January Health Tip from Kosciusko Community Hospital

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As part of the Tippecanoe Valley School Corporation’s ongoing partnership with Lutheran Health Network Kosciusko Community Hospital, each month we will be sharing a health tip with our parents and staff. January’s health tip is all about community wellness screenings.

More information about the screenings can be found here: http://kch.com/wellness

Where to find school delay and cancellation information

This entry was posted in Akron, Mentone, News, TV High School, TV Middle School on by .

With the winter season in full swing, Tippecanoe Valley staff members, parents, and students are reminded of the ways to receive school delay and closing information.

School Messenger

  • Students are automatically registered to School Messenger based upon the primary contact information provided in Chalkable(STI). New students and any updated primary numbers are automatically uploaded to School Messenger daily.
  • New staff members are added when they complete their New Employee Enrollment package and turn it into the TVSC Administration Office.
  • If a parent would like to have a different or additional number called (they are allowed up to 5 different numbers), then they must call TVSC Director of Technology Keith Lang at (574) 598-2759 and ask for the number(s) to be added. They must include with the number(s), the name(s) of their student(s), their grade level, and the school.
  • If a staff member would like to have an additional number added to the call list, they need to send an email to Mr. Lang’s attention indicating the number(s) they wish to receive calls at and the primary building in which they work.

The School Messenger system is a service TVSC provides for school employees and its students.  If someone from outside of these two lists would like to be informed of a closing, TVSC recommends that they listen to the local media outlets to which TVSC provides delay/cancellation information, or sign up for one of their texting services.  The media outlets are:

Radio

WRSW* & Willie 103.5*            https://www.newsnowwarsaw.com/schooldelays/

WROI                                       http://www.wroifm.com/closings–delays

WIOE                                        http://wioe.com/site/2018/01/wioe-school-delay/

Television

WNDU*                                      http://www.wndu.com/weather/closings

WSBT*                                      http://wsbt.com/news/local/closingsdelays

The * indicate texting service is available. 

Social Media

In the event of a delay or cancellation, each school’s Facebook page will post a status update with the information.

TVSC: https://www.facebook.com/TippecanoeValley/

TVMS: https://www.facebook.com/Tippecanoe-Valley-Middle-School-1574471089447534/

TVHS: https://www.facebook.com/tippecanoevllyhs/

Mentone Elementary: https://www.facebook.com/Mentone-Elementary-School-201649846662868/

Akron Elementary: https://www.facebook.com/Akron-Elementary-School-356826074490517/

School Websites

Delay and cancellation information can also be found on each school’s website in a scrolling message at the top of the homepage. You can also find the information at the bottom of each homepage in the colored weather information box.

TVSC: http://tippecanoevalleyschools.com/

TVMS: http://tippecanoevalleyschools.com/schools/tvms/

TVHS: http://tippecanoevalleyschools.com/schools/tvhs/

Mentone Elementary: http://tippecanoevalleyschools.com/schools/Mentone-elementary/

Akron Elementary: http://tippecanoevalleyschools.com/schools/akron-elementary-school/

Miracle Tree program helps 128 Tippecanoe Valley families

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128 families in the Tippecanoe Valley area received assistance this holiday season through the Miracle Tree program – six more than last year’s total of 122 families.

Miracle Tree is sponsored by Mill Creek Missionary Church and has been going strong for years in the Rochester area. Tippecanoe Valley teachers Darren Parker and Crystal Heckaman helped expand the program two years ago after noticing a growing need for it in their school corporation.

“This year’s program was another huge success in the Tippecanoe Valley community. It wouldn’t have happened without all of the community support we received in buying gifts and volunteering,” said Parker.

Families who expressed an interest in receiving help this year were assigned a number. Those numbers were then placed on ornaments and hung on trees inside Bell Memorial Public Library in Mentone and Akron Carnegie Public Library in Akron. The numbers let sponsors know how many children were in each family. Sponsors were then provided a wish list for the family they selected.

All of the gifts were presented to the families on Dec. 13th at a special event that included food and activities for children.

“Even with the poor weather that night, we still managed to feed roughly 500 people and pass out gifts to 351 kids this year,” said Parker.

The Tippecanoe Valley High School Student Council was one of the largest sponsors of families this year. Heckaman, who also serves as student council co-advisor alongside Cami Shriver, says they adopted 13 families, spent $6,100 on 61 kids, and then another $300 to supplement gifts for 10 kids who didn’t receive many gifts from their secret givers. They also created, set up, and played games with the kids on the night the gifts were given out.

“It was fun seeing the kids that we shopped for having such a good time, playing games, and bouncing in the inflatables,” said Heckaman.

Student council members used donations from the community to purchase the gifts. They, along with students in Shelly Engle’s English 11A class, took a trip to Meijer in Warsaw to shop for the children. The students in Mrs. Engle’s class have been discussing philanthropy and wanted to see how they could help with the Miracle Tree program this year.  

“Thank you to all of the families that sponsored one or more of our households in need as well as to all of the local businesses and organizations for their support,” said Parker.

Those businesses and organizations include Regional Rehab, Akron Las Donas Club, Craig Welding, Splendor Boats, local area farmers, TVHS Student Council, Glam, Mentone United 4-H, Beery Construction, Biddle Auction Co., Cargill, Midwest Poultry, Mill Creek Missionary Church, Hoffman Body Shop, Tippecanoe Valley School Corporation, Meijer, Bell Memorial Public Library, Akron Carnegie Public Library, Silver Creek Church, 4-H Jr. Leaders, and Beta Epsilon-Psi Jota Xi Sorority.

VALLEY INSIGHT: Why Grants are Important to Public School Corporations

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Written by Aaron Leedy, TVSC director of marketing, public relations, and grant writing

There has probably never been a time when the purse strings for public school corporations have been tighter.

As the state legislature prepares to reconvene on Jan. 3rd, public school administrators and teachers across Indiana will again watch as state lawmakers debate and decide the future of education.  What bills will they introduce this year? How might those bills, if they become laws, affect public school funding? These questions come up every year along with the uncertainty of how the policies surrounding education might change.

One thing a school corporation can do to fill potential funding gaps is apply for grants. Grants can provide financial assistance for classroom projects that cost a few hundred dollars to corporation-wide projects that can reach six figures or more in price.

In the summer or 2016, TVSC created a Director of Marketing, Public Relations, and Grant Writing position to help research and apply for grants. Some grants submitted are also written by teachers and administrators. Grant writing is a collaborative effort throughout our school corporation to provide the best facilities and programs to meet the needs of students.

Since Jan. 1 of this year, the Tippecanoe Valley School Corporation has received more than one million dollars in federal, state, and local grant funding. This is, in essence, free money that otherwise would have had to come out of the corporation’s budget to fund projects or services throughout Tippecanoe Valley’s five schools – Akron Elementary, Mentone Elementary, Tippecanoe Valley Middle School, Tippecanoe Valley High School, and the Burket Educational Center.

In addition to receiving funding, another benefit to pursuing grants is the ability to foster great relationships with local community foundations. Simply put, money donated to these foundations can stay in the communities they serve. TVSC continues to work closely with local foundations such as the Kosciusko County Community Foundation, Fulton County Community Foundation, Dekko Foundation, K21 Health Foundation, and the United Way to research and pair grants with specific projects throughout our schools.

Some of the more notable grants received since Jan. 1 of this year include an $84,230 grant from the K21 Health Foundation for a paved walking/biking path at Mentone Elementary School, a $30,000 grant from the Lilly Endowment for counseling services, a $14,000 proactive grant from the Kosciusko County Community Foundation to enhance counseling services, a $16,000 grant from the United Way of Kosciusko County for kindergarten readiness, a $20,000 matching grant from the Dekko Foundation and a $10,000 grant from the Fulton County Community Foundation for library upgrades.

TVSC also received 10 Kosciusko Endowment Youth Services grants earlier this year. Teachers apply for KEYS grants to fund classroom projects ranging from $100 to $1,000. The grants are reviewed by KEYS members who are high school students from four area school corporations in Kosciusko County.

As we continue to watch for changes at the state and federal levels to education, grants will be the one constant we can rely on to equip all students to be successful today, tomorrow, and beyond.

Valley Insight is a recurring monthly article written by administrators on a variety of topics related to education and the Tippecanoe Valley School Corporation. Articles will be posted to the district’s website and also shared with the local media.

TVSC board of trustees approves 2018-2019 school calendar

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The Tippecanoe Valley School Corporation board of trustees approved the 2018-2019 master school calendar at its regularly scheduled meeting on December 11th.

The calendar is almost identical to the current 2017-2018 school calendar, with only minimal differences between the two. The new calendar features 91 days of school for students in the first semester and 89 days of school in the second semester. School will begin on Monday, August 6th, 2018 and end Thursday, May 16th, 2019.

11 emergency make-up days prior to graduation are built in. The calendar also features a three-day Thanksgiving vacation for students, an 11-day Christmas break, and a week off in the spring. Registration for the 2018-2019 school year will be held on July 24th and 26th.

Click here to view the entire 2018-2019 school calendar.

December Health Tip from Kosciusko Community Hospital

This entry was posted in Akron, Mentone, News, TV High School, TV Middle School on by .

As part of the Tippecanoe Valley School Corporation’s ongoing partnership with Lutheran Health Network Kosciusko Community Hospital, each month we will be sharing a health tip with our parents and staff. December’s health tip is all about combating Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) and how to treat the winter blues.

More information about the KCH Wellness Center can be found here: http://kch.com/wellness

More information about SAD can be found here: https://www.helpguide.org/articles/depression/seasonal-affective-disorder-sad.htm

Tippecanoe Valley students collect food, money for local food pantry

This entry was posted in Mentone, News, TV Middle School on by .

Tippecanoe Valley Middle School and Mentone Elementary School both held successful food drives for Mary & Jerry’s Helping Hands food pantry in Mentone.

The annual food drives started on Nov. 13 and ran through Nov. 17. Mentone Elementary School collected more than 3,000 food items and more than $1,000 in monetary donations. Each grade level competed to see which one could bring in the most points. Fifth grade came in first, followed by fourth grade, and then kindergarten.

“This has been an amazing week. Mentone students have once again shown their amazing kindness and generosity,” said LeeAnn Rock, a teacher and student council advisor at Mentone Elementary School.

At TVMS, all first-period classes competed against each other. One non-expired, non-perishable food item equaled one point, while one dollar donated equaled one point. TVMS raised more than $500 in monetary donations and brought in 1,400 food items. Sara Thomas’ first-period class finished the week in first place with 284 points.

Mentone spellers compete in regional competition

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Mentone Spell Bowl came in 4th place at the regional competition in Wabash on Nov. 16, 2017. Caileigh Frentzel won a ribbon for a near perfect score of 6/7 words.

A special thank you to Mrs. Crabb for proctoring for our team. Mrs. Cody and Mrs. Sellers are happy the students had a fun year in spell bowl and congratulate them on their finish.