RANK-AND-FILE MEMBERS OF THE UFT FORM UMBRELLA SLATE TO CHALLENGE THE CURRENT RULING LEADERS OF THE UNION IN SPRING 2022 UFT ELECTIONSThe joint slate will be announced at the UFT's Delegate Assembly at 52 Broadway on November 17th at 4:30 PM. Coalition activists at the delegate hall will speak about the new coalition.
The above just came out and I will comment tomorrow. At the risk of burying the lede:
Reduce class size by 30% and all teachers except the very incompetent (and they love to use the relatively few examples to affect all teachers) would rise in effectiveness by whatever way you judge. I prefer ability to impact on the most children in a positive way.... Norm at Ed Notes, Oct. 24 2010
This bill would require each classroom in a school of the city school district of the city of New York provide 35 square feet of net floor area per child by September 2024, with no less than one-third of schools complying with such targets by September 2022, and no less than two-thirds of schools complying with such targets by September 2023... City Council
There seemed to be lots of back-stage maneuvering going on over this issue but untangling that Gordian Knot is a job for Houdini. Even though I don't think contacting politicians generally has a big effect, I am not against doing it as a chapter leader sent out this but framing this as a health issue has an impact.
I spent the morning making this doc to facilitate outreach to electeds in support of City Council bill 2374. Please share widely, and encourage your members to call their reps.
- Mulgrew talks/filibusters for almost an hour.
- Question period with Unity plants being favored for pre-planned questions.Ten Minute New Motion period: A guaranteed Unity plant motion to kill time and limit time for oppo voices. One guess?
Or else put at top of agenda for Regular Motion period as a way to shunt a mayoral control reso that has been in the agenda for 5 months aside. Ooops -- 6 o'clock - out of time.
Key motion for Mulgrew: Unity sponsored Class size at the city council but never in contract motion. Let's be clear - we support a city council attempt to reduce class size but that is never enough as we found out when the early 90s reduction for grades 1-3 was taken away by Bloomberg, who didn't think class size was important, ten years later. By the way -- the next Mayor also doesn't think class size is important: Eric Adams and class size
Adams said at a Citizens Budget Commission forum in February. “You could have one great teacher that’s in one of our specialized high schools to teach three to 400 students who are struggling in math, with the skillful way that they’re able to teach.”
CLASS SIZE FORUM LIVE BLOGGING - I logged on when Michael Mulgrew was talking about class size. Emily James is also on from UFT. The third person is Mark Treyger, the Education Chair, City Council
Class size the UFT route with weak enforcement vs contract protection
For
the past 50 years many of us have pushed the UFT to reduce class size
in the contract but they have refused to do so, claiming the money would
come out of our salaries. But so does toilet paper money. We can wipe
with dollar bills.
Imagine of we didn't even have the current 50
year old protections even with the loopholes. When budget issues come up
they would pump 45 in your classes. Only the contract keeps them to the
limits, as they must budget for those numbers. A sucky grievance
procedure gave them a lot of leeway to violate the rules, but the 2019
at least tightened up enforcement - but enforcement of the high numbers
to start with.
On the Zoom, here is the crux of how the UFT leadership undermines the case for class size as a contract demand:
Delegate from Beacon High School is excited about this campaign. Asks if the union has thought about bringing this up through our contract campaign. We are in a position of strength. We mobilized for a strike last year, and got more. Could we mobilize through contract campaign?
Mulgrew says it comes down to negotiating committee. We want to expand negotiating committee. 400 people representing 123,000 members. We want smaller class sizes, but is this the issue we want to lead on. Do we want to do it like this but in a smarter way. Every negotiating committee has discussed this. We have to think about the consequences of a strike because of the Taylor law.
And you can see the same from Arthur's report on last night's Ex Bd meeting: NYC Educator- UFT Executive Board October 15, 2021--Class Size Resolution Passes -
Barr--Resolution to support this bill is placed on screen. Gives history of UFT work on class size. Was first point in pandemic five-point plan. Asks for motion.
George Altomari--This issue older than UFT. Teacher's Guild looked at this. We had no contract, did best we could. Class size was 55, 60. People sat on things. We had no collective bargaining or numbers. Charlie Cogen did everything possible. He analyzed laws on books, found you needed so much space for fire hazard, wasn't successful, but we had a terrific run. Won through collective bargaining.
Anthony Harmon--Time is right, this is our opportunity, thanks union.
Barr had to tell the fake history story on UFT action - or inaction on class size.
Ed Notes over the past 24 years has exposed the real history of the UFT and class size, but I will leave that review, including my October 2001 reso passed unanimously at the DA for all class size violations to be published in the NY Teacher, which the union only did for two years. Now it would be easy to have all current class size violations up to date on the web.
Both you and Eterno said a slate would be announced. I didn't it. Who's the Prez to be?
ReplyDeleteWe ain’t talkin. And also not decided yet. Throw your name in the ring. They might pick out if a hat. Abm. Anyone but mulgrew
DeleteHere's some info for you:
ReplyDeleteFirst is a memorandum of agreement between DOE and UFT
https://www.uft.org/sites/default/files/attachments/classroom-space-1998-memorandum.pdf
Here we have the new construction classroom space guidelines as per NYSED.
http://www.p12.nysed.gov/facplan/publicat/building_aid_guidelines_072804.html
Current NYC building codes. Scroll to page 166 to see school room square footages. Note pre-k and K require 35 sqft.
https://www.nyc.gov/html/dob/downloads/bldgs_code/amendement_set_1.pdf
https://www.classsizematters.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/SPACE-CRUNCH-Report-Final-OL.pdf
And this. An interesting read showing how low even 35 sqft for pre-k and K is when compared to many other states.
https://www.whitehutchinson.com/children/articles/35footmyth.shtml
I would imagine if actual research were done very few K classrooms meet the 35 sqft criteria. The ones in my school sure don't.