Kimberly Meyer for SAU 16 COOP School Board

Kimberly Meyer for SAU 16 COOP School Board My name is Kimberly Masucci Meyer. I seek to be re-elected to my third term on the ERCSB.

I am seeking your vote in support of my candidacy as your representative on the Exeter Region Cooperative School Board (ERCSB).

03/09/2022

YES! We did it! Thank you for supporting our efforts to be a positive voice for children. I am honored to begin my third term alongside such pro public education colleagues on the Coop School Board. We are ready to get to work to continue investing in our children. I am proud of our voters. Total win was 3837 over 2617. Congrats to the other Coop winners as well : Bob Hall, Scott Dennehy, and Kim Casey. View the official announcement at the link below.

https://www.facebook.com/1002572842/videos/482729126625502/

Please vote today!  Your vote matters so much.
03/08/2022

Please vote today! Your vote matters so much.

03/08/2022

Please vote today. Local
Elections matter! Voters in all six towns can vote for all the cooperative school board seats.

03/07/2022

Thank you to Duncan MacDonald, a proud 2019 graduate of EHS who is so perfectly representative of our phenomenal graduates. I appreciate your support. You make us all proud by your poise, thoughtfulness, and accomplishments.

Please join the forum this evening to learn more about the upcoming election on March 8th. Please vote!
03/06/2022

Please join the forum this evening to learn more about the upcoming election on March 8th. Please vote!

A reminder that the Virtual 2022 School Board and Exeter Candidate Forum is coming up on Sunday March 6th from 5 to 7 PM.

Register now: https://bit.ly/2022CandidateForum

Please vote on March 8th!
03/05/2022

Please vote on March 8th!

The children of our communities deserve no less and the power of your vote – that one vote– which may impact them for years to come.

03/04/2022

Have you ever asked your child what he or she is most interested in studying or what he or she would like to do post-secondary only to have them look at you slightly puzzled? They may know subjects they like or talk about jobs that sound cool, but they are not exactly sure what to try first. Experiential learning gives our children hands on experiences to find out what they do or do not enjoy. I supported funding a full-time Extended Learning Opportunities Coordinator position so we can give students a hands-on approach to learning while they earn high school credit. College and career readiness depends on our kids getting exposure to post secondary options in a low stakes environment. This is how we prepare our children for the future. Please vote on March 8th to be a positive voice for children.

03/03/2022

Why is it some in our community do not want to discuss education issues, but instead persist on leveling personal attacks? Is it because they don't have any real strategy or desire to improve education? This minority accuses me of having a conflict of interest because I am the CEO of the YMCA. The Y receives no paid goods or services from the schools, but has partnered for decades to provide child care like other child care providers. The YMCA provided emergency child care for essential workers when the pandemic started. The YMCA lost money operating this child care service when schools went remote; Y staff members were laid off when the schools went remote, as most of our programs take place iIN SCHOOLS. A vote to go remote actually hurt the YMCA. Yet this vocal minority does not want to accept these facts and continues to try to mislead voters with misinformation. I believe voters want to move forward and focus on our children's education. The attacks may continue, but I know the majority of us want to have productive dialogue on giving our kids the best education we can. Thank you for all your support and sending a strong message to keep politics our of our schools on March 8th.

RANKINGS : There has been a lot of talk about declining rankings in the SAU. We should all be concerned about the qualit...
03/03/2022

RANKINGS : There has been a lot of talk about declining rankings in the SAU. We should all be concerned about the quality of education our children are receiving. But, let's evaluate education in a meaningful way - which is a lot more work. Children are more than standardized tests - perhaps this is why many colleges are now "test optional", meaning they do not require SAT or ACT scores, in the admissions process.

Did you know some of these rankings use the number of students who took AP exams (took - not passed) compared to number of seniors to impact ranking. So if you had 30 more students take and fail the AP exam, a school could be ranked higher.

In all reality, rankings tell us very little about the quality of education our children are receiving. Don't get me wrong - no one wants their high school rankings to be low. and there may be ways to use rankings as a a tool, but not as an indicator of education quality. Rankings may tell us about the type of instruction at the school - how well are we teaching to the test. They may help us ask questions about long term trends. They show a snapshot in time on student performance. Don't get me wrong - standardized tests can be a useful tool, but not to attack a school for how they rank against other high schools (apples to oranges).

Teaching to the test instead of teaching our children the competencies they need to succeed is outdated. It is the way I was educated many years ago; memorize and regurgitate.

Thankfully, education today has progressed. Today's education standards demand our students perform and demonstrate competencies, like critical thinking. And yes, there are plenty of ways we can and SHOULD evaluate the quality of our district's education (attendance, drop out rates, graduation rates, internships, and other indicators the community deems important using the Balanced Scorecard). All kids deserve a candid assessment of academic rigor and a high quality public education.

As you are doing your research on rankings, you may want to read this article "Why High-School Rankings Are Meaningless—and Harmful" by John Tierney in The Atlantic.
https://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2013/05/why-high-school-rankings-are-meaningless-and-harmful/276122/

Here is are two excerpts: "...the Mathews ranking -- and, to a lesser extent, the others -- amplifies the absurdity that pervades contemporary public education in the United States, where cramming students' heads with information and then subjecting those students to standardized tests seems to have supplanted helping students to learn as the preferred modus operandi of many education officials, and where the behavior of school officials is shaped more by perverse incentives than by educational common sense."

"...The ranking itself is meaningless. But the harm it and other lists of its kind do to public education and the role they play in driving the College Board's revenues can't be overlooked. These lists may sell papers and draw readers to websites, but for those of us outside of that business, we've a duty to push back against this kind of reductionism wherever we see it."

How much value can there be in an index that rates thousands of schools? When it reinforces the worst tendencies in our education system, not much.

Thank you for the great show of support today on Great Bridge in Exeter.  I appreciate your positive energy and smiles.
03/02/2022

Thank you for the great show of support today on Great Bridge in Exeter. I appreciate your positive energy and smiles.

03/01/2022

You may notice that a group has propped up a slate of candidates with the intent to take control of our school boards. Their platform is one of negativity and disdain for school administration and the way we fund schools in NH: our property taxes.

If you listen to these candidates, I challenge you to find substantive suggestions on how to improve our education for all students. Ask them what is most important to focus on in order to improve academic rigor. Ask them what ideas they have for improving our students' college and career readiness. Ask them if they know that we asked for a department head (learning area leader) for world language to emphasize the importance of global learning. Ask them if they know how we have been working to improve our math program and if they know the areas of math we found to be weak (geometry, by the way) and how we are remedying this. Ask them about industry relationships at SST, how we work with Great Bay Charter School, and the progress we have made in competency based education. Ask them why it is important that students are ready to learn so things like student wellness, health, safety, and belonging are foundational. I could go on, but I imagine you will struggle to find answers to these questions.

What you will find with these candidates is misinformation, lies, and a misunderstanding of school board governance roles and responsibilities. Many are angry due to masking and remote schooling during the pandemic, and not by a desire to improve education.

Hindsight is 20/20 and there is much to reflect on and learn from during the last two years, good and bad, but our students deserve board members committed to recovery, moving beyond the pandemic and focusing on positive student outcomes. Our children deserve board members willing to work with our school administration while asking tough questions and setting high expectations; that is how we positively impact student outcomes.

The school board has three functions: policy, budget, and hiring the superintendent with the Joint School Board. We hire professional educators to operate our schools using best practices around learning. That basic governance rule is being overlooked by many candidates.

We have talented staff in SAU 16 and amazing students who deserve board members who are ready to serve with an open mind, have a willingness to learn, be dedicated to all students and have an ability to balance taxpayer concerns.

PLEASE VOTE ON MARCH 8th.

Address

Exeter, NH

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