After being postponed this fall due to the challenges faced by the community because of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Dialogue with the Superintendent sessions have been rescheduled to the spring. This modified schedule allows all staff, faculty, parents and community members to hear from Superintendent Michael Hinojosa in the 2021-2022 school year.
The dialogues are designed to provide staff with an overview of the district’s programs and initiatives, a look at what’s ahead and an opportunity to ask questions. All Dialogue with the Superintendent sessions will take place from 5 to 6 p.m. and will be followed by Community Conversations from 6:30-7:30 p.m., during which parents and the community will have a chance to hear from the superintendent and ask questions.
| Date | Location | Schools invited |
| Jan. 18 | David W. Carter High School | David W. Carter and Wilmer-Hutchins high schools feeder schools, J.P. Starks Math, Science and Technology Vanguard, Dr. Frederick D. Haynes Global Preparatory Academy at Paul Quinn College
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| Feb. 8 | Seagoville High School | Seagoville High School and feeder school |
| Feb. 15 | South Oak Cliff High School | South Oak Cliff and Justin F. Kimball feeder pattern schools and New Tech High School at B.F. Darrell, Barack Obama Male leadership Academy, Mark Twain School for the Talented and Gifted and Harry Stone Montessori |
| March 1 | L.G. Pinkston High School | L.G. Pinkston and North Dallas high school feeder pattern schools and Dallas Environmental Science Academy, Jesus Moroles Expressive Arts Academy, West Dallas STEM School, Ignite Middle School,
Henry W. Longfellow Career Exploratory Academy, Montessori Academy at Onesimo Hernandez, Personalized Learning Preparatory at Sam Houston, K.B. Polk Center for Academically Talented and Gifted, Solar Preparatory School for Boys, Solar Preparatory School for Girls and Dallas Hybrid Preparatory at Stephen J. Hay |
| March 22 | W.T. White High School | W.T. White and Thomas Jefferson high school feeder pattern schools and Prestonwood Montessori at E.D. Walker |
| March 23 | Woodrow Wilson High School | Woodrow Wilson and Bryan Adams high school feeder pattern schools and IDEA High School and Eduardo Mata Montessori |
| April 5 | Hillcrest High School | Hillcrest and Emmett J. Conrad high school feeder pattern schools and George Bannerman Dealey Montessori Academy, Sudie L. Williams Talented and Gifted Academy |
| April 6 | Harold Wendell Lang Middle School | Skyline High School feeder pattern schools |
| April 19 | Young Women’s STEAM Academy at Balch Springs | W.W. Samuell and H. Grady Spruce high school feeder pattern schools and Talented and Gifted Academy at Pleasant Grove |
| May 4 | Booker T. Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts | Booker T. Washington HPVA, Yvonne A. Ewell Townview Center schools, CityLab High School and Downtown Montessori School |
| May 11 | Sunset High School | W.H. Adamson, Moisés E. Molina and Sunset high school feeder pattern schools and W.E. Greiner Exploratory Arts Academy |
| May 18 | Franklin D. Roosevelt High School | Franklin D. Roosevelt, James Madison and Lincoln high school feeder schools and John Lewis Social Justice Academy at O.W Holmes, CityLab High School, Martin Luther King Jr. Arts Academy, and Irma Lerma Rangel Young Women Leadership School
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“The coffee company gives us that opportunity to give back here and in Guatemala,” Alicia said.
to make ends meet, so she and her husband sometimes hold fundraisers through Elevate Coffee to provide extras for families. For example, this Thanksgiving, the company had a flash sale to raise funds to buy turkeys for the school’s famous Turkey Run. Organized by Coach Freddie Harris, the run combines fitness and helping families—95.5 percent of whom are considered low-income—by providing a turkey to students who win the run by grade level the Friday before the break. The more turkeys that are donated, the more turkeys that go home, Michael said.
Certification program. She met Michael 11 years ago when he crashed her birthday party. Once they started dating, they each realized that one of the attributes they most valued about each other was their passion to help and make a difference. With Elevate Coffee, they now live that passion every day and teach their children that it’s important to follow their dreams, they said.
In addition to their usual duties of administering care at the schools and making sure students’ medical records are up-to-date, school nurses have been demonstrating their commitment to Dallas ISD’s Core 4 culture tenets on the frontline of the pandemic. They have administered COVID tests at their campuses, coordinated quarantine, and scheduling vaccine clinics to make it easier for students and staff to get vaccinated.
“Nurses have always played a crucial role in the health and well-being of our campuses, but for the past few months, they have taken on so much more and have done an admirable job of holding the line against the virus,” said Jennifer Finley, executive director of Health Services. “Dallas ISD has not seen the numbers of COVID cases this fall that other districts have in great part due to the work of our wonderful nurses—they have been Core 4 all the way, and we are all grateful.”
