GothamSchools — daily independent reporting on NYC public schools

parent involvement

Chelsea parent is an unlikely ally in the school closure fights

Mary Conway-Spiegel (right) talks with Zenobia White, principal of the Academy for Scholarship and Entrepreneurship in the Bronx, while observing a middle school class.

After dropping her two sons at their Chelsea elementary school one morning this fall, Mary Conway-Spiegel spent several minutes fiddling with the GPS in her black SUV before it spat out directions to her next stop: a high school 15 miles north, in the Wakefield section of the Bronx.

Conway-Spiegel had an appointment with Zenobia White, the principal of a secondary school whose middle grades faced closure by the Department of Education.

Conway-Spiegel had no connection to the school, the Academy for Scholarship and Entrepreneurship, before last October, when White responded to a surprise offer from Conway-Spiegel to help ASE combat the stigma of being on the city’s shortlist for school closures.

The offer came during a round of cold calls that has become an annual ritual for Conway-Spiegel, who has appointed herself surrogate class parent at some of the city’s most struggling schools. She defends them under the banner of a one-woman advocacy outfit, called the Partnership for Student Advocacy, and the mantra — repeated almost daily via Twitter — “There are no failing schools.”

Conway-Spiegel’s exact motivation — to trek miles north and southeast from her Manhattan home and spend thankless hours sitting through public hearings — is hard to pin down, even for her. But she said a combination of experience as a graduate of the city public schools system and the adoptive parent of an African-American teenager inspired her to “see for myself” what the fuss is about at the city’s lowest-performing public schools.

“I just couldn’t stand it any longer, the discomfort I felt with what a bad job is being done in these communities,” she said. “It just seemed to me that nobody had ever been to these schools. I wanted to see just how awful it was, and when I went to see, none of it was that awful.”

Conway-Spiegel said she also takes inspiration from other parent activists, such as Leonie Haimson and Zakiyah Ansari, who head up organizing efforts around education policy issues, and from the Coalition for Educational Justice, the force behind many school closure protests. But rather than rally at the Department of Education’s headquarters, Conway-Spiegel prefers to log hours inside schools before advocating for them to stay open. She only works with schools where she can establish an on-the-ground presence and a relationship with the principal.

Most principals Conway-Spiegel reaches out to don’t respond — she said she understands that it is difficult for them to invite an outsider in at a moment of turmoil. But the ones who do — at Christopher Columbus High School, ASE, Samuel Gompers Career and Technical Education High School, and the High School of Graphic Communication Arts — receive crucial assistance with public relationship, help with what Conway-Spiegel calls “grunt work,” and, perhaps most crucially, hand-holding when it is most needed.

In 2010 she joined Columbus’s staff in protesting the city’s second, and ultimately successful, bid to close the school. She also helped them put together a proposal to convert Columbus into a charter school and volunteered to present the proposal to city officials, including a team of staffers who worked for Chancellor Dennis Walcott, then a deputy mayor.

At ASE, Conway-Spiegel helped White gather a group of local community leaders to brainstorm how to support the middle school through the closure and improve the high school’s academic and extracurricular offerings.

Last December, Conway-Spiegel arranged and led a meeting for students and staff from the Graphic Communication Arts to show off the fruits of their CTE program to city journalists. (Graphics escaped the city’s regular closure list but now faces being shuttered through turnaround.) Lantigua Sime, a long-time assistant principal at the school, said that meeting provided a rare opportunity to paint his school in a positive light for the public.

“They saw the good things that students do. That’s something that’s never happened before,” he said. “It’s always been a negative thing, that Graphics is a failing school. We’ve always felt like we have quality programs, we’ve just never had the opportunity to reflect that.”

Delving into some of the city’s most troubled schools is an unlikely activity for Conway-Spiegel, who grew near New York University, graduated from the school that is now called Fiorella H. LaGuardia High School for Music & Art and the Performing Arts, and founded her own fitness company. She has no education experience other than as a student and parent.

She got a taste of the challenges that low-income families face when she looked several years ago for a high school for a son she adopted when he was a teenager. (She declined to speak about him in detail but said his story was redolent of “The Blind Side,” a book and film about the efforts of a wealthy, white family to adopt a homeless, black teenager in Tennessee.)

But it wasn’t until she waded into a space-sharing fight at P.S. 11, the diverse elementary school her two younger children attend, that she became an education activist.

After becoming PTA president, Conway-Spiegel led efforts to defend the city’s bid to evict another school from P.S. 11’s building to relieve overcrowding.

One comment stuck with Conway-Spiegel long after the conflict was resolved.

“I’m so embarrassed,” she recalled another P.S. 11 mother telling her after a meeting. “You’re doing all this work and I’m not helping.”

If parents at P.S. 11 couldn’t find time to advocate for their school while juggling the demands of work and family, Conway-Spiegel thought, then what challenges must be facing poorer communities, where parents work multiple jobs, don’t speak English as their first language, or are afraid to participate in public education hearings because they are undocumented?

She decided to find out for herself, by attending public hearings that the city must hold when it proposes to close a school.

A prevailing narrative around low-performing schools is that they harbor apathetic educators and serve families who don’t value education. But Conway-Spiegel saw families who cared deeply, yet couldn’t make it to public meetings about their schools scheduled for the early evening or were too timid to speak out.

“There were many, many, many parents afraid to come forward, afraid to show up to hearings, afraid to take the mike,” she said. “I knew that, because of where we were in Manhattan, geographically, politically, we were in an advantageous position. Go to the Bronx, go to Hunts Point, the flatlands of Brooklyn, it’s a different story.”

Talk with Conway-Spiegel about DOE policies aimed at struggling schools, and she will inevitably turn to critiquing the practice of blaming parents, teachers, administrators for their students’ poor performances.

“I’m tired of it, I object to it: parents are not to blame,” she said. “Parents are doing the best they can and especially in these disenfranchised communities, shame on you for blaming them.”

On her way home from ASE, Conway-Spiegel reiterated the thesis that has become her raison d’etre: Labeling a school as failing hurts students and staff and doesn’t begin to solve the deep-seated problems that caused poor performance in the first place

“I just can’t imagine that feeling, hearing three months into your work year, that you suck. That’s just rough,” she said about the schools’ teachers and students. “That’s just rough. My heart goes out to them.”

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Leonie-Haimson/1094324158 Leonie Haimson

    Good for Mary and let’s hope her efforts pay off for these schools and their  students — who deserve far better from this administration!

  • Henrkiwarwick

    I hope Mary doesn’t get the same result as was smashed down our throats at the Columbus Campus. 

  • http://twitter.com/ThesaMelona Thesa Melona

    Being new to Partnership For Student Advocacy, I am proud of the work that Mary has been doing in conjunction with these schools.  I hope all her hard work inspires other school communities that it only takes a mustard seed or one ripple to affect change and growth.

  • Guest

    But, the move to oust Clinton from PS 11resulted a backlash and in the threat to move a D 75 program, where no one bothered to consult the parents or staff.  We all need to be aware of how our actions ripple out into communities, whether they are communities of color or of special needs.  There is no action without an equal and opposite reaction, physics 101.

    But no parent from the program that serves students with disabilities
    was consulted about this move….not by the P 33 school leadership team,
    not by the Clinton school relocation team and not by the DOE/SCA. Why
    is it okay to move kids with disabilities without any consultation yet
    there is a task force to move the Clinton School? Are the parents and
    the students with disabilities considered to be so unimportant that they
    needn’t even be given the courtesy of a place at the planning table?
    that they can be ignored?
    These children were at that school
    through good times and bad times, through major school construction and
    through multiple general education principals, yet they are moved with
    no plan for the future? Where is the vaunted School Planning Team?
    Wasn’t there supposed to be consultation with the whole community served
    in that public school building? Where is the P138 relocation
    committee? Has one been formed yet? Has one been considered? Or is
    that too much to ask…. hey they’re just “special ed” kids. 

  • Christine Rowland

    Mary was an amazing ally at Columbus. She advocated for us tirelessly and successfully engaged numerous public figures to become involved in our cause, fully knowing that the odds were stacked against us. I wish Mary every success in her efforts and am glad to hear that other schools are benefitting from her positive energy and commitment.

  • Joan H.

    I am thrilled that there are parent activists like Mary.  If my child is ever in a school that is threatened to be closed, Partnership for Student Advocacy is the organization I will call to help me.  Mary gives 150% and is smart, fearless and really cares.   

  • MLKing12

    Is that Dr. Zira from the Planet of the Apes I see in the photo?

  • Michael M. (parent still)

    Re “After becoming PTA president, Conway-Spiegel led efforts to defend the city’s bid to evict another school from P.S. 11’s building to relieve overcrowding.”

    I dare say that saga was more complex. The link to a story from December 2009 — when DOE was proposing moving MS 260, the Clinton School for Writers and Artists, to PS 33 (after which the DOE proposed the ASL school, which was another unpopular proposal, and before the current interim St. Michael’s location was identified) — doesn’t provide recent readers the punch line:  Clinton is in temporary digs at St. Michael’s while a brand new building is being built for it (to be shared with a high school TBD) at 10 East 15th.

    If “co-locate” is good enough for charter invasions and other shared space arrangements, than “relocate” — not “evict” — might be the better term here.

    As to Mary, if in a system of 1.1 million kids, there were even 10 more like her….

  • Michael M. (parent still)

    Indeed that was not well scouted by DOE.  Though PS 138 (a D75 program) is not under the wing of CECD2, as are PS11, Clinton, PS33… and ASL… I and my colleagues on CECD2 at the time DID fully take the PS 138 concerns, and then the ASL concerns, to heart.  We did not rest, nor did we accept the various DOE proposals, until a true win-win-no-losses solution was found.

  • Romney12

    Another Monkey principal? Why can’t there be more white principal’s?

  • KellieAP

    Cheers to this amazing parent who is doing what all of us parents hope all school leadership will do – push ego aside and put quality education for these young New Yorkers first.  

  • TJG

    It is refreshing and encouraging to hear that people like Mary Conway-Spiegel are out there making needed progress in our community and public education system.  Thank you for your efforts.  Please keep it up!

  • JennG

    Mary is an inspiration, once again demonstrating the
    difference a n individual can make. 
    The families at these schools are lucky to have her involved.

  • Flyshak

     Whoever said that “you can’t fight city hall” didn’t know Mary Conway-Spiegel!

  • Jared Alessandroni

    Mary is a tireless advocate for schools that fall victim to politics and bad luck.  It’s a pleasure to see her get some recognition.  

  • Cconway35

    Wonderful article…  I am so proud of you, Mary.

  • Romneywin

    Is that you Dr. Zira?  

  • Tgill4

    Keep up the great work Mary!  I hope that this article paves the way for other schools in need of help to open their doors and collaborate with Partnership for Student Advocacy.

Tips, questions, feedback?

Contact us at .

Word from Our Sponsor

Follow GothamSchools

RSS
Subscribe to the daily email digest:

Chalk It Up

Recent Comments

9 comments so far today

Archives

May 2013
M T W T F S S
« Apr  
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031