Tag Archives: education

What’s the progress on moving towards a District Registrar?

What’s the status of the district’s progress in moving towards the District Registrar? 

Who is the District Registrar?
Joy Zuber, who currently works in Administrative Services, will begin transitioning after spring break to work in the District Registrar position that will be housed in Teaching & Learning, at the Learning Resource Center.

Will the Registrar start handling new family registration right away?
No.  Our first task is to collect, review, and standardize the different enrollment forms that are used across the district.  We’ll then work with various departments including nutrition, transportation, and others to learn about their needs.  The new enrollment forms will then need to be reviewed by schools and departments.  Once the forms are standardized, then we’ll start handling the new family registration – and we’ll begin transitioning one building at a time.

Why one buiding at a time?
Changing from school based enrollment to a district enrollment is a significant change.   Transitioning one building at a time will enable us to work out issues and challenges along the way.

How long will it take? In other words, how long before all schools are transitioned?
We’re estimating that it will take 6 to 12 months.

Seriously?  This means our school will have to go through our regular registration process in August?
Yes, most schools will still need to conduct their traditional school registration again this August.

Why don’t we just do on-line registration for all of this?
We are moving towards on-line registration, but there are two key problems that need to resolved first, as on-line registration systems are based on…. 1) your district has a standardized enrollment process that is identical across all schools  and 2) your district has a District Registrar who is responsible for reviewing and approving all on-line registrations.   If we can resolve these two issues during the next 12 months, then our next step would be to automate the registration process on-line, which would put us in the summer 2013 timeframe.

What could possibly be so hard about standardizing the registration forms?
With building based registration, each school has had the ability to customize the forms for their own needs.  In addition, most schools use a student based form – which means parents fill out the same form for EACH student.  This leads to lots of repetition.  Instead, we’d like to move to a family based form, so that the family can fill out one form that contains information on everyone in the family.

When the Registrar is ready to transition schools to the new registration, which schools will go first?
Order hasn’t fully been determined yet, but the district will make that decision.

Will the registrar come out to the school to handle kindergarten roundup this spring?
No.  Even in future years, it’s likely that kindergarten roundup will still be run by the school, you’ll just send the forms to the Registrar.  For this spring (2012), please plan on conducting your roundups just as you have in the past.

 Will the District Registrar be accepting fees and handling registration money?
Sorry, this hasn’t been reviewed yet, but it’s likely that this will remain at each schools.

2011 printing comparisons for WDM Schools

Last year, we published “The Biggest Loser: paper edition” showing which schools were reducing their printing expenses at our district print shop.  Over a two year period, schools were saving a minimum of 25%, while some reduced as much as 75%.  However, this was only looking at our district print shop.  This year, we’ve monitored all printing devices to help us get a more complete picture….

Q1. Which school prints the least amount of pages per child per semester?

Printed pages/child per semester
1  Fairmeadows Elementary            916
2  Westridge Elementary        1,043
3  Phenix Early Childhood Center        1,057
4  Jordan Creek Elementary        1,127
5  Crossroads Park Elementary        1,289
6  Crestview Elementary        1,368
7  Hillside Elementary        1,547
8  Clive Elementary        1,726
9  Western Hills Elementary        1,766
10  Valley High School        1,782
11  Valley Southwoods Freshman High School        2,163
12  Walnut Creek Campus (Alt HS)        2,503
13  Stilwell Junior High        2,511
14  Indian Hills Junior High        2,661

Q2. How was this calculated?
All of the stats are from the same time period, July 1, 2011 to Dec 31, 2011.  Pages printed per child per semeter = # pages from print shop  + # pages from building copiers + # pages from buiding printers / # students enrolled.  Download the full stats for pages per student.

Q3. Which school spends the least on printing per child?

Cost/Student per semester
1  Fairmeadows Elementary $6.99
2  Jordan Creek Elementary $7.37
3  Westridge Elementary $8.11
4  Phenix Early Childhood $8.88
5  Crestview Elementary $9.50
6  Western Hills Elementary $11.45
7  Clive Elementary $11.90
8  Hillside Elementary $12.16
9  Crossroads Park Elementary $13.42
10  Valley High School $14.38
11  Stilwell Junior High $16.38
12  Indian Hills Junior High $17.08
13  Valley Southwoods Freshman High $17.47
14  Walnut Creek Campus (Alt HS) $22.56

Q4. How are $ per student per semester calculated?
All stats are from the same time period: July 1, 2011 to Dec 31, 2011.  $ spent per student =  $ spent at print shop + $ spent at copiers + $ spent at building printers / # students enrolled.  Download the full stats for cost per student.

Q5.  Why are the rankings different for each comparison?  Why aren’t they the same?
The average printing cost is different at each device (print shop vs copier vs building printers).  Some schools print more economically than others, depending on where they choose to print.  On average, a single printed sheet at the print shop is 1/2 cent.  The building copier cost is 1 cent – and at the building printer, the cost is at or over  3 cents per page.  Another factor is color, as that ranges from 5 to 10 cents per page and the usage also varies from school to school.

Q6. So what’s the purpose of all this?
The purpose is to give us a view of how we are doing in regards to printing.  If we provide your school with only your stats, then you have no basis for knowing how it compares – so we’ve included everyones stats.  We’ll run the stats again next fall and compare to the same timeframe to see how we are progressing.

Q7.  Hold on…. what about the district office (LRC) and operations? Where are their numbers?
They are available at the bottom of  the full stats for pages per student and cost per student… they were not included in the charts, since we can’t divide their cost by number of children enrolled.