GothamSchools — daily independent reporting on NYC public schools

reading list

A teacher weighs his role in fueling a closure policy he detests

Mayor Bloomberg announces the city's new schools in April. Often, educators who help start new schools occupy classrooms vacated as another school closes.

It’s a dilemma that thousands of city educators have faced in the last decade: Should they work in a new school, knowing that its existence was made possible by another school’s closure?

When high school social studies teacher (and teachers union activist) Stephen Lazar was confronted with the question last year, he chose to help start the new school — but not without strong reservations.

Today in the Community section, Lazar outlines the thinking that led him to Harvest Collegiate High School, which opened this year in the space being vacated by Legacy High School for Integrated Studies, which is in the first year of being phased out.

In the third piece in a series about helping to open the new school, Lazar writes:

I’m excited for Harvest Collegiate High School to be born, but for that to happen, Legacy High School has to die. …

… I’m of two minds on whether or not good people should try to open new schools in New York City right now. On the one hand, it makes one complicit in the failed current “school reform” project; on the other hand, if schools are going to be opened anyway, it’s better that good people be part of that. I honestly don’t know which is right in the end and accept the judgment and criticism I get for my decision to side with the latter view.

Spoiler alert: Lazar writes that he believes that what gets taught, and how, is just as political as where teaching and learning take place. That means he is taking a stand he believes in by launching a new member of the Coalition of Essential Schools, even as he compromises his beliefs in another way.

  • Former Turnaround Teacher

    This is a very interesting piece and I am glad it was written.  When I was looking to transfer at the end of the past school year I often faced a similar decision.  I could not bring myself to apply to certain schools that I know where in current phase out buildings.  However I did apply to some schools in buildings that had finished phasing out.  When it comes down to it, in the current system unless you are lucky enough to get into the 20% or so of High Schools that are either specilized or the DOE for whatever reason has decided to leave alone, you are either in a school that is phasing out or a school that is phasing in.

  • Clay

    You can’t blame Lazar. Under Bloomberg every school has the potential to be closed. The buildings are valuable charter space.

  • Anti Bloom

    look at the picture above of bloomy and his cronies all presenting a facade to the public and the under educated who cant see through this wizard of oz curtain….shame

Tips, questions, feedback?

Contact us at .

Word from Our Sponsor

Follow GothamSchools

RSS
Subscribe to the daily email digest:

Chalk It Up

Recent Comments

10 comments so far today

Archives

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