Who does the grant writing for the Lafayette Parish School System? What is our grant success rate?
Have there been any new LPSS positions added over the past three years? If so, how were they funded?
How many children from birth to 5 years old are being currently serviced by LPSS?
Did LPSS apply for Race to the Top and other funding sources?
Questions like these are among the 12-page assessment plan crafted by the Lafayette Parish School System’s newest superintendent, Dr. Pat Cooper, who distributed the document to board members Wednesday during his first regular Lafayette Parish School Board meeting as the school district’s top administrator.
Cooper, hired in December to take over following the retirement of Burnell Lemoine, will begin his new post full-time on Feb. 1, though he plans to spend some time in Lafayette in January while finishing his stint as CEO of an early learning center in New Orleans.
The answers Cooper finds through the assessment outline, coupled with countless meetings planned with LPSS staffers and local government and civic organizations, will pave the way for a first-year mission statement to be presented to the board by March or April. Before the first-year goals are outlined, Cooper says he plans to analyze district performance data and clarify to the school board in February the performance status of the district’s schools.
A more detailed five-year plan is expected to be complete by December, but Cooper does suggest in his early assessment plan some “basic infrastructure” within the district to increase graduation rates. Among those recommendations are a parishwide early learning coalition that includes all child care centers in the district, teen parenting programs in high schools, placing a truancy officer/liaison at each underperforming middle and high school, and having at least one nurse, social worker and guidance counselor for every 450 students in the district.
Cooper began his career in education as a classroom teacher in Baton Rouge before working his way up the ranks in the state Department of Education. While at LDOE, he oversaw a program for emotionally disturbed and autistic children and eventually served as the assistant superintendent for special education services in Louisiana, among other roles.
LPSS’s new super has 22 years of experience as a top education administrator and is known nationally for implementing a model that has drastically turned around graduation rates in districts where he’s formerly served as superintendent.
Read more from The Ind on Cooper’s qualifications here.
JUNE 20 Here's the transcript of the esteemed journalist Rush Limbaugh's recent spot on Sen. Elbert Guillory. Guillory's video explaining why all black folks need to go running right over to the GOP (and no, one of the reasons given is not that you can't get elected Lt. Gov. as a "D" in this state) is "amazing" and a "tear-jerker" to Mr. Limbaugh. Of course, he doesn't mention that Guillory thought enough of the D party to join it so he could get elected to the state senate. But Rush doesn't disappoint; he does manage to make the spot about him in the end.
JUNE 20 Here's a WBRZ investigative piece on a foundation in Baton Rouge that may have some problems. Like what, you ask? How about under-reporting income by $700K or having a member who gets contributions by telling folks about her mystical experiences? This lady says it all began 30 years ago when a bishop who died "spoke" to her from his coffin, letting her know that she was not "out of her head." Um, OK.
JUNE 20 Here's another analysis (or post-mortem, as the case may be) for Gov. Jindal's recent post in Politico. This time, it's from the editorial board of the LSU Reveille. The kids say there were some problems with the column; mostly, they were related to Jindal insulting his friends, his enemies, and everyone in between, including himself. The contradictions Jindal displayed weren't lost on these students -- or anybody else.
JUNE 20 This post by the editorial board of the Picayune congratulates former Saint Steve Gleason on the "inspiring" way the man has responded to a mean-spirited and just plain appalling skit on a radio station about him and ALS, the paralyzing and fatal disease he has. As usual, the editorial states, Gleason directed attention from himself and to the disease, which he says is misunderstood, underfunded and ignored. Maybe this will bring some attention to the disease, the board writes.
JUNE 20 The Advocate posts this story about the sudden death of James Gandolfini, the television, stage and film actor probably best known for his role as Tony Soprano on the HBO series. Gandolfini died while vacationing in Italy, the story reports. He won three Emmys for the Sopranos role, but also was honored with a Tony nomination for God of Carnage.
JUNE 20 Clancy DuBos writes here about the legal, financial and political quagmire that is NOLA law enforcement these days. Sheriff Gusman and Mayor Landrieu are facing off in federal court, and as DuBos says, the stakes are high. Gusman's prison is "a hellhole," DuBos writes, and Landrieu claims the books there are "deliberately unfathomable." Gusman says everything's hunky dory, but it would be better if he got more money from Landrieu. What a mess.
JUNE 20 Blogger Tom Aswell says Gov. Jindal needs to quit touring the country bragging about his "gold standard" of ethics reform -- because it just ain't true. Aswell gives us a lot of statistics on our dismal ethics record, including a long list of violations committed by our fearless leaders and political groups. Taken all at once, it's not a pretty picture, and certainly not a golden one.
JUNE 20 This post in the Picayune reports that a contractor pleaded guilty to a bribery scheme that involved fake bids and kickbacks. The contractor said he cut a deal with a guy working for Orleans Sheriff Gusman to submit fake bids so his real company could "win" work for the sheriff, the story says. The former sheriff's employee already has pleaded guilty, the story says. Meanwhile, Sheriff Gusman says he hasn't been contacted by any investigators.
JUNE 20 Here's a Huff Post blog by Jason Linkins, taking a few shots at Gov. Jindal for his recent Politico column. For instance, he takes issue with Jindal's advice that the GOP "stop the bedwetting," pointing out that there were certainly some Jindal-positive patches on those damp sheets. But the main gist of the column is that Jindal was singing one tune back in November, but he's using a different score now. Either way, it's hitting a sour note with Linkins.
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