Beauregard Elementary

One Team, One Dream

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  • Summer Feeding Program

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  • https://www.lee.k12.al.us/Domain/1389

    Please click on the link above to access the FREE AND REDUCED LUNCH APPLICATION.  New forms must be filled out each year.  Students without new forms completed will pay full price for lunch.

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    Know the Rules

    Outside Meals and Birthday Celebrations:

    • Parents are always welcome to eat lunch with their child; however, outside items cannot be served during lunch in the cafeteria.  They can be served at an appropriate time during the day outside of a one hour window before and after school meals.  Please coordinate with the teacher in advance for planning purposes.
    • Any celebration snacks served to students (cupcakes, cookies, rice crispy treats, etc.) must be bought from a store and must also be free of nut products - including peanut oil. (See pre-approved celebration snacks that may be purchased on the back of this sheet.)
    • Parents are also welcome to purchase a snack item available in the cafeteria for the whole class.  (See list on the back of this page for items available.)

     

    If you have questions about bringing items for your child’s class, contact school administration for approval.  We appreciate your efforts to make Beauregard Elementary a happy and healthy environment for students to learn!    

    Thank you!

     

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         Approved Birthday Celebration Items

      (Items must be purchased from a store.)

    • Cupcakes
    • Cookies
    • Fruit snacks
    • Rice crispy treats
    • Chips

     *************************************

              A LA CARTE ITEMS

           (Sold in the cafeteria)

    • Ice Cream - $1 (only on Fridays)
    • Variety of chips - .75
    • Rice Krispie Treats - .75
    • Water $1

     

                                                  

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  • Attendance

     

    Attendance Awareness

    1. Good attendance helps children do well in school and eventually in the workplace. Good attendance matters for school success, starting as early prekindergarten and throughout elementary school. By middle and high school, poor attendance is a leading indicator of dropout. Developing the habit of attendance prepares students for success on the job and in life.
    1. Excused and unexcused absences quickly add up to too much time lost in the classroom, starting in kindergarten and even pre-k, especially for the most vulnerable populations.
    1. Students are at risk academically if they miss 10 percent of the school year, or about 18 days. Once too many absences occur, they can affect learning, regardless of whether absences are excused or unexcused.
    • Sporadic, not just consecutive, absences matter. Before you know it – just one or two days a month can add up to nearly 10 percent of the school year.
    • Avoid unnecessary absences. Some absences are unavoidable. Occasionally, children get sick and need to stay home. What is important is getting children to school as often as possible.
    1. Relationship building is fundamental to any strategy for improving student attendance. Students are more likely to go to school if they know someone cares whether they show up. Trusting relationships – whether with teachers, mentors, coaches or other caring adults – are critical to encouraging families and students to pay attention to absences adding up and seek out help to overcome barriers to attendance.
    1. Chronic absence is a problem we can solve when the whole community works with, families and schools. All of us can make a difference by helping create a positive school climate that engages students and families in learning and sets the expectation that attendance matters. Community partners are especially important for helping schools and families address and overcome tough barriers such as limited access to health care, hunger, unstable housing, and poor transportation or neighborhood violence.
    1. Chronic absence, missing 10 percent or more of the school year does not just affect the students who miss school. If too many students are chronically absent, it slows down instruction for other students, who must wait while the teacher repeats material for absentee students. This makes it harder for students to learn and teachers to teach.
    1. Educators and families need to monitor how many days each student misses school for any reason – excused, unexcused or suspensions – so we can intervene early. Districts and schools should use data to identify how many and which students are chronically absent to provide extra support where it is needed. Families should track how many days their children have missed so they are aware of when they should be concerned and take action. We can’t afford to think of absenteeism as merely a lack of compliance with school rules or a loss of funding. Absences represent lost opportunities to learn in the classroom.
    1. Reducing chronic absence can help close the achievement gap. Chronic absence especially affects achievement for low-income students who depend more on school for opportunities to learn. Because they are more likely to face systemic barriers to getting to school, low-income children, many of whom are children of color, have higher levels of chronic absence starting as early as prekindergarten. Chronic absence data can be used to trigger interventions so high-risk student populations receive the supports they need, ideally before they fall behind academically.
    1. Map and address the attendance gap. Data can show up us where absenteeism is most concentrated (by school, grade, ethnicity, geography, income, etc.) and help us unpack the major causes and identify potential causes. This information can then be used to ensure resources are targeted to improve outcomes, especially for the students who currently have the least access to an opportunity to do well in school.
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