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New program at GMS provides student support; students remain with the same group through sixth-eighth grades

The Highland County Press - Staff Photo - Create Article
A recent winning Family Group is shown at Greenfield Middle School. Pictured (l-r) are Riley Lanning, Danica Detwiler, Gabe Quincel, Brianna Oiler, Harley O'Connor, teacher Mike Noszka, Kylee Waulk, Gavin Anderson, Kyle Holt (not pictured, Cason Comer, Maci Dennis, Isaac Lee, Ross Roman, and Emma Wright). (Submitted photo.)

By Angela Shepherd
GEVS Distric
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The Greenfield Middle School this year has implemented a support system for students called Family Group.

According to Principal Jason Potts, the idea for the program came from reflecting over the last three years of his time in the middle school where the need for social-emotional support has become imperative, especially with the pandemic and the negative impact possible with social media.

While the last couple of years have seen a tremendous increase in the counseling support available to students in the Greenfield Exempted Village School District, Potts said that doesn’t always reach all students. Many students struggle with anxiety, he said, and helping them learn to cope with the daily stressors of life as well as to communicate face-to-face instead of hiding behind their phone screens is important. This program is meant to focus on those things and appropriate social interactions. 

Another “driving force” behind the creation of Family Group, Potts said, is the need for a child to have a trusted, go-to person.

All students in the middle school, grades sixth through eighth, are assigned to a Family Group, and the groups consist of all three grade levels. Students remain with the same family group, headed up by the same adult, throughout their time in the middle school.

Groups consist of three or four students from each grade level and an adult, which can be a teacher, aide, or monitor. 

Potts said the family groups currently are meeting four times a quarter. Two meetings focus on attendance, grades, and behavior. The other two meetings focus on social-emotional learning and are designed by school counselor Melissa Murdock.

There are Family Group challenges, too, where the groups with the best attendance, grades, and behavior win rewards, things like a pizza party. During the challenges, Potts said banners are placed above the doors of the top three groups announcing their place in the challenge. 

Even though the program is fairly new, Potts said the positive changes are already apparent. “The biggest positive I have seen to date is how much the staff members have embraced the Family Group ideas,” Potts said. “They are meeting with kids outside of Family Group time checking in on the students, not only on their grades, attendance, and behavior, but also their mental wellbeing.”  

There are always good things happening in the Greenfield Exempted Village School District. To check out the happenings, you can go to the district website at greenfield.k12.oh.us, the district’s social media pages, and each building’s Facebook pages.

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