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Santa Fe City Council agreed to move forward with a plan for the city to potentially buy the old St. Catherine’s Indian School campus and lease it to the New Mexico School for the Arts.

Thursday, January 26th, 2012

ABQJournal Online – January 26, 2012

SF City Council Approves St. Kate’s Resolution

With little fanfare, the Santa Fe City Council agreed on Wednesday to move forward with a plan for the city to potentially buy the old St. Catherine’s Indian School campus and lease it to the New Mexico School for the Arts.

The council passed the resolution on its consent agenda along with several other items. Councilors later discussed the city’s “status of communications” with the property’s owner, New Mexico Consolidated Construction, in an executive session barred to the public.

A recent appraisal paid for by the School for the Arts has pegged at $1.9 million the 10.7 acres the city would acquire.

City Manager Robert Romero has previously said the city is bound, with some leeway, to pay the appraised price.

But Coss said Wednesday that New Mexico Consolidated Construction, owned by businessman Max Tafoya, has told the city it won’t accept a $1.9 million sale and disputes the appraisal.

An attorney for New Mexico Consolidated Construction said in September the property is on the market for $8.6 million, although that includes several additional acres the federal government is interested in acquiring for expansion of the nearby Santa Fe National Cemetery.

A detailed financial discussion is scheduled for the city’s next Finance Committee meeting on Monday.

New Mexico Consolidated Construction bought the campus several years ago from the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament, who closed the school in the late 1990s. The historic school dates back to the 1880s.

In 2006, the City Council designated 13 of St. Catherine’s 19 structures as city landmarks. The buildings had been named to the State Register of Cultural Properties in 2001.

NMSA RESPONDS TO STATE’S GRADING SYSTEM

Monday, January 23rd, 2012

Dear Friends of NMSA:

You may have seen in the January 12, 2012 edition of the New Mexican that the New Mexico Public Education Department (PED) has released their new grading system for Santa Fe Public Schools. New Mexico School for the Arts (NMSA) received a grade C. We have contested this ranking.

Under the new A-F Grading System, New Mexico schools are rated on 6 different factors.  In the category of Graduation Rate, NMSA was given a D. Since NMSA has only been in operation for a year and a half and will not graduate its first senior class until June 2012, we do not yet have any data on graduation rates, so PED took the score from the Santa Fe Public Schools data from the last 3 years.  In the area of Career and College Readiness, PED overlooked NMSA’s Career and College Indicator data of ACT, Explore, Plan, PSAT, SAT, ACT, and AP scores that was submitted and therefore ranked the school an F.

NMSA has filed an appeal with the PED to augment these two areas of assessment so that NMSA receives a fair grade under the new ranking.  The purpose of the A-F School Grading System is to measure growth, but the system does not account for a new school such as ours.

Do contact us if you have questions or would like additional information about the rigorous academic curriculum we provide at New Mexico School for the Arts.   Please remember the school’s 2011 designation of AYP, or Adequate Yearly Progress, honoring NMSA for achieving a 95% participation rate on state assessments for proficiency in math and reading.

Thanks again for your continued support,

Cindy Montoya, Principal, NMSA – Charter School

and

Adelma Hnasko, Executive Director, NMSA- Art Institute

PDF of State Grading Report

NMSA – STUDENTS ACHIEVE IN ACADEMICS AND THE ARTS

Sunday, January 15th, 2012

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

1/11/12

Contact: Adelma Hnasko

(505) 310-4194

AHnasko@NMSchoolForTheArts.org

 

 

NEW MEXICO SCHOOL FOR THE ARTS

STUDENTS ACHIEVE IN ACADEMICS AND THE ARTS

 

(SANTA FE, NM) New Mexico School for the Arts is proud to announce that the 28 seniors in its first graduating class have begun receiving acceptance letters and scholarship awards to colleges and universities across the country.  Zak Krasnow, a theater student from Santa Fe, and Marie Kuhns, a dance student from Silver City, have been accepted into the Oklahoma City. Sienna Fleming, an NMSA visual arts student from Roswell, will be attending the Visual Art School in New York City, and Kari Horan, a theater student from Anthony, will be the first in her family to attend a four year university at NMSU.

 

As one of only two high schools in Santa Fe that received AYP (Adequate Yearly Progress) designation in 2011, NMSA students and staff were surprised to learn of the recent C grade they were given by the New Mexico Public Education Department’s new A-F School Grading System.  The school has filed an appeal with the PED contesting the ranking.  “The purpose of the new model is to measure our students not on a pass/fail, but on a system that measures growth,” explains NMSA Principal, Cindy Montoya.  “This assessment model does not account for a new school such as ours.”  Because NMSA did not have a graduating class in 2011, PED utilized SFPS data (scoring a D) to calculate the Graduation Indicator.  PED overlooked NMSA’s Career and College Indicator data of ACT, Explore, Plan, PSAT, SAT, ACT, and AP scores and ranked the school an F.  NMSA came within .3 points of receiving a B rating and 10.3 points of receiving an A rating.  The school will await results of its appeal, and will receive official state grading assignments in the fall.

 

NMSA provides rigorous academics and mastery arts training in Dance, Music, Theater and Visual Arts to 180 creative young people from 34 distinct New Mexico communities.  Dozens of students ride the Rail Runner and utilize public transportation means to attend NMSA.  Fourteen additional students live in the NMSA Residential Program to access the top-notch education the school offers.  Currently located in the St. Francis Cathedral School in downtown Santa Fe, NMSA has begun the search for a permanent campus.  One site under consideration is the historic St. Catherine’s Indian School.  A new campus, slated to open for the 2014-2015 academic year, will ensure that New Mexico’s creative youth will have the opportunity to develop their artistic talents for generations to come.  

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New MexicoSchoolfor the Arts is a public private partnership comprised of NMSA, a statewide charter high school, and School for the Arts – NM (SA-NM), a tax-exempt arts education institution.  NMSA offers pre-professional instruction in the performing and visual arts in combination with rigorous academics leading to aNew Mexicodiploma. New MexicoSchoolfor the Arts prepares a diverse community of students to successfully continue their arts education at institutions of higher learning while engaging them to lead productive and creative lives that enrich their communities.  NMSA is located at the former St. Francis Cathedral School, 275 EastAlamedainSanta Fe.  For more information, log on to:

www.NMSchoolForTheArts.org.

 

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