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“More kids, more joy”: What happened when two small Denver elementary schools merged

Kindergartener Semaj Leyba ,6, plays one of her school’s trombones that is used to teach students during instrumental music class at Cheltenham Elementary on Feb. 22, 2024. Semaj stands for a portrait on the playground at Cheltenham Elementary. Following the closure of Fairview Elementary last year due to declining enrollment, students were reassigned to Cheltenham, resulting in a consolidation that brought extra funding and staff to the latter for the initial year. This consolidation has led to an expansion of "specials" including library, art, dance, P.E., choral music, and instrumental music, a significant increase from the two specials offered at Cheltenham and Fairview last year. However, impending budget cuts next year may impact the availability of these specials at Cheltenham Elementary. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
Kindergartener Semaj Leyba ,6, plays one of her school’s trombones that is used to teach students during instrumental music class at Cheltenham Elementary on Feb. 22, 2024. Semaj stands for a portrait on the playground at Cheltenham Elementary. Following the closure of Fairview Elementary last year due to declining enrollment, students were reassigned to Cheltenham, resulting in a consolidation that brought extra funding and staff to the latter for the initial year. This consolidation has led to an expansion of “specials” including library, art, dance, P.E., choral music, and instrumental music, a significant increase from the two specials offered at Cheltenham and Fairview last year. However, impending budget cuts next year may impact the availability of these specials at Cheltenham Elementary. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
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In art class on a recent Friday, Cheltenham Elementary students made puppets out of paper bags. In instrumental music, they plinked out patterns — “ta, ti-ti, ta-ta” — on wooden xylophones. In dance class, they took turns doing a step-touch to a version of the disco hit “Stayin’ Alive.”

The west Denver school has a whopping six elective classes, often called “specials,” this school year, up from two last year. Cheltenham also has 10 mental health and behavioral specialists, two assistant principals, two reading interventionists, two math interventionists, and a full-time gifted and talented teacher.

For a school with 425 students, itap an abundance of staff.

Principal Felicia Manzanares has another word for it.

“Itap a dream,” she said. “But you only get that for one year.”

The one-year-only staffing bump is because Cheltenham was on the receiving end of a controversial school consolidation. In the face of declining enrollment, the Denver school board voted last spring to close tiny Fairview Elementary and reassign its students to Cheltenham.

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