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Legislature’s third-grade reading bill now waits on the governor

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  • On Thursday, the Senate passed Senate Bill 1, a bill that will hold back third graders who are not reading proficient as indicated by an evaluation approved by the Indiana State Board of Education. An author of the bill, Sen. Linda Rogers, R-Granger, said the bill will create an educational system in which  “every child learns to read.” It is now on the governor’s desk.

    SB 1 passed in concurrence with 29 yays and 16 nays, nine nays coming from Democrats and seven from Republicans.

    The nine Democrats who voted nay included: J.D. Ford of Indianapolis; Greg Taylor of Indianapolis; Andrea Hunley of Indianapolis; David Niezgodski of South Bend; Rodney Pol of Chesterton; Fady Qaddoura of Indianapolis; Lonnie Randolph of East Chicago; David Vinzant of Hobart; and Shelli Yoder of Bloomington.

    The seven Republicans who voted nay included: Ron Alting of Lafayette; Vaneta Becker of Evansville; Mike Bohacek of Michigan Shores; Blake Doriot of Goshen; Aaron Freeman of Indianapolis; James Tomes of Wadesville; and Greg Walker of Columbus.

    SB 1 returned to the Senate because the House had made amendments that needed to be approved. If the Senate didn’t approve of the changes, there would have been a conference committee where lawmakers from both sides would have tried to come up with a compromise.

    SB 1 passed out of the Senate Feb 1 and the House on Feb. 27, with the majority of objections in both chambers coming from Democrats.

    Rogers in her opening statements on Thursday agreed with the amendments the House adopted for SB 1.

    “The House made a few changes to the legislation that made it better, and the department of education is on board with all of these changes,” Rogers said.

    “The House made the requirement to offer summer school to start this summer instead of 2025. It clarified some of the summer school language—for example, saying that the services must be provided by a teacher or instructor or tutor trained in the science of reading instead of just a teacher.”

    Rogers said other amendments made in the House include:

    • Licensing requirements.

    Rogers stated, “It requires current licensed elementary reading teachers to have a science and reading endorsement by the time they renew their license, starting in 2027. This is an 80-hour professional endorsement, and the department of education supports this effort and is already committing funds to make it happen.”

    • Offering reading screeners.

    A reading screener, which also goes by the term universal screener, is an assessment to help teachers determine a student’s reading proficiency, giving a good indication of which students may be at risk of falling behind.

    Rogers said, “The bill now requires every student in kindergarten through second grade to be given a reading screener. Instead of just requiring it for students that are not on track to read proficiently, it also says if a school has an IREAD passing rate below 70%, they must use a screener selected by the department of education,” she said. “Otherwise, the schools are able to pick their own screener from a department of education approved list.”

    Lastly, Rogers emphasized how parents can make an impact with kids’ educational success.

    “I think that it’s so important that parents start reading to their children … when they are infants, or if you’re in a childcare facility, you start reading to them as well because I think that’s going to help us a lot when it comes to language arts and to reading,” she said.

    Sen. Mike Bohacek, R-Michiana Shores, appeared before the Senate Thursday to raise his concerns around reading disabilities and children’s mathematics not being included in SB 1.

    “I couldn’t find anything specifically geared in the science of reading program that’s geared for dyslexic students,” he said.

    Rogers responded, “What happened is when we reviewed it and looked at it, the department of education, there was no one certified in the state of Indiana to be able to do that.”

    Bohacek then said, “We know that dyslexia is one of the biggest causes of reading deficiencies in kids, it’s diagnosable and discoverable, and I didn’t see anywhere in the bill. I thought that was a shortcoming as to where we didn’t specifically address that with training that would be specifically geared for it.”

    Rogers agreed with Bohacek’s comments but brought up a main reason the bill now offers screeners: “The screener is there to specifically look at and see if someone is dyslexic, when they start school in kindergarten.”

    Bohacek also voiced his concerns with children’s mathematics: “How come we didn’t even talk about the math portion of the ILEARN test? Those numbers from what I saw are even 10 to 15 points worse. So is there a specific reason why we ignored that part, or are we assuming that if we increase the reading scores, we will get some help there? They kind of go together, and if you have a child with two disabilities, in this case it could be, in many cases it will be, then these kids will absolutely be IEP qualified because they have a generalized learning disorder.”

    Rogers responded: “This bill does not refer to math portions, but certainly I don’t disagree with you that we have to continue to work on math as well.”

    The governor has seven days to sign the bill into law, do nothing and allow the bill to become law without his signature, or veto the bill.

    As of Tuesday, there had been only four bills signed into law by the governor so far this session.

    DeMarion Newell is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by

King catches fire from three, leads Blazers to win on Sophomore Night

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VINCENNES, Ind. – The Vincennes University men’s basketball team climbed up one spot this week in the final NJCAA Division I National Rankings for the 2023-24 season to No. 4 in the country.

The Blazes closed down the 2023-24 regular season Tuesday night in the Physical Education Complex on Sophomore night and came away with an 84-65 victory over the Kaskaskia College Blue Devils.

VU sophomore Kris King (Washington, D.C.) caught fire from behind the arc in the second half Tuesday night, connecting on six of eight three-point shots and scored 20 of his career-high 26 points in the second half.

Vincennes got off to a great start Tuesday night, working the ball into the paint and putting together an early 8-0 scoring run to take an 8-2 lead.

Kaskaskia would battle back and even the score at 28-28 before VU picked up the first double-digit lead of the night with an 11-0 run to lead 39-28.

The Blue Devils answered with a pair of buckets before halftime, cutting the deficit to seven and heading into the locker room break trailing the Blazers 39-32.

Vincennes again looked to create some separation on the scoreboard early in the second half and were able to use an 8-3 run to take a 50-37 lead before growing the lead even further with an 8-0 run to take a 60-43 lead.

The teams would trade baskets for most of the later part of the second half, with Kaskaskia unable to go on a scoring run of their own before VU helped seal the game with five unanswered to take their largest lead of the night at 84-61.

Kaskaskia would score the final two baskets of the game but were unable to get back within single digits as VU closed out the 2023-24 regular season winning 84-65 over the Blue Devils.

 

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Women’s Golf finishes 15th at the Huntsville Intercollegiate

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HUNTSVILLE, Ala. – University of Southern Indiana Women’s Golf competed in the 16-team Huntsville Intercollegiate on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday. USI finished 15th in their second match of the spring season.

The Eagles finished with a three-round score of 1058 (359, 354, 345). The Intercollegiate was hosted by Samford University at the RTJ Golf Trail at Hampton Cove.

The five competitors for the week were junior Baileigh Schneider (Huntingburg, Indiana), senior Katelyn Sayyalinh (Rockford, Illinois), freshman Alexis Wymer (Bridgeport, Illinois), freshman Ashlynn Weir (Evansville, Indiana), and sophomore Sydni Thurlow (Belleville, Illinois).

Sayyalinh led the Eagles with a three-round score of 257 (85, 84, 88). Schneider had the lowest round score on Wednesday with an astonishing 77. Lipscomb University was the eventual champion of the intercollegiate.

USI battles #8 Tennessee, but fall 2-1

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KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – University of Southern Indiana Baseball goes toe-to-toe with #8 University of Tennessee, but lost, 2-1, Wednesday evening in Knoxville, Tennessee. USI is 4-8 to start the season, while Tennessee goes 13-1.
 
A pitcher’s duel through five innings as the Screaming Eagles and the Volunteers were not able to muster more than a combined seven hits and nine total base runners. USI senior designated hitter Tucker Ebest (Austin, Texas) ended the offensive drought by both teams by crushing a bomb to center field for a 1-0 Eagles lead and his second round tripper of the season.
 
The 1-0 lead was short lived as the Volunteers responded with a solo shot of their own in the bottom of the frame. Tennessee broke the tie four batters later with a single and run scored for a 2-1 lead at the end of six.
 
USI would go down in order in the seventh and would strand the tying run at second in the seventh and eighth as Tennessee closed out the 2-1 decision.
 
Freshman right-hander Clayton Weisheit (Ferdinand, Indiana) began the contest on the mound for USI, getting a no-decision in his first collegiate start. Weisheit threw four scoreless innings, allowing two hits and a walk, while striking out four.
 
The loss in the game for USI went to junior right-hander Gavin Morris (Brazil, Indiana). Morris (0-1) allowed two runs on four hits, while striking out four.
 

Marah Wood’s 2-run home run leads UE to win over Lindenwood

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Aces split doubleheader versus Lions

 

EVANSVILLE, Ind. – With her team trailing 1-0 in the bottom of the 6th inning of the finale in Wednesday’s doubleheader against Lindenwood, Marah Wood launched a 2-run home run to give the University of Evansville softball team a 2-1 victory.  The Purple Aces split Wednesday’s doubleheader against the Lions at Tri-State Orthopaedics Field at James and Dorothy Cooper Stadium.

Game 1 – Lindenwood 5, UE 3

After scoring a single run in the second, Lindenwood added two in the third and another pair of runs in the fourth to open a 5-0 lead.  In the bottom of the fourth, Evansville got on the board,  Following a leadoff walk by Jess Willsey, Marah Wood singled to set the table for Hannah Hood.  The Newburgh, Ind. native came through with a double down the left field line to score Willsey.

Three quick outs ended the threat but the Aces once again put together a rally in the seventh.  Taylor Howe recorded a 1-out double to score Brooke Voss, who reached on a walk.  Dori Brown came in to pinch run for Howe and crossed the plate on an error by the Lions catcher.  Despite the late comeback attempt, the efforts for the Aces came up just short as they dropped a 5-3 decision.

Mikayla Jolly took the loss, throwing the entire 7-inning contest.  She allowed five runs, four earned, on seven hits.  Lindenwood pitcher Amanda Weyh also went the distance, giving up three runs, two being earned, on five hits.  Weyh was also the top offensive performer for her squad, going 2-3 with two RBI and a run scored.

Game 2 – UE 2, Lindenwood 1

Pitching was the name of the game in the second game of the doubleheader and it was one pitch that would make the difference.  Lindenwood struck first with a single run in the top of the third and would hold that edge until the bottom of the sixth.

Evansville was held to two hits through the first five innings, but the third hit of the day proved to be the biggest of the season.  Hannah Hood reached on a walk before Marah Wood stepped to the plate.  She launched the first pitch she saw over the left field wall to put the Aces up by a 2-1 score.

The Lions did their best to even the score in the top half of the 7th, but UE starter Megan Brenton shut the door to give UE the win.  Brenton earned the win, throwing the entire 7-inning game while giving up just one run on six hits.  Wood recorded two out of UE’s three hits in the contest.  This weekend, the Aces play their final non-conference tournament before opening up the Missouri Valley Conference slate next week.

 Vanderburgh County Commissioners Renew Agreement With Evansville Land Bank

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 Vanderburgh County Commissioners Renew Agreement with Evansville Land Bank,  Marking First Joint Initiative with Mayor Stephanie Terry’s Administration  

MARCH 6, 2024

EVANSVILLE, IN — March 6, 2024 — The Vanderburgh County Commissioners and Evansville6 Mayor Stephanie Terry proudly announce the renewal of the Evansville Land Bank Corp. (“Evansville Land Bank,” “Land Bank”) agreement, marking the first joint initiative between city and county executives since Mayor Terry’s inauguration on January 1. This collaboration underscores a steadfast commitment to collaborative governance and strategic partnerships in addressing the challenges posed by distressed properties within the city. 

The Commissioners adopted the Evansville Land Bank Corp. renewal at their regular meeting today. 

“We are happy to renew this vital agreement with the Evansville Land Bank, backed by Mayor Stephanie Terry’s support and approval,” said Commission President Cheryl Musgrave. “This partnership exemplifies our dedication to revitalizing neighborhoods and returning property to productive use.” 

The agreement, forged between the Vanderburgh County Commissioners and the Evansville Land Bank, empowers the Land Bank to acquire property abandoned through non-payment of property tax. The properties undergo clearance of debris and uninhabitable structures and are given clear titles by the County Commissioners. The Land Bank then proceeds with the redevelopment of these properties, aiming to return them to productive use. 

“The continued city/county collaboration under this agreement will contribute significantly to the betterment of our community,” Mayor Terry said. “For the past several years, this initiative has proven vital to acquiring, managing, and redeveloping properties, all of which is instrumental in achieving our community goal of neighborhood revitalization.” 

Since its establishment in 2016 to confront blight in Evansville, the Evansville Land Bank has been proactive in addressing vacant, abandoned, and distressed properties, having acquired 848 properties to date. Operating under the governance of a nine-member board of directors appointed in accordance with state land bank code and organizational bylaws, the Land Bank continues to play a crucial role in fostering equitable, inclusive neighborhoods, significantly contributing to the overall improvement of our community.Â