For
Immediate Release: August 19, 2012
For more
information:
Leonie
Haimson (NY): 917-435-9329; leonie@classsizematters.org
Pamela
Grundy (NC): 407-375-4222; shamrockparent@earthlink.net .
Robin
Hiller (AZ): 520-668-4634; rhiller@voicesforeducation.org
Wendy
Lecker (CT): 203-536-7567; paaconnecticut@gmail.com
Becky
Malone (IL); 773- 793-0355; wats7573@aol.com
Karen
Miller (TX): 281-893-8877; 832-372-4742; kmillerpta@aol.com
Julie
Woestehoff (IL): 773 -715-3989; pure@pureparents.org
Parent leaders hail the President’s focus
on the need for smaller classes
Parent
leaders throughout the nation thank President Obama for recognizing the
importance of class size in his weekly address, and for releasing a report that
shows how the elimination of 60,000 teaching positions since 2009 is not only
unprecedented in US postwar history, but has led to class size increases that
are severely damaging the quality of our public schools.
Leonie Haimson, Executive
Director of Class Size Matters, said: “The
President’s
speech yesterday and the new White House report, Investing in our Future, make it crystal clear
that the class size increases across the nation represent a crisis that is
severely undermining our children’s opportunity to learn. As the White
House report makes clear, class size reduction has been strongly linked to
higher achievement, higher levels of engagement, and higher rates of attending
college. Yet here in New York City, our youngest students are suffering
from the largest classes in 13 years, despite the fact that surveys show that
class size reduction is the top priority of parents, year after year. As
a city and a nation, we must do better.”
Pamela Grundy, parent leader and co-founder
of Mecklenburg ACTS in Charlotte NC, says: “Here in North Carolina we have been
fortunate to have state and local leaders acknowledge the importance of small
classes, especially in our state's many high poverty schools. Yet budget
cuts in have severely undercut this reform and our children are bearing the
consequences. We greatly appreciate the President’s efforts to reverse
this damaging trend, and we urge him to follow through on the federal level by
restoring the $650 million that his proposed education budget eliminates from
the Title II program, money that is currently used by states and districts to
reduce class size and keep teachers on staff.”
Robin
Hiller, Executive Director of Voices for Education, agrees: “Here in Arizona, schools
are suffering from class sizes of 32 in Kindergarten and 44 in high school.
There is nothing that is more important than bringing these stratospheric class
sizes down if we want our children to succeed. We urge Congress to fully fund
the President’s Jobs act and to restore all cuts to Title II, and for our State Legislature
to do its part by ensuring that our public schools have the resources they need
for smaller classes, rather than diverting public funds to vouchers, for-profit
charter schools, and other privatization schemes.”
Wendy
Lecker, one of the co-founders of Parents Across America – Connecticut, adds:
“We applaud the fact that the President acknowledges that reasonable class size
and an adequate supply of teachers are essential to a quality education and are
basic resources that all public schools must have. Here in Connecticut, schools
in high
poverty areas continue to have much larger class sizes than in wealthier
districts. We wish that our Governor and State Education Department would pay
attention to the need for equitable class sizes, rather
than their current focus on taking control of our public schools away from our
communities and putting them into the hands of private corporations.”
Becky Malone of 19th Ward Parents in Chicago says: “Class sizes in Chicago remain the largest in the state,
and 95% of Illinois school districts have smaller classes than
we do. Worse yet, the disparities have increased. While average class size has
decreased statewide over the last ten years, it has increased in our city’s
public schools. This is simply unacceptable if we are going to provide
equitable learning conditions to all children, but especially our most at-risk
students who need small classes the most.”
Karen Miller, parent leader in Texas and a former state PTA
legislative chair points out: “Texas was one of the first states to reduce
class size, with caps of 22 students in grades K-4, adopted by Governor Mark
White and the Legislature in 1984. Yet over $5 billion has been slashed from
the state education budget this past year. This has caused class sizes to soar,
tripling the number of districts that have applied for and received waivers, representing
nearly 30 percent of all elementary schools in the state. Surveys
show that voters overwhelming support smaller classes; research shows that they
boost student achievement, particularly for disadvantaged children. We cannot
claim to care about our children, as a state or a nation, and allow class size to
rise any higher.”
Julie Woestehoff,
Executive Director of Parents United for Responsible Education in Chicago
concludes: “I hope that all of us, including parents, teachers, and our
elected leaders, can pull together and invest in our children in the way that
research shows really makes a difference: by reducing class size.”
###
25 PertliMaybe the president should be forced to run for office every year. It is a correct idea,but why wait until he is up for re election to make this declaration.
ReplyDeleteHis education secretary Arne Donavan has proven to be pro testing,pro charter school and supported the ridiculous competition among states in his Race To The Top idea.We need smaller classes,but we also need less emphasis on Test scores and more suppport for public schools
Is Randi Weingarten of the American Federation of Teachers going to lend Obama a hand like she did in 2008?
ReplyDeleteShe suspended me for two days without pay on Election Day, 2008, because I had distributed a pro-Obama article to about 100 United Federation of Teachers staffers via email- something I and others routinely did.
The article was written by Larry Hanley, now president of the Amalgamated Transit Union in D.C. and was about why whites should not be afraid to vote for Obama. He based his piece on the 1989 Dinkins for Mayor campaign, which I co-managed on Staten Island. We got a mainly white union Local to endorse DInkins and to hit the streets for him.
Hanley called me "one of the keenest minds in New York City."
I distributed because it had been part of my job to be on the lookout for such press clips and also because several of my co-workers said they were sending it to their undecided friends in toss up states. One founder of the union (from 1960) emailed me a letter of praise.
Weingarten, who was still bitter that Obama defeated Hillary Clinton, hit the roof and ordered five of her top bosses to call me to a two-hour meeting on Election Day to suspend me -all without due process that Weingarten is always whining about (for teachers -not her staff).
Weingarten also prevented her 150,000 members from voting on the 2008 race.
She had internal polling showing that Obama was the clear favorite but she announced the UFT endorsement before any member voted!
The members never had a chance.
My suspension was the FIRST time in the history of the union that a staffer was punished for doing his/her job about press clips or for letting UFT officers read something about a UFT- endorsed candidate.
She did the same thing to other black candiates: Bill Thompson for mayor in 2009; (she sat out the Bloomberg-Thompson race because he allegedly told her he was going to use public monies to bribe her with two, four per cent raises in return for her silence. Four years later, the members are still waiting for the raises.
She knifed state comptroller Carl McCall for New York governor (she endorsed Pataki, the right wing Republican) and Latino Freddy Ferrer for mayor in 2001- the clear choice of the membership after he received a rousing standing ovation from 20,000 members at Madsion Square Garden. She, not the members, backed her close friend City Controller Alan Hevesi- who is now in jail for looting a pension fun.
Weingarten also fired four consecutive black female writers; one of them won an NLRB case, was awarded $150,000 and got her job back. Weingarten was trying to break the union.
She also admitted to a group of UFT leaders that she had passed over a black man, Ron Davis, "too many times" for press secretary.
-Jim Callaghan