Dear HPHS Community,
The information below was to be shared with our HPHS families well in advance of selecting courses for next year. Even though course selection is several weeks away, we have moved up the communication in order to avoid transmission of inaccurate information and to provide a common message to all in our HPHS community.
Following ratification by the District 113 Education Association (DEA), the Township High School District 113 Board of Education voted unanimously September 5, 2023, to approve the first collective bargaining agreement (CBA) with the DEA. This three-year contract took effect immediately. The contract between the Board and the DEA is the result of the hard work and collaboration of the respective bargaining teams. The Board’s bargaining team included Board members, the Superintendent, and the Chief Human Resources Officer, and the DEA team was comprised of representatives from both schools.
One of the terms in the contract that will interest our Giant learning community is that HPHS will be adopting the current DHS daily and weekly schedule for the 2024-2025 school year. The reason for implementing the DHS model at HPHS next school year is to address the inequity in teaching, collaboration and supervision minutes between the two schools caused by the schools being on different daily and weekly schedules. What the common schedule will be for the 2025-26 school year is yet to be determined and will ultimately be recommended by the Common Schedule Committee by December 1, 2024, as stated in the Agreement.
For the 2024-25 school year, HPHS students will continue to have eight periods plus an early bird option. Any modifications needed for transportation to the start or end times of the day will be communicated well before course selection begins in January 2024.
This change will come with both opportunities and challenges. We welcome the increased opportunities for students to gain content and build relationships with their teachers through more instructional minutes. We also look forward to an increase in time in homeroom to build community and provide more brain breaks throughout the school day. We also know that change can be incredibly difficult to navigate, and we are committed to doing everything we can within our building’s locus of control to be sure this transition is well-supported and thought out prior to the fall 2024.
Debby Finn
Highland Park High School Principal
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