Posts from February 8th, 2012
nightcap
February 8, 2012
Remainders: Bloomberg blames UFT’s ads for poor poll showing
- Mayor Bloomberg blamed attack ads by the UFT for his low schools approval rating. (Politicker NY)
- Chicago came close to printing a student-designed gang sign-ridden parking sticker. (Tribune via Russo)
- Staten Island parents are upset that the borough chief won’t visit slated-to-close P.S. 14. (SchoolBook)
- Watch a polished presentation on applying to kindergarten by one of the city’s experts. (Insideschools)
- Tucked into today’s journalism news: A high-stakes evaluation plan for Patch reporters. (Romenesko)
- A cheat sheet for education details in President Obama’s budget proposal next week. (Politics K-12)
- A Stuyvesant HS teacher took issue with 10 of 45 questions on a recent state math test. (Gary Rubinstein)
- A group of R.I. schools found summer tutoring stemmed the precollege “melt.” (Starting an Ed School)
- For some reason, the Census Bureau defines care by fathers as child care, not parenting. (Motherlode)
- The U.S. DOE aims to study the effectiveness of teacher training programs on test scores. (Answer Sheet)
- A class talk about reading raises a question a teacher can’t answer, but a student can. (Core Knowledge)
- Summarizing a working paper that explores which teachers principals fired and why. (Shanker Blog)
Deja vu
February 8, 2012
For second year in a row, a new Moskowitz school is being sued

Sabrina Tan, a lawyer for Advocates for Justice, describes the firm's suit over a new charter school.
Backed by a law firm that has battled the Department of Education in court repeatedly over the past year, a group of Cobble Hill parents announced today that they are suing to stop Eva Moskowitz’s Brooklyn Success Academy 3 from moving into their neighborhood.
Fifteen public school parents signed onto the suit, which Advocates for Justice said it would be filing today.
The suit claims the city and Moskowitz circumvented state education laws when they abruptly changed plans for the school late last year. BSA 3 was originally approved for either District 13 or District 14, but the city revised its proposal in late October and announced the school would instead share a building with two high schools and a special needs elementary school in District 15.
Opposition to the plan quickly mounted and reached a climax when protesters clashed with Moskowitz at a meeting she hosted for prospective parents in November. The city’s Panel for Educational Policy approved the co-location plan two weeks later.
It’s the second time in as many years that a Success school has been the subject of a lawsuit from the surrounding community. Last April, parents on the Upper West Side filed suit against the city’s plan to site a Success school on the Brandeis campus, charging that the network was not serving the needy student population that was written into its charter. The suit was dismissed just weeks before the school was slated to open. (more…)
near death experience
February 8, 2012
City reverses plans to close Wadleigh middle school, KAPPA VII
Two schools that had faced closure votes this week are being taken off the chopping block.
The Department of Education said today it would no longer seek to close the middle grades of Wadleigh Secondary School of Performing and Visual Arts or the KAPPA VII middle school in Brooklyn. Teachers reported getting the news at the end of the day today, one day before the citywide school board was set to vote on the closure proposals.
Chancellor Dennis Walcott said the department had made the decision after listening to community input at public meetings and behind the scenes.
“While these two schools continue to struggle, what we learned is that they are also poised to quickly improve,” he said in a statement.
But supporters of the schools, particularly Wadleigh, said the city’s statement was a smokescreen and said they would still travel to Thursday’s Panel for Educational Policy meeting in Brooklyn to protest closure votes for 23 other schools.
The real reason for the unusual reversal, they said, was that influential politicians in Harlem had sprung to Wadleigh’s aid — and threatened the Bloomberg administration in the process. (more…)
open question
February 8, 2012
City actually undecided about charter parents’ call for inclusion
The city is “sympathetic” to — but not ready to embrace — charter parents’ desire to win spots on district parent councils, officials said today.
On Tuesday, more than 1,200 charter school parents traveled to Albany as part of Lobby Day. Their main ask was that legislators set aside seats for them on the city’s elected parent councils. The councils, known as Community Education Councils, frequently discuss charter schools but have no formal authority over them.
A Department of Education spokesman told me on Tuesday that the city’s position on the request had not changed since 2009, when officials argued that seating charter parents on CECs would represent an inappropriate conflation of charter and district school management.
As it turns out, that’s not quite true. The city hasn’t actually made up its mind about whether to support a bill introduced by two legislators — Assemblyman Peter Rivera, a Bronx Democrat, and State Sen. Marty Golden, a Republican from Brooklyn — that would reserve one of the 11 seats on each council for a charter school parent.
I heard today from Micah Lasher, the city’s chief lobbyist in Albany, who said that the city had taken a deeper look at the issue on request from charter advocates and found merit in their argument. (more…)
"can't live off chips alone"
February 8, 2012
As Robeson High phases out, students hold out for 2 p.m. lunch
By the time afternoon periods roll around, Stefanie Siegel struggles to keep her English classes focused on the assignments in front of them. Many of the students haven’t eaten since the early morning, or the night before, and they watch the clock for 2:01 p.m.
That’s when class ends and lunch begins at Paul Robeson High School, a Crown Heights school in its first year of phasing out.
“I teach a senior English class in the morning and afternoon. Those [afternoon] kids were really hard to deal with, and it was mostly because they were hungry,” Siegel said. “My first period was 10 a.m., and that group was much easier to work with. There’s just a huge difference.”
Students start school at 8:35 a.m. Some hop off campus to buy food after seventh period, shortly after 1 p.m. Siegel said, and many teachers allow them to eat the food at their desks.
“We have some really old-school teachers who say, ‘no eating in the class,’ but even they have had to allow it,” she said.
“If you don’t make it for the breakfast program — and a lot of them don’t — and if you don’t bring something with you, you haven’t had any breakfast,” she said. “These kids might not have had dinner last night, either.” (more…)
public opinion
February 8, 2012
Poll: NYers don’t trust Bloomberg to protect students’ interests
New York City residents won’t be appointing Mayor Bloomberg as students’ chief lobbyist any time soon.
Nearly twice as many New Yorkers trust the teachers union to protect students’ interests than they do Bloomberg, according to a new poll out of Quinnipiac University. Bloomberg’s approval rating on schools has hovered around 25 percent since early 2011, according to the poll.
The poll, conducted Jan. 30-Feb. 5, found that 56 percent of registered voters in New York City say they trust the union more to go to bat for students. Less than a third, 31 percent, said they trust Bloomberg more. (The poll of 1,222 registered voters had a margin of error of 2.8 percent.)
Among households containing public school students, the split was even more pronounced. Just 21 percent of those voters picked Bloomberg, and 69 percent chose the teachers union. Parents’ backed the union more often than even households with union members.
The news comes in an education-packed poll conducted after a month in which in a showdown over new teacher evaluations led Bloomberg and Gov. Andrew Cuomo each to ratchet up rhetoric against teachers and their unions. The poll found that the percentage of New Yorkers with favorable opinions of teachers had fallen, from 54 percent last March to 47 percent now.
But while a different poll earlier this week found high approval for Cuomo’s school policies, a set of questions designed to assess New Yorkers’ feelings about a slate of policy initiatives Bloomberg proposed during his State of the City address last month elicited mixed results. (more…)
Headlines
February 8, 2012
Rise & Shine: State teacher evals suit has day in appeals court
- The state and NYSUT appeared in court in their still-open battle over teacher evaluations. (Times-Union)
- A P.S. 243 school aide allegedly filmed himself molesting students. (Times, Post, Daily News, NY1, WSJ)
- A poll finds mixed feelings on Bloomberg’s school policies. (GothamSchools, Times, Daily News, Post)
- A school facing a closure vote on Thursday, Grace Dodge High, has 11 technical programs. (NY1)
- Charter school parents traveled to Albany to ask for inclusion on local parent councils. (GothamSchools)
- The Bronx principal found to have used school funds for herself was charged with larceny. (Daily News)
- A teen who arrived at FDR High illiterate at 18 is set to graduate after intensive help. (GothamSchools)
- Some students skipped school to help celebrate the Giants’ Super Bowl victory. (GothamSchools, Times)
- Michael Goodwin: Gov. Cuomo shouldn’t wait any longer to start over on teacher evaluations. (Post)
- Two reformers say the only solution on evaluations is to give districts a strict deadline. (Daily News)
- The Daily News calls for the teacher who criticized students on Facebook to be un-reinstated.
- Boston handed out $400,000 in teacher bonuses this year, based on school-wide assessments. (Globe)
- California could cut a year-old transitional kindergarten meant to boost school-readiness. (L.A. Times)


