Showing posts with label class size reduction bill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label class size reduction bill. Show all posts

Thursday, March 8, 2007

Joel Klein, why do you send our kids to schools you wouldn't send your own to?


See this interview with Joel Klein from Fortune magazine in which he talks about the importance of treating schools like a business:

“I’ve talked to a lot of people about this who have retail outlets, banks, bookstores or what have you."

To bad he hasn't bothered to talk to any parents or educators.

He also says: “The hardest part of the job is answering this question: Chancellor, how could you send my kid to a school you wouldn't send your kids to?”

Hmm. Joel Klein's stepdaughter went to Miss Porter’s, a boarding school in Connecticut: average class size of 11.

Bloomberg sent his daughters to Spence; middle and high school classes average 13-14 students.

Yet our kids get class sizes of 28-34 in these grades -- which is just fine with them.

Also, FYI: here is what I found on the Spence website:

Is public transportation is available for the younger students?

The Atlantic Express is a free bus service for students in grades Kindergarten to 6 offered by the City of New York Board of Education and coordinated through the Spence Parents Association. It is available only in Manhattan to families who live within a five-mile radius of the school. Buses pick up and drop off at designated stops.

Monday, March 5, 2007

Come with us to Albany March 13!

The NYC parent lobby day in Albany is next week – Tuesday, March 13. Class Size Matters will be going too.

Free buses will be leaving from all parts of the city, and lunches will be provided, thanks to the UFT. Last year, the first Independent Parent lobby day was a blast.

I am proud to say that CPAC –the Chancellor’s Parent Advisory Council – is carrying up a terrific agenda.

CPAC is strongly supportive of the Nolan/Lancman bill Class Size Reduction bill that would require smaller classes in all grades, and has good positions on parent empowerment, governance, charter schools, accountability, high-stakes testing, and other important issues for public school parents.

Please contact me if you need to know where the bus is leaving from your district – and how you can reserve your seat today!

Also let me know ASAP if you’re interested in coming w/ me and other members of Class Size Matters on visits to key leaders in the Legislature and the State House. I would love to have you with me.

thanks,

Leonie Haimson
leonie@att.net
212-674-7320

Friday, March 2, 2007

Action in Albany


On Tuesday, we had a press conference in Albany to announce the introduction of the Nolan/Lancman class size reduction bill, A. 6063. Nearly every Assembly member from NYC is now a co-sponsor. The bill would require that at least 25% of the extra state aid coming to our schools be used to reduce class size in all grades, to be phased in over four years, and that the city’s capital plan for schools be amended to provide the additional space necessary.
WNYC ran a short piece about the bill; there were longer articles in the NY Sun , Staten Island Advance and Legislative Gazette. The objective is to galvanize enough support so that these provisions are included in each house’s separate budget bills , and then in the final budget, set for April 1 and negotiated as usual by three men in a room – Speaker Silver, Senate Majority Leader Bruno and Gov. Spitzer.

This is only a month away, and we need to keep the pressure on until then. We are helped by the fact that the Chancellor appears to have lost all credibility with the Legislature.

That same day, there were hearings on the Education budget – and Chancellor Klein was grilled for several hours by NYC Senators and Assembly members. Senators Diaz, Sabini, and Lafayette as well as Assembly Education Chair Nolan and Assembly member Diaz Jr. were extremely critical about the administration'­s record on class size, dropout rates, their slowness in relieving overcrowding and building new schools, the bus route fiasco and their propensity to make up statistics to make it appear as though their reforms have been successful.

What was astonishing to me were not so much these specific critiques – which were right on the money – but the fact that several Legislators said they had tried to meet with Klein for the last six years and he had so far cancelled every appointment; and these are the people who have the future of Mayoral control in their hands!

Senator Diaz had led the charge a few weeks ago when he asked Bloomberg to fire Klein and Walcott. Here is an excerpt from his letter:

Mr. Mayor, you are far away from being "The Education Mayor". I am afraid that if you continue to listen to the advice of Deputy Mayor Dennis Walcott and Chancellor Klein, your legacy will be the "The Education Mess, Confusion and Chaos Mayor" instead of "The Education Mayor". In order to protect our children’s education, stop parents’ anguish, fix the chaos in the system, and for you to avoid further embarrassment, Dennis Walcott and Chancellor Klein should resign or your should fire them.

When Klein claimed in response that parents in the Bronx were happy with several of his reforms, including the new small schools, Diaz responded that he clearly had not had contact with real Bronx parents, or else he would know how unhappy they really are.

Even long time Albany insiders were astonished at the intensity of Klein’s reception; a Daily News article gives a good flavor of the hearings. It starts this way:

“In his two hours before a State legislative committee yesterday, Schools Chancellor Joel Klein tried to accentuate the positive - but the lawmakers weren't buying it. For every success story Klein spouted, legislators had a parallel horror story, questioning whether mayoral control of schools was working.”

And there's a great video clip from NY1 that also mentions our bill. It begins:

“...when the city’s top school official met with lawmakers Tuesday, it was clear that not all is peaceful in Albany.”