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Leslie McNeely

Salem

Mrs. Leslie Ann McNeely, age 47, of Salem, passed away Monday, December 5, 2016, at St. Vincent Hospital in Indianapolis.

Leslie was born September 3, 1969, in Salem, the daughter of Leo Eugene Elrod and Teresa Lee Gater Garrity. She was a registered nurse at St. Vincent Hospital in Salem.

She is survived by her husband, Mark McNeely of Salem. They were married November 27, 1993. She is also survived by three sons, Josh Ferrenburg, Jared McNeely and Jordan McNeely all of Salem; her parents, Leo Eugene Elrod (Diana) of South Boston and Teresa Lee Garrity of Salem; two brothers, Jason Elrod of Salem and Samuel Garrity of Indianapolis; and three grandchildren, Annaston, Alison and Amelia Ferrenburg.

Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Friday at Weathers Funeral Home in Salem. Burial will follow in Crown Hill Cemetery. Visitation will be from 4 to 8 p.m. Thursday and from 9 a.m. until service time Friday.

Harriett Scheidt

Columbus

Harriett L. Scheidt, 83, of Columbus, died at 3:38 p.m. December 5, 2016, at Columbus Regional Hospital.

Harriett was born February 10, 1933, in Columbus, the daughter of Harry L. and Martha Hammon Babb. She married Donald L. Scheidt November 7, 1953.

Harriett was a Christian. She was a member of St. Paul Evangelical Lutheran Church, Clifty and Extension Homemakers Club “24”. She was a loving wife, mother, grandmother and great-grandmother. Harriett retired from Cummins Engine Company after 40 years of service.

The funeral will be at 1 p.m. Friday, December 9, 2016, at St. Paul Evangelical Lutheran Church, Clifty with Pastor Doug Bauman officiating. Calling hours will be from 5 to 7 p.m. Thursday at the church and one hour prior to the service at the church. Burial will be at Garland Brook Cemetery. Friends and family are invited to a bereavement dinner immediately following burial at the church.

Memorials may be made to the St. Paul Evangelical Lutheran Church, Clifty, Making Mission Possible through the funeral home.

Survivors include her husband, Don; children, Donita L. (Tony) Barringer, Lisa K. (Mark) Gilbert and Eric D. (Linda) Scheidt, all of Columbus; a sister, Wanda Vance of Stone Mountain, Georgia; grandchildren, Joshua Barringer, Luke Barringer and Caleb Barringer; step-grandchildren, Brian Gilbert and Kyle Gilbert; and great-grandchildren, Jordan Barringer, Jentry Barringer, Lyla Barringer, Jalynn Barringer, Cole Gilbert and Lake Gilbert.

She was preceded in death by her parents; a daughter, Marci L. Scheidt; brother, Albert Babb; and sisters, Theora Haydock and Mary Ellen Cox.

www.jewellrittman.com

Elsie Luedeman

Seymour

Elsie L. Luedeman, 91, of Seymour, formerly of Paris Crossing, died at 8:20 a.m. Monday, December 5, 2016, at Schneck Medical Center in Seymour, Indiana.

She is survived by her husband of 69 years, Walter; their children, Judy (Ralph) Hillenburg, Marilyn Hooser, Barbara (Jim) Grove, Mark (Linda) Luedeman, Lucille (Glenn) Metz and Paul (Mary) Luedeman; 18 grandchildren; several great-grandchildren; brothers, David (Phyllis) Marling and Max (Jean) Marling; and sisters, Marjorie (John) Morin and Nancy (Ray) Fisk.

Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Friday at Coffee Creek Christian Church with the Rev. Will Smith officiating. Burial will follow at Cana Cemetery. Friends and family may gather from 4 to 8 p.m. Thursday at Voss Chapel and from 10 a.m. until service time Friday at the church.

Memorials may be made to Cana Cemetery or Coffee Creek Christian Church through Voss & Sons Funeral and Crematory Service, Seymour, Indiana.

Ross Neese

Lebanon

Ross J. Neese, 88, of Lebanon, died Monday, December 5, 2016, in Columbus, Indiana.

Visitation will be held at from 4 to 8 p.m. Thursday at Myers Mortuary, 1502 N. Lebanon St., Lebanon. The Rosary will begin at 3:30 p.m. Thursday at the funeral home in Lebanon. A Mass of the Resurrection is planned for 10:30 a.m. Friday at St. Joseph Catholic Church, 319 E. South St., Lebanon, with the Rev. Timothy Kroeger officiating. Interment will follow at St. Joseph Cemetery.

He is survived by his wife, Phyllis Joan Neese; children, Theresa (Ross) J. Westerfield of Columbus and Timothy (Paula) F. Neese of Elkhart; brother, Byron Neese of Lebanon; five grandchildren; and 13 great-grandchildren.

In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made in his honor to the St. Joseph Building Fund, 319 E. South St., P.O. Box 309, Lebanon, Indiana 46052 or to the Lebanon Fire Department, 975 Lasley Drive, Lebanon, Indiana.

Mona Bode

Indianapolis

Mona Bode, 75, died at home with her family by her side on December 5, 2016, in Indianapolis.

Mona is survived by her daughters, Kimberly Bode (Michael Eder) and Kathleen Bode (J. Allen Hoover, II); six grandchildren; sisters, Shirley (Lloyd) Hudson, Rebecca (Ty) Johnson, Susan (Jerry Wayne) Scott and Anne (Timothy) Carpenter; brothers, Jefferey R. Vaughn, Edward Zollars, William Zollars; and foster brother, Robert D. Perkins.

Mona was preceded in death by her husband, Glen O. Bode.

Her funeral service will be held at 11 a.m. Friday at Burkholder Funeral Chapel, Seymour, with the Rev. James Hudson officiating. Visitation will be held from 4 to 8 p.m. Thursday and from 10 a.m. until service time Friday at the funeral home. Burial will follow the service at Immanuel Lutheran Cemetery, Seymour.

Charitable donations may be made to St. Francis Hospice in honor of Mona Bode and the wonderful care provided to her by their staff.

Dora Coffey

Columbus

Dora Darlene Coffey, 76, of Columbus, died December 5, 2016.

All services will be private.

The family will receive online condolences at:www.Hathaway-Myers.com

Hathaway-Myers Chapel is serving the Coffey family.

Bobbie Withers

Columbus

Bobbie Lee Withers, 79, of Columbus, died at 4:40 a.m. Tuesday at his home.

The funeral will be at 11:30 a. m. Friday at Myers-Reed Chapel on 25th St. Calling will be from 4 to 8 p.m. Thursday and two hours prior to the service Friday.

Ray Bennett

Seymour

Ray Darrell Bennett, 77, of Seymour, died Monday, December 5, 2016, at Seymour Crossing.

Survivors include his children, Curtis (Debbie) Copeland of Seymour; Susanne DeRosier of Michigan and Lori (Richard, Jr.) Robbins-Deaton of Reddington; brother, Ron (Caron) Bennett of Michigan; seven grandchildren; and numerous great-grandchildren.

No formal services are planned at this time. Cremation has been chosen.

Memorials can be made to the Ray Bennett Memorial Fund at the funeral home or on Ray’s obit on the website.

Woodlawn Family Funeral Centre has been entrusted with the arrangements.

Jane Applewhite

Seymour

Jane Applewhite, 60, of Seymour, Indiana, passed away at approximately 1 a.m. Tuesday, December 6, 2016, at her home, surrounded by her family after a seven year fight against cancer.

She was born May 28, 1956, in Seymour, Indiana, the daughter of the late Joseph Mather and Lela (Trowbridge) Mather, who survives.

She married Andy Applewhite on August 3, 1991, at New Hope Christian Church in Columbus, Indiana, and he survives.

Jane was a very active member of Seymour Christian Church. She graduated in the top ten of the 1974 class of Columbus East High School, graduated cum laude with a BA in Education from Hanover College in 1978 and received her MS in Education from Indiana University in 1982. Jane loved to travel and especially loved the beach. She was a free spirit who made friends easily and was kind to everyone she met. She was thoughtful and resourceful and very creative with arts and crafts. She loved to do projects for Seymour Christian Church and invested many hours to make sure they were perfect. She was a fixture there until her declining health prevented her attendance.

Jane was a champion for kindness and went out of her way to remember even the smallest events of friends and family with gifts and cards. She was also a champion for education. She taught 2nd grade in the Fayette County School System for 14-and-a-half years. After leaving that role and while raising her daughter, she tutored Japanese students in English and helped them assimilate themselves into American life. She opened her home to approximately 75 students in 17 years of tutoring. She loved to help her students be more confident so they could live freely like her. She used the opportunity to share her faith when the moment was right.

After her savior, nothing was more important to Jane than her family. She loved to play games, laugh and tell stories. She was fiercely loyal to all her family and friends. Her greatest memories were of her humble, loving family from her childhood. Jane’s greatest gift was her daughter, Allison. She poured every ounce of her heart and knowledge into Allison and like many parents lived and died with her successes and setbacks. Nothing was more important to Jane than to instill Christian values and character in Allison.

She is survived by her mother; her loving husband, Andy; her cherished daughter, Allison (Matt) Baker; and her two sisters, Norma (Eric) Brunn and Sheila (Mark) Jones.

She was preceded in death by her father.

Memorial services will be held at 7 p.m. Thursday, December 8, 2016, at Seymour Christian Church, 915 Kasting Road, with the Rev. Bill Lockman officiating. Friends and family may gather from 3 p.m. until time of service Thursday at Seymour Christian Church.

Memorials may be made to Seymour Christian Church Building Fund or American Cancer Society through Voss & Sons Funeral and Crematory Service, Seymour, Indiana.

A complete obituary may be viewed on the funeral home website at www.vossfuneralservice.com.

Latest ISTEP scores raise more questions

The last of the state’s ISTEP+ scores are out, and educators again are struggling with what to do with them.

The Nov. 17 release came more than six months after tests were conducted (late February through early May), and leaves educators little time to identify learning trends that can be implemented before the 2016-17 school year ends. Locally and statewide, scores generally dipped slightly from 2015.

The final few years of ISTEP have been marred by technical glitches that made it difficult for some students to answer questions in the time provided without becoming frustrated, which educators said tainted results from a fairness standpoint.

As a result of technology problems, some schools received waivers to conduct the test the old-fashioned way, with pencil and paper. The state compared those results with those of students who used computers to complete the testing, also generating questions about fairness.

The state sued and replaced testing vendor CTB/McGraw Hill after lengthy delays in scoring the 2014-15 tests, the first year of more rigorous education standards in Indiana. The state selected Pearson Education to administer the 2016 and 2017 tests.

With all those changes and challenges, Indiana lawmakers granted a waiver during this year’s session to Hoosier schools, protecting them from being punished for their A through F Accountability grades, and prohibiting teachers from being penalized in their evaluations, pay and bonuses that were to be tied to local student scores.

Whether such a waiver will be granted again is uncertain, but they should when the new session starts in January, and then drop the idea altogether afterward.

While it is important to hold schools and teachers accountable, and rewarding teachers for success with merit pay increases is a good way to do that, trying rewards and penalties heavily to standardized tests isn’t fair.

That’s because demographics play a big role in student achievement. Some teachers start each day with students already facing obstacles: language, income and unstable homes, for example. Basing teacher success in schools with large populations of at-risk students on the results of standardized tests does not accurately measure teacher performance. Pulling funds from schools that work with those students because of a ranking based on a test is counter productive.

Ultimately, we hope that the new state school superintendent, board of education, governor and Legislature can find a way to push for a more comprehensive approach to measuring academic success.

Coming up with a good replacement for ISTEP has also been a challenge. The panel charged with recommending a new statewide test struggled to come up with answers for seven months, until endorsing a shorter test Tuesday on a 21-2 vote. Other components of the recommendation: One testing window instead of two, results within a month’s time of testing completion and using an off-the-shelf assessment rather than starting from scratch.

Whether the new test to replace ISTEP can be implemented by next fall is uncertain. But lawmakers ought to know by now that they had better get this right. With our children’s education on the line, there’s too much at stake for them to hastily pick a wrong answer themselves.

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