Principal’s Post for March 7, 2021

Special Activities on March 12

March 12th is the last school day before spring break.  Students have an out of uniform green/white themed day on the 12th, and we will do the Minute to Win It activities in the afternoon that had been postponed from Catholic Schools Week due to the weather.  Classes resume after spring break on March 22nd.

Mid-Quarter Reports Emailed This Week

Mid-quarter reports will be emailed this week.  Use JMC to see the most current grades for students in at least grades 3-8.

Home & School Meeting This Week

Home & School will meet at 7:00 p.m. on Thursday.  An in-person option with social distancing is available in the cafeteria, and the Zoom link will be sent via email later this week.

Last Day of School

The OLV/JFK board of education voted to have June 11th as our last day of school this year.  With more than enough instructional hours to meet requirements and a major HVAC construction project to be completed in already a shorter than normal summer, it was decided to stay with June 11th as our last day of school.  The DCSD will continue until the 16th.  Because June 11th is not Davenport’s last day, there is no early dismissal at JFK on June 11th.

The first day of school for next year will be August 23rd.  We are awaiting a corrected full year 2021-22 calendar from the DCSD before we finalize our calendar for next year.

Board of Education Openings

If you would like to be involved in decisions like the two mentioned above, consider running for the board of education.  The board meets on the first Tuesday of each month from about 6:30-8:00 p.m.  Our longest meetings typically are when we talk “money,” that is, when we try to budget our priorities and put talk into action.  Board members occasionally have another meeting to attend during the month.  A board member’s term is three years.  Please contact me if you are interested in being on the board, and I will connect you with a board member for more information.  Elections are in May.

Virtual Career Fair

This year’s Scott County Catholic Schools and St. Ambrose University 8th grade career fair is virtual.  We would like to thank our “presenters” who did things much differently this year, and our counselors and student services personnel, including our Emma Wolf, who organized the event.  Finally, we could not have done anything at all without the tech support at each school, including Dianne Siefers at JFK.  Photos are on our Facebook.

The challenges of the virtual career fair seemed to mirror challenges faced with taking other things virtual over the last year.  “We’ll just do remote learning,” “we’ll just livestream volleyball games,” etc. usually results in a ton of IT work with video and audio formats, settings in what is used to record video, settings on the hosting site/platform, website filters/blockers which are different in a school setting than in/on one’s personal devices and home networks, bandwidth, WiFi access points, and more.  Those issued don’t even include individual oddities like “why does this one Chromebook keep trying to connect to the access point across the hall rather than the one nearby?”  We tested every link and even did an infrastructure test the day before the event, and still ran into challenges, especially for one of our 8th grade homerooms.  Nothing is easy with COVID!  We would also like to thank the supervising teachers who helped troubleshoot issues and implement and even revise our back up plans on the fly.

Although we have added more access points this fall, we currently have three companies that are examining the building for a complete redo of our wireless network.

Donations, Fundraisers, and Special Projects

We have restricted use funds in memory of Janet Thomas, long-time librarian for JFK and organist for OLV, that will be used toward outdoor musical equipment to be installed near our rosary-themed play area by the playground this summer.  If you would like to contribute toward that project, please specify that with your donation.

Major projects related to the Cultivating Our Future capital campaign are being planned.  A quote was approved to replace the blower in the church’s HVAC system, and quotes are being received to replace the church’s sound system.  (None too soon!)  We are also finalizing the documents for the school HVAC project that we’d like to complete this summer.  The school HVAC project includes heating pipes mitigation, mechanical ventilation, air conditioning, and air purification.  Pledges and donations are still being accepted for the $1.6 million campaign.  For more information about the campaign, use the following link:  capital campaign.

Plans are being made for the Rock the Lot Gala that will combine online elements and socially distant outdoor elements utilizing our vast campus.  We also hope to celebrate the anticipated beginning of the school HVAC project and just making it through the 2020-21 school year!  The Rock the Lot Gala is May 15, 2021.  If you would like to donate an item or service that can be auctioned alone or in a basket combined with other items, please contact Angie Hillebrand in the school office.

Plant Sale packets went home with students this past week.  Now that we’re starting to see grass again, it’s time to think spring!  For online ordering, please visit:  https://www.janetsjungle.com/davenport-jfk-catholic-school.html  Don’t forget to check back each week to see what new (online) BONUS BUYS have been added!  The sale concludes April 5th.  Plant Pickup Days (curbside only again this year) will be: April 29th & April 30th.
Fundraisers provide OLV/JFK one way to receive support from the broader community.  If it weren’t for fundraisers, users of the school, that is, tuition paying families, would have to pay hundreds of dollars more each year.
We are also, of course, grateful to OLV parishioners, including most of you, who give generously to the parish.  The parish support of JFK equates to almost $2,000 per K-8 student.

Tuition Contracts for 2021-22, Kindergarten Round-Up, PS, and ECLC Registration

Emily Sanderson, in the school office, is preparing the 2021-22 tuition contracts that represent the official registration document for next school year.  If you have not turned in your kindergarten round-up paperwork yet, please do so or contact her ASAP.  We don’t want to leave anyone off the list and without a kindergarten spot for next year.  We hope to have the tuition contracts mailed to families before spring break.

Preschool registration for 3, 4, and 5 year olds and ECLC (childcare) does remain open.  If you have not yet registered for these programs, please contact the school office ASAP.  Information we receive from families is used to determine waiting lists, staffing levels, and the number of sections to operate for each grade level.  We are, for example, already looking at student to staff ratios for preschool and ECLC for next year.

COVID Data

Below is a link to a .pdf file that shows several graphs of Scott County and JFK data.

I’ll add a few comments below as well.

COVID Data, March 5, 2021

  • Over the last week, Scott County data continued to trend downward.  Health department officials are hoping that we can avoid a 4th surge even as new variants become more widespread.  Looking at the “Confirmed and Epi-Linked Infections” graphs, one can see the first surge after the July 4th holiday, a November surge (which, oddly enough for Iowa, was before Thanksgiving), and the after Christmas surge.  Health officials jokingly asked school administrators if we’d consider cancelling spring break!
  • Rates in Scott County are still above the July surge.  Health officials are concerned that we might become complacent because COVID numbers aren’t as high as just the latest surge.
  • On Thursday and Friday, we did have a milestone of sorts at JFK.  There were no students or staff absent because they were required to quarantine as close contacts.  We haven’t seen that since before November!
  • For the last two weeks, most of our illness absences have not been due to COVID symptoms.  COVID symptoms are defined as one high risk symptom (such as a new cough) or two or more low risk symptoms (such as vomiting and fever).
  • A new study out of Mississippi suggests that the number of children who have had COVID-19 is more than ten times higher than previously thought.  The study looked for COVID-19 antibodies in blood samples that were taken between May and September for other reasons and compared it to the number of children having actual positive COVID tests during the same time period.  They found that the number of children who have had COVID-19 may have been more than ten times higher than the number who actually tested positive.  The difference, it is thought, is believed to be because younger children have less severe symptoms or may be asymptomatic entirely.  The article, of course, also emphasized the continued need for COVID-19 mitigation strategies.  Here is a link to the article.

End of Year Special Activities

We have begun to think about some of the end of the school year special activities.  It is likely that we won’t be able to do some and have to make significant changes to others.  Examples include 8th grade and preschool “graduation,” field day, and band/music activities.  If you have ideas, please reach out to your child’s homeroom teacher or me.  We do a lot of brainstorming!

Be safe during spring break!

Chad