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The billboard sparking questions about Hoosac Valley is on Route 8 in Lanesborough. It shows the seven pathways at the school: arts & entertainment; biomedical science & health care; business and entrepreneurship; education; engineering & technology; environmental studies; and sports medicine and health & wellness.

Hoosac Valley High Prepared for New innovative Pathways Program

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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CHESHIRE, Mass. — Hoosac Valley High Principal Colleen Byrd has an objective for this school year: getting freshman on the path to future careers.
 
"One of the goals in my sit is getting 100 percent of ninth graders will be enrolled in a pathway by the end of the year," she told the School Committee on Monday. 
 
Hoosac Valley was designated by the state as an Innovation Career Pathway school earlier this year, joining Mount Everett Regional School and Monument Mountain Regional High School. 
 
The state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education will be providing resources for pathways development.
 
"We're effectively creating the winds of change in this district as I speak," said Superintendent Aaron Dean. "We've taken a lot of steps, a lot of shifts in the positive direction and, this year, I feel like the year where a lot of these things finally will come together."
 
Pathways are designed to provide students with coursework and experiences such as internships to prepare them to enter their field of interest after graduation or to continue on to a higher degree. The goals are to produce lifelong learners, critical thinkers and global citizens.
 
Byrd said many of the courses overlap in the pathways (or are required for graduation) so students who may change their minds partway through high school should have credits that can be transferred. 
 
"These skills are not just something that we do in high school. This is something that we're expanding all the way down to our preK programming and really looking at how do we make these connections and how do we build new skills for our students as they graduate," said Superintendent Aaron Dean. 
 
Byrd said the middle school is already teeing up with incoming eighth graders being counseled and "exposed to the pathways through similar vantage points as ninth graders."
 
Hoosac is certified for two pathways so far — environmental and life sciences and health care and social assistance — but is preparing seven total pathways. 
 
That's led to a somewhat cryptic billboard on Route 8 advertising the high school's new program with just graphic symbols. School Committee members asked if it was effective without words. 
 
"Our whole point was to put it out there we are a pathway high school, and drive traffic to our site," Dean said, adding that it was the recommendation of the marketers. "Over time, I think we can do more spotlights." 
 
He couldn't speak to how much traffic it had driven yet but said it has generated a lot of questions. 
 
The school's been seeking a direction of this sort for some years. 
 
"We're finally getting our identity, our niche, our place in Northern Berkshire," said Dean.
 
In other business: 
 
The School Committee ratified a new three-year contract with the teachers union. The contract includes a negotiated restructuring to accommodate the new pathways curriculum in the first year and then 3 percent raises in each of the next two years. The old contract expired at the end of June. 
 
• Dean reported that 25 new teachers attended orientation; there is now a total of 105 in the district. He said they had a varied background and "seem very excited about the pieces that we're working on, Project Lead the Way, pathways programming in general."
 
• The School Committee voted to award the roofing contract for the middle and high school gyms to Triumph Roofing Inc. of Baldwin, which had the low bid of $784,000. Of the seven bids, the highest was $1,257,880 by Reliable Roofing & Sheet Metal LLC. 
 
The funding will come out of the district's federal Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) funds. The roof comes with a 30-year warranty and construction starts Oct. 1 and should be completed by the end of the month. 
 
• The committee also voted on the use of Yondr pouches for cell phones, authorized account transfers to close out the fiscal 2023 year and briefly touched on the superintendent evaluation process.

Tags: curriculum,   HVHS,   

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Anahata Schoolhouse is Offering a New Program for the Community

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

Howard Rosenberg opened the yoga studio in 2018 in the old school house at 201 North Summer St. 
ADAMS, Mass. — The Anahata Schoolhouse on North Summer Street is offer a new service to its yoga patrons — ayurveda.
 
"Ayurveda means the science of life or longevity and it's a 5,000-year-old traditional system of medicine originating in India. It's a universal system of medicine that applies to anybody, anywhere," said certified ayurveda practitioner Hilary Garivaltis. 
 
"It's based on nature, natural laws, and rhythms and principles of nature and understanding that we're all a part of it so learning how we fit into the world around us is so important in ayurveda."
 
Garivaltis has been a leader in ayurveda for 25 years and taught for 12 years at Kripalu Center for Yoga & Health in Strockbridge. 
 
She continues to give workshops and courses, and helps set up programs, including now at the Anahata yoga and healing arts center. This includes offering personal consultations to create customized recommendations on diet, lifestyle and habits.
 
"Ayurveda is really body care, yoga is taking care of the mind, ayurveda is taking care of the body," said Aly Sprague, Anahata's director of ayurveda and yoga programs.
 
"It's extremely individualized, so no one that comes in is going to walk away with the same recommendations, not one person, because we are all made up of varying degrees."
 
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