
Galena School District Shows Early Learning Drives Math, Reading Gains
The Galena City School District is showing how early childhood investment can drive academic gains, with students in early grades performing above national norms in math and reading assessments.
The district serves just over 300 students at Sydney Huntington School in Galena and operates a state-licensed child care center inside the elementary school. The center serves children from 8 months to 3 years old, using the same curriculum as the district's 3-year-old and 4-year-old preschool programs. The approach extends beyond the typical Head Start model, which has served children since 1965, and Early Head Start, established in 1995 for infants and toddlers. Galena's integration of early learning directly into the school district allows for continuity from infancy through elementary grades.
"The premise behind this was to help us not only with child care for employability for the entire community, but also to support the Alaska Reads Act in our ages 0 to 3, which that doesn't touch, to build capacity for our students beyond that into K-3," Assistant Superintendent Lisa Shelby said.
The district extended its school day by 45 minutes and added two daily intervention blocks without extending teacher contracts. The change moved support from voluntary after-school programs to mandatory in-school interventions.
"We had a kind of a voluntary after-school program a few years ago after school, and what we found is the kids who needed the support most were not coming to school to access those interventions," Shelby said. "So we pulled that into the school day."
Representative Jubilee Underwood asked how the district worked the intervention blocks into the schedule. Shelby said the district has about 35 minutes twice a day for interventions and uses multiple curriculums depending on student needs. The district also picked up high-density tutoring through a grant for reading.
On the mCLASS math assessment, which is used by about 230,000 students nationwide, Galena's early-grade students are showing strong performance. The assessment uses color bands to indicate proficiency levels, with green representing on-grade-level performance and blue representing above-grade-level performance. Galena's data shows significant blue and green across kindergarten through second grade.
In reading, the district is using mCLASS, the same assessment picked up by the Alaska Reads Act. That product is used by 4 million students nationwide. Galena's students are performing slightly above national norms, with particularly strong results in kindergarten through second grade.
All of the district's programs serving more than 300 students are grant-funded through tribal partnerships and state and federal grants. The district has a grants writer who also handles federal programs, and Shelby manages grant reporting and implementation.
This article was drafted with AI assistance and reviewed by editors before publishing. Every claim can be verified against the original transcript. If you spot an error, let us know.
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