Every year since 2007, parents
have voted smaller classes their #1 priority, according to the Department of
Education’s own annual surveys. In addition, the state passed a law in 2007
called the Contracts for Excellence (C4E), requiring that NYC reduce class size
in all grades, in return for receiving additional state aid. Yet class sizes
have increased every single year since then.
This year, the DOE has posted its
proposed C4E
plan in February for public comment, long after most of these funds have
been allocated and spent. The deadline for public comment is March
18. Please send in your comment today, with a copy to John King, the
State Education Commissioner. A sample message is below; feel free to
change it any way you like. You can check out my 20 Questions to DOE, about their lack of accountability in this area.
We will be presenting at several
Community Education Council meetings in Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens, starting tomorrow in Baruch
Middle School on 330 East 21st St., where we will be giving presentations on
C4E and class size, and if there is time, speaking briefly about new threats to student
privacy. If you are interested please come, more info about when
and where is posted here.
Thanks, Leonie
The
DOE has failed NYC children in many ways but in no way more disappointing
than in its failure to live up to its legal and ethical commitments to reduce
class size.
As
a parent of a child in a NYC public school, it is unacceptable to me:
·
That NYC public school students continue to be subjected to the
largest class sizes in the state;
·
That they have been deprived of their constitutional right to an
adequate education because of their excessive class sizes, according to the
state’s highest court;
·
That class sizes have risen every year for the last five, and are
now the largest in 14 years in the early grades;
·
That DOE continues in its latest C4E proposal to do nothing to
reduce class sizes despite a law passed in 2007, requiring them to lower class
size;
·
That DOE has never allocated a single penny of the more than $500
million in annual C4E funds to district-wide or targeted programs to reduce
class size;
·
That many of the DOE policies have in fact encouraged
INCREASES in class size, including but not limited to the following:
·
Cutting school budgets by 14% since 2008, despite increases in
overall education spending and in many other areas;
·
Eliminating the early grade class size funding in 2010, despite a
promise to the state to keep the program intact;
·
Stopping capping class size in grades 1-3 in 2011 to 28 students per class;
·
Demanding that special needs children be accommodated in general
education and inclusion classes at maximum contractual levels, despite the fact
that these students need smaller classes most of all;
·
Refusing to align either its school utilization formula or capital
plan with class size reduction goals;
·
Continuing to co-locate new schools in school buildings, taking up
every possible inch of space and depriving schools of the ability to lower
class size in the future:
·
Holding meetings in February and March for the current year’s C4E
proposal, and refusing to hold borough hearings, making a mockery of the public
process required by the law.
You
have utterly failed in your responsibilities to my child as well as 1.1 million
other NYC students, who have been deprived of a quality education because of
your continued negligence.
Yours,
Name, school, borough
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