The Bulldog Bark
February 2019
Reusch Report
Below are some great ways to build up your students to achieve great attendance!
Let your child know that you think attending school daily is important:
- Show them you are interested in their school activities and tell them that you want them to do well in school.
- Good attendance habits start at an early age. Make sure your child goes to school regularly and on time. This helps them develop a positive view of school and the importance of attendance.
- Discuss with your student that arriving to school on time and to report to class when dropped off.
- Become involved in your child’s school life and school activities.
- Take an interest in your child’s school work. Check homework for accuracy and completeness.
- Read the school newsletter. Post the school calendar and notes on the refrigerator, or other prominent location to highlight school activities and important student information.
- Do not provide inappropriate excuses for your child to miss school. Do not let them take time off from school for minor ailments – particularly those which would not prevent you from going to work.
- Don’t expect or let older children stay home from school to babysit younger siblings.
- Set good examples and enforce rules. Speak well of the school and support school staff.
- Make a contract with your child to improve his/her attendance. Reward positive improvements.
- Give yourself and children enough time to get ready. No TV on school mornings.
- Provide students their own alarm clock. Teach kids to set and use their own alarm clock or clock radio.
- Set alarm clock 30 minutes earlier for students who need more time to get ready for school.
- Plan ahead the night before: such as identifying and pre-prepping breakfast, have kids choose clothes and shoes the night before, and pack their backpacks with completed homework and snacks/water. Parents can prepare for work the night before too.
- Set a regular bedtime schedule. Age should be a factor. ď‚· Get proper rest and go to bed early.
- Have your child go to bed 10 minutes earlier and get up 10 minutes earlier.
- Have kids bathe or shower in the evening.
- Help your child relax before bedtime with a story, instead of the stimulation of television.
- Have schoolwork and lunch ready and laid out, ready to go. Create a special folder for completed assignments.
- Provide regular study times and a quiet, clean area for doing homework.
- Have your child walk to school or the bus stop with another child who is always on time.
- Limit and balance extra-curricular activities.
- Have a back-up plan for cold weather for cars not starting.
- Attend Parent Teacher Conferences
- Attend Back to School Night and Parent Meetings
- Volunteer in the classroom, on field trips or during school events.
- Make education a family priority.
- Encourage your child to get more involved with their school. Sign them up for extra-curricular activities they like or an after school program. Studies show the more involved a child and parents are with their school, the better their attendance and success is.
- Let the school know in advance if your child is going to be absent or if you have concerns about your child’s attendance or school performance.
- Report all absences on the day the student will miss school by calling the attendance office or line.
- Provide doctor’s notes to the attendance clerk when medical verification is available for student’s absences.
- If your child does not want to go to school, find out why and work with your school and child to address concerns. Let our child know he/she must attend school.
- If you notice your child is avoiding a particular class or is having a difficult time in one subject area, discuss this with your child and his/her teacher. Offer extra support at home. This will prevent your child from developing a behavior of avoidance in school when things become difficult.
- Get to know your children’s friends and their families and make connections with other families that value school attendance.
- Contact your child’s school for help if it is needed to support your child or family.
- Ask teachers and staff at your child’s school and other family members for advice on how to keep your child going to school – on time, every day!
- Check your child’s backpack weekly. Occasionally important letters (such as a medical excuse for last Thursday’s absence) can become lost in a full backpack. Organizing its contents weekly improves your chances of finding these documents while they are still useful.
- Keep a school year calendar. This is an excellent way to track all of the important dates, holidays, and events at your child’s school. It is also a convenient place to document absences (who was absent, why and how you cleared it/date cleared), phone calls/conferences with school staff, and all of your other important school related information.
- Make sure your child knows you do not approve of him/her being late or absent. Talk to your child about issues that may be making them late for school.
- Help your child understand the state laws and school attendance policies.
- Do not let your child persuade you into making an excuse for him/her. Don’t give up. Reward good behavior and take it one day at a time.
We look forward to seeing you everyday!
Mr. Reusch
Congrats to Kyen Jiang for receiving the Judge's Scholar Award
Library News
75% of our student body met the 100% Goal with 82% Accuracy during 2nd marking period- Way to go!
NEW AWARD THIS YEAR:
Our principal now awards the classrooms with the highest percentage of students having AR goals with their very own AR Championship Belt to display in their classrooms for the marking period. Last marking period winners are listed below. Congratulations to these teachers and students:
6th Gr – Dame @ 93%
7th Gr – Cavanah @ 84%
8th Gr – Clark @ 71%
AR GOAL REMINDER:
March 12- 100% AR goal due
SMS Archery Team Starts Season off Strong with 3rd Place in Madisonville's Maroon Classic
Congratulations to Jaxson Matthews! Jaxson is the 2019 Middle School District Spelling Bee Champion!
Congrats to Kendall Pullum on Achieving 8th Place in the Chapter Competition as an Individual and is Moving on to STATE to represent SMS Math Counts!
Congrats to our SMS Dance Team as they head to STATE! Good Luck Ladies!
Book Fair February 19-25
A Carnival of Books
There will be door prizes, book swaps, book fair, and free dinner from 4:30-6:00.
Teen Vaping Seminar on February 20
High School Registration Information
Congrats to our November Students of the Month
6th Grade
Junior Tomas
Zane Wilson
Jackson Smith
Kate Mays
Anna Kemp
Ramsey Watson
7th Grade
Gage Beck
Carter Lawrence
TreShaun Green
Malia Sweatt
Chloe Woodard
Ava Deters
8th Grade
Aidan Grace
Andrew Hall
Jaylea Clement
Madeline Pindara
Alyssa Maehara
Cairra McGuire
Congrats to our December Students of the Month
6th Grade
Lacon McKinney
Tahja Jarrett
Anthony Burrus
Allyson Rideout
Grace Galbraith
Mallory Burns
7th Grade
James Mattingly
Gregory Thompson
Mason Caton
Hannah Austin
Sierra Johnson
Perri London
8th Grade
Vincent Cruz
Kyra Haynes
Mollianne Major
Emmi Kirtley
Trey Roberson
Austin Piper
Yearbooks are on Sale for $25! Purchase them in the morning or in Ms. Clark's Room B-13.
Congrats to the SMS Cheer Team as they Received 1st Place at White County Cheering for a Cure!
We Love our SMS Wrestling Team!
South Middle School
Website: southmiddle.henderson.kyschools.us
Location: 800 South Alves Street, Henderson, KY, USA
Phone: 270-831-5050
Facebook: facebook.com/southmiddleschoolbulldogs