DPI Notice of Educational Options
Notice of Choice Lottery Dates and Times: the February Racine Parental Choice Lottery date for the 2023-24 academic year will be held on Thursday, February 29. Lotteries will take place between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. at 245 Main Street in Racine.
Racine Parental Choice Meetings: On the dates listed below, members of the Board of Directors from the Siena Catholic Schools of Racine will be available to meet with you to discuss any questions that you may have about the Racine Parental Choice Program and your child’s school. These meetings, a requirement of our participation in the Racine Parental Choice Program, are an excellent opportunity to share your thoughts and hopes for the future of Catholic Education in Racine. There is no need to RSVP – you are welcome to come at any time.
How is the Siena system governed?
What is the role of the Board of Trustees?
What is the role of the Board of Directors? Who serves on the Board?
What are the bylaws of the Board of Directors?
How is the system being funded?
How is fundraising handled?
Individual campuses conduct fundraising events and activities in accordance with the school’s needs and mission. Proceeds from local school efforts support the goals set by each individual school.
Development efforts on a system level are lead by the Siena Development Office and support system-wide goals.
Individual campuses conduct fundraising events and activities in accordance with the school’s needs and mission. Proceeds from local school efforts support the goals set by each individual school.
Development efforts on a system level are lead by the Siena Development Office and support system wide goals.
What parishes contribute financially to Siena?
Are the Racine Dominican Sisters affiliated with the system?
Are there any immediate plans to alter academic programming?
Efforts are being launched to create an elementary literacy continuum which will include the creation and adoption of common assessments across all Siena Catholic Schools. Additional initiatives for the 2019/20 school year include the creation of a Gifted and Talented Program, additional movement toward the Archdiocesan adoption of Standards-Based Learning and Assessment, and the initial stages of a system-wide review of elementary Math curriculum.
How will curriculum and changes to academic programming be developed?
What is standards-based grading?
Standards-based grading allows students to be more aware of what they are expected to learn and their progress through their grade level standards. It provides parents with a more detailed outline of their student’s growth and achievement. We believe that clear communication between school and home throughout the course of the year is vital to our students’ success.
Standards-based grading is based on the principle that grades should convey how well students have achieved standards. In other words, grades are not about what students earn; they are about what students learn. A traditional grading system reduces everything that a student does to a single letter grade, at the end of a grading term, making the grade neither timely nor actionable.