No way can this school be claiming 1400 applications... Pat Dobosz
We know how Success and other charter inflate demand while seats at their schools remain empty. Call for the 1400 names to be made public - a good project for an ed reporter - foil them - and break the phony charter demand bubble. This area of south Williamsburg/North Bed-Stuy was always a rough area of District 14. In my final year I was sent to the IS 33 building to pick up a computer and we heard gunshots outside. This was around noon. Since then there gentrification bubble has moved in - Eva picks her spots.
Here is more from Pat:
PS 297 is located in D14. There are two other SA schools, one at the old IS 33 building and one in PS 59 all within a three block radius of each other. No way can this school be claiming 1400 applications. The other schools from what I see in the morning are not having their doors broken down. Their numbers do not look excessively high as the children enter the buildings. Often parents apply unwittingly to SA as they do to other area schools out of the Pre-K or K programs, but have no intentions of attending
Bust Success Charter Phony Demand Bubble 
or are steered away by teachers, friends and family. Myself and a colleague have discouraged many parents from going to SA.
Eva is trying to build a little empire in this corner of D14. She is trying to slide into this school quietly and without fanfare, thinking this is a neighborhood that is asleep. She also has a SA at the other end of the district in MS 50 and her husband has Citizens of the World in the middle of the district. All in prime real estate. It's not about the children. It's about Eva
expanding her empire. please drop a note to: D14Proposals@schools.nyc.gov
Success Academy Would Limit Special Needs at Bed-Stuy School, Critics Say
BEDFORD-STUYVESANT —  Plans to move a Success  Academy charter school into  Bed-Stuy would rob an existing elementary school of space used by special needs  students, opponents said.
 
Parents  and educators at P.S. 297 met to discuss the proposal Thursday, with many vowing  to fight it.
Dozens  of students, parents and teachers attended, with many holding handmade posters  that read “Save Our School.”
Dozens  of students, parents and teachers attended, with many holding handmade posters  that read “Save Our School.”
Success  Academy, founded by former City Councilwoman Eva Moskowitz,  is looking to open a new location that would be shared with P.S. 297’s Park  Avenue building at the start of the 2016 school year.
But  some educators fear the proposed co-location would take over much needed space  that the elementary school currently uses for its special needs students. And  they said another Success Academy would not benefit the community.
The  charter school already operates two sites within a three-block radius of P.S. 297.
“As  CEC members, we question the aggressive expansion of Success Academy,” said  Mirian Lopez, vice president of the Community Education Council for District  14.
“As  a member of the school community, we ask, why does Success Academy need any more  schools?”  
Success  Academy has more than 30 locations throughout the city, with plans for more over  the next few years, according to reports.
Those  opposed to the proposal say their main concern is the possible loss of a  second-floor wing dedicated to services like occupational therapy, speech  therapy and physical therapy.  
“The  students with special needs would be the ones who lose the most,” said CEC 14  member Roberto Portillo, adding that it would be “irreparable to the  community.”
P.S.  297 serves kids in pre-k through fifth grade. In the 2014-2015 school year, 26  percent of students were listed as special needs.
If  approved, Success Academy Bed-Stuy 3 would have up to 160 students in  kindergarten and first grade starting in 2016, and add one grade level each  year, according to the city’sDepartment  of Education.
As  the proposal is still up for vote and concrete plans are not set for the layout  of the co-location, Success Academy could not provide comment on the specifics  for which spaces would be utilized, according to a Success Academy  spokesman.
There  is demand in the area, according to the charter school network. Success Academy  received about 850 applications from parents who live in School District 14 and  roughly 550 applications from parents who live in nearby District 16, the  spokesman added.
While  some detractors pushed back against a co-location, others outright protested  another Success Academy in the neighborhood. Anonline petition was launched in Novemberobjecting the  proposal.
Parents  criticized Success Academy’s methods Thursday, recalling their children's past  experiences at the schools and saying the network does not adequately provide  for special needs students.
Robert  Gilliam, whose 10-year-old son attended Success Academy Bed-Stuy 1 a block away  on Tompkins Avenue, said his son was “broken” and “devastated” by his time at  the charter school.
His  son, Jordan, was in need of an Individualized Education Program (IEP) and did  not receive the services he needed at Success, Gilliam said.
“For  about six months, everything was fine. Once his reading comprehension went down  and he had to get an IEP, everything changed,” Gilliam said. “He got disregarded  like a piece of rag.”
The  staff at P.S. 297 helped Jordan in his transition, he added, and the proposed  new charter school would take what little space the elementary school has.
“Success  is nothing but a money game. It’s nothing but about the numbers,” Gilliam  said.
A  Success Academy spokesman cited a survey administered by the DOE last year, in  which 98 percent of Success Academy parents said they were satisfied or  very satisfied with the overall education their kids were receiving.
In  addition, 15 percent of Success Academy students last year were listed as  children with disabilities, he said. 
The charter school chain has recently faced criticism for singling out poor-performing or  difficult students. Supporters  have praised the network for  students' high performance.
Another  parent, Shanna Charles, said her experience at Success Academy Bed-Stuy 2 was  “horrible,” with her son being suspended twice a month and the staff trying to  “push him out.”
“Success  Academy does not need to be inside P.S. 297,” Charles said. “This community has  suffered enough.
“The  only thing we should try to do in this community is try to build it up —  and Success Academy is not a part of that.”
Teachers  and students echoed similar sentiments, with many arguing that the proposed  space for the charter school could be used for P.S. 297’s expansion.
“Why  shouldn’t we be afforded the opportunity to grow our students beyond the fifth  grade?” asked guidance counselor Jessica Cashman.
“Why  do we have to let them go when we have the space to possibly make ourselves  bigger and better than we already are?”
In  addition to P.S. 297, the building currently provides space for community  organization Good Shepherd and previously housed The Ethical Community Charter  School, whichshuttered  at the end of June.
Now,  the building serves approximately 256 students from the elementary school,  making it “under-utilized” since it has the capacity for 659 students, according  to the DOE.
Parents,  teachers and community members can weigh in on the proposal by sending comments  to D14Proposals@schools.nyc.gov or by calling 212-374-0208.  
The  Panel for Educational Policy is scheduled to vote on the plan at 6 p.m. on Dec.  16 at the High School of Fashion Industries at 225 W. 24th St.


After years of expanding support for children with Special Needs, we have embarked on a period of retrenchment. It is similar to removing the life jackets from drowning swimmers.
ReplyDeleteAbigail Shure
SA is a godsend for many. SA should be given the green light to open many more schools.
ReplyDelete