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Winter Bridges offers chance to catch up

Natrona County sophomore Christy Bessert, 15, finishes a social studies final Monday morning during Winter Bridges. The district-wide program provides students with tutors and course work to complete for credits missed. (Tim Kupsick, Star-Tribune)

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Winter break ended a week early for some Natrona County High School students. They were up bright and early Monday morning, studying in the high school's library.

The students are attending Winter Bridges this week, a five-day program to keep them caught up on schoolwork. For high school students, Winter Bridges is an opportunity to make up credits from failed classes.

"I should have all this stuff done," said Hawkins Kipp, a tenth-grader. "I kind of wish I could have done it last week. I'm missing work this week to do this."

Hawkins and Daniel Claycomb, also a tenth-grader, said they appreciated having the chance to make up their work.

"We just come here and do work we missed," Daniel said. "It's good."

Winter Bridges is a district-wide program, now in its second year. Reading tutor Rick Arner said many teenagers who attend Bridges are on the verge of being very successful students. Arner runs the Bridges program at Natrona County.

"Maybe the kids were sick the last week or so. Maybe there's a concept they didn't understand about a lesson. Maybe life circumstances just got in the way," Arner said. "They need a chance to get a passing grade and we understand that."

For senior Jonathan Heuring, the winter session is enough time to make-up for a failing grade in his government and economics class.

"I was more worried about my friends than school work at the time, and I realized I had to change that around," Jonathan said.

And the week-long winter session is much more appealing to the 17-year-old than spending a chunk of his summer in school.

"I came to Winter Bridges so I could graduate," Jonathan said.

Arner said it's really up to students to take the initiative to earn a passing grade.

"They carry that responsibility," he said. "The kids here are so close to success...some might take an hour, some may want to take all five days."

Reach education reporter Jasa Santos at (307) 266-0593 or at Jasa.Santos@trib.com.


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Comments to this story.

OH good wrote on Jan 6, 2009 9:34 AM:

" Now kids have yet another excuse to be lazy. NCSD caters to half-hearted attempts. Teachers and students are no longer pushed to be the best from the beginning. Whatever happened to the good old fashioned Do it because you were told by an adult? When I was in school I would not have had the nerve to plain old refuse to do my work ON TIME. What a joke! "

Marc wrote on Jan 6, 2009 10:33 AM:

" The effectiveness of the Winter Bridges Program vs. the impact on all Students, Families and Staff would be an interesting inquiry and discussion. "

parent wrote on Jan 6, 2009 11:14 AM:

" Not everyone is elegible to do winter bridges, you have to carry a certain % to even be considered. For instance, my child can do winter bridges for science because he is so close to passing, but not for history because he is no where near passing. Do some research before you criticize. "

Honesty wrote on Jan 7, 2009 8:11 AM:

" My child is at winter bridges and I think it is a cop out. They choose not to do the work during the regular semester and now have YET ANOTHER chance to get a passing grade. IT IS CRAZY and does not teach them any responsibility or consequences for their actions (or lack of in this case).

I keep hearing from the school district about "...what a nice student..." my child is- which is exactly why they are falling trough the cracks. The fact that this child is nice and LAZY is the perfect combination to give them chance after chance after chance. "

OH good wrote on Jan 7, 2009 12:54 PM:

" Well put Honesty. I never god 2nd and 3rd chances to get my work done. I do not get why children are not held accountable any more for nearly anything. My parents never had to push me to do my work or go to school. I did the work and went because it was my JOB. Yes folks, for the first 18 years of life school AND chores are a child's JOB. "

Been there done that... wrote on Jan 7, 2009 4:42 PM:

" As a ninth grade teacher, I had the opportunity to spend hours (outside of my regular planning periods) putting together several packets of every assignment "eligible" students did not turn in on time - they also got all tests they did not pass. Of course, most of them did not even show up for Winter Bridges, but I got to do the work anyway...Afterward, I was able to spend even more of my time grading the assignments and tests for the few who did show up. Was there more effort put into them the second/third time around? No...the parents forced the students to come to school when all of their friends were still on break and do work they didn't care about in the first place. The students minds were anywhere but on their school work. I admit, there are students who deserve a chance to catch up due to illness, etc., which is why they can receive an incomplete and finish missed work the next semester. I don't know teachers or administrators who lack the ability to make that kind of judgement call.
In the end, it was a frustrating experience that did not help most students' failed grades. "

Unfortunate wrote on Jan 8, 2009 2:24 PM:

" The 9th grade teacher deserves kudos. I could never be a teacher and deal with the lack of caring from students and parents. Kids expect a free ride and parents don't want the hassle. Yes a few do their best but that is so small compared to the lazy ones. "

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