Testimony
at Contracts for Excellence Hearing
June
18, 2014
by Tory
Frye, District 5 and 6 parent and elected parent member, Community Education Council
Six [CEC6]
My
name is Tory Frye and I am the parent of public school students in Districts 5
and 6 and am an elected parent member of CEC6.  I am here this evening
representing thousands of District Six parents; I’ll tell you why I think this
is true in a moment.  
We
know that the primary purpose of the C4E is to reduce class size and yet the
DOE has chosen not to do this.  Our CEC6 President has spoken
eloquently on why reducing class size is so crucial in our district, which has
a significant proportion of current or former English Language Learners, as
well as special needs students (and often students who are classified as
both).  Educators, students and parents will testify to the difficulty of
teaching and learning for these students in large class sizes.
Here
are the facts about class size in D6:
-      
In 2013-14 the average class size for K-3 was 24; according to the
Campaign for Fiscal Equity settlement, which gave rise to the C4E contracts, we
should be at 20.
-      
We have the largest average class size in D6 since 2006.
-      
6 D6 schools have K class averages of 25+
-      
10 D6 schools have 1-3 class averages of 25+
-      
5 D6 schools have at least one 1-3 class with 30+
-      
14 D6 schools have at least one 4-8 class with 30+ 
-      
PS 366 has a K class with 28 students
-      
PS 153 has a 1st grade class with 32 students
-      
PS 28 has a 2nd grade class with 31 students
-      
PS 132, a struggling school, has a 3rd grade class with 29
students
-      
The average D6 utilization rate is 94%
-      
13 schools are over 100% utilization, including PS/IS 187, which is
blocks away from the Mother Cabrini High School, which the DOE has handed over
to Success Academy, a school that was never desired in our district, despite an
overcrowded and high performing school mere blocks away.
-      
Analysis* indicates that we need another 900 seats
-      
D6 also has 19 “TCUs” (aka trailers) at 3 schools, not including the
“mini buildings” at schools like PS 192/325, which, if eliminated, would mean
we need another 681 seats.
-      
So we have class sizes that exceed the CFE targets and the need for
additional seats in our district just to reduce current, non C4E-compliant,
overcrowding.
-      
This is why we want the DOE to spend the entirety of the C4E dollars on
class size reduction by hiring more teachers, adhering to the CFE class size
targets, and creating more classrooms by aligning the Capital Plan to the CFE
class size targets.
-      
We reject the excuse that the state has not provided the money and ask
that Mayor de Blasio use his influence to get the money we are owed in order to
reduce class size and/or use the city funds to achieve these goals.
-      
To return to why I think I speak for thousands of D6 parents?  Here
is our analysis of the Learning Environment Surveys for D6:
·      Two-thirds (68%)
of parents rank smaller class size as the #1 improvement that could be made at
their schools
·      Twenty-one of 25
schools (84%) rank it as either the #1 or #2 improvement.
| 
School | 
#1 | 
#2 | 
| 
Smaller
  class size #1 (17/25 or 68%) | ||
| 
PS
  5 | 
Smaller
  class size | 
Hands
  on learning | 
| 
PS
  8 | 
Smaller
  class size | 
More
  state test prep | 
| 
PS
  28 | 
Smaller
  class size | 
More
  state test prep | 
| 
PS
  48 | 
Smaller
  class size | 
More
  state test prep | 
| 
PS
  98 | 
Smaller
  class size | 
More
  state test prep | 
| 
PS
  128 | 
Smaller
  class size | 
Stronger
  enrichment | 
| 
PS
  132 | 
Smaller
  class size | 
More
  state test prep | 
| 
PS
  152 | 
Smaller
  class size | 
Stronger
  enrichment | 
| 
PS
  153 | 
Smaller
  class size | 
Stronger
  enrichment | 
| 
PS
  178 | 
Smaller
  class size | 
Stronger
  enrichment | 
| 
PS/IS
  187 | 
Smaller
  class size | 
Stronger
  enrichment  | 
| 
PS
  189 | 
Smaller
  class size | 
Stronger
  enrichment  | 
| 
PS/IS
  278 | 
Smaller
  class size | 
More
  state test prep | 
| 
PS
  325 | 
Smaller
  class size | 
More
  state test prep | 
| 
PS
  314 (Muscota New School) | 
Smaller
  class size | 
Less
  state test prep | 
| 
PS
  366 (Washington Heights Acad.) | 
Smaller
  class size | 
Stronger
  enrichment | 
| 
PS
  210 (Twenty-first Century) | 
Smaller
  class size | 
More
  state test prep | 
| 
Smaller
  Class Size #2 (4/25 or 16%) | ||
| 
PS
  115 | 
More
  state test prep | 
Smaller
  class size | 
| 
PS
  4 | 
More
  state test prep | 
Smaller
  class size | 
| 
PS
  18 | 
More
  hand on learning/more test prep | 
Smaller
  class size | 
| 
Amistad
  (PS/IS 311) | 
More
  state test prep | 
Smaller
  class size | 
| 
Class
  size # or more (4/25 or 16%) | ||
| 
PS
  368 (Hamilton Heights Acad.) | 
More
  state test prep | 
More
  effective leadership | 
| 
PS
  192 | 
Stronger
  enrichment | 
Hands
  on learning | 
| 
PS
  173 | 
Stronger
  enrichment | 
More
  state test prep | 
| 
PS
  513 (PS 513) | 
Stronger
  arts  | 
Stronger
  enrichment | 
* D6 class size analysis via Class Size Matters
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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