Monday, October 15, 2012

Meeting: A Good Example Of A Well-Done Story

Note the to-the-point lede and the strong nut graf and telling quotes tight grafs and ranking of information in order of importance and newsworthiness. Here we go:

 
The Grand Ledge school board voted to keep using the same biology textbooks in Grand Ledge schools last night despite complaints from citizens that the books do not teach creationism.
After a lively public hearing that about 100 people attended, the board voted 6-3 to continue using the current textbooks.
“We’ve seen your biology books,” Grand Ledge parent Claire Sawyer said. “I don’t want my children using them. They never mention the theory of creationism.”
The debate went back and forth among members of the public in attendance.
“Evolution isn’t a theory,” Grand Ledge parent Harley Euon said. “It’s a proven fact. Creationism is a religious idea, not even a scientific theory. People here are trying to force schools to teach our children their religion.”
After the vote in favor of the current textbooks, the board said they encourage parents to discuss the matter of creationism versus evolution in their individual homes. 
In other discussion, the board opted to continue remedial summer classes for one more year, but to examine whether the remedial classes are worth their cost.
The classes, which the board said cost about $2.1 million, are set to stay for at least one more year after a 7-2 vote.
The classes are only used by about 900 students each summer, according to board member Umberto Vacante.
“If we’re going to spend that kind of money, I think we should use it to help and reward our most talented students,” Vacante said. “They’re the ones we ignore. We could offer special programs for them.”
Superintendent Greg Hubbard disagreed with Vacante’s assessment.
“Some of these summer students have learning disabilities and emotional problems, and they really need the help,” Hubbard said. “This would hurt them terribly. Without it, they might never graduate.”
In budget discussions, the board announced that $9.3 million of the $618.7 million in next year’s budget will be spent on the construction of a new elementary school on West Madison Avenue. 

The school will be completed and open in two years, the board said.
The board said teachers and administrators are set to receive wage increases of 4.5 percent and six percent, respectively.

No comments: