Home » News » Education
May 28. 2012 8:56PM
For Lyndeborough students, it's out with the old(er), in with the new
LYNDEBOROUGH — In September, the kindergartners will be moving in and the sixth graders moving out as a district-wide shift takes place, but teachers and administrators in Wilton and Lyndeborough are working to ensure the transition goes smoothly for all the students.
At the Lyndeborough Central School, a new addition has been completed to accommodate the school's first-ever class of kindergartners. Until recently, Lyndeborough was one of about a dozen school districts in the state that didn't offer kindergarten, but a state mandate passed by the legislature required that all districts incorporate kindergarten into their curriculum.
For several years, to meet the mandate, Lyndeborough sent its youngest students to a private kindergarten in Milford while trying repeatedly to get voter approval for an addition to the Central School to accommodate the students. Finally, last year, that approval came through and the project is now wrapping up.
Principal Susan Tussing said the new addition helps satisfy a lot of space issues at the school, from increasing the size of the library and creating a new computer room, to giving the kindergartners a bright, open classroom to experience their first year of school.
“We're in the process of finalizing the hiring of a new kindergarten teacher,” Tussing said.
Out back there's finally more parking — something that's been in very short supply at the school, she said. And last week kids in every class worked on special art projects with the help of Dover-based artist Nathan Walker.
Using ordinary objects found at home and school — everything from Legos to corks to seashells — the students from each class worked together to make relief sculptures that will hang in the new hallway of the school.
And while final preparations are being made on the kindergarten, teachers and staff are saying goodbye to the last sixth grade class the Central School will see.
Beginning in the fall, sixth-graders from Lyndeborough and Wilton's Florence Rideout Elementary School will be incorporated into the Wilton-Lyndeborough Middle School, a move that everyone has been preparing for for months, said acting Superintendent Brian Bagley, who also serves as principal of the high school.
“Putting together the schedule is the biggest challenge,” said Bagley, “and we're moving a lot of people around to make it work.”
But Bagley said everyone's pulling together from the three schools to make sure the kids feel welcome and are “going to be exposed to a lot of positives” in their new surroundings.
At the Lyndeborough Central School, a new addition has been completed to accommodate the school's first-ever class of kindergartners. Until recently, Lyndeborough was one of about a dozen school districts in the state that didn't offer kindergarten, but a state mandate passed by the legislature required that all districts incorporate kindergarten into their curriculum.
For several years, to meet the mandate, Lyndeborough sent its youngest students to a private kindergarten in Milford while trying repeatedly to get voter approval for an addition to the Central School to accommodate the students. Finally, last year, that approval came through and the project is now wrapping up.
Principal Susan Tussing said the new addition helps satisfy a lot of space issues at the school, from increasing the size of the library and creating a new computer room, to giving the kindergartners a bright, open classroom to experience their first year of school.
“We're in the process of finalizing the hiring of a new kindergarten teacher,” Tussing said.
Out back there's finally more parking — something that's been in very short supply at the school, she said. And last week kids in every class worked on special art projects with the help of Dover-based artist Nathan Walker.
Using ordinary objects found at home and school — everything from Legos to corks to seashells — the students from each class worked together to make relief sculptures that will hang in the new hallway of the school.
And while final preparations are being made on the kindergarten, teachers and staff are saying goodbye to the last sixth grade class the Central School will see.
Beginning in the fall, sixth-graders from Lyndeborough and Wilton's Florence Rideout Elementary School will be incorporated into the Wilton-Lyndeborough Middle School, a move that everyone has been preparing for for months, said acting Superintendent Brian Bagley, who also serves as principal of the high school.
“Putting together the schedule is the biggest challenge,” said Bagley, “and we're moving a lot of people around to make it work.”
But Bagley said everyone's pulling together from the three schools to make sure the kids feel welcome and are “going to be exposed to a lot of positives” in their new surroundings.
- No curbside collections in Manchester on Monday - 0
- Suit: Claremont's North Country Smokehouse claims $606,011 spent on diamond, SUV, more - 9
- Winnipesaukee watershed association looking to raise its profile - 0
- New Ipswich cemetery’s future is anybody guess after state objects to graves - 1
- Goffstown artisan gives new face to Wolfeboro tower - 0
- Town may have to fix grave error - 3
- Updated: Winning Powerball ticket sold in Fla.; 2, $1M tickets sold in NH - 0
- No more Winni whoppers: Fishing Derby winner will have to take lie detector test - 11
- Learning the way of the gun in Wakefield - 2
Nashua librarian reports E-books flying off virtual shelves
READER COMMENTS: 0- Getting revved up over student car raffle - 0
- Man pulled from Barnstead pickup truck wreck with serious head injury - 0
- Boy Scouts of America vote ends gay scout ban - 0
- Warwick Mills scores $94.3 million contract from Army for body armor - 0
- Senate OKs medical pot, with plenty of restrictions - 0
- Rangers win in overtime, stay alive for Game 5 - 0
- Hanefeld shoots 74 at Senior PGA - 0
- Bishop Libasci to ordain 2 at St. Joseph Cathedral - 0
- Price tag to restore chimney about $1m - 0
Delaney Flanagan: Memories at the graveyard
READER COMMENTS: 0- Should schools do more to police food and beverages consumed at school?
- Yes
- 29%
- No
- 71%
- Total Votes: 112




