Posts Tagged ‘enrollment’

MonNov19

Mason Community Center launches new fitness program for seniors

Posted by rrichardson November 19th, 2012, 12:58 pm Post a Comment

The Mason Community Center is launching a new program for senior citizens.

The national SilverSneakers fitness program is geared towards group retirees or older adults eligible for Medicare.

The program provides a fitness center membership, with customized classes for seniors to improve their strength, flexibility, balance and endurance, along with health education seminars, online support classes and program advisors.

The center will hold a free informational seminar about the program at 2 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 27.

Enrollment for the program begins at 9 a.m. Monday, Dec. 3 at the front entrance desk. The center is at 6050 Mason-Montgomery Road and can be reached at 513-229-8555.

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Posted in: Events, Health & Fitness, Mason Community Center |

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ThuOct11

WCCS to hold informational Medicare session

Posted by rrichardson October 11th, 2012, 11:38 am Post a Comment

Warren County Community Services is teaming up with the Ohio Senior Health Insurance Information Program (OSHIIP) to hold a Medicare “Check-up Day” event this month.

The free event is set for 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 30 at Warren County Community Service’s offices at 570 N. S.R. 741, Lebanon.

Seniors, family members and caregivers will learn about the different Medicare options, plan selections and determining coverage eligibility.

Medicare’s open enrollment begins Oct. 15 and runs through Dec. 7.

Appointments are suggested for individual counseling sessions and can be made by calling Karen Hill at 513-695-2288 or by email at karenh@wccsinc.org.

Attendees are encouraged to bring their social security number, photo ID, current Medicare coverage or other insurance cards, current medications taken and names of preferred pharmacies and doctors.

Information: 513-695-2288; www.wccsi.org.

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Posted in: Community, Events |

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School report cards out next week

Posted by rrichardson October 11th, 2012, 8:45 am Post a Comment

The Enquirer:

Ohio will be handing out state report card ratings for districts and schools Oct. 17, state officials said Tuesday, now that State Auditor Dave Yost’s investigations into enrollment and attendance manipulation is winding down for 100 schools around the state.

Each year, usually in late summer, the state publicizes report cards that rate districts and schools on a six-level scale; the highest rated are called “Excellent with Distinction,” then Excellent, while the lowest rated are dubbed “Academic Emergency” and the slightly better Academic Watch.

But those labels and the calculations behind them were lacking late last month, when Ohio held back state report cards and instead released only a spreadsheet describing student scores on state achievement tests and graduation averages for high schools. State officials said they’d rather wait for Yost to finish examining records at the 100 schools with the highest numbers of student withdrawals.

Most of those schools, including some in Cincinnati, were declared “clean” of data manipulation last week. Some school results were “indeterminate” because investigations weren’t complete, including schools in Cincinnati, Princeton and Hamilton City Schools districts.

Despite that, most report card data for all schools will be released on a preliminary basis next week, said John Charlton, Ohio education department spokesman. That will include the 120-point Performance Index – a measure of test scores that allows for schools and districts to be ranked against each other – and attendance rates for all Ohio schools and districts.

State report card ratings are important, often affecting whether the public approves new school taxes or reelects sitting school board members. The report card feed perceptions about school quality.

Mason, one of the state’s premiere academic performers, earned the state’s top academic ranking of “Excellent With Distinction” last year.

The previous school year saw the 11,000-student district, which consistently ranks among the top 10 of Ohio’s 614 districts, fall one rating to “Excellent” for the first time since Ohio began the annual district rankings in 2000.

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Posted in: Schools |

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TueOct2

Ohio college enrollment steadily declines

Posted by rrichardson October 2nd, 2012, 12:28 pm Post a Comment
University of Cincinnati

Students walk to class at the University of Cincinnati / Enquirer file

The Associated Press

College enrollment in Ohio is dropping.

A preliminary report released by the Ohio Board of Regents Monday shows that enrollment has dropped 5.9 percent since last year. The decline of more than 31,000 students at the state’s 61 public universities and colleges was expected — but it still hurt some financially and forced the layoff of 23 people at one community college.

The Dayton Daily News reports that the enrollment decline is attributed to a record number of students graduating last year ahead of the semester conversion at 17 institutions. Also to blame are changes to federal financial aid that mean fewer students are eligible, and an economy that has some choosing to go to work instead of school.

It’s the second consecutive year enrollment has dipped.

The Ohio Board of Regents 15-day headcount shows that enrollment at university main campuses is down about 1 percent from 2011. It’s down 4.24 percent at university regional campuses, and 13 percent at the state’s community colleges.

(more…)

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Posted in: Community, News |

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WedAug22

State delays school report cards amid ethics ‘cloud’

Posted by rrichardson August 22nd, 2012, 8:35 am Post a Comment

Michael D. Clark reports:

Ohio’s much-anticipated annual school district report cards will be delayed until at least September after a unanimous and unprecedented vote Monday by the state school board.

Ohio School Board President Debe Terhar of Green Township said an ongoing state investigation into the validity of data from local districts has cast a shadow on this year’s results.

“We need to make sure the data we have is accurate,” Terhar told The Enquirer.

Terhar said she communicated her concerns to the Ohio Department of Education last week and officials there agreed that the Ohio Auditor’s investigation, which includes that state education department, should first be completed.

“Some rankings could be inaccurate and without the auditor’s report it would be premature to release them,” she said.

The latest round annual academic rankings, which for the 2011-12 school year were scheduled for release Aug. 29, are the single most important rating of Ohio’s 614 public school systems.

The report cards are measurements of students’ performance on key academic indicators, including achievement test scores, graduation rates and Ohio Graduation Test scores. The six ratings, from top to bottom: Excellent with Distinction, Excellent, Effective, Continuous Improvement, Academic Watch and Academic Emergency.

The delay in rankings could affect high school students statewide who are applying for college admission and financial aid this fall, as well as teachers and administrators whose contractual “step pay” increases may be tied to their district rating.

(more…)

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Posted in: Schools |

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FriAug17

Mason Schools to Ohio auditor: ‘Nothing improper to report’

Posted by rrichardson August 17th, 2012, 3:36 pm Post a Comment

Michael D. Clark reports:

Ohio school superintendents who may have cheated the system are again being put on public notice by the state’s auditor but this time with an offer of leniency.

Local school officials that voluntarily come forward by Monday to confess if they improperly altered student enrollment figures in recent years to improve their state academic rating will suffer less than if they wait until the auditor’s investigation reveals they did so.

“The time to tell the truth is now,” said Ohio Auditor David Yost in a letter sent this week to Ohio’s local school leaders.

Officials from Mason Schools, the largest district in Warren County and among the state’s top-10 academic performers, said they have nothing to report.

“We have nothing improper to report so we will not be responding,” said Tracey Carson, spokeswoman for the 11,000-student district.

Locally the Hamilton County school district of Lockland is one of three districts – including Columbus and Toledo schools – that have already been accused of altering enrollment data.

Yost contends some district administrators have withdrawn, then re-enrolled students who were habitually absent. The practice could improve test scores and attendance rates on the districts’ state report cards because only students who are continuously enrolled in a district are counted on them.

In his letter, Yost said, “I am confident that most districts have been doing the right thing, in the right way. Others may have acted improperly, but with the belief that their practices were acceptable. It seems likely that still others acted deliberately.”

Yost offered “an opportunity to report information in good faith. If your district has or may have done something wrong in reporting data, whether you knew or did not know it was wrong, we need you to step forward and report the truth.”

“Falsely reporting attendance data is a violation of state and federal law. More importantly, we fail our children and the mission of our schools when we alter records that have a direct impact on the services offered to our students.”

“Voluntary self-reporting demonstrates good intentions and will help separate those who acted in good faith from those who acted with fraudulent intent. This office will be an advocate for those who self-report attendance irregularities.”

Yost, has said his office will investigate a yet-undetermined representative sampling of Ohio’s 613 districts.

“In the weeks ahead, auditors from my office will visit schools in Ohio to review records and report whether it is likely data manipulation occurred. If you have knowledge that inaccurate data was reported to the state by your schools, regardless of the motive for doing so, you can make things right,” wrote Yost.

Toledo Public Schools voluntarily admitted its past data manipulations last month to the Toledo Blade. Superintendent Jerome Pecko said he began an investigation into his district’s policies after reading reports of manipulation in Columbus Schools.

The Toledo Blade contributed

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Posted in: Board of Education, Schools |

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TueJan24

MECC sees high demand for limited spots in preschool program

Posted by rrichardson January 24th, 2012, 1:07 pm Post a Comment

The Mason Early Childhood Education Center will accept applications through Feb. 17 for its preschool program.

The program for children ages 3-5 has proved so popular that the school now accepts applications on a lottery system, said Rebecca Huber, a preschool administrative assistant at the school

The school receives more than 100 applications each year for a limited number of spots.  The number of open positions can vary from 30 to 60 each year, depending on the number of returning students, she said.

Parents will receive notification of their child’s status by March 16.  Children not selected can then be placed on a waiting list.

To enroll, children should be 3-years-old by Sept 1. and be toilet-trained.  Tuition for the 2012-2013 school year is $310 a month, plus an annual snack fee of $115 due at the start of the school year.

Download applications at www.masonohioschools.com or pick them up at the preschool office at 4631 Hickory Woods Drive.  For more information, call MECC at 513-398-3741.

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Posted in: Events, Schools |

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