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DoD reviewing schools, including Fort Stewart's
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Fort Stewart’s three elementary schools are among 60 domestic Department of Defense schools to be assessed this coming year by the National Defense Research Institute (RAND).
The purpose of the CONUS Education Options Assessment is to ascertain how cost and quality can best be balanced in schools on 15 stateside military installations. Depending on the results, examiners could recommend post schools continue operating under the Department of Defense Education Activity, be supervised by the Liberty County School System or even establish charter schools. DOD schools in Guam and Puerto Rico will not be included in the study.
DODEA officials stress that the assessment has not yet begun.
“No decisions have been made,” said Elaine Kanellis, deputy chief of communications at DODEA in Peachtree City. “There are no preconceived notions.”
Liberty County School System administrators confirmed Monday that neither school-board members nor senior-level staffers have been contacted about the impending study.
Kanellis said it is too early to speculate the assessment’s outcome, adding the RAND-conducted study will be “thorough and pragmatic.” RAND will interview local education officials and work with parents, teachers and DOD school superintendents. RAND also will take into account student-performance data before determining the “best possible decisions on how to best educate students of military families,” she said.
RAND examiners will look at post schools’ classroom practices and programs, educations initiatives implemented by the states and DODEA, and study the impact of back-to-back deployments on students, families, schools and military communities, according to dodea.edu.
Kanellis said the assessment is one of several studies the DOD has facilitated over the years. Examiners’ findings and recommendations will be reviewed by senior officials in the Office of the Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the military services, sometime in late summer or fall of 2014, according to the DODEA website. Any options produced by the study likely will not be a “one size fits all” diagnosis for every school included in the assessment, Kanellis said.
DODEA schools operate at a cost of $375.7 million annually, according to dodea.edu. Along with schools on bases in Georgia, schools on military installations in Alabama, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, Kentucky and New York will be assessed.

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Groups hand out scholarships
RH theater scholarship
Richmond Hill High School senior Jacey Shanholtzer shows her Dawn Harrington Berry Spotlight Award, which was awarded by the Richmond Hill Community Theatre and includes a $500 scholarship. With her are Tom Harris, Ashlee Farris, Brett Berry and Kim Diebold. The award was created in memory of Dawn Harrington Berry, a long time RHCT member and president who died in 2016. - photo by Photo provided.

Three reports recently presented scholarships

Richmond Hill High School senior Jacey Shanholtzer received the Dawn Harrington Berry Spotlight Award, which was awarded by the Richmond Hill Community Theatre and includes a $500 scholarship. The award was created in memory of Dawn Harrington Berry, a long time RHCT member and president who died in 2016.

Garden Club

The Richmond Hill Garden Club recently awarded a $1,000 scholarship to Katherine Wood and a $500 scholarship to Carly Vargas, both seniors graduating from Richmond Hill High School.

The awards were presented May 8 during Honors Night at RHHS.

Wood plans to attend Green Mountain College in Vermont and major in environmental studies.

Vargas plans to attend Tennessee Technological University in Cookeville, Tennessee, to pursue a degree in either environmental studies or biology.

The garden club awards a $1,000 scholarship annually to a local high school senior who plans to major in a field related to environmental concerns, plants and/or gardening.

This year, due to having two exceptional candidates, the garden club awarded an additional $500 scholarship.

Exchange Club

The Exchange Club of Richmond Hill recently named Caroline Odom as its student of the year.

The club each month during the school year names a student of the month, and the student of the year is chosen from among those winners.

Awards are based on academic performance, community involvement and leadership.

Monthly winners receive $100, with the annual winner getting a $1,000 scholarship.

The Exchange Club has been recognizing students for more than 30 years.

Odom will go on to compete in the Georgia District Exchange Club against students from across the state.

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