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Theater group seeks directors, producers

Mill Race Theatre Company, the city’s oldest community theater organization, is seeking directors and producers for the 2017 season of performances.

Individuals who have an interest in leading and executing the artistic vision of shows should apply for the director slot, according to the theater company. Individuals interested in leading productions from the business end including, but not limited to, securing sponsors and handling ticket sales and marketing should apply for the producer position, it said.

Applicants may receive interviews with the Mill Race Theatre Company board of directors.

These leaders will help with next year’s shows, including “Proof,” “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat” and “A Charlie Brown Christmas.”

Deadline to apply is Jan. 10.

Applications and additional information can be found online at millracetheatre.org.

Online child care finder launched in Indiana

The Indiana Family and Social Services Administration recently launched a new online tool to aid families in finding child care and early education providers throughout Indiana.

The website, Childcarefinder.in.gov, allows families to search licensed providers, registered ministries and exempt providers. Families will be able to set search parameters to help meet their specific needs. Parameters include location, type of provider, hours, licensing status and whether or not the provider participates in Paths to Quality, the state’s voluntary quality rating and improvement system.

Inspection reports and validated complaints or enforcement actions for each provider are also provided on the site.

The website can be used from smart phones and mobile devices, as well as on a desktop computer.

Sound of North will perform at inaugural parade in Washington D.C.

The Columbus North Sound of North marching band will march in the presidential inauguration day parade in Washington D.C. in January after pledges reached $93,385 today.

Rep. Milo Smith, R-Columbus, said he is still working hard to raise the remaining $30,000 or so, but the amount raised so far is enough for the band to start making travel plans.

Band Director Bill Stultz confirmed he has told the band and their parents that the trip is on to perform in the inaugural parade for Columbus native and Vice President-elect Mike Pence. Pence graduated from Columbus North and asked the band to be invited.

The $125,000 is the amount estimated for 200 band members and staff to make the trip. If enough corporate and private donations come through, the trip also will include some Washington, D.C., sightseeing opportunities.

An account has been established at Salin Bank’s locations in Columbus and Edinburgh to accept donations under the title “Columbus North Band Boosters inaugural parade fund.”

Smith is asking all those who have pledged so far to please head to a Salin Bank location to deposit pledge money.

And those who want to help the band complete its $125,000 total are urged to send a pledge to milo@milosmith.com and then deposit the money at Salin Bank.

For more on this story, see Thursday’s Republic.

Report cards in for area schools

Bartholomew County schools received report card grades that would make parents proud, as every area school rated an “A” or “B” for the first time since 2011.

The Indiana Department of Education on Tuesday released its 2016 A-F accountability grades for schools, which now have 30 days to appeal their grade to the Indiana State Board of Education.

District grades are scheduled to be released to the public after the board approves them, department spokeswoman Samantha Hart said.

Significant improvements were scored by Clifty Creek Elementary School, which went from being rated as “D” for 2014 and 2015 to a “B” this year. Taylorsville Elementary School, which had been rated at “C” for the past two years, also moved up to a “B.”

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Hope Elementary, another school that had worked its way out of “D” and “F” grades over the past five years, held steady at “B,” a ranking it has maintained since 2014.

Flat Rock-Hawcreek Superintendent Shawn Price said the corporation was extremely pleased with the results, especially Hope Elementary’s continued progress and growth.

Price said Hope Elementary’s success has been part of an intentional effort toward improvement, and credited Principal Jessica Poe, hired in 2015, for the great strides the school has achieved. He also credited the school’s staff for working as a cohesive team with efforts to look at ways to help individual students be successful.

“Honestly, with all the controversy with ISTEP+, our schools and teachers are going to continue to do what’s best for the students,” he said.

Noting that the next legislative session may bring large changes to the current standardized testing system, Price said this year’s scores will be a huge step in moving Hope Elementary off a priority status label with the state.

Release of the grades makes it possible for school corporations to finalize their teacher evaluations, with a piece of that evaluation tool being the school grade.

“It has an impact linked to compensation,” Price said.

Bartholomew Consolidated School Corp. Superintendent Jim Roberts said his school corporation has known for some time about the positive grade report. Roberts said he is proud of all the staff members who have worked so hard to achieve it.

“But we try really hard not to get too excited about this,” he said, noting that the grades are based on a formula and assessments that have changed and are not the same as previous years.

“Comparisons have been a challenge on this,” he said.

While the high school formula has built in graduation rates and other career-preparation data into its formula leading to a letter grade, the elementaries and middle schools rely more heavily on the ISTEP+ for the performance standards, he said.

“I wish they would add a few more factors into those formulas,” Roberts said.

New to the corporation this year, Roberts said he was proud of the work by Clifty Creek and Taylorsville staff, as those schools had experienced low grade scores in the past.

“It’s tough when you work so hard and you get a letter grade that’s not as good as you want it to be,” he said.

“They have been working as hard as anybody in the country,” Roberts said. “I’m very proud of all of them.”

While Bartholomew County, including its private schools, found optimism in Tuesday’s announcement, statewide the results were more sobering.

After a change in the method to calculate the school accountability grades, Indiana overall had more failing schools and fewer schools with “A” ratings, the data shows.

Failing schools increased by 3.5 percentage points while schools earning an “A” dropped by 31.8 percentage points, thestatehousefile.com reported.

Among the BCSC schools that fell from “A” status to “B” with this year’s standards were Parkside, Schmitt and Smith elementary schools. However, Columbus North High School moved from “B” to “A” with this year’s standards.

Members of the State Board of Education said some of the shift is connected to the new manner in which the accountability grades are calculated, rewarding a school’s growth as well as other career-readiness standards.

“This year, Indiana implemented a new student-centered school accountability system utilizing Indiana’s new, more rigorous standards and assessments for the first time,” Superintendent of Public Instruction Glenda Ritz said in a statement. “For those reasons, the 2015-16 school year establishes a new baseline for school accountability grades in Indiana.”

Additionally, legislators passed a law to prevent a school’s grade from being unfavorably affected by the 2015 ISTEP scores, a key factor in the accountability formula. Legislators called 2015 a transition year with higher standards and a new test, leading to significantly lower test scores.

After the ISTEP scores dipped again in 2016, school officials are already discussing trying to get accountability grades to be held harmless once again.

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School accountability grades are determined by the Indiana Department of Education, which rates public and private schools on an A-F scale. Various factors contribute to a school’s accountability grade, including ISTEP+ results in elementary and middle schools and graduation rates in high schools.

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To see how Bartholomew County schools were graded since 2011, see Page XX.

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Man, 69, dead after accidental shooting

An area man has died in what’s been ruled an accidental shooting.

Officers from the Columbus Police Department were called to the 300 block of Cleveland Street about a person who had been shot at about 10 a.m. Monday, said Lt. Matt Harris, department spokesman. When the officers arrived, they located Michael A. Sporleder, 69, unresponsive in the living room.

A family member inside the home said Sporleder was attempting to clean a 9 mm handgun when it discharged, striking him, Harris said.

Bartholomew County Coroner Larry Fisher, who had attended school with the victim in North Vernon, said he pronounced Sporleder dead at the scene from an accidental gunshot wound to the chest. Sporleder was cleaning guns in the home with his son when the accidental shooting happened, Fisher said.

Deputies arrest local man on burglary charge at closed nursery

Bartholomew County Sheriff’s deputies arrested a local man after responding to a burglary alarm at the now-closed Wischmeier Nursery near Garden City.

Deputies were called to 240 Jonesville Road at about 3:18 a.m. Tuesday. Deputy Nate Nichols saw a broken window on the northeast side of the building and found Timothy Schoettmer, 36, 2644 Hawpatch Drive, inside the building.

Sgt. Kris Weisner, Deputy Dane Duke and K9 Bolt searched the building but no other individuals were located.

Schoettmer was booked into the Bartholomew County Jail on charges of burglary and public intoxication and is being held there without bond, deputies said.

Wischmeier closed permanently this past summer after 31 years in business.

Police investigate accidental shooting

Detectives from the Columbus Police Department are investigating an accidental shooting.

Columbus police were called to the 300 block of Cleveland Street about a person that had been shot at about 10 a.m. Monday, said Lt. Matt Harris, Columbus Police Department spokesman. When the officers arrived, they located Michael A. Sporleder, a 69 year old Columbus resident, unresponsive in the living room.

He was later pronounced dead at the scene. A family member inside the home said Sporleder was attempting to clean a 9 mm handgun when it discharged, striking him.

For more on this story, see Wednesday’s Republic.

County native completes fundraising bike ride

Hartsville native Carter Forney has completed his long-distance, fundraising bike ride through the southern United States.

Forney finished his cycling journey of more than 3,000 miles Friday in St. Augustine, Florida. That was more than two months after he began his trip Oct. 3 in San Diego, California. The 2007 Hauser High School graduate has raised about $2,000 so far toward a $2,500 goal to provide bicycles to children through the Bikes for Goodness Sake Foundation. The Austin, Texas-based charity provides bikes to underprivileged children through corporate-sponsored bike-build events.

He has a GoFundMe page and video blog, and is planning rewards to those who donate to his cause. He plans to personally thank donors who send at least a $20 donation. Others who donate $50 or more will get a documentary that the cyclist filmed as he made his journey.

To contribute to Carter Forney’s Cycling Coast to Coast for Bikes for Goodness Sake, go to gofundme.com/2ky3gbsw

Local teachers receive grants

Two Columbus teachers have each received $12,000 Lilly Endowment grants to fund personal and professional renewal experiences.

Recipients are Central Middle School teacher Katherine R. Slabosky and Columbus East High School teacher Derek C. Chastain.

Slabosky plans to use the money for a project called “Advice from a Glacier.” She plans to visit Iceland and Glacier National Park in Montana to observe glaciers and geology.

Chastain’s project, “Lost Among the Stars: Building a Telescope to Gaze Into Deep Space,” will involve building a large reflecting telescope. The telescope will then be used by students to pursue study about astronomy.

Chastain, who has taught at East since the fall of 2005, said he became interested in astronomy as a child while looking at constellations with his father.

He plans to build the telescope during summer break and hopes to begin using it next fall.

The Lilly Endowment Teacher Creativity Fellowship program is in its 30th year in 2017, with many educators using the fellowships to travel across the United States and the world to pursue different interests.

“These dedicated teachers, principals, counselors and media specialists have designed inspirational projects that promise to strengthen them personally and professionally,” said Sara B. Cobb, the endowment’s vice president for education.

“For three decades now, we at the endowment have learned how important it is for educators to have time and space to create and explore. They have shared with us that they return to their schools with a greater commitment to their students and the vocation of education.”

More than 2,900 educators have received grants since the fellowship program began in 1987.

The endowment selected 2017 fellows from a competitive pool of more than 500 applicants.

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The Lilly Endowment Teacher Creativity Fellowship program will mark its 30th year in 2017. The fellowship program, which began in 1987, awards $12,000 grants to educators to pursue personal and professional interests.

The endowment selected 2017 fellows from a competitive pool of more than 500 applicants.

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Developer seeking delay on requests

An Indianapolis developer that has proposed building more than 300 single-family homes northwest of Columbus plans to ask a city panel to continue its application.

Arbor Investments intends to approach the Columbus Planning Commission at its 4 p.m. Wednesday meeting to seek a continuance of the company’s rezoning and annexation application, said Melissa Begley, assistant planning director with the city-county planning department.

The company is requesting to annex 151 acres in Columbus Township for a proposed subdivision, Abbey Place, between Indianapolis Road and Interstate 65 near the Princeton Park subdivision.

The firm is also seeking to rezone a portion of the property consisting of nearly 97 acres from residential single-family 2, or RS2, to residential single-family 3, or RS3.

The proposed development brought more than 40 people to Columbus City Hall on Nov. 9 when Arbor Investments pitched its plans to the Plan Commission. Many residents said they feared traffic problems in the area would worsen if the project were developed.

The developer of the project, Paul Claire, told the commission he would be willing to consider a traffic study after concerns were raised by audience members.

However, that traffic study has not been completed, which has led Arbor Homes to request the continuance, Begley said.

That request is subject to approval by the plan commission.

If the continuance is granted, the project could be revisited at the commission’s January or February meeting, she said.