District leaders used the curriculum committee portion of the meeting to highlight program growth and preliminary academic gains while cautioning that much of the detailed assessment data remain embargoed.
Lede: Mr S and Mr Thomas told the board that JROTC enrollment has grown substantially (from roughly 15–20 students to multiple new sign-ups, with about 45 additional students registered for next year) and that the district’s prevocational Spirit/NorthStar programs are expanding and attracting students earlier in high school.
Nut graf: Officials said multiple measures — attendance, chronic absenteeism, behavior referrals and culture/climate surveys — show improvement and that early performance indicators (NJ metrics, ELA i-Ready) reflect significant growth, though the district said the full dataset is embargoed and will be released in more detail next month.
Details and board questions: Board members asked whether elimination of tracking and modified block schedules at the intermediate level affected outcomes. Mr Thomas said i-Ready results showed strong year-over-year increases in some parameters (he cited an example of a 150 percent increase in a subset of English measures from last year to this year) and said the district will continue to revise enrichment approaches and evaluate results when NJSLA outcomes are available.
Quotes and attributions: "We are seeing significant growth in all of our culture and climate surveys this year," Mr Thomas said. On program engagement Mr S said the JROTC and NorthStar programs are "doing wonderful things" and credited teachers, volunteers and community grant partners.
What remains to come: Officials said more detailed breakout data will be presented at a future meeting after embargoed materials are released.