School Scope: Queens
DA, School Discipline Needs Class Size Reduction
By Norm Scott
You may have been reading
about changes to the NYC school discipline and integration policies spearheaded
by Chancellor Carranza and the Mayor and tabloid press has been going wild by
emphasizing the excess in these policies. The use of restorative justice (RJ)
has many supporters but also many detractors in schools where the
administration has allowed discipline to get out of control and is not capable
of creating an adequate RJ environment. Often these admins absolve themselves
of responsibility and play the “blame the teacher game.” These schools often
have very high turnovers of staff. If you want to see a key to admin
incompetence check the turnover rates. In the Bloomberg days, principals who
had high turnover were praised as bringing in new blood while dumping senior
teachers (and their salaries).
The most controversial have
been attempts to revise the conditions for entry to the big 3 specialty
schools: Stuyvesant, Brooklyn Tech and Bronx Science, the only schools based on
one test, the SSHAT. Traditionalists are going wild. As is the Asian community,
which dominates all three schools. What is sort of funny is that the equally
great school, Townshend Harris in Queens, does not rely on the test but on an
amalgam of grades. I don’t believe in the one test policy but am also always
suspicious of the De Blasio administration of the schools. I also believe all
students benefit from a diversity of schoolmates. That Brooklyn Tech at one
time had a high proportion of black students and now has barely none means
something. The number of white kids at these schools has also declined but they
are viewed as having other options.
Teachers are very familiar
with the constant refrain to “differentiate instruction” which means reaching
every child at his/her own level, even if class sizes are in the thirties. I’ve
been sitting in on a 3020a hearing where they are trying to fire a 17-year
tenured teacher on what seems a very flimsy case. A key argument is that she
has not differentiated instruction effectively enough – in middle school math
classes of 30 students (LOL). And then there are her ratings on Danielson
rubrics, which calls for a double LOL. As someone who spent 20 years teaching
4-6 grades, I had to stifle an instinct to LOL at what has been done to the
ability to teach.
Restorative justice and differentiation of instruction are ideals I agree with but without addressing a serious reduction in class size, chances for success are minimal. It is expensive to reduce class size, but it is time to bite the bullet and begin the process, at the very least in the earliest grades k-4.
Restorative justice and differentiation of instruction are ideals I agree with but without addressing a serious reduction in class size, chances for success are minimal. It is expensive to reduce class size, but it is time to bite the bullet and begin the process, at the very least in the earliest grades k-4.
The DA race has national implications
· Race For Queens DA Tightens As Lancman Quits, Backing
Katz
· Cuomo: AOC-backed candidate could win in Queens if
voters don’t show up
· A looming district attorney election may not bode well
for New York City’s second-largest borough.
Just a few headlines about
what would usually be an obscure election. I’m about to head out to vote for Tiffany Cabán
for Queens DA because I believe in reforming the criminal justice system.
Melinda Katz has also promised reforms but I’m concerned about the sources of the
money she raises. Rory Lancman dropped out at the last moment (rumors are he is
being offered a chance to take Katz’ place as Queens borough president), Katz
should win. But the numbers will tell an interesting tale of the power of the
Queens Democratic machine and its allies vs. the newly activated people by the
Democratic Socialists (DSA).
NY Times headline: A Race for Queens D.A., but Ocasio-Cortez,
Warren and Sanders Loom
A few excerpts: “The Democratic primary may show whether a
progressive vision for criminal justice resonates in a borough with a
law-and-order past. One persistent, if timeworn, image of Queens, popularized
in television shows like “All in the Family” and “King of Queens,” centers on
white working-class families in New York City’s second most populous borough. “Another
is that of an ethnically diverse and gentrified place, a force that helped
propel Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to a shocking primary victory last year over a
powerful Democratic congressman, Joseph Crowley. The upcoming six-way
Democratic primary for Queens district attorney may go a long way in
determining which portrait is more accurate. It is a local race that is
unexpectedly drawing national attention, with presidential candidates like
Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren weighing in. In cities like Boston and
Philadelphia, progressive candidates have captured district attorney seats by
promising criminal justice reforms in the hopes of ending an era of mass
incarceration brought on by policies enacted during the 1990s, when crime was at
record highs.”
The WAVE didn’t make an
endorsement but the editorial made it
clear that Tiffany was taboo.
Norm blogs at
ednotesonline.com and wishes all school workers a happy end of school year.
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