Ed Notes Extended

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

PS 123 Rally Update...and more

The protest/rally for 6:30 AM this morning is still on. For background read our report from the other day: Separate and Unequal Schools in NYC: Rally at PS 123 on First Day of School but the 3:30 follow-up event may not happen. I've got some family obligations today so I will be somewhat out of touch but Angel Gonzalez is back from organizing GEM branches throughout Italy and will be there to take some video and hang out afterwards. Angel doesn't Tweet or Twitter (that vegan diet, you know) so we will have to get updates later in the day. I am going to the Met game tonight - unfortunately - so will be out of the loop. Maybe they'll post updates from Angel on the scoreboard.


If you've been following the story here and at the GEM blog all summer, you are aware of the aggressive nature with which Eva (now officially being dubbed 'Evil') Moskowitz' people run roughshod over people. I don't have time to gather all the resources in this post but just do a search for PS 123 and PS 241.


GEM has been working with other groups to try to bring all the schools wanting to resist the invasion by charter schools into their buildings together. One of the focal points has been Moskowitz' Harlem Success Academy schools such as those at PS 241 and 123. If you read one piece, read this one from "Shocked in Harlem," a teacher at PS 241 about the impossible chaos of trying to get ready for the new school year in a school invaded by Moskowitz. SHOCKED IN HARLEM AT EVA MOSKOWITZ, HSA EXCESS

Teachers at PS 123 faced the same chaos, with halls loaded with stuff moved out by Harlem Success. Check out some of the videos I posted in the sidebar for more on this issue from early July when Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer toured the school (mayoral candidate Tony Avella also came up that day).


Were Teachers at PS 123 Told to Go Home?

Supposedly the UFT district rep told teachers to go home yesterday after teachers were trying to move things around to get ready for the first day of school today. Rumor is that a teacher got hurt and had to go to the emergency room. UFT president Mulgrew was called. One would expect him to be there today. But with the UFT having taken over space in two charter schools themselves in East NY, Brooklyn, they cannot claim any moral high ground and can only expect the massive HSA publicity machine to attack them with the consequent fawning NYC ed press quoting them widely.


Brooklyn Charter Invasion Resistance

Meanwhile, things are beginning to heat up in Brooklyn where CAPE (Concerned Educators for Public Education) is organizing around the charter school issue. Some GEMers will be going to a meeting with them this week and we will report on the activities over there. See their press release from our post in July.


I'll add updates to this post as they come in.


Report from PS 160 in Coop City

Here are some comments from parents at PS 160x


GEM you were right. Equality Charter School lied about only being at PS160 for 2 years. They said it at all the hearings and the DOE said they will only be there for 2 years. Now the Equality principal told the Co-op City Times yesterday, September 5,

"School administrators have been told by the DOE that there is a probability that the school will be moved to a new location within the next few years as the student body expands by one grade each year."

They LIED. You were right. They lied about leaving in two years. They're not ever gonna leave. They're gonna push out 160 students and take over. Their classrooms were also painted and their entire section refurbished!!! Please tell the parents. The truth is out. We need you to come back to our school and fight with us against privatization and pushing our children out of their own schools.


Which led to this response:

Anonymous, I like your enthusiasm. I am one of the parents who spoke out about this charter school being housed at PS 160. I must say that this upcoming school year will be a challenging one at PS 160. My advice to you as a parent is that if you see anything that you feel in your heart is not right report it to the Parent coordinator or the Principal immediately. It is our responsibility as parents to look out for our children. When there is an announcement about the PTA meetings and things of that nature, please attend. This will be the only way to stay informed and fight for your child/children’s education. Furthermore, just to speak about the article in the newspaper. What I want to know is how they are going to handle their students who are late or truant? The Prinicpal mentioned that the students who arrive after 9:00am will enter thru the front of the building. We as parents of PS 160 children age 5-11 years old...must demand that the Equality School Administrators send an "official employee" and not another "responsible student" to come down to the main lobby where Mrs. Cox will be seated and pick up the “late” student and make sure that they get placed in their respective class room. Their students must not be allowed to "freely" room the halls of our two floors. We must think to be PRO-ACTIVE and not be Reactive.

No school is safe

Here is a partial list of public schools being invaded:

PS 15K, PS 38M, IS 45M, PS 123M, PS 150K, PS 160X, PS 175M, PS 185M, PS 188M, PS 194M, IS 195M, PS 241M, PS 242M, PS 375M, PS 385X, HS 695M and many more.

Which schools will be next?




Principal gets around hiring freeze on ATRs

Changing the subject....but not really, since the ATR, rubber room, closing schools, charter school issues all connect to the free market neoliberal agenda....I received this note from a teacher at a large high school:


They found a way to hire teachers other than ATRs in my school. I don't want to post it on my blog, but others need to be aware this is going on. There is no hiring freeze on special education. They are getting the new teachers double certification and hiring them for the special ed department and then farming them out to math to teach. If this is going on in my school, it is going on throughout the city. One ATR in my school has been given a full program for a person on leave, but the school will not hire her full time.

4 comments:

  1. You are completely right about principals hiring other teachers when there are ATRS waiting for positions. In Brooklyn many schools did not hire ATRS. PS 229 in Bay Ridge has a new anex and I wonder how many ATRS were hired for the new classes. I bet NONE.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you for all the reporting on Ps 123 and 241. You have to wonder why the chancellor tried to close PS 241. If PS 241 were to close Charter Schools like Democracy Prep and Harlem Success Academy would have nowhere to dump the children they no longer want. Both schools have dumped children into 241. 241 keeps moving forward despite the ongoing attacks from Klein. We need more truth on charter school child dumping and less propaganda from the corporate sector and Klein, who push these unproven and statistically irrelevant charter schools. The only shutting down needed in the DOE is that of Joel Klein's leadership.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Article Comments (7) Email Print RSS Share Digg Facebook Newsvine Furl Mixx Reddit Stumble Yahoo! BuzzDelicious Propeller Left in the pool: Principals not hiring teachers from closed schools, despite financial incentives
    by Rachel Monahan
    Daily News Staff Writer

    Friday, September 11th 2009, 4:00 AM

    Savulich for NewsTeacher Camille LoParrino: There's a lot of gems out there that are not getting picked up. Related NewsArticlesMom sues city to speed cleanup of Bronx school's PCBsSpace crunch keeps kids at home as classes begin in city Space crunch keeps kids at home as classes begin in cityStella D'oro set to move operations to OhioWorkers shudder over Stella D'oro shutteringMoney muddle hits Working Families PartyNew MTA chairman Jay Walder planning major changesCity principals balked at hiring teachers from closing schools this summer - even though they were offered financial incentives, the Daily News has learned.

    The Education Department last November instituted the incentives to reduce what's now a pool of 1,613 teachers working as high-priced substitutes and costing taxpayers more than $137 million a year.

    Even so, principals aren't snapping the teachers up.

    "[Being in the pool] kind of puts a cloud over those people," said Principal James Harrigan of Public School 229 in Dyker Heights, Brooklyn.

    Harrigan hired four teachers this summer based on references from fellow principals - but none from closed schools.

    "It's probably unfair," he added. "I took the recently excessed people because I felt more comfortable in my relationship with their principals.

    "The recent people were excessed for budget reasons. ... The year before, a lot of it was school closures."

    Some principals accepted the subsidy and hired 188 teachers, or 17%, of the 1,134 eligible teachers.

    The subsidy lasts eight years and covers the difference in salary between a first-year teacher and a senior teacher who has been in the pool since at least November.

    About 52% of the 1,960 teachers who lost their permanent jobs at schools this spring have since been hired. The vast majority of them lost jobs for budget reasons.

    A hiring freeze was instituted to make sure the pool didn't grow after schools were told they had to cut their budgets.

    Nonetheless, the pool grew by 500 teachers since this time last year.

    "Principals have the final say over the teachers they hire and can choose teachers specifically suited to their students' needs - even when their choices are limited to current staff," DOE spokeswoman Ann Forte said.

    "The DOE is making a concerted effort to help these people find jobs," she added, citing job fairs and résumé-writing workshops specifically for the pool.

    Teachers union President Michael Mulgrew blamed DOE officials for "disparaging" teachers who've been in the pool since at least last year and said the administration should be "applauding" their work.

    "Over 70% of these teachers come from closing schools," Mulgrew said.

    "The data is very clear ... as these schools close, the test scores and the performance of these schools go up," Mulgrew said. "These people are valued, tried and true employees."

    Teacher Camille LoParrino, starting her third year in the pool, said she worked as a lead teacher for the Reading First program before it was scrapped for budget reasons.

    She's now working as a substitute for an old mentor at School of Inquiry and Social Justice in the Bronx, hoping for a permanent opening next year, she said.

    "I applied to four dozen open market jobs that first summer," she said. "The second summer, I started to lose interest.

    "I sent out three dozen résumés. This summer, I sent one dozen. ... There's a lot of gems out there that are not getting picked up."

    rmonahan@nydailynews.com


    Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/education/2009/09/11/2009-09-11_stuck_in_detention_teachers_from_closed_schools_not_being_hired_despite_some_big.html#ixzz0QqRsknKX

    ReplyDelete
  4. THIS ANSWER IS FOR ANONYMOUS 7:22 PM. (1ST ONE ON THE COMMENTS)

    Principals not hiring teachers from closed schools, despite financial incentives
    by Rachel Monahan
    Daily News Staff Writer

    Friday, September 11th 2009, 4:00 ANONYMOUS

    Savulich for NewsTeacher Camille LoParrino: There's a lot of gems out there that are not getting picked up. Related NewsArticlesMom sues city to speed cleanup of Bronx school's PCBsSpace crunch keeps kids at home as classes begin in city Space crunch keeps kids at home as classes begin in cityStella D'oro set to move operations to OhioWorkers shudder over Stella D'oro shutteringMoney muddle hits Working Families PartyNew MTA chairman Jay Walder planning major changesCity principals balked at hiring teachers from closing schools this summer - even though they were offered financial incentives, the Daily News has learned.

    The Education Department last November instituted the incentives to reduce what's now a pool of 1,613 teachers working as high-priced substitutes and costing taxpayers more than $137 million a year.

    Even so, principals aren't snapping the teachers up.

    "[Being in the pool] kind of puts a cloud over those people," said Principal James Harrigan of Public School 229 in Dyker Heights, Brooklyn.

    Harrigan hired four teachers this summer based on references from fellow principals - but none from closed schools.

    "It's probably unfair," he added. "I took the recently excessed people because I felt more comfortable in my relationship with their principals.

    "The recent people were excessed for budget reasons. ... The year before, a lot of it was school closures."

    Some principals accepted the subsidy and hired 188 teachers, or 17%, of the 1,134 eligible teachers.

    The subsidy lasts eight years and covers the difference in salary between a first-year teacher and a senior teacher who has been in the pool since at least November.

    About 52% of the 1,960 teachers who lost their permanent jobs at schools this spring have since been hired. The vast majority of them lost jobs for budget reasons.

    A hiring freeze was instituted to make sure the pool didn't grow after schools were told they had to cut their budgets.

    Nonetheless, the pool grew by 500 teachers since this time last year.

    "Principals have the final say over the teachers they hire and can choose teachers specifically suited to their students' needs - even when their choices are limited to current staff," DOE spokeswoman Ann Forte said.

    "The DOE is making a concerted effort to help these people find jobs," she added, citing job fairs and résumé-writing workshops specifically for the pool.

    Teachers union President Michael Mulgrew blamed DOE officials for "disparaging" teachers who've been in the pool since at least last year and said the administration should be "applauding" their work.

    "Over 70% of these teachers come from closing schools," Mulgrew said.

    "The data is very clear ... as these schools close, the test scores and the performance of these schools go up," Mulgrew said. "These people are valued, tried and true employees."

    Teacher Camille LoParrino, starting her third year in the pool, said she worked as a lead teacher for the Reading First program before it was scrapped for budget reasons.

    She's now working as a substitute for an old mentor at School of Inquiry and Social Justice in the Bronx, hoping for a permanent opening next year, she said.

    "I applied to four dozen open market jobs that first summer," she said. "The second summer, I started to lose interest.

    "I sent out three dozen résumés. This summer, I sent one dozen. ... There's a lot of gems out there that are not getting picked up."

    rmonahan@nydailynews.com


    Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/education/2009/09/11/2009-09-11_stuck_in_detention_teachers_from_closed_schools_not_being_hired_despite_some_big.html#ixzz0QqRsknKX

    ReplyDelete

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