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North Haven Community School is the sole pre-K-12 school of Maine
School Administrative District # 7. The school is fully accredited by
the New England Association of Schools and Colleges, the only Maine
island school and one of only a handful of public K-12 schools in New
England to have earned that distinction. It is located on
North Haven Island in Penobscot Bay, twelve miles offshore from
Rockland, Maine. The smallest public K-12 school in the state,
its 2005-2006 school population stands at 69 students - 33 in grades
preK-6, 12 in grades 7-8 and 24 in 9-12. The student-teacher
ratio is about 6:1.
North Haven Island is approximately nine miles long
by three miles at its widest point. The population of 380
year-round residents swells to more than 1200 at the height of the
summer season. The island is served by a Maine State ferry out of
Rockland, Maine. There are three ferry runs a day. The
seventeen car, 250 passenger ferry, Capt. Neil Burgess, takes about 1
hour to make the crossing between North Haven and Rockland.
The economy of the island is based largely on the
summer resident and boating populations. Boat building and
maintenance, the building trades, caretaking and lobster fishing are
the principal means of employment. Other service businesses, some
summer shops and restaurants, and the school account for other full and
part-time employment.
The school has a total of 27 full and part-time
employees, including fourteen full-time teachers. Nine teachers
hold Master's Degrees. As well, there are four part-time teaching
positions, including a vocational program instructor.. The
district is administered by a part-time superintendent and a full-time
principal. There is a five person Board of Directors of
MSAD #7, elected annually at Town Meeting for 1-3 year terms. The
annual operating budget for SY 2005-6 is approximately $1.4 million.
The main school building was constructed in
1973. While originally an open architecture concept school, it
has undergone extensive renovation and most classroom areas are now
self-contained. The building is handicapped-accessible. The school
building includes the central and administrative offices, a library,
elementary and high school classrooms, a science lab, darkroom,
greenhouse, Learning Center, guidance office, and ITV network
facilities. The Middle School, and art and music classrooms, are in a
28 x 74 portable classroom adjacent to the main school building.
Behind the school is a vocational program workshop, an ITV classroom
building, the elementary playground, and a small playing field for
recess and phys ed. The school gym is located at the Town-owned
Community Building downtown, one and a half miles from the school
campus. A 50 passenger handicapped-accessible school bus, a smaller 20
passenger minibus, and a student-designed and modified electric VW van
provide for the school's transportation needs.
North Haven Community School’s educational
philosophy is founded on experiential learning. It offers a full
elementary, middle and high school curriculum, including special
education, and an applied technology vocational program. Music,
computer technology, physical education, art, photography, drama,
guidance, and foreign language are provided by teachers in those
specialty areas. There is a privately-funded Arts and Enrichment
program that augments and enriches the core curriculum with
instruction, assemblies, residencies, workshops and performances by a
variety of artists, speakers, craftspeople and performers at school and
at Waterman’s Community Center, with a 136 seat theater, downtown.
There are 175 student days (and 180 teacher days) on
the 2005-2006 school calendar. The school day runs from 8:00 a.m.
until 3:05 p.m. on Monday through Thursday, and 8:00 a.m. to 12 noon on
Friday (to accommodate student and teacher needs for medical
appointments, athletic team trips and weekend travel).
A minimum total of 23 credits is required for
graduation from NHCS. Starting in grade 9, students must earn 4 credits
of English, 3 each in Math, Science, and Social Studies (including 1 in
U. S. History in grades 11-12), 2 in a foreign language,, 2 in Physical
Education, and 1 each in Fine Arts,, Computer Literacy, and Independent
(Knowledge Fair) Project. Students may acquire a maximum of 2
credits for community service work. Starting with the Class of
2008, students must successfully meet State of Maine Learning Results
Diploma Standards and successfully present their four-year Student
Portfolio to the MSAD #7 Review Board. The school uses a
variety of alternative means of assessment including portfolios,
projects, presentations and performances.
While letter and numerical grades are not used in
the elementary school (up to grade 6), letter grades are used in grades
7-12, and are entered on students' high school transcripts. A letter
grade of A is the equivalent of 90-100; B, of 80-89; C, of 70-79; and
D, of 65-69. No credit ("NC") is recorded for work below D (below 65).
A narrative assessment, with reference to Maine’s Learning
Results Standards and the school’s Expectations for Student
Learning, is included for each course on a student’s trimester
Progress Report, and on mid-term reports. An Honor Roll is announced
for each trimester, and yearly. "High Honors" recognizes students who
receive all A's in their full-credit courses. "Honors" is awarded to
students who have received all A's and B's in their full-credit courses.
Class groupings are heterogeneous,; generally,
consecutive classes are grouped together. A self-contained Middle
School was established in 1994 for students in grades 7 and 8.
The average combined class is about 10 students. There is a
half-day kindergarten and a four day, 4 hour pre-k program held at
Waterman’s Community Center.. About fifteen percent of NHCS
students are special needs children. Most are mainstreamed in their
regular classrooms, and receive special education services provided by
a full-time special education coordinator/teacher and a reading
specialist.
Annually, the entire high school plans and
participates in a week-long integrated curriculum fall field study
expedition. The middle school alternates between a fall
expedition to Baxter State Park and trip to Washington, DC in the
spring. As well, the school provides some co-curricular and
extra-curricular activities. There is a school band and
chorus. The students publish a school yearbook, The Pilot,
annually. There are drama programs for grades K-12, and several major
productions annually. Several electives are offered to high
school students each trimester, including art, photography, cytology,
computer applications, college writing, and community service. There is
a full offering of sports teams, some combined with Vinalhaven, our
neighboring island’s school. In the fall, the combined
schools field teams in golf, cross-country and soccer. In the
winter, the North Haven boys and girls "Hawk" squads represent NHCS in
Class D West basketball competition. Tennis is offered in the
spring. The rowing team participates in New England Youth Rowing
Association events throughout the school year, and was the New England
champion in 2002. The school participates in a number of student
program,s, including the Tour de Sol, Kieve's Leadership Decision
Institute,, H.O.B.Y., nd Beyond High School, a locally developed high
school Health curriculum with Vinalhaven. The teaching
staff has been actively involved in the Island Institutes's Island
Schools Program for many years.
NHCS has been designated a “Consistently High
Performing School” by the Maine Department of Education in 2003
and 2004 based on MEA Reading scores and has been the recipient of
several Maine Department of Education Innovative Education Grants for
curriculum development and school restructuring. The school was
the subject of Tom Gjelten's, Schooling in Isolated Communities.
Its drama program was featured on CBS Sunday Morning in the summer of
1998. Islands, a student and community created musical, was
performed at the New Victory Theater in New York City in 2001, and
shown on Maine and National Public Television. The school’s drama
students won the 1998 State Drama Festival in Division II, and its
girls cross country and basketball teams have qualified recently for
post season competitions.
NHCS has had a zero drop-out rate, and 100%
graduation rate, for over twenty years, and daily attendance averages
about 93%. In the past fifteen years, of the 81 students who have
graduated from NHCS, approx. 82% have gone on to post secondary
education. Twenty one are currently enrolled in a 4 year college
or university, including Bowdoin College, Colby, and the University of
Maine System. North Haven Community School graduates have earned
degrees from both in-and out-of-state institutions, such as Bowdoin,
Brown University, Northeastern and Colorado College.
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