Posts from September 2010
on the ground
September 8, 2010
Live-blogging the first day of school, from all five boroughs
As he does every year, Chancellor Joel Klein takes a five-borough tour on the first day of school. For the second time, we’re chronicling his journey and the first day of school for the city’s 1.1 million students in 1,600 schools. Anna and Maura will be sending dispatches from the road all day.
Want to add your own first-day-of-school stories or pictures? Email us.
2:59 p.m. And that’s a wrap. PS 65 has broken out the celebratory pizza, and Klein is taking a slice of his favorite snack. “That’s what you should blog about,” he said to Maura, who’s now on the way back to the GothamSchools office, the year’s first first day of school complete. Only 179 more school days until summer vacation.
2:58 p.m. A final note about the PS 65 Dolphins. Why are you like dolphins? Principal Scamardella asked a group of third-graders. Their answers ranged from “because we’re nice” to “because we keep our hands to ourselves.”
2:57 p.m. Teachers union president Michael Mulgrew just called to respond to Klein’s claim that he didn’t come along on Klein’s first-day tour for political reasons. The real reason was purely logistical, he said.
“Yesterday they invited us and I had already told people I was going to different schools,” Mulgrew said. “I don’t know why he’s trying to make this about him and I.”
2:50 p.m. The city just posted a peek into what reporters missed while they were stuck in traffic earlier today: Manhattan Village Academy students discussing the importance of leadership.
2:43 p.m. Principal Scamardella says familiarizing PS 65 teachers with the “common core” standards for what students should learn is the biggest task ahead of her. She also says PS 65 is devising a new way to grade students that allows students to participate in the grading process.
2:36 p.m. Klein pops into a science class where the teacher is reading aloud from The Secret Science Project that Almost Ate the School, a children’s book that she paints as a cautionary tale for students who don’t take their schoolwork seriously — “especially in science!” Unlike most of the teachers Klein visited today, she doesn’t interrupt her instruction. She’s animated, and her students are engaged. (more…)
Headlines
September 8, 2010
Rise & Shine: More pressure, less money on first day of school
- City schools are starting classes today with higher expectations but not more funding. (Daily News)
- With a new school year comes a new round of fighting over how to fix failing schools. (NY1)
- This year’s strange first-week-of-school schedule hasn’t been an issue in recent memory. (Times)
- Most parents who don’t like the strange schedule are still sending their kids to school today. (Daily News)
- To avoid a schedule like New York’s, Los Angeles isn’t starting school until Monday. (L.A. Times)
- A judge failed to rule on Staten Island middle school bus service, leaving some students stranded. (NY1)
- This week is not just the start of public school but the opening of private school applications. (Times)
- Higher standards on state tests could put more students at risk of being left back. (Daily News)
- Fred Smith says problems with state tests go far deeper than inflated scores. (New York Post)
- The Daily News says improving state tests should include a look at how they treat Christianity.
- City schools won’t be offering flu vaccines this year. (Daily News)
- The principal of Brooklyn School of Inquiry has an unorthodox past and parent support. (Daily News)
- Leon Goldstein High School is counteracting budget cuts by selling homegrown software. (Daily News)
- Advocates are continuing to push for more transparency and discretion in student discipline. (WSJ)
- A Brooklyn pizzeria is offering free slices to students with good grades. (Daily News)
nightcap
September 7, 2010
Remainders: A teacher who worked at KIPP turns from “reform”
- A former KIPP teacher explains how he lost faith in the dominant “reform” narrative. (Ed News Colorado)
- The Gates Foundation, which once ejected me from a meeting, wants to be more transparent. (AP)
- A Duncan aide passed off a fictional Chicken Soup for the Soul story as true. (Virginian-Pilot)
- First-year teachers should speak up and ask for help, but be ready to hold their own hands. (Miss Brave)
- At a Chicago “turnaround” high schools, the first day began with a “zero tolerance” declaration. (Catalyst)
- The best metaphor for school policy fads might be a hurricane, not a pendulum. (Larry Cuban)
- Back-to-school fashion tips from frugal, reasonable, dress-code-adhering Hollywood. (Daily News)
- “Waiting for Superman” director Davis Guggenheim thinks teachers are most important. (HuffPost)
- Dan Brown thinks Davis Guggenheim’s prescriptions for improving teaching are flawed. (HuffPost)
- Staffers at the U.S. Department of Education are very miserable, a survey says. (Politics K12)
- Some charter schools might get left out of the $10 billion edu-jobs bill funding. (Politics K12)
size matters
September 7, 2010
Freshman cohorts halved at many phaseout high schools
The 14 high schools saved from closure by a union lawsuit will open tomorrow with significantly lowered enrollments. A majority of the schools have seen their incoming ninth grade cohorts cut by half or more over last year.
Though enrollment numbers at the schools have increased since July, when the Department of Education last reported them, they’re still far below where they’ve been in years past. Many of the schools admitted fewer students through the high school admission process this year and are taking in more “over the counter” students. These are students who don’t apply to the schools, but are placed in them by the DOE, and more are likely to enroll in the coming weeks.
Of the schools the city wanted to close, the Choir Academy of Harlem had its ninth grade enrollment drop the most, from 64 students last year to 21 this year, a 67 percent decline. Brooklyn’s Maxwell Career and Technical Education High School is a close second; incoming freshman class is 66 percent smaller than last year’s class.
New Day Academy, a 6-12 school, saw the least change. Last year it opened with 79 ninth graders and, as of today, it has 73. (more…)
No Parent Left Behind
September 7, 2010
City charter office to schools: start parent groups by October
For the first time, the Department of Education’s charter school office is forcing all New York City charters to start parent associations.
The change is a direct result of the new charter cap legislation that Albany passed in May. In addition to doubling the number of charters allowed to open, the legislature amended state education law to say that charter schools located in New York City must establish parent or parent-teacher associations.
What remained unclear over the summer was whether the new provision would be enforced by the city, or by each school’s individual authorizer.
Today, the acting director of the city’s charter school office, Aaron Listhaus, sent a memo to leaders of all of the city’s charter schools — regardless of who authorized them or when — instructing them to start forming parent organizations if they have not done so already.
Listhaus gave the schools an October 1 deadline to check in with his office on their progress starting a parent group. Charter school authorizers have never before had to track whether their schools have parent groups. Hard numbers about how many schools will be affected by the change were not available today. But Listhaus and a spokeswoman from the New York City Charter School Center estimated that a majority of city charter schools currently do have parent organizations.
The full memo from Listhaus to charter school leaders is below: (more…)
back-to-school
September 7, 2010
One school’s solution to the one-day first week problem
What does a school do when the first day back is a Wednesday, but students have the rest of the week off?
While some parents and students are threatening to boycott the first day of school, one school has found a different way to use the day, though not for instruction.
The Beacon School, a selective high school on the Upper West Side, is using tomorrow as a purely administrative day. According to the school schedule posted online, most students will report to an advisory session for a little over an hour. Freshmen will get their photo IDs and all students can stay for an activities fair and lunch, but it’s not required, making the day more of an official check-in than a school day.
contract sport
September 7, 2010
“Give it to me!” Klein says of D.C.’s teacher contract
Chancellor Joel Klein and city teachers union president Michael Mulgrew have been careful not to say too much in public about contract negotiations, which started almost exactly a year ago and have been stalled for months.
But in New York magazine this week, Klein wished out loud for a New York City teachers contract that looks like the one hammered out this year in Washington, D.C.
That contract includes, for the first time, a voluntary performance-pay plan and allows principals to use a student test scores, rather than teacher seniority, to decide who to cut during budget reductions. It also limits the amount of time that excessed teachers can remain on payroll while they search for new positions (in New York, teachers can remain salaried indefinitely after they lose their position in a school).
Those changes are some (though by no means all) of the provisions that Klein is seeking in New York and which the United Federation of Teachers has fiercely resisted. But American Federation of Teachers president Randi Weingarten insisted to the magazine’s reporter that the D.C. contract does not bring radical change:
Over breakfast in Washington, she was at pains to argue that, all appearances to the contrary, the union had made no large concessions, that “tenure was preserved intact,” that the contract “isn’t the breakthrough that New Yorkers and others think it is.” (When I put these claims to Klein, he fairly snorted: “If there are no concessions in there, give it to me! I’ll take that concession-free contract tomorrow!”)
a thousand words
September 7, 2010
Calling all back-to-school photogs: send us your pictures

Students and the mayor showed up at PS 111 in Long Island City, Queens last year for the first day of school.
The first day of school is chaotic, stressful, and exciting — all ingredients for an excellent photo opportunity. Amid the tumult of tomorrow, please take a few seconds to capture your students and children at their finest. They and their schools won’t look so polished until next year the next quality review, so send us your photos! Email your back-to-school photos to tips@gothamschools.org
after the fall
September 7, 2010
After test score criticism, Klein allows more planning time
Teachers are starting the school year with 37.5 more minutes a week to figure out how to raise test scores.
In an email sent to principals on Friday, Chancellor Joel Klein announced that schools are now allowed to convert one period of tutoring time into teacher planning sessions aimed at boosting scores. The four-times-weekly, 37.5-minute sessions were introduced in February 2006 for teachers to offer small-group instruction.
“This time must be used in a structured way to look at data and student work, to examine curriculum and teacher practice and to diagnose what changes and supports are needed to improve performance for the students who need it most,” Klein wrote.
Klein’s email announcement marks the city’s first concrete response to the state’s more stringent test score standards. In July, when the scores were announced, Klein said schools would have to give struggling students “more attention” but didn’t specify how. Mostly, he and Mayor Bloomberg have focused on defending the city’s progress despite lower scores. In the email to principals, Klein dismissed challenges to the city’s claims as “belligerent critiques.”
Klein’s complete back-to-school email to principals is below: (more…)
Headlines
September 7, 2010
Rise & Shine: Some families say they’re ditching school’s first day
News from New York City:
- Some parents and students say they are boycotting the first day of school tomorrow. (Post)
- One of those boycotting families say they’re heading to the Finger Lakes. (Post)
- Family advocates in half of city school districts didn’t answer their phones last week. (Post)
- Mayor Bloomberg said that’s because parents with school questions should just call 311. (Post)
- Teachers accused of wrongdoing don’t have to report for duty until next week. (Post)
- Staten Island families whose bus service was cut don’t know how they’ll get to school. (NY1)
- Half of city residents think Bloomberg has improved schools, according to a new poll. (Daily News)
- The superintendent of District 26 in Queens held a student back despite her teacher’s advice. (Post)
- Residents of a Harlem housing project are trying to stop a charter school from opening. (Daily News)
- A long-under-scrutiny principal of a high school in the Lafayette building was removed. (Post)
- The Ghetto Film School supports the Cinema School high school and turns teens into directors. (Times)
- New York City’s public schools are increasingly generating football stars. (Post)
- Chancellor Klein says “Waiting for Superman” is more powerful than “An Inconvenient Truth.” (NY Mag)
- Merrick Academy Charter School has rehired three of the 11 teachers it fired by FedEx. (Daily News)
- Brooklyn’s PS 261 threw some books and electronic equipment away. (Daily News)
- A Queens mom says her disabled son was sexually assaulted by fellow kindergartners. (Daily News)
- A new film focuses on what students in New York City schools are being fed for lunch. (WSJ)
And beyond:
- Across the country, schools are opening this year having changed major education policies. (WSJ)
- Newark is the latest city to see teachers, not administrators, head up schools. (Times)
- A retirement incentive contributed to a jump in teacher retirements statewide. (PressConnects.com)
- New York school districts are still trying to figure out what higher test standards mean. (Times Union)
- Albany’s charter schools are virtually all black and Hispanic. (Times Union)
- The $600 million spent on the school at the site of RFK’s assassination has raised questions. (Times)
- California is moving toward requiring children to be 5 before starting kindergarten. (L.A. Times)
- A look at D.C.’s schools if chief Michelle Rhee chooses to move on post-primary. (Washington Post)

