ADULT PASS: $100.00 ($3.00 HTT fee $3.39 credit card fee – TOTAL $106.39) Putting the arts and creativity at the heart of children and young peoples lives.We encourage everyone to take advantage of one of the All-Sports Pass options and avoid paying repeated fees during the 2021-2022 school year.ĪLL-SPORTS PASSES (valid for 2021-2022 school year) There is a one-time fee when purchasing one of the All-Sports Pass options. The ALL-SPORTS PASSES are the best way to avoid paying exorbitant fees with the purchase of each individual ticket (fees are currently $1.55 per ticket). As a result, we wanted to offer cost-savings options for students, adults and families. The Dublin high school athletic departments will be continuing a partnership with Hometown Ticketing for the 2021-2022 school year.Īthletic Directors realize there are fees involved when purchasing online tickets. As referenced in the earlier article, a broader and better understanding of health is necessarily for the success of all students – at any level.All Sport Athletic Passes for 2021-22 Seasons Happy Thanksgiving MGA Campuses Closing for the Holiday at 2:30 PM, Wed. I have coached for over 20 seasons for boys and girls premiere teams holding board positions with several soccer clubs. The logo of Middle Georgia State University with the flame to the left of the text. Dr Abraham My name is coach James Fulwiler and for the last 10 seasons I have run the Dublin High School Mens soccer program. The 935-square-foot facility at Jerome High will provide 12. The Board of Directors and Staff at DPIE are delighted to know that a portion of the CARE Grant to Dublin High School was devoted to the development of this center that will benefit students for many years to come. School & League Logos: Open Letter to Brian Williams: James Fulwiler, Dublin High School. Dublin (Ohio) district will add modular classrooms at one of its high schools. It is very accessible yet also removed and for some students even that makes a difference.” Having it slightly off the beaten track is nice. It is great to have a dedicated space away from the hustle of our various offices. Students know it is a quiet, safe and calming space to be in. Principal Maureen Byrne: “The Wellness Center is beginning to pick up momentum. For our students, it means that we take their needs seriously.” I feel strongly that our students are at risk, when significant life changes happen to them. Superintendent David Marken: “The concept of a stand-alone Wellness Center lends significant credibility to the need of both student privacy and, also the school and district believe it is important enough to have designated mental health and wellness staff to meet the needs of our students.
What might this mean to students that are seeking out support? We had the opportunity to collect some feedback from two key district figures in response to a very simple question.ĭPIE: Please articulate the importance of now having a stand-alone Wellness Center on campus. What seemed like an unattainable dream for over 10 years became a reality with the simple cutting of a ribbon on a mid-September morning.
In combination with grants from Dublin Partners in Education, Fremont Bank and other contributors, the wheels were set into motion. Oftentimes, despite its true value, these funds are not always readily available. Secondly, the center would need to be either a constructed or repurposed space which also needed to be furnished. BTW, Jared Boll is scheduled to drop the puck tomorrow evening for the Coffman-Jerome game. Therefore, it could not be housed in the Counseling office or the HUB. DIFD is off an running 6,000 purple bracelets distributed to all 3 HS schools with the DIFD logo and phone for kids to contact Mental Health specialists if they need help. For one, this type of service/facility needed to be separate from the singular structures featured about the campus, thus any student would have the opportunity to enter the Wellness Center anonymously and without judgement. In a highly distinctive collaboration between DUSD and the community, Dublin High now has the ability to deliver a service that has the potential to benefit the student body as a whole. Superintendent David Marken, Principal Maureen Byrne, Mayor David Harbert and others at the cutting ceremony. If you believe you, or your student, have been subjected to discrimination, harassment, intimidation, or bullying you should contact your school site principal and/or the District’s Equity Compliance Officer/Title IX Coordinator, Kanitra Lopez, Legal Compliance Specialist by phone at (916) 686-7795, by email at, or in person.