Mayor de Blasio spoke today at Riverside Church about the need for systemic education reform, including expanding preK, afterschool programs, retaining teachers, and involving parents; and his refusal to pit children against each other as currently happens with charter co-locations.
It was a very good speech -- despite the fact that it did not mention the critical need for smaller classes. Below the video is an excerpt, in which he addresses the bitter fight over charter school co-locations. Meanwhile, the charter lobby has funded non-stop ads, paid for with $3.6 million, attacking him for his decision not to allow Eva Moskowitz's Success Academy to push PS 194 to 134% capacity and displace special needs kids from P 811 in Harlem.
It was a very good speech -- despite the fact that it did not mention the critical need for smaller classes. Below the video is an excerpt, in which he addresses the bitter fight over charter school co-locations. Meanwhile, the charter lobby has funded non-stop ads, paid for with $3.6 million, attacking him for his decision not to allow Eva Moskowitz's Success Academy to push PS 194 to 134% capacity and displace special needs kids from P 811 in Harlem.
“The answer is not to save a few of our children
only. The answer is not to find an escape route that some can follow and
others can’t. The answer is to fix the entire system. (sustained
applause)… so we have to approach systemic change. …Poverty, hunger, the lack
of affordable housing… But even within the education system itself we
aren’t approaching root causes and the systemic changes we need to. We
have to work from the assumption that we will save every child, that we will
reach every child, that no system is working unless every child has
opportunity. And we need to be able to say that despite the good efforts of
many the school system is still broken in many ways…We need to work on
solutions for the whole and the original notion of the charter movement was to
innovate, to create laboratories …to bring to the entire school system. …The
idea is not to create separation, the kind of competition that works for some
and leaves some out…For 6% of our children in the charters, they are our
children; we need them to succeed. For 94% of the children in the
traditional public schools they are our children, we need them to
succeed.
The notion that some children may be “lucky” enough to
escape from the traditional public schools in their neighborhood speaks
volumes, because so many parents feel that right now…I want that parent to know
that we will not accept the neighborhood school that fails them …Our
mission is to create a city in which regardless of zip code, your neighborhood
public school is a great option for your child. (sustained applause.)
There has been failure, we should not sweep it under the
rug….It’s all of us in public life that haven’t measured up… well I say to you
today that in my mayoralty… It is my responsible to fix the problem, and I
won’t choose between the children of this city any more that any parent would
choose between the children in their family. I will reach out to all the
children in the city, in traditional public schools, in charters schools, in
religious schools… they all deserve a solution.
We made some decisions in the last weeks striving for
fairness, but …I didn’t measure up in explaining this to the people of this
city. We want want children to have good options, but not displacing or
harming other children in the schools to which they may go. We will make
sure that 194 children [in Success Academy] have a good home this year, but we
will not do this at the expense of our special education children. That
is a false choice has been set up as part of a broken system and a broken
dialogue; and it's time to ending that kind of dysfunction … So we’ll protect
the children who need our help while not pitting one against another."
ReplyDeleteThis was a great speech..