The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current, September 01, 2017, Page 3A, Image 3

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    3A
THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2017
Seaside students get new online science curriculum
Students learn
by doing, not
just watching
‘We know that excitement
will translate to the students
once school starts.’
By R.J. MARX
The Daily Astorian
SEASIDE — Students at
Seaside High School will see
big changes this fall with a
newly adopted science and
technology curriculum.
A science program, STEM-
scopes, helps kids get expe-
riential learning to meet
national standards. A com-
puter science program devel-
oped by Microsoft helps stu-
dents get the kind of computer
training needed to understand
advanced programming.
The program was devel-
oped by teachers and scien-
tists at Rice University in
Houston to meet national stan-
dards for science, known as
the Next Generation Science
Standards.
“Teachers were very
excited during the training
today,” Sande Brown, the Sea-
side School District’s cur-
riculum director, said after
a teacher training at the high
school Wednesday. “We know
Sande Brown,
Seaside School District’s curriculum director
Submitted Photo
Clockwise from top left, teachers Erin Meyer, Chuck Albright, Danielle Reese and Toni
Paino at a training in Seaside School District’s new technology curriculum.
that excitement will translate
to the students once school
starts. Excited students are
engaged students, and engaged
students are learning.”
The program focuses on
connecting science to reading,
writing, speaking and math
and helps students prepare for
careers in science and tech-
nology, Brown said. Students
learn by doing, not just watch-
ing, and kids work in groups
to solve problems.
“We are also excited about
this curriculum because it is our
school district’s first completely
online curriculum,” Brown
said. “By purchasing this
online curriculum instead of
textbooks, we were able to save
money and use some of that
money to purchase comput-
ers and science materials and
equipment for the classrooms.”
Although the curriculum is
online, teachers have the flex-
ibility of downloading and
printing paper copies of work-
sheets, information pages or
tests online in a program that
varies by grade level.
“The focus, however, is to
have students doing science,
not just be on the computer,”
Brown said.
The text is in both English
and Spanish, and the computer
can read out loud text in both
languages.
The “textbook” language
is differentiated by grade
level, above grade level, and
below grade level so students
of a range of reading lev-
els can access the new learn-
ing, Brown said. It also has a
connection to news and other
books on relevant science
topics.
The program is easily
updated and the company
makes corrections or sug-
gested revisions quickly.
The program focuses on
what educators call the “5 E’s”
of science education, Brown
said: engage, explore, explain,
elaborate and evaluate.
“This is a big leap forward
in having the new bonus of
having an online resource,”
Seaside School District Super-
intendent Sheila Roley said.
The school district typically
buys new textbooks every
seven years. The online com-
ponent will provide the oppor-
tunity for continuous updates,
she added.
“The critical thing to take
away is that we still believe
that science instruction is a
process of discovery for stu-
dents,” Roley said. “The heart
of the program is still science.”
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Oregon cleans
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More than
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SALEM — The Oregon
Health Authority said Thurs-
day that it has cleaned up its
Medicaid rolls, terminating
more than 54,000 people from
the program.
In recent months, state
auditors raised concerns that
the Oregon Health Plan — the
Medicaid program that pro-
vides health care coverage to
the poor and other qualifying
groups — was providing ben-
efits to people who no longer
qualified.
Oregon
Health
Plan
patients must go through
an annual process — called
“redetermination” — to have
their eligibility confirmed.
Oregon had fallen behind on
those redeterminations and
by late May had a backlog of
roughly 115,000 people.
Of that group, the agency
announced Thursday that it
found that 60,353 people were
still eligible for the program.
But 22,937 plan partici-
pants were found to no longer
qualify, while 31,895 cases
were closed due to a lack of
response from the recipients.
Altogether, the agency
says that the closures due to
patients no longer qualifying
for the program account for
less than 2 percent of the more
than 1 million people on the
Oregon Health Plan and will
not affect the state’s two-year
budget.
Auditors said in May that
each Medicaid enrollee in
Oregon costs, on average,
about $430 per month.
Additionally, the agency
claims that all current partic-
ipants are now on a regular
review cycle, and a backlog
will not continue.
According to the Ore-
gon Health Authority, Ore-
gon Health Plan participants
will have their eligibility
rechecked automatically by
the state’s new system, which
is an effort to integrate the eli-
gibility determination pro-
cess for various safety net
programs administered by
the health authority and the
state Department of Human
Services.
It seems that the Oregon
Health Authority is eager to
put the episode behind it. In
the report detailing comple-
tion of the project, the agency
pinned the backlog issue on
the failure of Cover Oregon,
which was supposed to be
a state-run health insurance
marketplace. Cover Oregon,
a costly failure under former
Gov. John Kitzhaber, was also
expected to perform eligibility
renewals for Medicaid.
“These nearly 1 million
Medicaid renewals conclude
and complete the state’s recov-
ery from the failure of Cover
Oregon,” the report said, add-
ing that Cover Oregon’s col-
lapse and the dramatic expan-
sion of the state’s Medicaid
population under the Afford-
able Care Act “overwhelmed”
the state’s health system.
The report caps off the ten-
ure of Lynne Saxton, who was
asked to resign as the health
authority’s director by Gov.
Kate Brown after revelations
of a public relations and media
campaign to discredit a Port-
land-area Medicaid provider
surfaced in early August.
Patrick Allen, formerly
the head of the Department of
Consumer and Business Ser-
vices, has been named acting
director of the health authority.
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You r Ticket TO THE
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entry and will remain in effect until further notice.
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please call our
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503-738-6351 Ext. 2
TIMBERLANDS CLOSED
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