Fort Bend County to the southwest of Houston is one of the suburban areas, like Montgomery County to our north that has experienced explosive population growth since the 1980's. The Fort Bend Independent School District has been on what seems to be an almost nonstop building program to keep up with it.
Even better, it turned blue because of that explosive growth in the 2018 midterm elections
A new elementary school, the 51st in the FBISD, is currently being built in the Aliana community in the northwest part of the district. After asking the FBISD community to submit a name for the new school scheduled to open in January 2020, a committee comprised of FBISD teachers, parents, students, community advocates, staff and an FBISD board member went through the nearly 100 names submitted to choose the name of the new school.
The school will be named Malala Yousafzai Elementary School, and it is one as a TK I am definitely in agreement with. The Nobel laureate has been a tireless advocate for public education.
“Fort Bend ISD is proud to name Malala Yousafzai Elementary in honor of a true advocate for education. Our FBISD Profile of a Graduate outlines the skills and attributes graduates should possess upon graduation from our schools. Through her compassion for others and servant leadership, Yousafzai is an embodiment of these characteristics, which we are trying to instill in our students. We look forward to hearing of the many successes of the school and its students in the future,” said Dr. Charles Dupre, FBISD Superintendent of Schools.
The name for the new school was approved during the December 17 FBISD board meeting
Malala and her father are currently on a trip to Australia, and when they heard the news, were quite pleased with it.
This is such great and encouraging news," said Malala's father Ziauddin Yousafzai. "I'm very thankful for this. It's an opportunity for young students to get inspiration."
"Malala's name is known globally and now, for a school to be associated with Malala's name, it just shows that the spirit of education is being wholeheartedly promoted," he added..
As for Malala's thoughts about the FBISD action, she conveyed through her father that she was "quite glad" and 'grateful to the Sugar Land community for helping spread her message of education for girls.
She garnered international attention at age 15 for surviving an Taliban attack on her while traveling home from school. A year later in 2013 she delivered a highly publicized United Nations speech that urged world leaders to make education a priority. Yousafzai became the youngest person ever to receive the Nobel Peace Prize in 2014
The attendance zone boundaries for Yousafzai Elementary are currently being determined by the district.
As for whether the Yousafzai's will be in the Lone Star State when the school is dedicated, Ziauddin Yousafzai said, "I cannot make any promises right now, but should we receive an invitation and are in Texas or nearby, we would definitely love to attend and meet these amazing people.
Um, FBISD, y'all might want to get on that ASAP.
Showing posts with label Texas school. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Texas school. Show all posts
Wednesday, December 19, 2018
Saturday, June 04, 2011
Last Day Of A School
Yesterday was the end of the 2010-11 school year in HISD, and it affected me moreso than it has in previous years besides having to worry about the younglings running around when I drive through neighborhood streets for the next two months..
As part of the budget cutting affecting school districts in Texas due to our Republifool controlled state legislature working on trimming $4 billion out of public education over the next two years, the local school districts are responding by making painful cuts on the local level
To save $1.6 million, HISD is closing four low enrollment elementary schools. One of the four schools that closed its doors permanently was Joseph J. Rhoads Elementary, one of the elementary schools I matriculated at for my kindergarten and several years later third grade when the HISD school pairing desegregation plan kicked in.
The school was named for African American educator Joseph J. Rhoads, a Marshall, TX born educator who was an honors graduate of Bishop College, attended Yale for a year, was principal of Booker T. Washington HS in Dallas from 1923-1929, obtained a M.A. from the University of Michigan in 1935, taught at Tuskegee Institute, and in 1929 became the sixth president of Bishop College. (which unfortunately shut its doors in 1988). He was also the first African American alumnus of the then Marshall, TX based school to head it.
During his tenure as its president which lasted until 1951 he established the Dallas branch of the school in 1947 to which Bishop College later moved from Marshall in 1961. The J. J. Rhoads Education Building on the Dallas campus was named for him along with elementary schools in Houston and Dallas. He distinguished himself as an educator, administrator, and a civil rights warrior in the Lone Star State.
Mr. Rhoads was president of the Texas Council of Negro Organizations and chairman of the Texas Commission on Democracy in Education, and fought for equality of opportunity for all citizens and equal salaries for Black teachers in Texas. He passed away on October 9, 1951 and is buried in Marshall
J.J. Rhoads opened its doors to serve the Cloverland neighborhood in 1957. When I was attending the school in the late 60's the school needed temporary buildings to house all us baby boomers that were coming through the campus. There was a Black population shift occurring out of the Fourth and Fifth Wards on the northeast side of town to South Park, Sunnyside, Cloverland and southwest Houston.
There was also new Black segregated suburban housing being built in that general area the school serves in King Estates, Kennedy Heights and my Crestmont Plaza neighborhood that was swelling enrollment as well. It was down to approximately 350 students when the doors closed yesterday under the leadership of its last principal Dr. Debera Balthazar.
Back during that time, J.J. Rhoads, true to its namesake, was a leading all Black grade school so renowned for academics there was a waiting list to get in. That reputation as a academic powerhouse started breaking down after the Singleton Ratio to desegregate schools in Texas began to be implemented and the experienced Black teachers started getting sent to predominately white schools and the Black schools got inexperienced white teachers in return.
I had mixed emotions about J.J. Rhoads since I barely remember my kindergarten year with Ms Williams (who was also my 1st grade teacher at Law) and my third grade year was a less than pleasant experience for the first three months I was there. I liked Law since it was a brand new building and hated being rezoned back to Rhoads. Also being messed with and averaging a fight a week until I sent an unmistakable 'don't jack with me ' message by painfully (for them) beating down three boys during a three on one recess fight didn't endear me to the school either.
But walking its halls is always going to be part of my childhood, and it was a surprisingly sad day when they permanently closed the doors to J. J. Rhoads Elementary school.
As part of the budget cutting affecting school districts in Texas due to our Republifool controlled state legislature working on trimming $4 billion out of public education over the next two years, the local school districts are responding by making painful cuts on the local level
To save $1.6 million, HISD is closing four low enrollment elementary schools. One of the four schools that closed its doors permanently was Joseph J. Rhoads Elementary, one of the elementary schools I matriculated at for my kindergarten and several years later third grade when the HISD school pairing desegregation plan kicked in.
The school was named for African American educator Joseph J. Rhoads, a Marshall, TX born educator who was an honors graduate of Bishop College, attended Yale for a year, was principal of Booker T. Washington HS in Dallas from 1923-1929, obtained a M.A. from the University of Michigan in 1935, taught at Tuskegee Institute, and in 1929 became the sixth president of Bishop College. (which unfortunately shut its doors in 1988). He was also the first African American alumnus of the then Marshall, TX based school to head it.
During his tenure as its president which lasted until 1951 he established the Dallas branch of the school in 1947 to which Bishop College later moved from Marshall in 1961. The J. J. Rhoads Education Building on the Dallas campus was named for him along with elementary schools in Houston and Dallas. He distinguished himself as an educator, administrator, and a civil rights warrior in the Lone Star State.
Mr. Rhoads was president of the Texas Council of Negro Organizations and chairman of the Texas Commission on Democracy in Education, and fought for equality of opportunity for all citizens and equal salaries for Black teachers in Texas. He passed away on October 9, 1951 and is buried in Marshall
J.J. Rhoads opened its doors to serve the Cloverland neighborhood in 1957. When I was attending the school in the late 60's the school needed temporary buildings to house all us baby boomers that were coming through the campus. There was a Black population shift occurring out of the Fourth and Fifth Wards on the northeast side of town to South Park, Sunnyside, Cloverland and southwest Houston.
There was also new Black segregated suburban housing being built in that general area the school serves in King Estates, Kennedy Heights and my Crestmont Plaza neighborhood that was swelling enrollment as well. It was down to approximately 350 students when the doors closed yesterday under the leadership of its last principal Dr. Debera Balthazar.
Back during that time, J.J. Rhoads, true to its namesake, was a leading all Black grade school so renowned for academics there was a waiting list to get in. That reputation as a academic powerhouse started breaking down after the Singleton Ratio to desegregate schools in Texas began to be implemented and the experienced Black teachers started getting sent to predominately white schools and the Black schools got inexperienced white teachers in return.
I had mixed emotions about J.J. Rhoads since I barely remember my kindergarten year with Ms Williams (who was also my 1st grade teacher at Law) and my third grade year was a less than pleasant experience for the first three months I was there. I liked Law since it was a brand new building and hated being rezoned back to Rhoads. Also being messed with and averaging a fight a week until I sent an unmistakable 'don't jack with me ' message by painfully (for them) beating down three boys during a three on one recess fight didn't endear me to the school either.
But walking its halls is always going to be part of my childhood, and it was a surprisingly sad day when they permanently closed the doors to J. J. Rhoads Elementary school.
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