Stakeholderconvos
Stakeholderconvos
Stakeholderconvos
Stakeholder Conversations
Executive Summary
Bloomington Public Schools
December 3, 2014
Background
Comments
provided
in
this
summary
are
not
verbatim
nor
do
they
capture
all
of
the
feedback
or
questions
posed,
rather
the
comments
reflect
the
primary
themes
from
the
entire
population
of
stakeholders
who
participated
in
the
conversations.
Methodology
The
collective
responses
reported
here
are
intended
to
assist
the
School
Board,
district
leadership
and
various
advisory
committees
in
identifying
opportunities
to
develop
new
and/or
improve
current
programs
and
services.
Results
are
not
projectable,
cannot
be
statistically
applied
to
the
community
and
should
not
be
used
as
a
substitute
for
quantitative
studies,
if
the
issues
raised
warrant
further
research.
Primary
Themes
Significant
perceptions
identified
in
the
conversations
by
question
and
stakeholder
group
are
as
follows:
Question:
What
about
the
Pathways
to
Graduation
(Personalized
Growth
Plans)
resonate
with
you?
Confuses
or
concerns
you?
Students
Parents
Business/Government
Leaders,
Community
Residents
Match
students
curiosity
with
their
options;
introduce
career
examples
in
the
classroom
at
an
earlier
age.
Personal
plan
is
achievable,
but
it
must
be
a
shared
responsibility
between
student,
parents
and
potential
employers.
Cant
visualize
how
the
plan
will
work;
seems
overwhelming
to
create
personalized
plans
for
thousands
of
students.
Concern
for
where
the
resources
will
come
from
to
develop
the
plans,
and
ongoing
support
for
them.
Support
for
re-thinking
current
guidance
counseling
investments
for
career
counseling
or
career
navigators.
Question:
What
are
your
hopes
and
dreams
for
you
(students);
your
children
(parents)?
Students
Parents
Question:
What
should
students
know
and
be
able
to
do,
to
be
successful
in
school,
life?
Students
Recognize
we
(students)
dont
understand
everything
Good
study
and
note-taking
skills,
collaboration
skills,
and
sleeping
habits
Good
working
relationship
with
teachers
Self
motivation
and
how
to
self
advocate
Ability
to
work
with
others
even
if
you
dont
like
or
feel
comfortable
around
them
How
not
to
procrastinate;
meet
deadlines;
be
accountable
Set
goals,
take
the
initiative,
face
down
obstacles;
be
a
role
model
for
others
Respect
for
one
another
and
differing
opinions
Parents
Business/Government
Leaders,
Community
Residents
Students
should
know
how
to
set
their
own
vision,
understand
options
and
pursue
what
makes
them
happy;
be
more
self-aware
of
who
they
are,
their
strengths
and
weaknesses.
Develop
personal
and
social
responsibility,
think
critically,
and
communicate
effectively.
Empower
students
and
parents
to
own
the
responsibility
for
education;
to
help
students
become
leaders.
Career
training
skills
Academics
plus
social
skills;
peer
review
to
help
evaluate
where
students
are
on
their
pathway.
Works
well
with
others
Start
at
pre-school
talking
to
students
and
parents
about
success.