District in Pictures
November 19, 2021
IDEA Grants Delivered in Surprise Visits to 10 Schools
On Friday morning, IDEA Grant Prize Patrols fanned out to 10 schools to make surprise deliveries of 12 IDEA Grants totaling $11,039. IDEA (Innovative, Developmental, Educational Activities) Grants, funded by the WFISD Foundation, give teachers financial support to try something new in their classroom. The amount awarded varies each year. Since 1991, the WFISD Foundation has awarded more than $317,000 to teachers. This year’s recipients are Mikki Zellner and Alissa Donaldson (Booker T. Washington), Jamie Newberry (Burgess), Autumn Weber (Career Education Center), Mary Coleman and Daniele Chavez (Fain), Abi Parker, Cody Kenner and Shelly Proctor (Franklin), Bethany Calloway (Haynes), Brandi Perkins (Hirschi), Cindy Smith (received two grants) and Diane Perry (Kirby), Donna Burch (Milam), Bryce Henderson and Brionne Perry (Rider). Pictured: Burgess teacher Jamie Newberry (center, in beige) celebrates her IDEA Grant with her students, Principal Jeff Hill, Community Partnerships Coordinator January Cadotte, and Curriculum Specialist Nikki Davis.
Wichita Falls High School Announces One Hispanic Scholar
Wichita Falls High School senior Benjamin Marin has been named a National Hispanic Scholar in the College Board’s 2022 National Merit Scholarship Program. His announcement comes two months after the College Board’s initial unveiling of scholars in its scholarship contest since he took the qualifying test during its second administration. Benjamin plays on the WFHS baseball team, takes dual credit college classes at Vernon College and also takes career classes at the Career Education Center. Previously, WFHS announced it has the District’s lone National Merit Semifinalist, senior Steven Lee. The District also has three Rider scholars recognized by the National Hispanic Recognition Program: Geraldin Argandona, Miranda Salazar, and Misael Gutierrez.
Rider High School Freshman Violinist Selected for All-State Orchestra
For the first time in 28 years, Rider High School will send one of its own to the All-State Orchestra. Rider freshman violinist Jun Park was selected as a member of the 2021-2022 TMEA Texas All-State Orchestra. Earlier this year, Jun was selected as 1st chair of the Region Orchestra. Then he advanced to Area. “After going head-to-head with every violin player in the state, Jun earned a chair in the Texas All-State Orchestra,” said Loy Studer, Rider band director. “Jun is also a member of the varsity tennis team, he excels in his academics, and is in the Wichita Falls Youth Symphony Orchestra.”
Five WFISD Teachers Receive Texas Music Educators Association Grants
Five teachers in WFISD elementary schools received grants from the Texas Music Educators Association (TMEA). Sheppard Fine Arts teacher Stephanie Benson said she will use her grant to buy new instruments and start some new programs. Franklin K-5 Music Specialist Abi Parker will use her $800 grant to buy instructional materials, manipulatives, storybooks, movement props, and recorders. Booker T. Washington music teacher Mel Martinez will use the grant to provide students with a growing electronic composition and theory learning station, complete with a keyboard and five-license software for independent work. The plan is to grow it to a five-seat center. Brook Village’s Mary Marshall will purchase xylophones and metallophones for a musical adventure. Lamar’s Becky Glasgow will use the grant to replace an outdated portable sound system used for performances. Pictured clockwise from top left: Stephanie Benson, Abi Parker, Mel Martinez, Mary Marshall, Becky Glasgow.
Wichita Falls High School Girls Soccer Team Earns 16th Academic Award
WFISD board members recognized the 2020-2021 Lady Coyotes Soccer Team in Monday's school board meeting. They recognized the team for earning the United Soccer Coaches Team Academic Award. This is the 16th time the Lady Coyotes have earned this honor for their cumulative GPA of 3.25 or higher on a 4.0 scale. There were 169 girls’ teams throughout the United States that earned the United Coaches Team Academic Award for exemplary performance in the classroom as a team during the 20-21 academic year. The Lady Coyotes Soccer Coach is Rob Woodard.
CEC Construction Program Receives $5,000 from North Texas Home Builders Association
At its recent luncheon, The North Texas Home Builders Association presented Career Education Center Construction teacher Scott Little (in orange) with a $5,000 check. The gift will help fund the CEC’s third, on-site house project. The Home Builders Association has made clear its support of the CEC construction program through the years with an annual donation.
Wichita Falls High School Artist Wins ‘Best Abstract’ at Mystery Art Fest
Amaria Combee, a Wichita Falls High School student, won “Best Abstract Painting” in the Youth Division of the 2021 Mystery Art Fest, held Oct. 20 at the Kemp Center. “Her name was misspelled in the brochure, but she is definitely our Coyote,” said her art teacher Chris Mayfield. Mystery Art is an annual exhibit and auction of works by local artists. Artwork is donated and the artist’s name is hidden until it is judged and awards given.
Haynes Northwest Academy First-grader is 2021 Texas Challenge Young Gun Champion
Haynes first-grader Hudson Straight has had a passion for racing go karts ever since he began watching his dad race cars. Hudson has raced in 10 races since he began in July 2021. He has earned three first-place wins. In a race this past weekend, he got first place, making him the 2021 Texas Challenge Young Gun Champion. Right now, he is in the middle of his winter series and is racing about twice a month. He is a student in Madison Smith’s class.
Deaf Students Zoom with Deaf Hip-Hop Artist
Every year, WFISD Deaf Education students ages 3 to 18 gather to celebrate a Friends-Giving. COVID derailed the gathering for the past two years, so this year’s event was extra special. Kimberly Thorne reached out to Sean Forbes, a deaf hip-hop artist, and asked him to join the group via Zoom. “He did not disappoint!” said Ms. Thorne. “Sean is known for sharing a message to inspire others, both in the deaf and hearing communities, to follow their dreams. He founded D-PAN (Deaf Performing Arts Network) with the goal of making entertainment more accessible for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Communities.” He sang and signed live his song, “Watch These Hands.” Many students joined in. He also answered questions from students. “His primary message to students was, ‘If you set your mind to it, you can do it. If I can become a deaf rapper, what’s stopping you?’” said Ms. Thorne.
Booker T. Washington Elementary Cheers Its 87 New PTA Members
This has been the year that PTA membership at Booker T. Washington Elementary has really taken off. The school welcomed 87 new members this fall. Assistant Principal Synquis Lewis and Secretary Jimmy Pipkin are responsible for the many activities driving up participation, according to Principal Angela Rooney. So far, the two have rewarded the two classes with the most sign-ups with a pizza party (pictured, top) and the opportunity to toss water balloons at Mr. Pipkin (pictured, bottom). “They have taken it by the reins and done amazing things to get so much participation,” said Mrs. Rooney. “I’m so proud of their efforts!”
Cunningham Elementary Students Conclude Read-a-thon with Fun Run
On November 5, Cunningham students participated in a Fun Run around the school to celebrate the conclusion of their Read-a-thon. The Read-a-thon tracked students reading nearly 15,000 minutes. It raised more than $7,000. Pictured lower left: Caleb Noble, who participated in the 3rd-5th category, won the grand prize of a Nintendo Switch Lite.
Farris Early Childhood Center Receives $1,500 from Former Student to Buy Christmas Presents
One day Farris Principal Letitia Willis asked a little boy coming back to school from Christmas vacation, “Did you have a good Christmas? Did Santa come?” and he responded, “Not yet!” Ever since then, she has sought help to provide Christmas for her students. She asked her staff members if they knew any businessmen in their circle of friends or family who would donate money to fund Christmas presents for Farris students. This year, Farris paraprofessional Marcella Arredondo asked her brother, Danny Martinez, if he would like to contribute a donation to Farris, where he had attended kindergarten. Mr. Martinez is President of The Jae Christian Company. On Monday, he presented Ms. Willis with a $1,500 check. The money will be used to buy Christmas gifts from Santa for all Farris students. “It’s a real cycle of love,” said Ms. Willis. Pictured left to right: Farris Principal Letitia Willis, Danny J. Martinez, community advocate Luis Serna-Martinez, and Farris paraprofessional Marcella Arredondo.
Career Education Center TAFE Students Win at Competition
Four students pursuing the Education pathway at the Career Education Center scored wins at the Texas Association of Future Educators (TAFE) competition and will move on to the State TAFE competition and conference in Dallas in March. Winners were Rider seniors Cyntia Perez and Zaybien Bisbee, and McNiel eighth-graders Leila Dillard and Brynlee Koch. Seven students competed. “It was our first TAFE face-to-face conference and competition, so it was a learning experience for all of us,” said Erin Dillard, Education and Training teacher. “We had a great time traveling to Abilene Christian University for the Area 7 contest and conference.” Pictured left to right: Erin Dillard, Leila Dillard, Brynlee Koch, Huston Smith, Mackenzie Brown, Izzy Duron, Cyntia Perez.
Lamar Elementary Playground Officially Dedicated
The new playground at Lamar has been a long time coming. The new play structure was unveiled in a ribbon-cutting ceremony November 12. Last February, one principal’s impassioned Facebook plea to help fund Lamar’s desperate need for a playground led to a flurry of donations that officially completed Lamar’s $14,000 fund-raising effort in just six days. The final push for the last $4,000 came when Fowler Principal Alex Martin posted a photo on Facebook that showed Lamar had only pull-up bars. Community Partnerships Coordinator January Cadotte saw Ms. Martin’s post and using special software, Network for Good, she created a digital campaign with a direct email link. So many people used the email link for giving that, six days later, $4,100 was raised to fully fund the project.
West Foundation Fourth-graders Write Narratives Using Vocabulary from the 1600s
West Foundation teacher Lori Corsaut kicked off a special writing project by reading two books to her fourth-grade students. She read them Sara Morton’s Day, by Kate Waters, about a day in the life of a Pilgrim girl, and Samuel Eaton’s Day, by Kate Waters, about a day in the life of a Pilgrim boy. Then she had them write a realistic personal narrative using authentic 1600s vocabulary. “Most students used 10 to 20 words found in the story or book’s glossary,” said Kathy Callaway, reading instructional coach at West Foundation. “For example, coney is a fat rabbit, snare is a trap, Goodman is Mr., and cockerel is a rooster. They had so much fun with this as well as learned from it.” Pictured: Ms. Corsaut shows off her students and their projects.
Fowler Elementary Team Greeted with Breakfast Pop-up
Bright and early on Monday morning, Fowler staff and teachers arrived at school to find a pop-up tent waiting for them. Administrators served them breakfast pizza, scones and hot drinks as a thank-you for their commitment and dedication to children throughout this difficult year. American National Bank and Trust sponsored the breakfast pizza.
Franklin Elementary Students Put Inferencing Skill to Use for Turkey Disguises
Third-grade students in Michelle Church’s class have not only learned the skill of inferencing, but they’ve learned how to put it to use. They created riddles to describe their turkey's disguise, being careful to be descriptive without giving too much away. Then they made inferences to guess their classmates’ turkey disguises. Each student also wrote a story about the fate of his or her turkey, explaining if he managed to escape or ended up as Thanksgiving dinner. Pictured: Your turn! Make your own inference about this turkey's disguise as you read its clever riddle: "I am really bright, so bright you can be blind from me. I have wings. I can fly. I am watching you. Who am I?"
Zundy Elementary Welcomes Bilingual Teacher for Math, Science
At Zundy, new bilingual teacher Cristopher Allen teaches third-graders two subjects: math and science. Mr. Allen recently arrived in Wichita Falls from Monterrey, Mexico. He is 35, single, and said he loves hiking, traveling, reading and watching movies. “I love nature,” he said, “and I consider myself quiet and try to be as kind as possible. I try to keep myself learning during my whole life.” Pictured: Mr. Allen circulates through his third-floor Zundy classroom as students work in groups using math games and manipulatives to study multiplication and division.
Kirby Middle School Entertains Visiting Hockey Players
On Monday, 10 players from the Wichita Falls Warriors hockey team visited Kirby students. The athletes visited students during the three lunch periods and went into the sixth-grade physical education class and the seventh-grade Career Explorations class. “It was such a great opportunity for students to visit with these players about how they took their talents to the next level and the work ethic it took to do it,” said Laura Keen, Kirby counselor. “Many students had never seen a hockey player or been to a game, so I think it sparked their interest and opened their eyes to something new.”
Cunningham Elementary Student Perseveres, Walks After Surgery
Cunningham kindergartener Logan Fox is pictured Tuesday with his trademark smile in his physical therapy class with kindergarten teacher Kimberly Pinkstaff.Logan was born with AMC (Arthrogryposis Multiplex Congenita), a joint contracture condition that prevents proper joint function and muscle development. Last year, his parents raised funds for a special surgery in Florida. So how is he doing? “The surgery was very successful,” said Ms. Pinkstaff. “They put screws and plates in his legs and hips to help him stand and walk. He has gained more independence and has started walking on his own with assistance from his walker. He has progressed from always being in a powered wheelchair to being able to walk in the classroom,” she said. All fundraising is complete. He will have another surgery next summer to remove the screws and plates. “Logan is a very sweet, smart and independent student and is very driven to do almost everything on his own,” she said. “He writes and colors well by using his mouth to grip his pencil or crayons. He plays with others at centers, and the students are helpful and sweet to Logan. He brings such joy and happiness to my classroom because he is so driven and never complains about anything.” Pictured top right: Logan demonstrates how he can walk across his classroom.
Zundy Elementary Librarian Promotes Reading with Tasty Bundtlets
Zundy librarian Abby Eakin promoted reading with the help of Nothing Bundt Cakes, a bakery in Wichita Falls. The agreement: During the months of September and October, Zundy students who read 400 minutes each month would receive a bundtlet (a miniature version of the bakery’s famous bundt cake). “I had about 20 students who participated and were so excited,” said Mrs. Eakin. “They worked hard and reached their minutes.”
McNiel Middle School Students Conduct Lab to Extinguish Flame
Eighth-grade students under the direction of Stephanie Schenk, Sierra Nally and Michael Tayntor worked on a lab that showed the chemical reaction between vinegar and baking soda. The reaction produces a gas called carbon dioxide. The gas produced can then be used to put out a flame.
Hirschi, Rider, Wichita Falls High School Students Sample Two Food Concepts and Vote for Favorite
When the Chartwells team recently introduced two new food concepts to WFISD high school students, the teenagers sampled both, then voted for their favorite. Their selection will debut on the high school cafeteria serving lines in December. Chartwells Chef Carrie Richardson and Sous Chef Mikel Holland offered up Chaat House Indian Cuisine (Indian-inspired dishes such as curries over rice or flatbreads) and Mac & Cheesy-ology (a macaroni and cheese bowl concept topped with multiple proteins, toppings and veggies). Eighty percent of Hirschi, Rider and Wichita Falls High School students preferred Mac & Cheesy-ology, giving it the Student Choice Award. It will be served in December. Career Education Center Culinary class members assisted in preparing and serving for this event.
Curriculum Specialist Paid a Backhand Compliment
For eight years, Shera Rasmussen taught English to high schoolers. Then, in 2015, she stepped into the position of secondary English curriculum specialist, where she focuses on helping teachers. She travels to many classrooms at several schools, sitting in on classes and sometimes jumping up to join the teacher in teaching the lesson. Her presence in the classroom isn’t always understood by students – as was evident last week when one student commented to her, “Are you a teacher or something? You just explained that so nicely.” The comment amused her. “I guess I’ve still got it,” she said to herself. After all, she is still a teacher. “I still very much see myself as a teacher even though I work at the district level,” said Ms. Rasmussen. “It’s common for teachers to explain who I am when I come into their classrooms, but I’m pretty sure it doesn’t make any sense to students. All of my English teachers are so welcoming, and I love getting to teach with them." Pictured: Ms. Rasmussen (pictured second from right) sits with students for a book discussion.
Lamar Elementary Invited Local Veterans to Special Veterans Day Program at The Forum
When Lamar administrators began planning the school’s Veterans Day Program, they chose to hold it at The Forum, which gave them the facility at no cost but asked for any size donation. So the Lamar team kicked off the planning with a fundraiser to raise money for their donation. They also gave a portion of the funds raised to The American Legion Post 169 for its Toys for Tots Drive. The Lamar team invited local veterans to the program put on by third- and fourth-graders. At the program’s end, the American Legion presented Lamar Elementary with an award and a certification of appreciation for outstanding service and for recognizing the Wichita Falls veteran community.
Education Center Staff Serve Up Thanksgiving Dinners in Schools Across the District
Education Center staff members did double-duty this week as they added “Celebrity Server” to their To Do lists. Employees grabbed an apron and helped set up the special family luncheons held at the elementary schools on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. Then they spent several hours serving up the turkey dinners to parents who joined their children for the family lunch. They served a menu of roasted turkey with gravy, homemade mashed potatoes, green bean casserole, cinnamon glazed carrots, a sweet dinner roll and fresh baked cookies.
Southern Hills Student Council Students Learn Screencastify Skills
When you take on new responsibilities, it often requires learning new skills. Student Council members at Southern Hills Elementary decided to take over doing the daily announcements, but to do it, they needed to learn how to operate Screencastify. The online browser extension built for Chromebooks records and edits videos. Lexi Law, an instructional technology specialist, visited their Southern Hills classroom to teach them how to use it. Pictured: Ms. Law circles through the classroom, helping students. Also pictured helping students: Student Council Co-sponsor Maria Carrillo. Kyle Faragher is another Student Council co-sponsor at the school.
Haynes Northwest Academy Math Program Rewards Students with Highest Number of Minutes
In October, students participating in the Spatial-Temporal Math (ST Math) program at Haynes were rewarded for logging the greatest number of minutes per week. “Jiji the Penguin moves from school to school to celebrate the school’s success,” said Haynes Principal Tristan Browne. The ST Math program teaches the foundational concepts visually. “By using visual learning, students will become better at solving unfamiliar math problems, recognizing patterns and gaining a conceptual understanding that will help build their problem-solving stamina,” he said. Pictured: Haynes Principal Tristan Browne holds ST Math’s Jiji the Penguin.
Fowler Third-grade Teachers Welcome Students to the Bakery
Fowler third-grade teachers Amanda Dorsey, Amy Davis, Brianna Fisher, McKenna George and Samatha Campbell guaranteed that hard work in their class would pay off by throwing a donut party to mark the end of their math unit. Then they created bakery-themed stations for review work of all the math they learned during the last unit. They decorated their rooms to look like bakeries, with each teacher contributing her own spin to the project. Students earned a spot at the donut party if they met their goals on the unit test.
Fain Elementary PTA Program is Students’ First Since COVID Shut Schools Down
Fourth-graders put on their first PTA program at Fain since COVID. Amazingly, these students were in first grade when they put on their last program. The gap reflects the many experiences lost to the pandemic – and the relief many feel to be resuming traditions like PTA programs.
Zundy Elementary Hosts ‘Camp Read S’more’
Zundy Elementary staff fit all their favorite things into Camp Read S’more: roasting marshmallows, making crafts, telling jokes, shopping the Book Fair, and giving time to parents, students and staff to be together as the sun set. And of course, everyone made s’mores from a s’mores bar stocked with graham crackers, chocolate and marshmallows. The November 11 event even provided an opportunity for adults and children to be vaccinated for the flu, COVID-19 and HPV or to receive a COVID-19 booster.
Crockett Elementary Teachers Get in a Pickle
Crockett Instructional Coaches Mariah Sutherland (Math) and Jody Barnett (Reading) helped Crockett teachers celebrate National Pickle Day on November 14 by preparing a spread of pickles with a sign that said, “You’re kind of a BIG DILL.” They laid out a spread of sweet and spicy pickles, pickle-flavored chips, dips, pickle popcorn, pickle roll-ups and even chocolate-covered pickles.
Fowler Elementary Teacher Expands on 'Balloons Over Broadway' Book
Fowler third-grade teacher Brianna Fisher used a book, Balloons Over Broadway, by Melissa Sweet, to teach her students how to write a story using major characters, minor characters, and plot diagrams. The story, which focuses on puppeteer Tony Sarg and how he invented the helium balloon floats that fill the skies during the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, prompted the class to make floats of their own.
Haynes Northwest Academy Students Learn Division with Hands-on Models
Few things are as important to grasp as the math skill of division. So fourth-grade math/science teacher Renae Dickens builds her students’ understanding of division by using hands-on models to represent the solving of division equations. “I introduce this concept by relating the idea of division with the idea of sharing,” she said. “Then I explain how a number of groups can be shared equally.” Students demonstrate their equal groups in many forms. They even draw out the problems on their desk and use digital models to demonstrate what they’re doing. “This activity gave them visual references and concrete models to use, “ said Ms. Dickens.
Booker T. Washington Pre-K Teacher Creates Magic Milk
Students in Mikki Zellner’s Head Start/pre-K classroom are learning about the letter M. “We discussed the alliteration in ‘magic milk’ and also learned the sound the letter M makes,” said Ms. Zellner. To make the knowledge meaningful, she took students through a fun experiment of combining two things – milk and dish soap -- that create a reaction. “We watched the reaction when we added dish soap to the milk. The soap breaks up the fat in the milk. By adding food coloring, we saw the movement! The kids were in awe and asked to re-do the experiment over and over all day during Center Time.”
Fain Elementary Students Use ‘Toy Story’ Movie to Learn Protagonist, Antagonist
You know you’ve got a great idea when you use it every year for five years, and it just keeps getting better. Fain teacher Laura Wetzel highlights the movie Toy Story when she teaches the definitions of protagonist and antagonist within fictional text. She creates Toy Story-themed stations around her room, where students can learn about the main character and his needs or wants. Her students quickly pick up on the terms because of their prior familiarity with Woody, Buzz Lightyear, Sid and the rest. “Students learned how characters change throughout the story and how some never change their mood or behavior,” said Ms. Wetzel. “We also talked about foreshadowing and how the character’s demeanor and actions can give clues.”
Booker T. Washington Students Draw Flags Flapping in the Breeze
To create drawings of flags flapping in the breeze, Booker T. Washington fourth-grade teacher Cristina Manzel asked her students to watch a directed drawing lesson on YouTube from a father-son team. “We just took it one step at a time, and the students just followed along,” she said. “We finished these right before Veterans Day.” The flags now fly in the stairwell at the school. She used the flags to launch a lesson on veterans and to highlight any veterans in the students’ families. “I included my family,” said Ms. Manzel. “My mom was career Army, with 22 years. My ‘adopted’ son just left for Basic Training in October. We also discussed (Booker T. Washington Principal) Mrs. (Angela) Rooney and her service.”
Crockett Elementary Teacher Transforms Classroom into Starbucks Coffee Shop
Crockett Counselor Amanda Awtrey was impressed when she saw how Crockett second-grade teacher Katie Adams wrapped up the class’s Personal Financial Literacy unit in math. Ms. Adams turned her classroom into Starbucks to simulate a real-world business where students would need to sharpen their math skills to buy and sell. Then she gave each student his or her own wallet, filled with spending money to spend at their classroom Starbucks. They chose from menu treats like hot lattes (hot chocolate), iced lattes (chocolate milk), honeybuns, zebra cakes and oatmeal pies. Students used math to purchase their favorite treats, counting out their money and double-checking the change they received.
Sheppard Kindergarten Classes Make Collaborative Art Piece
Sheppard’s kinder classes worked together as one team to create a collaborative art piece. Paraprofessional Trisha Carnahan created the extension activity based on students’ first social skills lesson in the library. Students learned about the quote from Helen Keller, who said, “Alone we can do so little. Together we can do so much.”
Jefferson Students and Staff Make ‘Gratitude Tree’
Jefferson Principal Erica Adkins likes to keep the theme of gratitude alive on her campus during the month of November. She started out with a Gratitude Bingo Challenge, asking staff members to complete challenges that would help them focus on their blessings. Then she created a school tree. She asked every staff member and student to write something for which they were thankful on a leaf. She put all the leaves on the tree so “we could see the many blessings we have within our Jefferson family,” she said. “It was fun to see all the things each person is grateful for.” The tree is displayed in the cafeteria so it is easily seen by all visitors.
WFISD Foundation Offers Kendra Scott Fundraiser for Christmas Shopping
The WFISD Foundation is partnering with Texas-based jewelry designer Kendra Scott for a fundraiser on November 19 and 20. On those two days, online purchasers at www.kendrascott.com who enter GIVEBACK-ANGHM at checkout will trigger a 20 percent return of the purchase price to WFISD Foundation. The company sells necklaces, rings, earrings and bracelets made from natural materials. All money raised will return to support WFISD teachers through IDEA Grants and fund student scholarships. An April 2021 two-day Kendra Scott fundraiser prompted total sales of nearly $2,300, funneling a return of $455 back to WFISD Foundation.
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District in Pictures is a weekly publication developed by the WFISD Community Relations department. If you have events, recognitions or classroom activities taking place on your campus that you would like us to feature, please let us know by emailing Ashley Thomas at athomas@wfisd.net or Ann Work Goodrich at awork@wfisd.net. We would love to include you in our weekly district news.
Email: athomas@wfisd.net
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