Friday Five, October 7, 2022
Fall Break is next week!

The Zionsville Education Foundation (ZEF) awarded nearly $25,000 for the 2022 Fall Classroom Grants. Thank you to everyone who donates to ZEF. Your contributions enhance student experiences through teacher innovation across all ZCS schools.

Congratulations to the Fall 2022 ZEF classroom grant recipients, and thank you, ZEF!  

The Zionsville Education Foundation (ZEF) awarded nearly $25,000 for the 2022 Fall Classroom Grants. Thank you to everyone who donates to ZEF. Your contributions enhance student experiences through teacher innovation across all ZCS schools.

Congratulations to the Fall 2022 ZEF classroom grant recipients, and thank you, ZEF!  

Zionsville Education Foundation (ZEF) Prize Patrol

Inspiring Future Engineers

Emily Allen and Emily Smith, Zionsville Middle School
With the use of Infento Kits, students will be given the opportunity to fully immerse themselves in the engineering design process. This grant will give students the ability to explore how engineering impacts their lives by creating their own life-sized transportation and inspire more students to pursue STEM careers.

Boomwhackers

Meagan Brown, Trailside Elementary Students will have the opportunity to learn how to play Boomwhackers percussion instruments to further develop their understanding of melody, harmony, and beat. Each tube is tuned to a musical pitch determined by the tube’s length, and its own specific color. Music is color coded, allowing elementary students to read efficiently, scaffolding traditional music literacy in later grades.

Promoting Self-Reflection and Supporting Student Growth with year-Long Digital Portfolios

Jennifer Hamelmann, Union Elementary This grant gives Mrs. Hamelmann’s classroom tools to create individual, year-long digital portfolios. Each student’s portfolio will be a purposeful collection of work and experiences that demonstrate his/her efforts, achievements, growth, and personal reflections from the school year.

MaKey MaKey Young Inventors

Molly Seward, Trailside Elementary
Provides the STEM classroom with the hands-on learning tool, MaKey MaKey. It is designed to connect everyday objects to computer keys. Using a circuit board, alligator clips, and a USB cable, MaKey MaKey uses closed loop electrical signals to send the computer either a keyboard stroke or mouse click signal. Students will also explore circuits and conductivity to make musical instruments, game controllers, or voting machines.

Sidewalk Astronomy

Matt Mulholland and Katie Willour, Zionsville Community High School
The ZCHS Astronomy Club will purchase a Dobsonian Reflecting Telescope that will help foster the curiosity of ZCS students and the Zionsville community at large. The ZCHS Astronomy and Science Clubs will arrange for periodic nighttime viewing field trips for ZCHS students to learn about and observe various cosmological phenomena. They will also conduct community outreach nighttime viewing experiences at public events giving members of the ZCS school community the opportunity to look at the night sky through a professional grade high-powered telescope.

Social Studies/Language Arts Literature Circles: Books Are Windows and Doors

Randi Schreiner, Zionsville Middle School
Seventh grade Social Studies and Language Arts classes will receive literature circle books that connect to the existing curriculum. Students will choose a book to read while meeting with other students who choose the same title. They will participate in classroom activities that fit with each particular novel and make connections to what they are learning in Social Studies at the same time.

Steel Eagles Robotics – Go VEX!

Karen Stillions, Pleasant View Elementary
Robotics materials will keep the PVE robotics team moving forward and up to date with current competition needs through additional equipment for this year’s “Slap Shot” game. New robotics brains, remotes, and additional parts will further enhance the students’ building, coding, and competition success.

The Chicken Club

Mitzi Macaluso, Zionsville Middle School
Materials provided will include a chicken coop and six hens. The Chicken Club provides students with hands-on learning about biology, compassionate animal husbandry, food science, small business practices with the egg sales, and sustainable living practices. Students will be responsible for taking care of the flock. They will practice responsibility, math, teamwork, organizational skills and develop a sense of pride.he inscription of signs and symbols.

Scootin’ and Chutin’ – Teamwork and Fitness Fun with Scooters and the Parachute!

Garrett Stephens, Boone Meadow Elementary
A set of scooters and a giant parachute will give BME Wellness classes access to endless ways to have fun, stay active, and work together. Whether it is a cooperation activity with the parachute, or a relay race with the scooters, these pieces of equipment will be student favorites. Every Boone Meadow student will benefit from this new equipment several times throughout the year.

Jump Rope for Just Right Reading

Kimberly Gray and Rebekah Graham, Boone Meadow Elementary
Provides high-quality, engaging, decodable texts for early and emergent readers accompanied by online resources and teacher’s guides. The books will promote student choice and provide students direct access through classroom libraries.

Students around ZCS love Prize Patrol day too!

Music to my ears

The Zionsville Community High School Fall Band Concert was a treat. Band Director Tom Landrum and his band students put on a beautiful concert for families. Superintendent Scott Robison made an appearance - more on that later in this issue. Thank you to our incredibly talented student musicians who know how to put on a top-notch musical performance.

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A day in the life of a superintendent

Special item submission by Janet Mann

Superintendent Scott Robison doesn't like to highlight the little things he does daily that make him a relatable, reliable, human leader both inside Zionsville Community Schools and outside in our community. I had to slip this item into this week's edition (leaving no option to edit it out) because I found it rather fitting that on the same day that Dr. Robison was recognized for the Lorin A. Burt Outstanding Educator Award by the Indiana School Boards Association (ISBA), he was doing all of the "little" things that make him stand out among other great school leaders.

On this day, he started downtown at the annual conference before heading up to film a ZCHS alumnus interview, presenting at a board meeting and then performing immediately after that meeting alongside Zionsville Community High School (ZCHS) band students in their fall concert.

It's the little things. It's the little things that make the biggest impact. And, he does them every single day.

Thank you, Dr. Robison, for caring about the staff, students and our entire community. You make it look easy and like a normal day. It is your normal day...all in a day!

*See ISBA press release below photos to learn more about Dr. Robison's recent award.

Superintendent Scott Robison performs with the Zionsville Community High School (ZCHS) band

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
ISBA Announces 2022 Educator of the Year

October 5, 2022  Dr. Scott Robison, superintendent of the Zionsville Community Schools (ZCS), has been named educator of the year by the members of the Indiana School Boards Association (ISBA). 

Dr. Robison, who is retiring from Zionsville in February 2023 after 16 years as superintendent, received the Lorin A. Burt Outstanding Educator Award Monday during ISBA’s Annual Fall Conference held jointly with the Indiana Association of Public School Superintendents (IAPSS).

During the award ceremony, Dr. Robison was recognized for his commitment to academic excellence, sound financial stewardship, and attention to personal relationships.

Over the past 16 years, Zionsville Community Schools has experienced the second-largest student enrollment increase in the state. The Boone County district consistently ranks among the top five highest-performing districts in Indiana in terms of state assessment scores, even as it ranked last in the state in per-pupil funding for much of the past decade. ZCS has passed five ballot initiatives during Dr. Robison’s tenure.

Dr. Robison has worked in public education for 38 years. He began his career as a teacher in Floyd County, where he grew up. He previously served as superintendent of the Sheridan Community Schools and as assistant superintendent for business in the Westfield Washington Schools. In Westfield, he also held the position of director of curriculum, instruction, and staff development. He has been a principal of three elementary schools and one middle school in the M.S.D. of Pike Township and the Southwest Allen County Schools.

“Thank you for the great honor of this award,” said Superintendent Robison. “I am humbled by it and accept it on behalf of the children my colleagues and I serve every day.”

Nearly 900 school board members and school superintendents attended the 73rd Annual ISBA/IAPSS Fall Conference October 3-4, 2022, at the Indiana Convention Center.

Lorin A. Burt led the Indiana School Boards Association from 1960 until his death in 1967. Prior to ISBA, Burt was superintendent of schools at Kendallville, principal of Leesburg High School, and a teacher and basketball coach at Mentone.

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“Watch Us Farm”

Dr. Robison invited superintendents from around the state on a field trip to “Watch Us Farm,” a Zionsville non-profit that is providing meaningful work for adults with developmental and/or intellectual disabilities. Watch Us Farm is providing great hydroponically and field grown produce, fine woven goods, and greeting cards to the local community. Give this non-profit a look at: https://www.watchusfarm.com/.

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Fall is in the air!

Fall Break begins at the end of today’s school day. We will resume classes on Monday, October 17. Have a safe and fun school hiatus with family and friends.