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Thank you Brooklyn Cardenas, for your amazing art work. Other students' submissions will be rotated throughout the year.
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November 28, 2016
Volume 20,
Issue 14
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Liberty Common School
1725 Sharp Point Drive, Fort Collins, CO 80525
Attendance Line: (Please call by 8:30 AM) 970-482-9800 Option 2
Office Hours: Monday - Friday 7:50AM - 4:00 PM
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Mrs.Trout, Kindergarten teacher, climbs to the top of Liberty Peak at today's Character Assembly.
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Mrs.Trout, courageously hangs out as
Jon Lachelt, belays.
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A big Liberty thank you to Jon Lachelt, Owner of Ascent Climbing and Fitness Studio, who spoke today at our Character Assembly on Self- Control.
Ascent Climbing and Fitness Studio has over 80 rope climbing routes some of which reach a height of 49', along with dozens of bouldering routes, fitness equipment and daily yoga classes. They have numerous kids classes, a youth climbing team, and climbing classes for adults to learn the necessary skills to fully enjoy the sport of climbing. CLICK HERE to view Ascent Climbing and Fitness Studio website.
Events Calendar
December 5| Liberty Lecture at LCHS. Topic: Galapagos
December 6|
3rd and 4th Grade Choir Concert, 6:30 p.m.
December 9| Chess Club
December 15|
BOD Meeting, 6:00 p.m.
December 16| Free Dress Day
December 19| 5th and 6th Grade Band and Choir Concert, 6:30 p.m.
December 19| Character Assembly-Cooperation. Members of the US Pro-Circuit Cyclist Team, Jelly Belly, will speak.
(4th-6th) attends: 8:10-8:45
(K-3rd) attends: 8:55-9:9:35
December 26-Jan. 6| Winter Break
Major Dates
2016-17 Calendar
- Winter Break- Dec. 26-Jan. 6
- Martin Luther King Day-Jan. 16-NO SCHOOL
- Professional Development Day-Feb. 17-NO SCHOOL
- Presidents' Day-Feb. 20-NO SCHOOL
- Spring Break-March 13-17-NO SCHOOL
- Good Friday-April 14-NO SCHOOL
- Last Day of Classes-1/2/Day May 26
T-Shirt Days
- Dec. 22nd
- Jan. 27th
- Feb. 24th
- March 31st
- April 28th
- May 19th
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School Portrait Make-up Day.
Friday December 2nd, 2016, 3:00-5:30PM and Saturday December 3- 9:00AM-12:00PM. Location is
Skillman Photography 818 E. Elizabeth, Fort Collins. Click Here to print an order form.
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LIBERTY ROBOTICS TEAMS HEAD TO STATE
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Coach Jenny McElwain writes:
I'm excited to report that our all-girls "Busy Bees" team competed successfully at the Lego Robotics tournament last weekend. The girls came in first place and were champions overall for the qualifier. Like the other Liberty teams, we are headed to the state championship December 17th. Our team members showed amazing perseverance, cooperation, and self-control from the first run of the day when our team realized our robot was malfunctioning in multiple ways. Our "Bee-V-3" couldn't score any points at all for the first few runs, and the team had to overcome shock and disappointment because they arrived with a robot that was programmed to score 129 points. From then, they troubleshot, checked the connections, unloaded and reloaded all of the missions, and even programmed a brand new 15-point mission to compete in the third and final round.
Besides a great score, the team was noted by judges for being a delight to watch during the core values judging, creating an off-the chart innovative design in the robot game, and having researched their project so thoroughly along with creating and already implementing lasting solutions during the season to really blow the judges away. We are so grateful to the Liberty Leadership for the support and sponsorship of our team.
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The team members are: Anagha Mathur (4th grade, rookie), Avery Peters (4th grade, rookie), Josie McElwain (6th grade, 2nd year), Juliana McElwain (4th grade, rookie), Riya Shadaksharappa (4th grade, rookie), and Riley Carlson (5th grade, 2nd year). Coached by Jenny and Jon McElwain with the profuse help of Kevin Carlson and very active support of all the parents.
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Liberty team, Trial and Error, took first place on the project portion of the competition and was invited to the state competition in December
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Pictured from left to right: Carter Conrady, Tristan Cox, Harlen Montez, Matthew Stalcup, Nolan Tidwell, Tyler Cox, and Jarett Jackson
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The History of Liberty
Common High School
By: Mrs. Michelle Provaznik and Principal Bob Schaffer (Founding Parents)
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The History of Liberty Common High School By: Mrs. Michelle Provaznik and Principal Bob Schaffer (Founding Parents)
Part 4 of 5
In May of 2013, Liberty Common High School graduated its first senior class. This was the culmination of an epic effort started in 2008 when Liberty Board of Directors Chairman
Craig Horton
and Board Member
Michelle Provaznik
attended a charter-school conference in Denver.
The information the pair gathered at the conference, along with general statewide excitement about the growing success of charter schools in Colorado, provided impetus to explore expanding Liberty Common School to a full K-12 school. Also attending the same conference was LCS founding parent,
Laurel Van Maren
, who was on Ridgeview Classical Schools Board of Directors at the time. The three discussed moving forward with a Liberty high school and began meeting for the purposes of laying out general plans for the school.
This was not the first time Liberty's parent leaders considered a high-school expansion. In fact, the idea had been pondered twice before, but failed to garner enough support from the Board of Directors or administration due to a variety of issues including financial feasibility.
In 2008, things were different. Liberty Common School's kindergarten-through-ninth-grade program had been awarded numerous state and national commendations for academic achievement. The school's students consistently earned top academic-performance scores in the Poudre School District, and across Colorado. The school had achieved national "Blue Ribbon" status, and was regarded as a premier nationwide example of excellence by the Virginia-based Core Knowledge Foundation.
Liberty's reputation as a nationally known, top-performing school naturally attracted the attention of new parents throughout the region. Enrollment had swelled to 581 students in grades K-9. The school was more than completely full. The number of families on the lottery list waiting to enroll their children at Liberty numbered well over fifteen-hundred.
That year, the Board of the Poudre School District voted to change the grade configuration for neighborhood junior-high and high schools throughout the district. Where the district's high schools previously consisted of grades 10-12, PSD’s high schools would now expand to include ninth graders.
The change in the district's configuration would apply direct competitive pressure on Liberty's ninth grade. The writing was on the wall: Liberty either needed to expand to include a high school, or watch its ninth grade wither on the vine.
Horton and Provaznik, with the support of Van Maren, presented their high-school ideas to their colleagues on the Liberty Board of Directors. Though the initial response was lukewarm, the Board formed a committee to explore and evaluate the feasibility of expanding the school through twelfth grade. Horton was selected to chair the Expansion Committee.
The Committee's first step involved holding a community meeting. In October of 2008, a notice went out to all parents about the idea of creating a high school. Over 80 people attended the meeting.
Not only were parents of Liberty students interested in the formation of a high school, prospective Liberty parents were interested in the addition of more K-8 classrooms (one additional classroom per grade) in the hopes their children might be called from the extensive lottery list to fill new slots (30 new students per grade) that would be created.
The goal of the Expansion Committee was to create a comprehensive business plan to prove the feasibility of the whole-school expansion. Seven subcommittees were formed, involving over fifty parent volunteers. The subcommittees were chaired by the following parents:
* Athletics:
Dan Knab
* Character Education:
Mark Sutherlin
and
Kendra Mosely
* Curriculum:
Michelle Provaznik
* Facilities:
Tricia Diehl
and
Peter Kast
* Finance:
Dan Provaznik
* Marketing/Enrollment:
Melanie Seilbach
* Scheduling:
Angela Horton
and
Krissy Kopren
The subcommittee efforts centered upon creating a high school from the ground up. At the time, there was no blueprint or instructions to refer to, so the committees performed extensive research to develop curriculum, sports programs, campus policies, facilities, etc. The highest goal was to avoid any compromise of Liberty Common School's core mission - teaching the kids already in its system.
While much of the expansion effort focused on the high school, the largest part of the expansion was, in fact, the addition of a third track for the grades K-6, which increased elementary-school enrollment and staff by 50%. The needed classroom space for the enrollment jump necessitated moving grades 7-12 to a second campus.
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Tim Ricketts
(above) former business manager of Liberty Common Schools, worked with the BOD finding complicated financial solutions that allowed the high school to become a reality.
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Another public meeting was held on January 6, 2009 to gauge community interest. Many parents were interested in the expansion and signed their students up for the waiting list. Several members of the Poudre School District (PSD) Board of Directors also attended the meeting. Their initial reaction seemed supportive. That mattered. If the expansion was to occur, PSD's approval would be required.
Ultimately, at a meeting of the Liberty Board of Directors, administration, and parents on February 5, 2009, the Expansion Committee recommended Liberty expand and add a high school. The Committee's presentation showed that not only was the expansion feasible, but that Liberty would, in fact, be in financial jeopardy if the ninth grade was lost at the hands of PSD’s plans for grade reconfiguration.
With very conservative enrollment estimates, the findings showed that expansion of grades 9-12, simultaneously with the addition of a third track of K-8 was not only possible, but would allow Liberty to thrive. The Expansion Committee was thrilled to have founders Dr. Randy Everett and Dr. Maureen Schaffer speak in favor of the expansion.
On February 19, 2009, Liberty's Board petitioned the Poudre School District to amend Liberty's Charter and to add a third track of K-6th grade, to also add a tenth grade, and to phase in an eleventh and twelfth grade in subsequent years.
A resolution adopted by the Liberty Board of Directors said it all: "The purpose of completing our high-school program is to offer high-school education that is college preparatory in nature, specifically builds on the Core Knowledge Curriculum, effectively continues to foster the reading, writing, mathematical and thinking skills particular to Liberty's current offering, continues the Liberty approach to character education, is small in size, extends the economics, history, science and mathematics foundation that Liberty has established, and makes use of learning opportunities inherent in the thinking framework currently employed at Liberty."
Many exchanges and meetings between the district and Liberty ensued. Craig Horton, Michelle Provaznik, and
John Rohrbaugh
were asked to present the case for the Liberty expansion at a PSD Board meeting. Ultimately, the PSD Board agreed to pursue negotiations with a vote of 6-1. Final negotiations proceeded.
In August of 2009, Liberty received a letter from PSD's Board president
Larry Neal
indicating the district was pleased to move forward on an addendum to the Charter allowing the expansion and the new high school to go forward.
Even though the district had formally approved the expansion, implementing it was hardly a foregone conclusion. An acute economic recession had stricken the nation and hit Colorado's School Finance Act pretty hard. All public schools in the state were notified there would be a punishing rescission of previously allocated state funds - funds upon which Liberty was counting. Furthermore, it was announced the state would reduce spending for the next year on the order of 6% or more.
Tim Ricketts
, Liberty's business manager was asked to run multiple versions of financial scenarios anticipating every conceivable budget situation. The Board had to make a serious decision involving a long-term financial commitment amid the funding rescission, the budget reduction, and a precarious economy.
To be continued......
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Gala Desserts Auction. Calling all bakers and dessert lovers. Each year at the Spring Gala, the Dessert Auction is a deliciously successful fundraiser. This year we hope to put the icing on the cake by inviting all of you to participate!
Here’s the scoop:
Monday, December 5, 2016 from 8-10am in the teachers’ lounge, each family is invited to bring their favorite dessert along with a mouth-watering description. We will hold a scrumptious tasting for the teachers and invite them to vote for their favorites. 10 winners will be invited to donate that same dessert for the Spring Gala Dessert Auction.
Some sweet tips:
*Desserts can be home-made, store-made, or restaurant-made.*We suggest gourmet, rich, and decadent desserts… the ones you just have to dig into.
*Please avoid making pound cakes, cookies, pies and fondant decorated cakes.
*Each dessert will be photographed, so make them jaw dropping.
*Deliver your amazing sweet contribution to the Teachers Lounge at the LOWER school between 8:00AM and 10:00AM on Monday, December 5th.
*Winners will be asked to deliver the exact same dessert at 10am at the Hilton Hotel on March 3rd, so please make it repeatable.
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Amazon Smile. We are excited to announce a new and easy way for you to generate donations for Liberty. Earn money for Liberty while you shop through
Smile.Amazon.com
.
AmazonSmile is a simple and automatic way for you to support Liberty every time you shop, at no cost to you. When you shop at
Smile.Amazon.com
, you’ll find the same low prices, vast selection and convenient shopping experience as
Amazon.com
, with the added bonus that Amazon will donate a portion of the purchase price back to Liberty.
- Simply go to http://smile.amazon.com and enter “Core Knowledge Charter School Foundation.” CKC School Foundation is the technical name for our non-profit organization. You will not find us by searching for 'Liberty.’
- The AmazonSmile Foundation will donate 0.5% of the purchase price of your eligible AmazonSmile purchases back to Liberty.
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The Time is Now to Sign Up for Chess Club
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Chessmates at Liberty Common
All grades welcome!
Beginner and Advanced Groups
Fridays 3:15 - 4:15PM
Dates:
Jan 20, 27
Feb 3, 10, 24
March 3, 10, 24, 31
April 7, 21, 28
Cost: $65 for 12 weeks of class and chess instruction.
Each class includes 30 min of instruction and 30 min of playtime taught by an experienced
chess coach.
Registration: Online at www.chessmatesfc.com >SCHOOL CLUBS > Liberty Common
Fill out Form and make payment.
Question or Comments?
Contact Us:
www.facebook.com/chessmatesfc
(970) 658-9976 (call or text)
Refund policy:
Any participant may receive a full refund until after the second class is completed. After the second class there
will be no refunds granted, or partial credits given, for any reason.
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Paulette Hansen:
282-8455
Patrick Albright:
232-8257
Joel Goeltl
: 593-8556
Jeff Webb
: 545-9636
Denise Benz
: 420-4184
Kelly Notarfrancesco: 295-4643
Aislinn Kottwitz
: 217-5925
Upcoming Board Meeting- December 15, 2016, LCS 6:00PM
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