Ball State Delivers Long-Term Muncie Schools Plan To General Assembly

By Stephanie Wiechmann, IPR News | Published on in Ball State, Education, Government, Local News
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(Photo: Ball State University)

Ball State University has delivered a plan to state lawmakers for the future of Muncie Community Schools, as required by 2018 legislation making the university responsible for the district.  Lawmakers required the plan to show innovation.  As IPR’s Stephanie Wiechmann reports, the road map includes adding many already-used state and national programs into the classrooms.

The question for Muncie Community Schools since 2018 has been: what is innovation?

In 2019, Muncie Community Schools officials defined innovation as improving things that other districts do well, but MCS does poorly or not at all.  Ball State President Geoffrey Mearns said the General Assembly wanted the district to experiment.

“They know that this is a laboratory for innovation and experimentation, and they understand that some of those innovative efforts will not succeed, which is not a bad thing.”

MCS BSU Pillars

(Graphic: Ball State University and Muncie Community Schools)

The final plan for the future of Muncie Community Schools will combine several existing programs together to drive the district toward its goal of a “cradle to career” model.

Read The Academic Innovation Plan

On the list:

  • The district will offer every Muncie child pre-kindergarten education that aligns to the highest state standard, partnering with community preschool providers so there are more spots available.
  • The district will use the national Project Lead the Way rubric to focus curriculum on literacy, math, and science.
  • Training for teachers will use the National Institute for Excellence in Teaching program and rely heavily on Ball State University trainers and resources.
  • The district will use competitive compensation to recruit educators.
  • Student progress baselines will be shown by how many students pass the state standardized ILEARN exam.
  • A universal breakfast program has already been implemented to combat food insecurity in the district.

MCS says it will continually use ideas tried and verified by what it calls “similarly situated high-performing, high-poverty districts.”  The plan says it’s a living document that will be adapted during its expected run of 5-7 years.

By year four, its goal is to create what it calls “a sustainable and innovative national model of academic excellence at all levels.”

It also hopes to help the county achieve the state’s goal of 60 percent of Hoosiers having a post-secondary degree or credential.  Currently 30 percent of people in Delaware County have these.

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