Attleboro Public Schools’ Journey to Excellence with Follett Aspen
Case Studies
July 25, 2024
Attleboro Public Schools (APS) in southeastern Massachusetts serves 6,000 students across 10 schools, with over 700 part-time and full-time educators and support staff. Committed to excellence in teaching and learning, the district recognized the need for a robust student information system (SIS) to support their mission of developing and delivering engaging, challenging, and inspiring learning experiences.
The Challenge
IT Director Jonathan Plourde began searching for a new SIS to replace the district’s inflexible and cumbersome system. Plourde discovered the ideal solution in the Follett Aspen® Student Information System. After seeing its functionality in a nearby district, it became clear that Aspen was the system that could grow with APS and meet their evolving needs.
However, implementing a new SIS amid leadership changes proved challenging. Users were hesitant to adopt Aspen, unsure of its benefits and resistant to change.
The Solution
The transition required strong leadership and vision, which came from the new superintendent at the time, Kenneth Sheehan. Recognizing that Aspen’s full functionality was underutilized, Sheehan hired Karen Pereira, an experienced Follett Aspen SIS programmer and project manager. Together, they spearheaded an initiative to fully leverage Aspen’s capabilities, mobilizing the central office to lead the charge and help staff overcome their resistance.
Within six months, Aspen’s multi-functionality had significantly improved efficiency across the district. Users began to see the potential of the new system and how it was transforming their processes.
“Aspen changed everything for Attleboro,” says Sheehan. “Even simple challenges with registration have been resolved. With our old system, we once had a situation where 127 students were told not to come to school because records showed they did not belong in the district!”
The Results
With the help of Aspen, Sheehan had instant access to accurate data needed to make critical decisions. The district was able to streamline state reporting needs, fully integrate HR functions, construct improved workflows, and enable a new Instructional Management System (IMS). Curriculum maps were made available to all instructional staff quickly and easily.
“A lot of superintendents have a myopic, shallow view of their district because of limitations in their SIS,” Sheehan noted. “Aspen allowed me to tie everything together: student data, HR functions, curriculum, IEPs – all of it!”
Pereira and the Attleboro IT team built on the foundation Plourde created, making significant improvements. Slowly but surely, objections to the new SIS dissipated as users understood the benefits and how things were changing for the better.
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