said. “My canvas is a ceramic piece, which may be very simple when I make it. You look at it, and there’s nothing to it, but then after I burn the feathers on it, it becomes an elaborate piece of art.”
Cross is calling this State Fair “the highlight of all the years” competing. Once she gets the pieces back from the fair, she will display them first outside of her classroom and then in Skyline’s library. She said she is proud of the work she has done, and she hopes her success will encourage her students and her fellow teachers to enter their own work into the State Fair’s Creative Arts competitions.
“Anybody can enter,” Cross said. “I do ceramics, but they have all different categories, including drawing and painting. I just encourage my students, if they want to enter work, to let me know early, because it’s a process that you have to complete over the summer.”
If you are interested in entering a piece next year, visit the State Fair of Texas website and check the Creative Arts page for more information. In the meantime, do not miss the opportunity to see all the award-winning artwork on display in the Creative Arts Building at the State Fair through Sunday, Oct. 23.
National Dropout Prevention Month is celebrated annually during October, and Dallas ISD is spreading awareness about the six credit recovery and acceleration programs in place across secondary campuses to help all students succeed.
“Dallas ISD is with students every step of the way,” said Marcus Scott, manager of Dallas ISD’s Graduation, Recovery, Attendance/Advocacy and Dropout Intervention (GRA2D) Department. “It doesn’t matter where they are on their journey to obtain their high school diploma. We are taking the negative stigmatization off of on-time graduation and celebrating spring, fall and summer graduations. That speaks volumes because if they don’t make it for this one, they can still make it for the next one.”
All of the district’s credit recovery and acceleration programs are self-paced, as students can access the curriculum anywhere they have an internet connection. They include:
Reconnection Centers: Eachcomprehensive high school has a Reconnection Center, where students who are no more than four credits behind can come for a class period to work on recovering or accelerating credits.
Freshman On-Track Initiative: This program targets second-year ninth grade students and helps put them back on track with their classification and on-time graduation by utilizing the Reconnection Centers for one or two class periods.
Reconnection Plus Program: High school students who are significantly deficient with credit—for example, a student who has been in high school for three years and is still classified as a ninth grader—may qualify for a full day or half day schedule in the Reconnection Center to get the support they need.
Evening Academy: High school students who do not have room in their schedule or who do not want to disrupt their schedule can supplement their learning by coming to the Evening Academy three days a week.
Phoenix 2.0: This accelerated graduation plan allows high school-aged middle school students to progress in their eighth-grade core classes while simultaneously earning industry certifications and high school credits. The goal is to empower these students to graduate from high school in three years.
Grad Lab: While the approval process for this program is ongoing, it will enable students who are not in school for whatever reason, but who still want to earn their high school diploma, to attend night classes from 5-9 p.m. There, they will work on the courses that are required for them to earn their high school diploma, as identified by their counselors.
These programs are making a tangible difference in transforming student lives. Between the Reconnection Centers and the Reconnection Plus Program alone, Scott said they saw more than 6,000 students complete over 16,000 courses last year. Meanwhile the Freshman On-Track Initiative had 700 participants at five high schools with over 1,000 course completions and is expanding districtwide this year.
“We are here for our students, come what may,” Scott said. “We are encouraging staff and families across the district to champion our students, even for one success. Celebrate every step forward, and help us take all negative stigmas off our students. If they need additional support, refer them to their school counselor, and we will take care of the rest.”
Leslie Swann, director of the GRA2D Department, said another one of their goals is to spread awareness about these “second chance” credit recovery and acceleration programs in Dallas ISD.
“We are not asking families or staff to know the intricacies of each program; we just want them to be ambassadors for this work,” Swann said. “The district’s mission is to educate all students for success, and we can all help advance that mission by knowing what’s available.”
To learn more about Dallas ISD’s GRA2D Department and all the programs it has to offer, visit https://www.dallasisd.org/Page/39058. To determine the best program fit for a student you know who needs support, contact their campus counselor.
Dallas ISD teachers go above and beyond to educate all students for success, and the district appreciates their hard work—along with the broader Dallas community. Equitable, a financial services company, recently sponsored the Back to School Activation at Molina High School to honor and thank teachers for their unyielding dedication to students.
The luncheon took place at Molina High School’s cafeteria, as the company is sponsoring teacher-focused appreciation events for schools across the nation and selected Molina as the inaugural recipient in Texas.
“It’s personal because almost 18 years ago I was a teacher here,” Molina High School Principal Jacob Nunez said. “Teachers need to know that they’re supported. I need teachers to know that we care about them, and that’s why we’re here celebrating them today.”
Mark Ramirez, Dallas ISD’s deputy chief of school leadership and former Molina High School principal, attended the event and spoke about his experience as the school’s administrator from 2010 through 2015.
“As I go back and walk in this building and walk through these hallways, I remember that all the training ground for my current position learned it here,” Ramirez said.
The celebration featured a live mariachi, cheerleaders, a catered lunch for all teachers, giveaways, financial planning materials and more. Guest speaker Judge Hector Garza and motivational speaker Will Murphy also attended the event.
“We work day-in and day-out, always thinking about the students and making sure that we provide them everything they need,” said Maritza Abonza, a Spanish teacher at Molina. “It’s a tiring job and for them to take the time and spoil us like this is beautiful. The mariachis represent the culture that is within our walls at Molina.”
International Chefs Day is recognized annually on Oct. 20 to celebrate the highly trained culinary professionals who dedicate themselves to helping others eat well. Dallas ISD is proud to have three chefs and four dietitians in Food & Child Nutrition Services to deliver wholesome meals to students throughout the year.
Chef Betsy Wooldridge, a menu planning supervisor, has spent the past six years doing just that, and she has enjoyed every day of it.
“The best part of my job is seeing the students’ excitement when they get something new on their menu,” Wooldridge said. “I come from a big Italian family in the northeast. Our culture is very food driven, and that inspired me to go into culinary nutrition. I find it really interesting, and when I got to Dallas ISD, I thought, ‘This is right for me.’”
Wooldridge works directly with the menu planning team to come up with new recipes, order food, organize taste testings and monitor data to determine student needs. But the process does not stop with them. Their decisions set off a “chain reaction that affects all these different departments,” Wooldridge said. They partner closely with Food & Child Nutrition Services’ campus-based staff and operations to ensure that students across the district are receiving the best possible meals.
“In large districts like ours, we do everything,” Wooldridge said. “Some districts have food service companies, so they have chefs and recipes that they can pull from, as well as trainings that are already provided. We manage everything here, so having the expertise of trained chefs allows us to make recipes that staff can understand.”
A recent menu planning success was last year’s “brunch for lunch” in honor of National School Breakfast Week. Wooldridge said they served students a cinnamon roll, eggs and turkey sausage and had no idea how it would be received. When the meal promotion rolled out across the district, it was a huge success.
“We actually had a cafeteria supervisor email with a picture of his students, and they were all giving us a thumbs-up,” she said. “They just loved it. It was so cute.”
While some recipes are more popular than others, the feedback Wooldridge’s team receives motivates her to continue refining her skills to pave the way for student success.
“It’s really important to make sure we are feeding the students wholesome meals because, as we know, some of the students in our district only get our breakfast, lunch and after-school meals. We want to make sure that they do not pass up lunch because there is something they do not like.”
Dallas ISD appreciates all the outstanding culinary professionals in Food & Child Nutrition Services. Their hard work and determination is empowering students to be healthy, happy and successful in school each day.
October is National Cybersecurity Awareness Month, and Dallas ISD’s Information Technology is sharing tips to stay safe online. This week, learn how to spot the social engineering red flags:
Unsolicited help or request for information
Baiting—the offer feels too good to be true
Contact can’t prove their identity
Access Tailgating (Nonemployee following you into a building/restricted area)
Scareware (Someone outside of IT informing you your device has been infected)
National Cybersecurity Month has been celebrated since 2004 led by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and the National Cybersecurity Alliance (NCA) in a collaborative effort between government and industry to raise cybersecurity awareness nationally and internationally.
This year’s theme—See Yourself in Cyber—shows that everyone is part of cyberspace and that it’s up to each person to make smart decisions to keep important information safe.
The Racial Equity Office, in partnership with the Office of Transformation and Innovation, is inviting professional campus staff to serve as School Choice Student Advisors. This initiative aims to increase magnet and choice school enrollment among African American and emergent bilingual students from historically underrepresented communities.
Dallas ISD is seeking 100 School Choice Student Advisors districtwide to support eligible students and families during the School Choice application process, which begins in November. Eligible mentors include professional campus staff, as the advisors will guide students and their families through the application and assessment processes.
The Racial Equity Office asks for the following commitments from participants:
Participate and complete the family check-in activity on the following dates:
Tuesday, Nov. 8
Tuesday, Nov. 15
Tuesday, Dec. 5
Tuesday, Dec. 20
Tuesday, Jan. 10
Tuesday, Jan. 17
Wednesday, Jan. 25
Monday, Jan. 30
Other responsibilities include attending a virtual orientation, virtual student advisor check-ins and submitting documentation.
School Choice Student Advisors will receive a $500 stipend when they meet the required criteria and submit the proper documentation. For consideration, please complete the School Choice Student Advisor interest form. All selected advisors will be given virtual orientation training.
To get to know the program better, meet one of last year’s advisors: Winnetka Elementary School Counselor Yara Duran.
Duran mentored five students, who went on to apply to W.E. Greiner Exploratory Arts Academy, Henry W. Longfellow Career Exploration Academy, Dallas Environmental Science Academy, Irma Lerma Rangel Young Women’s Leadership School, Rosemont Preparatory School and Jesús Moroles Expressive Arts Vanguard.
Why did you become a School Choice Student Advisor?
I became an advisor because I wanted to help our students reach their potential at a school that would challenge them. Many of the students and families are not aware that their child qualifies for a magnet middle school, so it was a great feeling to deliver that news to them. As a product of Dallas ISD, I had no idea what a magnet school was. Once I did find out, it was too late for me. I wanted to be a part of a program that spread the news to families, like mine, who were unaware of these opportunities.
What are the main responsibilities involved?
Our main responsibility was first to congratulate and inform the families that their child qualified to apply to a magnet school—with some of our schools being ranked best in the nation. We then provided the parents with important dates for applications, open houses and information on schools that might fit the student’s interests, and we offered to be a mentor to help guide them through the process. If they agreed to us as a mentor, we set up a date to meet to go into more detail about the process. Some families filled out the application themselves, but for most of my families, I did the application alongside them.
What was your favorite part about being an advisor?
My favorite part was being a mentor. Seeing the excitement from the scholars and congratulating them on their accomplishments and hard work was just the beginning. In our profession, this is part of our job, but spreading the awareness of these programs to historically underrepresented students was that much more rewarding.
Do you have any favorite student success stories from last year?
My favorite success story was from one of my mentees whose family was unaware she qualified. She was never a part of any clubs, but she enjoyed acting. I remember getting a text from her mom with a picture of a quiz she was doing on her own, practicing theater terms to prepare for her interview. A couple months later, I received another text from her mom telling me that she had been accepted into the magnet theater program at Greiner and thanking me for my help.
Why should other staff consider becoming a School Choice Student Advisory Program mentor?
As educators, we want the best for our students, and their success is what makes our hard work worth it. You should consider becoming a mentor because you can be that factor to reach all of our students and help them discover and reach their maximum potential.
Managers and supervisors provide the vision and leadership that makes work successful, and their efforts are recognized during National Boss’ Day celebrated annually in October. Dallas ISD is joining in to celebrate the leaders who are transforming student lives and making memorable moments every day by providing guidance and support to those around them.
Nursing supervisor Chyl Helms has called Dallas ISD home since 2004, so she understands the importance of what she calls “leading from the front.” Not only does she oversee 50 campus nurses, but she also facilitates all new nurse orientations and the two-year School Nurse Clinical Development program for approximately 75 nurses annually.
“My team is my true passion,” Helms said. “I see myself as their advocate and do everything I can to make my staff feel valued and respected—and to feel like they are part of a bigger picture. Being the only healthcare provider on a campus can be challenging, so I also serve as a sounding board and a safe space if they have a bad day and need to process it.”
Helms sees being a leader as an opportunity to continuously improve. Whether she is communicating more efficiently, finding meaningful ways to recognize individuals or encouraging her team to learn from their mistakes and build new and improved systems, she is devoted to helping others—a value that inspired her to become a nurse in the first place.
She started out as a travel nurse, exploring countries like Jamaica and India, before finding her way to Dallas ISD as a nurse at Booker T. Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts. She soon became a preceptor and moved to William Lipscomb Elementary School, the former James Fannin Elementary School and Ben Milam Elementary School before becoming a nurse supervisor.
In the years since then, she has left a profound impact on countless staff, setting the tone for all new nurses and helping them find their homes in the district. Her team’s positive feedback speaks for itself.
Arlington Park Early Childhood Center campus nurse Debra Rodgers said, “Chyl is a role model, an encourager and a supporter for Dallas ISD nurses. She is warm, caring and friendly; and she sends handwritten notes and little gifts throughout the year to encourage us.”
Meanwhile, Dawn Wilcox, the campus nurse at Lipscomb, said, “Chyl educates and trains all of our new nurses in addition to managing her own massive workload, and I rarely see her without a smile. She is incredibly intelligent and an indispensable resource to fellow nurses. She models using humor and self-care as a way to manage stress, and her approach centers the needs of students. She is amazing at balancing compassion with non-negotiable expectations of excellence. We need to recognize more of the innovative and grueling work performed by support staff—especially our district nurses.”
Thank you to all the leaders and managers across the district who have stepped up during the pandemic and beyond to provide support and contribute to educating all students for success. Dallas ISD appreciates everything that you do.
“It’s not always about the big tasks,” Helms said. “Sometimes those small things can mean so much to people, and that’s the part of nursing that I really love—seeing the joy on people’s faces with the small things. When anyone has a rough day, I encourage them to stop and look each student in the eye and have that moment of ‘why.’ It’s always about the students.”
The NCAA, Women’s Final Four and Dallas Local Organizing Committee have teamed up to provide a reading program aimed at creating a lifelong love and interest in reading for third graders in Dallas.
Registration for the Read to the Final Four literacy challenge opens on Oct. 17, and Dallas ISD reading specialists, literacy coordinators, third grade teachers and staff should encourage third-grade students and classrooms to participate.
Pre-registered classrooms will participate in an eight-week incentivized program that will give them the ability to win a variety of prizes. The eight-week competition tips off on Jan. 23, 2023, and concludes on March 17, when the top four schools will be awarded with a field trip to recognize the winning school in a special ceremony that coincides with the week of the Women’s Final Four.
For more information about the Read to the Final Four or the Women’s Final Four weekend of festivities, visit NCAA.com/WomensFinalFour. For questions about the program, contact Caroline Robinson at caroline@dallassports.org.
Kaya Vessel, an instructional specialist in Early Learning, grew up dreaming of transforming student lives through education.
“Teaching was always my dream job,” she said. “I was the kid who always wanted to play school. During the last week of classes, I would ask my teachers for their teacher’s editions so I could go home and play school with my sisters. I’ve always had a love for kids.”
She started teaching in the day care at her high school, the School of Education and Social Services at Townview, which confirmed her career path. After graduating from Dallas ISD, she attended Dillard University in New Orleans to study early childhood education. Hurricane Katrina delayed her student teaching by a year, but as soon as she completed her program, she headed home to Dallas, where she taught for 13 years.
Vessel considered herself to be a “stern” teacher because she always pushed her students to reach their full potential, and her efforts paid off this past school year. Not only did her students perform well on their STAAR tests, but she was also named Nancy J. Cochran Elementary School’s campus teacher of the year. Her team celebrated her accomplishment by playing Vessel’s favorite song as she walked into her classroom.
“My students were there singing along because they knew it was my song,” she said. “They were saying, ‘We have the best teacher of the year!’ That right there, that was one of my favorite memories from this past school year.”
Another passion of Vessel’s is pouring into teachers. She worked as a mentor teacher for years, which inspired her to shift her career trajectory to supporting and retaining teachers. She joined the Early Learning team this summer and considers it her “goal in life right now” to help teachers be successful so they can help their students in turn.
“I remember my first couple of years in the classroom, I had teachers come in from down the hall. If I was struggling, we would do practices after school, and we would run through the next day so I would be ready. It meant so much to me,” Vessel said. “At this point where there’s a mass exodus from this profession, I want to be someone who can help at least one teacher decide, ‘I want to stick it out and give education a chance.’”
But first, she took a short detour back to the classroom. Due to the national teacher shortage, the district’s Teaching and Learning department identified certified central staff members who could fill in the gaps and ensure that students in almost 100 classrooms could have a certified instructor at the beginning of the year while the district worked to fill those vacancies.
Vessel was briefly dispatched to two schools at the beginning of the 2022-2023 school year before receiving a third dispatch to serve as a kindergarten teacher at Ebby Halliday Elementary School. She worked with students there for about a month and is currently transitioning back into her role as an instructional specialist in Early Learning.
“It was beneficial for me to be in that teaching position temporarily, because when they did hire that teacher, I was able to coach them so the students didn’t miss a step,” Vessel said. “I was aware of how their classroom was set up and how their routines operated, and I helped their teacher jump right in.”
Vessel is looking forward to embracing her new responsibilities as an instructional specialist, as well as completing her master’s degree in the spring. She plans to incorporate those skills into her Early Learning position to continue making a difference in the district. After all, she understands how difficult teaching can be, but she believes in each and every one of Dallas ISD’s phenomenal teachers.
“Teaching during this season has been hard. However, we can do hard things,” Vessel said. “We can do it—we’ve done it. The pandemic started two years ago, and we’re still rocking and rolling. The most important thing is, don’t forget about self-care. You can’t show up for students if you can’t show up.”