WELCOME TO ORRVILLEMIDDLE SCHOOL

RIDER STRONG!

Respect Prepare Perform Persist

Welcome to Orrville City Schools. We hope this handbook will help you understand some of the policies and practices of our school. It provides important information concerning school procedures rules and allows for communication between home and school. Please take time to read over the information contained in the handbook.

Both the school and home need to work for the best interest of the children, and the better we understand one another the better we are able to provide the best educational opportunities. As partners in education, we encourage your full participation in your child’s learning. Parents are encouraged to become involved by helping with homework, volunteering at school, and participating in PTO.

We extend our best wishes to both parents and students that together we may enjoy a most successful school year. A positive attitude combined with efficient communication practices should help us all achieve our goals and objectives.

Mr. Dave SovacoolMrs. Jamie Cicconetti

Middle School Principal Middle School Assistant Principal

PHILOSOPHY

The philosophy of Orrville Middle School centers on the belief that all students have the capacity to learn, grow and develop into knowledgeable and caring citizens of the Orrville community. Our students will be engaged in learning that is relevant, challenging and exploratory. It is our goal that our students develop socially, emotionally, and academically in a trusting and respectful environment in which family and community are actively involved. In order to achieve these goals it is necessary for the school and family to work closely with each other so that the child is successful at school. During the middle school years, our students may face many important life choices and needs the support of both home and school to make wise, healthy decisions.

MISSION STATEMENT

The mission of the Orrville City School District, in partnership with the parents and the community, is to inspire all students to become successful and lifelong learners and to be prepared to responsibly contribute to our community and society.

SCHOOL RULES

All middle school students follow three basic school rules. These rules are followed in every location of the buildings. The students pride themselves on following the three R’s.

Respect yourself! Respect others! Respect property!

ANTI-BULLY RULES

Rule 1: We will not bully others.

Rule 2: We will help students who are bullied.

Rule 3: We will include students who are left out.

Rule 4: We will tell an adult at school and an adult at home if we know if somebody is being bullied.

STUDENT EXPECTATIONS

  1. Follow all school rules, policies and procedures.
  2. Attend school on a consistent basis and arrive on time.
  3. Treat each other and the school staff with respect.
  4. Follow all directions the first time given.
  5. Dress in an appropriate manner for school.
  6. Be prepared for daily assignments by studying for tests and quizzes, completing homework and having all necessary materials.
  7. Take pride in your school and your school building.

Student Planner

This Orrville Middle School Student Planner, which has been provided to you, is designed to give the student a complete look at all policies and procedures, activities, and other general information that is important to be a successful student. The planner also provides a complete calendar to help organize the student’s academic life. We encourage all students to make the best possible use of the planner. Teachers have been encouraged to include activities that involve the planner. If a student loses their planner, they will be expected to purchase a new one from the office. The student planner is to be used as a hall pass for students at OMS.

SCHOOL ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE

It is requested that students do not arrive to school before 7:15 A.M. if they do not ride a school bus or participate in the breakfast program. Students need to report to the East end of the building. 7th and 8th grade students will wait in the gym, and 5th and 6th grade students will wait in the cafeteria before the first bell rings.

All students will bedismissed at 2:40. Students are expected to leave school grounds immediately following dismissal, unless they are involved in a scheduled after-school activity.

ATTENDANCE

All students enrolled must be in regular attendance as outlined in Ohio Law. Attendance is the legal responsibility of the parent. When a student is absent:

1) The parent will call the school by 8:35am.

*The school will notify the parent if not called off.

2) The student will bring a parent excuse/doctor’s note withinthree days of his/her return.

3)The student will be responsible for all work missed.

4)Students will not be permitted to receive credit for work missed due to unexcused absences.

ACCUMULATED ABSENCES:

Any student who has accumulated more than 10 excused absences (without a prior doctor’s note) must bring a signed and dated physician excuse for all further absences. If a doctor’s note is not provided, the absence will be marked as unexcused.

**Parents will be notified by mail of accumulated absences with a warning letter at 7 days and a notification at 10 days that all student work will be marked unexcused until a dated physician’s excuse is produced for missed days.

REASONS FOR EXCUSED ABSENCES:

1)Personal illness

2)Illness/death in the immediate family

3)Death of a relative

4)Quarantine for contagious disease

5)Observance of religious holiday

6)Emergency deemed as sufficient cause by the administration

*If a student arrives after 8:35am or leaves before 1:55pm they will be considered ½ day absent.

*Students who have unexcused absences from school are still responsible for work missed, but will not receive any credit.

*Students must be in attendance for 4 periods to participate in extracurricular activities.

UNEXCUSED ABSENCES:

Habitual Truant: Unexcused 5+ consecutive days

Unexcused 7+ days in one month

Unexcused 12+ days in one year

Chronic Truant: Unexcused 7+ consecutive days

Unexcused 10+ days in one month

Unexcused 15+ days in one year

**Parents will be notified by mail when their child has reached each one of these benchmarks and what actions will take place.

**Possible actions include parent education programs, intervention and counseling programs for the student, loss of student driving privileges, alternative school and any other appropriate legal action.

TARDINESS

Tardiness is defined as any student arriving at school after the start of the school day. Any student arriving more than 45 minutes after the start of the day will be marked absent UNLESS they have a doctor's or dentist's note. The time of the appointment should be on the doctor's note and it should be presented to the office secretary. Anyone leaving school prior to 45 minutes before the end of the school day will be marked half day absent.

TRUANCY

A "habitual" truant is any child of compulsory school age who is absent without a legitimate excuse for five or more consecutive school days, seven or more school days in one month, or 12 or more school days in a school year.

A "chronic" truant is a child of compulsory school age who is absent without legitimate excuse for seven or more consecutive school days, 10 or more school days in one month, or 15 or more school days in a school year.

The Board endeavors to reduce truancy through cooperation with parents, diligence in investigating the causes of absence, and use of strict guidelines in regard to tardiness and unexcused absences.

When the Board determines that a student has been truant and that the parent, guardian or other person having care of a child has failed to ensure the child's attendance at school, state law authorizes the Board to require the parent to attend a specific educational program.This program has been established according to the rules adopted by the State Board of Education for the purpose of encouraging parental involvement.

For correction of the "habitually truant" unruly child, the courts may now order the Board to require the child to attend an alternative school if one has been established.

Regarding "habitual" truants, the Board must take as an intervention strategy any appropriate action contained in the Board policy, or the Board may file a complaint in juvenile court jointly against the child and the parent. The complaint must state that the child is an "unruly child" by virtue of being a "habitual truant," and that the child's parent violated the School Attendance Law.

Regarding "chronic" truants, if the parent fails to get the child to school and the child is considered a "chronic" truant, the Board must file a complaint in the juvenile court jointly against the child and the parent. The complaint must state that the child is a "delinquent child" by virtue of being a "chronic truant," and the parent violated the School Attendance Law.

MISSING CHILDREN LAW

Birth certificates and student records must be presented to school officials at the initial entry time that the student enrolls in the Orrville City Schools. Should their records not be produced, within (14)days from the date of entry, Ohio Law (ORC 2091.3, 3301.25) requires the school to notify the local law enforcement agency that the student may be a missing child.

In compliance with ORC 2091.3, 3301.25 et. Al., parents shall provide the school a current home, work and emergency phone number, and must call the school to report student absences. Should a student not be reported absence, a representative of the school will attempt to notify the parent/guardian of the absence. The notification will be by telephone or in writing on the day of the absence.

ABSENCE/PRE-EXCUSED

If a student knows ahead of time that he/she will be absent, an excuse stating the reason and length of absence should be presented to the attendance officer. Doctor and dentist's appointments are only excused for the time it takes to go and return to school from the appointment.

EARLY CHECKOUT

Like tardies, excessive early departure from school can hinder your child’s education. Please do not abuse this privilege. Doctor and dentist appointments should be scheduled before or after class time whenever possible.

Anytime a child checks out of school early, an adult must sign the child out of school in the office. The adult must be either the parent or guardian or an adult that the parent has authorized the school to release the student to.

Provisions must be made in advance for planned absences, otherwise, no credit will be allowed for make-up work.

GRADES

Grades are issued at the end of each grading period. The following grading scale will apply:

% Letter Grade

100-90 A

89-80 B

79-70 C

69-60 D

59-50 F

It is the student's responsibility to know where he/she stands in a course at any given time. If you fall behind, seek help through scheduled times with your counselor or teacher.

NEW ELGIBILITY STANDARDS FOR STUDENTS IN GRADES 7-8 (OHSAA BYLAWS)

Students who are enrolled in a member 7TH-8TH grade school will be required to pass a minimum of five subjects taken in the preceding grading.

Beginning August 1, 2010, which means that the bylaws become operationally effective at the end of the first grading period of the 2010-11 school year, the revisions read as follows:

A student enrolled in the first grading period after advancement from the eighth grade must have passed a minimum of five of all subjects carried the preceding grading period in which the student was enrolled.

A student enrolling in the seventh grade for the first time will be eligible for the first grading period regardless of the previous academic achievement. Thereafter, in order to be eligible, a student in grade 7 or 8 must be enrolled in school the immediately preceding grading period and received passing grades during that grading period in a minimum of five of those subjects in which the students received grades.

For students taking just five courses, there will be no margin for error as failing even one course will cause a student to be ineligible for a grading period. Please keep in mind that all subjects in which the student will receive a grade or a P/F or S/U will count. Thus, if a student is taking three electives in a grading period, each of the grades in those subjects would count toward this standard.

New standards for eligibility for the 7th and 8th grade:

  • Pass the equivalent of 5 classes
  • GPA above 1.5
  • If the GPA is 1.0-1.499 then they must do the 2 hours per week tutoring program

RETENTION AND MINIMUM COMPETENCY

Pupils at OrrvilleMiddle School who receive a yearly average of “F” in two or more of the following subjects (Math, Social Studies, Language Arts or Science) will repeat the grade. The administration reserves the right to promote or assign any student to the next grade, if it is in the student’s best interest.

A student with a passing grade may be retained following a parental conference.

Academic Dishonesty

Academic Dishonesty demonstrates a lack of character that is inconsistent with the goals of the OrrvilleCitySchool District. Cheating and plagiarism are forms of Academic Dishonesty, which are defined as follows:

Intentional Plagiarism occurs when writers or researchers are aware that they are using someone else’s words or ideas as their own. Cheating is the act of obtaining or attempting to obtain credit for academic work through the use of any dishonest, deceptive or fraudulent means.

Some specific examples of intentional plagiarism and cheating include but are not limited to the following:

  • Using pre-written papers from the Internet or other sources.
  • Copying an essay or article from the Internet, on-line source or electronic database without quoting or giving credit.
  • Cutting and pasting to create a paper without quoting or giving credit.
  • Using Cliff’s Notes or a similar source without giving credit.
  • Borrowing words or ideas from other students or sources without giving credit.
  • Allowing someone else to write the paper or do the work.
  • Presenting a technology-based foreign language translation as one’s own work.
  • Copying, in part or in whole, from another’s test or other evaluation instrument.
  • Submitting work previously presented in another course, if contrary to the rules of either course.
  • Using or consulting during an examination sources or materials not authorized by the instructor.
  • Altering or interfering with grading.
  • Sitting for an examination for someone else or allowing it to happen.
  • Stealing a test, quiz, etc.

Unintentional Plagiarism occurs when writers or researchers unwittingly use the words or ideas of others by failing to give credit to the source. When in doubt, students must check with their teacher or writing lab monitor.

Some specific examples of unintentional plagiarism include but are not limited to the following:

  • Paraphrasing poorly: changing a few words rather than taking notes and rewriting the material.
  • Quoting poorly: putting quotation marks around part of a quotation but not around all of it or putting quotation marks around a passage that is partly paraphrased and partly quoted.
  • Citing poorly: omitting an occasional in-text citation or citing inaccurately.

Any other act committed by a student in the course of his or her academic work, which defrauds or misrepresents, including aiding or abetting in any of the actions defined above.

(Adapted from the following sources: San JoseStateUniversity, NorthHunterdonHigh School)

CONSEQUENCES

Before any formal action is taken against the student for the alleged violation, the student will be afforded due process. Parents will be informed at each step of the process.

In cases of Intentional Plagiarism and Cheating:

  1. For the first offense, the student will receive an F on the assignment. The Guidance Counselor will be notified to provide appropriate intervention and a note will be placed in the Discipline Folder.
  2. For the second offense, the student will fail the course for the grading period, a notation will be placed in the permanent record, and the student will be considered insubordinate and receive the appropriate consequences.
  3. For the third and subsequent offenses, the student will fail the course for the semester.

In cases of Unintentional Plagiarism:

The student may opt to choose one of the following:

  1. Redo the assignment within teacher guidelines for a reduction of no more than one letter grade for the assignment.
  2. Receive an F on the assignment.

Subsequent offenses will constitute insubordination, therefore requiring disciplinary action.

PHILOSOPHY OF THE GUIDANCE DEPARTMENT

The main emphasis of any school, of course, is on academics. However, things you see as problems, whether they are related to home or school, will from time to time, bother each of you throughout the school year. These problems have a way of upsetting us and making it difficult to study or gain peace of mind. The purpose of the Guidance Program at OrrvilleMiddle School is to provide the opportunity for students to discuss their feelings through problem-solving techniques, such as one-on-on counseling and group interaction.

APPOINTMENT WITH THE GUIDANCE COUNSELOR

Appointments with the guidance counselor can be made ‘by talking directly to him/her or through contact with a friend, teacher or the principal. All appointments should be made before or after school, during a study hall, or during lunch. Class time should not be used unless it is an extreme emergency.

OMS DISCIPLINE PLAN

The purpose of the OMS Discipline Plan is to ensure that our students attend school in a safe, productive and orderly setting. The purpose of the plan is not to punish, but to teach our students that in order to have a positive school climate rules and procedures must be followed. There will be positive incentives for the students who conduct themselves in an appropriate manner, as well as firm, fair, and consistent consequences for students who choose not to follow school rules or procedures. The behavioral expectation is that students attend school on a consistent basis, arrive on time, come prepared for class, complete their assignments, treat each other and the staff with respect, follow directions the first time and conduct themselves in an appropriate, orderly manner. Cooperation among staff, students and parents is crucial for a positive school climate.