Showing posts with label middle schools. Show all posts
Showing posts with label middle schools. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Panel Votes To End Eighth Grade Social Promotion by Michael Meehan - NY1

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A panel with eight mayoral votes on it, voted 11-1 Monday night in favor of Mayor Michael Bloomberg's proposal to end so-called social promotion in the eighth grade.

Under the plan, students who fail either their eighth grade reading or math tests, or social studies or science class must attend summer school. If they pass the summer classes, they go on to high school. But, if they fail again, they must repeat the eighth grade.

A similar policy is already in place for third, fifth, and seventh graders.

Before the vote, community members and advocates, including members of the Coalition of Educational Justice, shouted for the vote to be pushed back.

Last year, the city says 18,000 out of 77,000 eight graders failed their classes. Advocates say it's not fair to punish students for the city's failings.

"When you look at outcomes of middle schools in this city, they're deplorable. So we're punishing kids for the failure of their schools," said Norm Fruchter of the Coalition for Educational Justice.

The protest grew so loud that Schools Chancellor Joel Klein issued a warning.

"Security is now advising if this continues, we'll evacuate," he said.

But the protest continued, prompting Klein to clear the room twice, before finally canceling the meeting altogether.

"It's a shame these sham policies are going forth in the name of reform," said city school parent Ernesto Maldonado.

The one vote against the policy came from the Manhattan borough president's appointee.

"The policy to hold kids back is the most damaging and expensive thing we could do," said appointee Patrick Sullivan.

Klein later met with reporters and said holding back kids who fail has worked in the third, fifth and seventh grades, and that parents want that in the eighth grade too.

"This will be a catalyst for improved performance, and the parents of this city will recognize that," he said.

The new policy takes effect in September with incoming eighth graders. In June 2009, if they don't pass their classes, they face the prospect of having to repeat the eighth grade.

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Parents Enraged Over Vote - Videos - WNBC


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Parents Rip Mayor's Panel on Stricter Eighth-grade Promotion Policy by Erin Einhorn - NY Daily News

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The city's education policy board voted to make entering high school much more difficult for city kids during a raucous meeting Monday night in which protesters shouted, "Shame!"

The Panel For Educational Policy voted 11 to 1 to support Mayor Bloomberg's stricter eighth-grade promotion policy despite angry objections from parents.

The lone dissenter on the board was Patrick Sullivan, an appointee of Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer.

Starting next year, eighth-graders who flunk a major academic class or bomb a standardized math or reading exam will have to repeat the grade.

"What good does it do our students if we're sending them wholly unprepared into a high school environment?" Chancellor Joel Klein said after the vote was taken.

The vote was cast amid shouts of, "Shame on you" from about 85 people packed inside the Education Department's Tweed Courthouse headquarters. Another 50 or so protesters who couldn't fit into the room stood outside shouting, "Let us in!" There was so much yelling that the remainder of the meeting had to be suspended.

"You are just punishing students for the failure of their schools," Lenore Brown of Brooklyn, who has eight grandchildren in public schools, told the panel. The new policy comes at a time of deep cuts to the city's public schools.

The vote was hardly a surprise. The panel, which replaced the Board of Education when Mayor Bloomberg took over the schools in 2002, almost always offers unanimous support to his policies.

The one time that members of the panel signaled that they would oppose the mayor was when he sought similarly stringent promotion criteria for third-graders in 2004. Bloomberg fired his two appointees to the board and replaced them with more agreeable panelists. The Staten Island borough president also fired his appointee at the time.

Monday night, roughly four years after what came to be called the Monday Night Massacre, was far less dramatic.

With Adam Lisberg

Education Panel Extends Ban On School Social Promotion by Elizabeth Green - The New York Sun

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Middle-school students will have to pass two tests and four core subjects next year before they can move on to high school, under a new policy approved last night despite objections from two borough presidents and a crowd of rowdy parents who said they spoke on behalf of 5,000 city residents.

Mayor Bloomberg proposed the policy in his State of the City address in January as a way to extend his ban on so-called social promotion, but the Panel for Education Policy had to approve it before it could become official.

The group, which has not vetoed a mayoral plan since it was created to replace the Board of Education in 2002, voted 11–1 to pass the policy last night.

The Manhattan president's representative, Patrick Sullivan, voted against the plan. The representative of President Adolfo Carrion of the Bronx originally proposed delaying the vote, saying the panel had not had enough time to review the decision. He then appeared to oppose the plan, but quickly changed his vote to a yes, citing a misunderstanding. The other 10 members, eight people appointed by Mr. Bloomberg and two appointed by the presidents of Staten Island and Brooklyn, voted for the plan. (The president of Queens currently has no appointee on the panel.)

The schools chancellor, Joel Klein, applauded the decision. He cited data on previously installed retention policies for third-, fifth-, and seventh-graders, which he said show retention helps students improve.

Mr. Sullivan called that data "statistical malpractice," asking: "If these programs were so effective, why do we have 18,000 children in eighth grade you are proposing to hold back?" He referred to the number of eighth-graders the city estimates would have been affected by the retention policy had it been in place last year.

About 85 community members who had filed into the Department of Education headquarters at Tweed Courthouse to protest the policy booed and chanted against the vote, creating such a disruption that Mr. Klein decided to adjourn the meeting prematurely.

The group, organized by the Coalition for Educational Justice, presented Mr. Klein with 5,000 ballots in support of its position, which is that retaining eighth-graders who do not pass standardized tests does nothing to help them succeed, and indeed could move them to drop out of school. Speaking to reporters later, Mr. Klein said he believes the new policy has "widespread support throughout the city." "There's always going to be a small group of people who don't like the policy and feel the need to express it," he said

Passing Eighth Grade Gets a Little Harder Elissa Gootman - New York Times

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The Bloomberg administration won approval for a new eighth-grade promotion policy last night at a meeting repeatedly interrupted by the chanting and heckling of parents who contend that the policy amounts to blaming students for the failings of the city’s middle schools.

The policy requires next year’s eighth graders to pass classes in core subject areas and to score at a basic level on standardized English and math exams to be promoted. The Panel for Educational Policy, which oversees the city schools, approved the policy by a vote of 11 to 1 in its meeting at Tweed Courthouse, the Education Department’s headquarters. Eight of the 13 members on the panel — there is one vacancy — are appointed by Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, and the five borough presidents appoint one each.

From the moment the meeting began, it was punctuated by parents chanting, “Postpone the vote” and “No plan, no vote,” a reference to what they said was the department’s lack of a comprehensive plan for fixing the city’s middle schools.

After the vote, the chants grew louder, culminating in shouts of “Shame! Shame!” that were accompanied by wagging fingers. The meeting was adjourned, with other items on the agenda pushed off to next month’s meeting. Parents continued their protests outside the building while Schools Chancellor Joel I. Klein met with reporters to defend the policy.

“In the end, passing kids through the system without making sure they’re ready for the next grade level is not a formula for success,” he said. “Our job is not to move a kid out of middle school; our job is to move a kid from middle school to high school, prepared for high school.”

Mr. Klein said he believed there was “widespread support throughout the city for the policy.”

But parents and education advocates, who held a news conference protesting the measure on the steps of the courthouse before the meeting, disagreed.

Ken Cohen, the N.A.A.C.P. regional director for New York City, called on the panel to postpone the vote, based on what he said was widespread disapproval of the policy. “Today we are here to see how this body reacts to the voice of the people,” he said. “This is not their government; it is our government. Let the people speak.”

When the mayor four years ago announced strict new promotion criteria for third graders in an effort to end social promotion, in which children are passed along to the next grade even when they are academically unprepared, he ushered in one of the stormiest episodes of his mayoralty.

Parents and politicians balked, and the policy was approved only after the mayor fired two panel members who had opposed it; the Staten Island borough president fired a third.

Subsequent promotion policies for fifth and seventh graders generated far less opposition. That was in large measure because the policies have resulted in fewer students being held back than before, with some improving their test scores after summer school programs, and others winning promotion through an appeals process.

But the eighth-grade policy has once again hit a nerve.

It landed in the middle of a raging debate about what is wrong with the city’s middle schools, and how to fix them. The debate gained momentum this fall, when federal test scores showed that city eighth graders had made no significant progress in reading and math since Mr. Bloomberg took control of city schools in 2002. State tests, though, have shown city students making gains over the same period.

One of the key criticisms of grade retention policies is that they demoralize students to the point that they may be more likely to drop out. Some parents say this could be a particularly acute problem for eighth graders who are told they cannot advance to high school.

The eighth-grade proposal could also affect more students; last year, officials said, 17,974 eighth graders received the lowest possible scores on their English or math exams or failed a core course, but only 1,300 were held back.

Patrick J. Sullivan, the Manhattan borough president’s appointee to the panel and the lone dissenter, said the number of low-performing eighth graders raised questions about the effectiveness of the mayor’s retention policies in the earlier grades.

“There’s no reason to wait for kids to fail and then keep them in the same environment for another useless year,” he said.

But Edison O. Jackson, a panel member who is the president of Medgar Evers College, called the effort a “step in the right direction,” saying that too many students require an extra year of remediation before they can move on to college-level coursework.

Zakiyah Ansari, a Brooklyn parent who is part of the Coalition for Educational Justice, a group that organized the news conference, said the policy punished children for “things they really don’t have any control over.”

She added, “I don’t think anybody really understands the need and the crisis that’s really going on in middle schools.”

Saturday, March 8, 2008

Explosive Device Thrown at William Carr Junior High School 194 in Queens - 1010 WINS

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WHITESTONE, N.Y. (AP) -- A Queens man will be charged with three counts of first degree arson following three incidents involving explosive devices at his former middle school.

Fire officials say 23-year-old Constantinos Mavrikos threw beer bottles full of flammable liquid at the William Carr Junior High School in Whitestone three times. The first incident happened at 5 p.m. on Thursday, then again at 6:00 p.m. and the third time Friday afternoon.

There was no major damage to the school but the wall was charred.

Children were inside the school at the time of the incidents but no one was hurt.

Mavrikos was arrested Friday after someone wrote down his license plate and called the police.

He is currently being held at the 109th precinct while officers await a search warrant to enter his home, which is located a few blocks away from the school.

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Principal Not Coming Back by Erin Einhorn - NY Daily News

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The Queens principal accused of corporal punishment and threatening a teacher will not return to the same school, Chancellor Joel Klein told the Daily News Tuesday.

Principal Anthony Aldorasi was removed from Astoria's Intermediate School 141 after the complaints were filed last year, and officials sought to fire him from his $136,745 post.

An arbitrator ruled last week that he deserved a less severe punishment - a $6,000 fine and a 10-day unpaid suspension - and ordered school officials to find him a job in the same district, No. 30.

"He's not going back to 141," Klein told The News, adding that he did not yet know where Aldorasi would be reassigned or if he would be offered a new deal instead. "We have to review our options."

Parents and teachers at IS 141 were planning a protest this week against Aldorasi's potential return.

Among other issues, they were concerned about students who had testified against him in his arbitration hearing.

"I don't think it would be the right decision to send him back into the school that he betrayed," said parent association treasurer Irene Diakogeorgios, who has two sons at the school.

An IS 141 teacher who had butted heads with Aldorasi said he was relieved he wouldn't be back.

"I would be angry if he came back to 141, because we've all seen an unbelievable transition from not wanting to come to work, to looking forward to coming to work on a Monday," said the teacher, who requested anonymity.

Aldorasi declined to comment.

eeinhorn@nydailynews.com

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Race to seal fate of State Senate? by John Lauinger

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The line in the sand for state Senate supremacy this year runs right through Queens County.

The highly anticipated political showdown between veteran Sen. Serphin Maltese (R-Glendale) and City Councilman Joseph Addabbo (D-Howard Beach) is already gearing up.

Maltese is gunning for his 11th consecutive term and Addabbo is term-limited out of his Council seat. The political stakes couldn't be higher.

With Senate Republicans clinging to a razor-thin two-seat majority, pundits said the Maltese-Addabbo race could be the linchpin that determines who calls the shots in the upper house.

"This is an historic race," said Evan Stavisky, a Democratic political consultant. He noted that if Democrats snatch the Senate from Republicans, redistricting in 2012 could cement Democratic control in Albany.

"Any credible expert will acknowledge that once the Senate goes Democratic, it's not going back," Stavisky added.

Republicans are already outnumbered in Maltese's district by more than two to one.

And Maltese has had a bull's-eye on his back since the 2006 campaign, in which he was nearly upset by political newcomer Albert Baldeo, who pulled in 49% of the vote without significant party backing.

"That's got to be one of three or four really heavily targeted districts in the state — probably the most targeted because of the perception that Maltese can be taken out," said Doug Muzzio, a political science professor at Baruch College.

Addabbo, who reported more than $70,000 in fund-raising by the state Board of Election's Jan. 15 filing deadline, said Democratic bosses have promised to give him "all-out resources" in his battle against Maltese. He said an influx of cash and campaign staffers from all over the state will arrive in his camp soon.

However, Addabbo faces a primary against Baldeo, who boasts $400,000 in campaign funds.

"I look forward to them fighting it out," said Maltese, who already has $240,000 in hand. He said the Republicans are not to be outdone in this race.

"[Majority Leader] Joseph Bruno in the Senate has pledged to me that if necessary he views it as a possible million-dollar race," he said.

Each candidate vowed not to run negative campaigns, but both slung a little mud in interviews with Queens News.

Addabbo slammed Maltese for flooding the district since shortly after the 2006 campaign with office newsletters that he says are really thinly veiled campaign ads.

Maltese blasted Addabbo for taking three donations, totaling nearly $30,000, from billionaire George Soros and his family.

"My donations are in the main from individuals, in the main from people residing in the district," Maltese said.

With Paul H.B. Shin

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Ozone Park Girl, Jennifer Asitimbay, Reported Missing by Family...




This young lady, Jennifer Asitimbay is missing. Her aunt gave me this flyer and asked that I post it in hopes of finding her. Her family
desperately wants her to return home. Jennifer recently graduated from Elizabeth Blackwell Middle School 210 in Ozone Park, Queens. She is 13 years-old and she was in Class 805 at the school.

Anyone with information please contact the family at the numbers above. Thank you

I wish her family Good Luck and hope that she returns home safe and sound soon..!

Sunday, June 17, 2007

Courier-Life Publications: Middle Schools: Setting kids Up to Fail by Michèle De Meglio...

Schools Chancellor Joel Klein agrees with Brooklyn parents who have repeatedly said that students who struggle in middle school are more likely to drop out.

“We cannot continue to allow students to move through grades even though they are barely able to read until we lose them entirely in middle or high school,” Klein said at a conference in Washington, D.C.

That sentiment was expressed in recent weeks by local parents who said the city’s troubled middle schools are setting students up for failure.

They contend that students drop out of high school because they lack the reading, writing and math skills necessary to excel in courses in grades 9-12.

That’s because elementary and middle schools have failed to adequately prepare students for advanced learning, parents say.

To support their assertions, they cited the graduation figures recently released by the city and state.

The state Education Department says just 50 percent of New York City students complete high school in four years.

The city Department of Education (DOE) says 60 percent of students in the five boroughs graduate in four years.

While both of these figures are up from the year before, parents say they must improve.

Even state Education Commissioner Richard Mills has said, “The statewide graduation rate has gone up only slightly and is unacceptably low.”

Klein called the “millions of students at risk of dropping out” throughout the country a “crisis.”

He said, “We know the dismal litany of life outcomes for dropouts: low earnings, more likely to need government assistance, to be in jail, to have children who will be dropouts.

“It is clear that as a nation we can no longer tolerate, morally or economically, the failure to educate vast numbers of our children.”

Klein recently announced plans to revamp the DOE’s alternative high school system, the goal of which is to prevent students from dropping out.

Instead, students will be redirected to small learning environments, such as those in small high schools, in hopes that they can get back on track and earn a high school diploma rather than a General Equivalency Diploma (GED).


Wednesday, June 13, 2007

NY Post: Kid Pepper Attack by Tom Liddy...

June 12, 2007 -- An eighth-grader released pepper spray at a Queens junior high school yesterday, landing seven people in the hospital, cops said.

About 400 staffers and students were evacuated from the third floor of JHS 226 in South Ozone Park at about 11 a.m. when the 15-year-old released the noxious chemical, officials said.

No one was seriously hurt. The teen faces possible suspension.

Friday, May 25, 2007

Queens Ledger: Lack of Guard Has Parents/Pols Cross by Stephen Geffon...

Although the intersection of 101st Avenue and 94th Street by MS 210Q - Elizabeth Blackwell School - in Ozone Park has been the site of numerous accidents and a fatality, Department of Education (DOE) officials still have not assigned a school crossing guard to the location.

Last April, seventh grader Elvis Quinn was struck by a car as he crossed the intersection, which is less than 50 feet from the front the school. Quinn died 13 days later.


"Unfortunately, whenever there is a tragedy like this, it highlights the need for more security and safety measures around our schools," said Councilman Joseph P. Addabbo, Jr. "During the city's budget process, I always attempt to promote an increase in funding for crossing guards."


State Senator Serphin Maltese, whose district includes MS 210Q, noted the number of accidents and student fatality at the corner of 101st Avenue and 94th Street.
"I think that's definitely a situation at a corner that cries out for crossing guards and supervision," he said. "That's a bad corner, there's no question about it."

Maltese said he would be taking immediate action to get school crossing guards at the location, explaining that he would be writing DOE. Although school crossing guards are under the jurisdiction of the police department, the senator said it was his understanding that the local precinct would provide a crossing guard to the school if requested to do so by DOE.
Maltese said he fully intends to question and request information from the DOE, Department of Transportation (DOT), and the school administrators, and to demand in this case that a crossing guard be put at the intersection. "It isn't only children that need crossing guards, in many cases it's many others," he said.

According to DOT statistics between 2001 and 2004, 18 accidents occurred at 101st Avenue and 94th Street, and between 1998 and 2000, eight accidents occurred at the intersection.
The Elizabeth Blackwell School has a student population of over 1,200 students and over 100 staff members. Craig Chin, a DOT spokesperson, said that school administrators are responsible for arranging for school crossing guards with the NYPD.

Rosalyn Allman-Manning, principal of MS 210Q, did not respond to a request for comment for this article.


Without a crossing guard, parents worry about their children crossing the intersection as they go and return from school.
"Every parent's fear is that your kid gets hit by a car," said MS 210Q Parents Association co-president David Quintana. "Something needs to be done."

Last week, Quintana wrote to Community Board 9 seeking their assistance in setting up a meeting between the DOT, the 102nd Precinct, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, and the community to discuss the unsafe traffic conditions in the immediate vicinity of the school.
In his letter, Quintana asked, "First and foremost for a school crossing guard at 101st Avenue and 94th Street." Quintana also requested that the MTA Q-11 bus running on 94th Street be rerouted, "thereby making 94th Street effectively a residential (non-commercial) street."

Former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani acknowledged the importance of school crossing guards to the safety of children when he hired an additional 150 of them to assist children in crossing busy streets on their way to school.


State Legislators also expressed support for the school crossing guards.


"School crossing guards are a vital and integral part of our educational system," said Assemblyman Pete Grannis, adding, "crossing guards ensure that children all across the state are able to arrive at and leave school safely."


Recognizing the ceaseless commitment and dedication of school crossing guards, the New York City Council passed a Resolution calling for the first Monday of the school year to be declared School Crossing Guards Appreciation Day in the City of New York.

NY1: City Reading Scores For Middle School Students Show Improvement by Michael Meenan...

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City eighth graders showed the most improvement in state reading test scores released Tuesday by the state education department. NY1 Education reporter Michael Meenan filed the following report.

"I was particularly pleased by the middle schools because it's been clearly the toughest challenge that we face,” said Schools Chancellor Joel Klein Tuesday, with a smile of relief on his face as he spoke about state reading scores for this year's third through eighth graders.

These big tests, scored one through four, have a lot of weight on whether kids get promoted, with one a failing mark, two barely passing and three and four over the bar.

In 2007, 56 percent of the city’s English-proficient third through eighth graders met the state’s reading standards, but when students learning English as a second language are included, the passing rate fell to about 51 percent, virtually the same overall rate as last year. The passing rate of 56 percent for English-proficient students is about three points higher than the same group for last year, but still well below the statewide overall average of about 62 percent.

"We have more work to do; that’s a point I have been making repeatedly," said Klein.

Since last year's results showed a large majority of eighth graders not reading at grade level, middle schools have been under serious pressure to improve. One Manhattan middle school put on a full court press and got over 80 percent of its kids to pass.

"It takes a concentrated effort, and not just on the language arts. I think that’s the secret. It should also be in social studies and science, and that's one of our big emphasis, so there is reading and writing across the day,” said Joseph Cassidy, principal of The Clinton School.

Cassidy runs a small middle school with only a couple of hundred kids so he can target where improvements are needed. Bigger, more crowded schools tend to have scores not nearly as high, especially since immigrant kids just learning English now have to take the test as well. Only 16 percent of those kids passed, and the president of the teachers' union said it is unfair to test kids in a language they don't yet understand.

"It was a federal requirement, but a requirement that we thought the state should fight,” said United Federation of Teachers' President Randi Weingarten.

The test does have consequences, sometimes to the good, as in the drop of four points in kids reading at the lowest level.

"That’s going to mean fewer kids in the grades affected are going to be subject to the summer school program,” said Klein.

And for third, fifth and seventh graders, these scores are really important because combined with math test results, which will be released next month, they will decide whether those kids go onto summer school or on to the next grade in September.

- Michael Meenan

Thursday, May 24, 2007

New York Times: New York Eighth Graders Show Gains in Reading By David M. Herszenhorn...

New York Times: New York Eighth Graders Show Gains in Reading By David M. Herszenhorn...

The number of eighth graders reading at grade level or above in New York State climbed impressively this year for the first time since 1999, when the state adopted tougher educational standards and its modern testing system, according to scores released yesterday from the annual statewide English exam.

The eighth-grade results showed the most clear-cut advances in a year in which students in all tested grades, third through eighth, demonstrated better reading ability, including overall gains by students in New York City, where Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg has made education a cornerstone of his administration.

The results were complicated, however, by a new federal requirement that the exam be administered to all students who have been in school in the United States for at least a year, even those who have yet to learn English.

Because of the change, nearly 40,000 more children with limited English ability, most of them in New York City, took this year’s test than in 2006, creating an appearance of declining scores in Grades 3 and 4. When those students’ results were factored out to make the numbers comparable to last year’s, officials said there was slight improvement.

The sharp increase in the proportion of eighth graders reading at or above grade level statewide, to 57 percent from 49.3 percent, provided a first spark of hope that school districts were beginning to turn around a long record of academic failure in middle school. Scores also improved in the sixth and seventh grades though more modestly.

It was the first time since the modern testing system was adopted in 1999 that more than half of the state’s eighth graders showed an ability to read proficiently.

“We have deplored low performance in middle grades in the past,” said the state education commissioner, Richard P. Mills, at a news conference in Albany. “But when you see improvement and you call and find out that people earned improvement by doing the right things, we have an obligation to celebrate that.”

He acknowledged, however, that the overall middle school results remained sobering, with more than 40 percent of seventh and eighth graders still failing despite this year’s gains.

In New York City, home to more than three-quarters of the state’s students with limited English skills, officials said they were pleased with the scores, which they said showed that the city was holding onto recent gains in the early grades and making new strides in the middle grades.

When the results of the students with limited English were excluded, scores in New York City improved in all grades except third grade, where scores were flat. Overall, across all grades, the proportion of New York City students meeting the state English standards rose 2.8 percentage points, to 56 percent from 53.2 percent last year.

And in eighth grade, the city showed the same solid gain that the state did, with the students meeting standards rising to 46.4 percent from 38.5 percent. The city’s gains, however, mostly disappeared when the students with limited English were factored in. With those students included, the proportion of all New York City students meeting the standards remained essentially flat, moving to 50.8 percent from 50.7 percent.

And including these students in early grades led to a drop in scores, of 5.1 percentage points in third grade, 2.9 points in fourth grade and six-tenths of a point in fifth grade.

Still, Schools Chancellor Joel I. Klein said that the results showed “significant, consistent growth” citywide and that he was heartened by improvements in scores among black and Hispanic students and children with disabilities.

Mr. Klein, too, said he was keenly aware of the large numbers of students still failing to read at grade level. “It’s a question of whether the glass is half empty or half full,” he said at a press briefing. “It’s clearly half full and getting fuller by the year.”

But not everyone was impressed. Diane Ravitch, a historian of the city school system, said that officials had long propped up scores by excluding non-English speakers. Such students should be tested, she said, and their results included in any official tally.

“I don’t see a revolution in these scores,” she said. “I see small, crablike steps. The scores are pointed in the right directions, but they are small, small gains and I would have expected big gains. By now they can no longer blame the dysfunctional system. They own it. “

Read entire article...

Saturday, May 19, 2007

Queens Tribune: Group Aims To Fix Middle School by Lee Landor...

It is a time of awkwardness, transition and unruly physical change – but also one of insurmountable growth and development: it is middle school.

Middle schoolers are at a vulnerable stage, one which City Council Speaker Christine Quinn recognized and decided to address via the creation of the Middle Schools Task Force earlier this year.

The Task Force has been meeting and holding public forums in each borough since March. Through the forums it has collected information about the condition of middle schools, and the concerns and suggestions of middle school teachers, principals and parents.

More than a dozen parents and educators voiced worries and questions to the Task Force members, who were joined by Council members John Liu (D-Flushing), Hiram Monserrate (D-Corona), Helen Sears (D-Jackson Heights) and Chair of the Education Committee Robert Jackson (D-Manhattan) at last week’s final public forum, titled “Equity, Access and Choice in Middle Schools,” held at JHS 145 in Jackson Heights.

The discussion was of the City’s middle school crisis, which is affecting the City’s 200,000 middle school students, their parents and their educators.

According to the Council, less than 50 percent of middle school students met the English Language Grade standard last year, and only 38.9 percent of 8th graders met math standards. Partly contributing to these numbers are the middle school teachers, 20.6 percent of whom were teaching out of license in 2005.

To Jackson, this is desertion by the City.

“We cannot expect kids to have the skills they need to graduate from high school if we abandon them at such a crucial time in their lives,” he said.

Quinn shared those sentiments when she first chose to convene the Task Force.

“Too many of our middle schools are failing, allowing kids to fall through the cracks between elementary and high school,” she said. “And if we lose them there, it’s a short road to high school drop out and a lifetime of limited opportunity.”

Speakers at the forum agreed, citing problems with lacking and inadequate English Language Learner programs and questioning the affect the education department’s restructuring will have on children’s education.

They discussed the logistics for student placement, the scarcity of gifted and talented programs and the problems with zoned schools. One speaker asked that the Task Force outright challenge the DOE to provide middle schools pedagogical choices.

“Compare districts two and three to district six,” she said. “It’s appalling – the disparity of choice.”

Karen Muntu of the Helping Involve Parents for Better Schools group brought up the lack of parental involvement in education – a problem partly resulting from poor communication between the DOE and parents.

Calling parental involvement the determining factor in the success of children, Muntu said the education dept. needs to find more ways to engage parents and better connect them with teachers.

On the agenda of New York Immigration Coalition representative Jose Davila were three propositions: establish an English Language Learner dropout prevention/high school readiness program, create an immigrant parent initiative to eliminate language barriers and help parents navigate the school system, and give ELLs more access to smaller high schools where they can transition better and receive proper attention.

Using these suggestions (among all those gathered since March), the Task Force will work to develop a blueprint to reform and restructure the middle school system, which they will present before the City Council sometime in June. Quinn and members of the Council will then work with the education department to implement the Task Force’s proposed policy initiatives.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

NY Sun: Klein's New Funding Program Will Benefit Middle Schools by Sarah Garland...

Middle schools — the school system's weakest links when it comes to test scores — will see an influx of cash starting in September under a new school funding program announced by the schools chancellor yesterday.

Chancellor Joel Klein said extra funding would also go to schools with students living in poverty — although only up until third grade, when the system would switch to funding students based on their state test scores.

"We're sending new funds to students who have the greatest need," Mr. Klein said at a news conference where he disclosed the details of the new budgeting system. "It's a landmark day for our school system."

The new system, commonly known as "weighted student funding," will use part of the $1 billion won last year in the Campaign for Fiscal Equity lawsuit — which argued that the city's education system was underfunded — to redistribute wealth among schools.

About a tenth of the $1 billion won in the lawsuit — $110 million — is going toward raising the budgets of 693 schools currently receiving less than the citywide average. More than twice the amount going to the underfunded schools — $230 million — would go toward maintaining the budgets of schools above the average, which the mayor agreed to protect from funding losses.

Principals would have wide discretion in how they spend the new money, which is drawn from the tax levy, Mr. Klein said. He suggested that many would choose to spend the money to hire more teachers — a scenario likely to please the teachers union.

The teachers union president, Randi Weingarten, praised the mayor's commitment not to take money from well-funded schools, but suggested that class size reduction — which would require hiring more teachers — should be explicitly required.

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Courier-Life Publications: Graduation Gains Still a Loss, Parents Say - Many Blame Struggling Middle Schools for Poor Performance by Michèle De Meglio

The city’s graduation rate may be up but it remains “unacceptably” low – and parents say middle schools are to blame.

Data released by the state Education Department shows that the percentage of New York City students graduating high school after four years increased from 44 to 50 percent over a two-year period.

But 50 percent accounts for just half of the city’s high school student population.

“I think any improvement is great but clearly we have a long way to go,” said Mary-Powel Thomas, president of District 15’s Community Education Council (CEC).

The entire state recorded a 67 percent four-year graduation rate in 2006.

“The statewide graduation rate has gone up only slightly and is unacceptably low,” said state Education Commissioner Richard Mills. “We need to act urgently now.”

Brooklyn Technical High School recorded the highest graduation rate in Brooklyn with 92 percent.

Several local high schools had graduation rates at less than 40 percent, including Automotive, Harry Van Arsdale, and Boys and Girls.

With a 26 percent graduation rate, ACORN High School for Social Justice had the second lowest rate in Brooklyn.

An analysis of the data posted on the state Education Department’s website, www.nysed.gov, shows that racial disparities in student achievement still exist.

While the graduation rates for African-American and Hispanic students increased, they remain lower than those for their white classmates.

The four-year graduation rate for Hispanic students rose four percent to 45 percent, and the rate for African-American students jumped three percent to 47 percent.

“The rate among black and Hispanic students is a disaster,” asserted Public Advocate Betsy Gotbaum.

Thomas said more must be done to encourage the city’s best teachers to work in struggling schools, many of which have large African-American and Hispanic student bodies.

“If you want to attract your highest quality teachers to your lowest performing schools, it would help to offer them more money,” she said.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg and schools Chancellor Joel Klein have said they’d like to implement such a system.

Calling the graduation rate increases for African-American and Hispanic students “bright spots,” Mills asserted, “New York City has gained. But we still have far to go.”

Bloomberg said the figures “demonstrate that, as a result of the school reforms New York City has made, more students are graduating from our public schools than at any time in decades. Four- and five-year graduation rates have risen steadily and substantially during the past two years.”

Carmen Colon, president of the Association of New York City Education Councils, asserted that the mayor’s repeated restructuring of the public school system and frequent introduction of new policies are not responsible for the increase in the city’s graduation rates.

“The numbers are based on policies that were there before Bloomberg,” she said, and, “do not reflect any given policy or program [implemented by Bloomberg and Klein] – they haven’t been around long enough.”

Regardless of who is responsible for the statistics, Brooklyn parents were less than enthusiastic about the city’s graduation rate figures.

“Everybody agrees that they’re dismal and there have to be new commitments to making sure that students are encouraged to complete school,” said David Bloomfield, president of the Citywide Council on High Schools (CCHS).

Parents say the reason students drop out of high school is that they lack the reading, writing and math skills necessary to complete courses in grades 9-12.

They say this is because elementary and middle schools fail to adequately prepare students for advanced learning.

“The trouble starts long before high school,” Thomas said. “As we’ve seen from standardized test scores, they go steadily down from third grade to eighth grade.”

“Middle school graduates are woefully unprepared to do high school-level work. Those are many of the kids who end up dropping out,” Bloomfield agreed.

But, he noted, “New research shows that many students who had adequate preparation drop out as well.”

The solution is to ensure that kids attend class regularly, he said.

“I think that the entire community has to get behind efforts directed at attendance as well as achievement,” he said.

“I don’t think it’s only the responsibility of the Department of Education” to raise the graduation rate, he continued. “Parents and students bear a high degree of responsibility for making sure that they attend school on time, do their homework, and study, study, study.”

But teenagers must want to go to school and right now, there’s too much emphasis on test prep in elementary and middle schools, so by the time students enter high school, they’re turned off to the learning experience, Colon said.

In those early grades, “they start hitting you with testing and that’s when kids’ minds start to click off. This is boring,” she said.

She offered this advice to DOE officials, “Start making science, history and math exciting…Children will sit for something that’s engaging.”

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Sunday, May 6, 2007

Courier-Life: Graduation Gains Still a Loss, Parents Say - Many Blame Struggling Middle Schools for Poor Performance by Michèle De Meglio...

The city’s graduation rate may be up but it remains “unacceptably” low – and parents say middle schools are to blame.

Data released by the state Education Department shows that the percentage of New York City students graduating high school after four years increased from 44 to 50 percent over a two-year period.

But 50 percent accounts for just half of the city’s high school student population.

“I think any improvement is great but clearly we have a long way to go,” said Mary-Powel Thomas, president of District 15’s Community Education Council (CEC).

The entire state recorded a 67 percent four-year graduation rate in 2006.

“The statewide graduation rate has gone up only slightly and is unacceptably low,” said state Education Commissioner Richard Mills. “We need to act urgently now.”

Brooklyn Technical High School recorded the highest graduation rate in Brooklyn with 92 percent.

Several local high schools had graduation rates at less than 40 percent, including Automotive, Harry Van Arsdale, and Boys and Girls.

With a 26 percent graduation rate, ACORN High School for Social Justice had the second lowest rate in Brooklyn.

An analysis of the data posted on the state Education Department’s website, www.nysed.gov, shows that racial disparities in student achievement still exist.

While the graduation rates for African-American and Hispanic students increased, they remain lower than those for their white classmates.

The four-year graduation rate for Hispanic students rose four percent to 45 percent, and the rate for African-American students jumped three percent to 47 percent.

“The rate among black and Hispanic students is a disaster,” asserted Public Advocate Betsy Gotbaum.

Thomas said more must be done to encourage the city’s best teachers to work in struggling schools, many of which have large African-American and Hispanic student bodies.

“If you want to attract your highest quality teachers to your lowest performing schools, it would help to offer them more money,” she said.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg and schools Chancellor Joel Klein have said they’d like to implement such a system.

Calling the graduation rate increases for African-American and Hispanic students “bright spots,” Mills asserted, “New York City has gained. But we still have far to go.”

Bloomberg said the figures “demonstrate that, as a result of the school reforms New York City has made, more students are graduating from our public schools than at any time in decades. Four- and five-year graduation rates have risen steadily and substantially during the past two years.”

Read more...