DeWitt Clinton High School |
The Bloomberg administration has been defined by its
determination to close as many schools as possible, and has shut more than a hundred so far, rather than make attempts
to improve them. It is now threatening to close down DeWitt Clinton High School, one of the last remaining
large schools in the Bronx, with a renowned history. Over its 115 years, its alumni have
included
32 Oscar, Emmy and/or Tony Award winners, 11 Pulitzer Prize winners, 5 Olympic
medalists, and 54 current or former members of the NY State Supreme Court.
Just
13 years ago, Clinton was ranked among the top 100 high schools in the nation,
according to U.S. News and World Report.
But then came the Gates-funded small schools initiative, as implemented by Bloomberg/Klein, which undermined all the large comprehensive high schools in the Bronx through overcrowding. For at least the last six years, Clinton has been at 120 percent utilization, with nearly one thousand more students than it was designed to hold.
Perhaps as a consequence of this overcrowding, many of its
classes have 34 students or more -- far above the goals of 25 or less in the city's Contract for Excellence plan.
Moreover, in March, 2011, almost two years ago, a “joint
intervention team” of the State Education Department and the city recommended
changes in leadership:
·
Assign new leadership with the
capacity to clearly communicate and implement a plan for improving student
achievement in ELA and mathematics, including ELLs and students with
disabilities.
·
Develop a new leadership team
with a focus on improving instruction to include differentiated instruction and
the infusion of higher level thinking skills into the instructional program for
all students.
Yet
nothing was done: not a reduction in class size to allow for differentiated instruction;
not a lessening of overcrowding, and not a change in leadership. Despite
all these problems, Clinton students exhibit relatively high rates of college
readiness, a goal that the DOE claims to care
about most. According to the recent Progress Reports, the school’s students average SAT
scores of 422-437; a hundred
points higher than the scores of the high
school that
DOE says is the best
in the city.
In response to concerns
expressed by State Commissioner King, the DOE
promised last year to refrain from continuing to flood high-needs students
in certain schools, which
consultants to DOE had pointed out years ago relegated
them to failure. From Alan’s
description, DOE does not seem to
have followed
through with its promise in
the case of Clinton.
It is obvious what should be done to improve
a school: refrain from overcrowding it, do not
overwhelm it with high numbers of at-risk students, reduce class size, and
if this
doesn’t work, replace the principal. Yet the DOE has taken none of these steps.
One has to wonder if they purposefully want the school to fail so they can close it down.
A
community forum to help determine the fate of DeWitt Clinton will take place on
Thursday December 6, 2012 from 6-8 in the auditorium. The school is located at
100 West Mosholu Parkway South, Bronx, NY 10468. Here is Alan Ettman’s
account; for more
information, you can contact him at 917-613-7047, aettman@optonline.net.
The NYC Dept. of Education has included DeWitt Clinton HS in
the Bronx on its recently released list of “failing schools”, which means that
it may shut down Clinton – a school that is more than 100 years old - within
the next year. Clinton is one of a few
large comprehensive high schools remaining in NYC; the others having been
undermined then closed by the DOE. This
policy of closing schools rather than helping them is part of the effort of
“reformers” to privatize public education.
There has been a systematic sabotage of large high schools
by the Bloomberg administration. After
more than a decade in office there are more and more schools that, based on the
Department of Education’s questionable “Progress Reports,” are slated to
close. We believe that schools do not
fail, which is what education “reformers” claim; rather, it is policies that
fail.
In 1999, U.S. News and World Report listed Clinton as one of
the 96 outstanding schools in the country.
During the Bloomberg regime, the school has declined to a point where we
now have received an “F” on the city’s dubious report card.
The story of our decline, like that of dozens of high
schools in NYC, is a tale of bad policies, lack of support, and statistical
calculations that favor newly created small schools over large comprehensive
ones. Over the past few years, we have
watched as the city funneled high needs students into specific schools, and
then closed those schools based on declining scores. DeWitt Clinton is one of those schools which
have been flooded with students who are known to be the most challenging to
educate.
Currently DeWitt Clinton has 748 students who are English
Language Learners (ELLs), which is 19% of the total school population, and 556
Special Education students which accounts for 13% of the school. (Many of the Bloomberg-created small schools
have 400-500 students in the entire school.)
It should come as no surprise, then, that the number of Clinton students
who graduate in four years is below the city average – the population of
incoming students is simply a different caliber and requires extra services
than those that we are being measured against. (However, the number of students
who graduate in six years is 71.5%, which is higher than the city-wide
average.) To those critics that say DeWitt Clinton is just a dropout factory,
we say in response that it is the city’s policies that have created this
dropout factory.
Other factors that are relevant include the fact that our
per-pupil spending is lower than city-wide norms; the number of students whose
families are considered poor is higher than the city average; and the number of
students who have low scores, poor attendance and/or discipline issues in
middle school is quite high. For example,
out of a current incoming class of 950 students, more than 100 were considered
long term absents (LTAs) in 8th grade and more than 100 failed a
majority of their 8th grade classes.
It is the current administration’s practice of closing schools based on
assessments that do not take certain factors into account that are too
heavy-handed and ignore the reality of the lives and environment of our
students. Indeed, there were a number of
schools on the potential closing list from last year which have improved their
performance and are no longer being considered for closure. It would seem to us that this measure of
closing our school – which is so rich with tradition and history – is drastic,
when it has been proven that additional time, resources and investment can
result in a school’s rebound and improvement.
The Mayor has chosen his toughest battles for his final
political year. With the potential closings of more high schools, we are
witnessing Bloomberg touting his agenda of opening small schools (which have
not been shown to be any more effective than the large schools) in one last
ditch attempt to claim that his educational policies are successful, despite
the concerns of the community, current students and education professionals.
Despite the factors described above, we are proud of our
significant achievements. DeWitt Clinton
offers more than a dozen Advanced Placement classes, has a large number of
highly engaging student clubs (which
faculty supervise without pay because of budget shortages), and approximately
30 athletic teams. The number of
students who attend public colleges and who earn at least 30 credits in their
first two years is 61%, which virtually matches the NY State average of
61.5%. Our students attend some of the
best universities in the country – the honors program at DeWitt Clinton High
School is still so highly regarded that college recruiters make it a point to
recruit our students because of the quality education they have received. These are the same students that continually
demonstrate the fine teaching being practiced at Clinton, through AP scores
that far exceed city and national averages.
Bronx middle schools continue to send their best and brightest to
Clinton because we serve these gifted minority students. None of this is
factored into the school report cards, but it is widely known in the Bronx
education community. There are simply
too many good things happening here at Clinton for the city’s “solution” to be
closure.
Many students do thrive in small schools; however, it is the
large schools that offer a wide array of course offerings, extra-curricular
activities and traditions. It would be a
shame to close the last comprehensive high school on the west side of the Bronx
– and one of only a handful left in NYC.
We believe strongly that the tradition of our school extends beyond the
current student population, teachers and administration – the institution of
DeWitt Clinton is 115 years old, and we owe it to future generations to keep
this rich tradition alive. The list of our notable alumni is 38
pages long and includes such luminaries as James Baldwin, Richard Avedon,
Ralph Lauren, Paddy Chayefsky, Countee Cullen, Avery Fisher, Irving Howe,
Robert Klein, Stan Lee, Neil Simon, Burt Lancaster, Tracy Morgan, Charles
Rangel, and many others.
There will be a public hearing to discuss the fate of our
school on Thursday December 6 from 6 – 8 PM. It is my hope that this event can be covered
and that the story of the undermining of the NYC public school system be
addressed. -- Alan Ettman
1 comment:
"allowing" schools to improve is the wrong way to put it...the administration is actively sabatoging big schools to push their agenda. If we were left alone and "allowed" to succeed, we would be fine at clinton. It is not just that we don't get any real support, they want us to fail
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