Skip to main content

About

RVC Voice was created to publish information about Ross Valley Charter School and the education landscape. I feel that it is important to ensure that there is a positive, informed voice in our community in support of RVC. The inaugural post is titled “Are Charter Schools Public?” We felt this would be a good place to start in order to dispel the rumor put forth by the “Go Public, Not Charter” signs in our community.

The content on this blog will largely focus on positive commentary and provide data to the broader community and prospective families looking at Ross Valley schools. It is not officially connected to the Ross Valley Charter School. It is parent-driven.

Popular posts from this blog

We believe

All children want to learn. Not all children learn the same way at the same pace. All parents do their best to provide their children with the best possible educational opportunities. There are many kinds of learning environments suited to many kinds of learners. Every child should have access to free, public education where they thrive as learners. All citizens share the responsibility for making this education available to all. If children have what they need, it is better for everyone. We do not have to compete for resources. When we work together, we are stronger. When adults model how to collaborate using conversation, children learn how to collaborate using conversation. All children deserve to feel included, welcome and safe in all schools and neighborhoods. We are all on the same side, the side of all children. - from a few local parents whose children attend Ross Valley Charter School

Proposition 39 & RVC

There is some debate in the community about whether Ross Valley Charter School (RVC) is “taking” space from District students by being at White Hill. The reality is that the law does not give District public school students any greater right to publicly-funded school facilities than charter public school students. In fact, the law requires that all such facilities be made equally available by Districts to charter schools so they may have a place to operate. How much space should RVC receive? The math is simple. RVC’s projected enrollment of 144 in-district students for 2018-19, which is 45% or roughly half of the average  RVSD enrollment of 319 students per school (projected). Under Proposition 39, this means that RVC should receive nearly half the amount of space a typical K-5 RVSD elementary school provides to its students. All four elementary schools in the district have at least 22 classrooms each, so RVC should be provided 10 rooms at a minimum. The actual calculations are m...

Better Salaries for Teachers

A worthy cause. Better salaries for teachers... Higher salaries for all school teachers would be a good thing, but West Virginia teachers are in a particularly bad spot. They are some of the lowest paid teachers in the country. Link to a Change.org petition to West Virginia's governor below. From Change.org petition: "Teachers in West Virginia have been on strike for more than a week, demanding the state pay their public employees more. West Virginia Congressional candidate Richard Ojeda started this petition because he wants to see teachers 'treated as professionals rather than inconveniences.' Sign now if you agree."