Progress - Education

Page 1

Minot Daily News

BUILD IT – FOR THEY HAVE COME

Education

SATURDAY, APRIL 9, 2016 MinotDailyNews.com • Facebook.com/MinotDailyNews

Enrollment growth means construction for area school districts

Berthold students are busy in a new classroom in a completed portion of an ongoing building project March 16. Photo by Jill Schramm

The modern cafeteria in the new Watford City High School was built to accommodate the districtʼs increased enrollment.

Submitted Photo

By JILL SCHRAMM

Staff Writer jschramm@minotdailynews.com A rapid population increase, much of it spurred by oil development in the past six years, has put pressure on local school systems to keep up with rising enrollment numbers. Many school districts in northwestern North Dakota have engaged in building projects in recent years. Some still are in a construction mode, and indications are that the building boom may not be quite finished.

Alexander Students at Alexander Public School look forward to new facilities next fall. When completed, the construction project will provide twice the space for the student population, which has nearly quadrupled in recent years. The new addition will add classrooms, a new kitchen and cafeteria,

a second, larger gymnastic and a fitness area that will be open to the public outside of school hours. Supt. Leslie Bieber said the cafeteria has been so crowded that the dining area had to be extended into the gymnasium. The construction of a new cafeteria and gymnasium will solve that space crunch and allow for more physical education for elementary students, who haven’t been able to have daily phyed classes due to space considerations. The spike in enrollment enabled Alexander to revive a football team after a 27-year hiatus and bring back basketball and volleyball after 12-year absences. The volleyball program ran into a hurdle early on when excavation on the school construction caused a wall of the gymnasium to shift. Bieber said only partial use of the gym was available for a while, so girls practiced at East Fairview and held games at Williston State College. Basketball practices took place at the community center in Watford

City until the gym was fully repaired, three days before the first home basketball game. “The surrounding communities definitely helped us out,” Bieber said. School enrollment grew from 55 students during the 2009-10 school term to a peak of 210 students. Enrollment this spring stood at about 200. In response to the growth, the district purchased two classroom

modules. The district plans to repurpose those modules for its agricultural-industrial shop program, which currently operates out of a module purchased during the previous oil boom in the 1980s. That older module will become storage. Voters approved a $17.1 million bond issue to facilitate the construction. The district also received about $500,000 in oil impact grants. See BUILD — Page 2

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