Thanks to the tireless work of Leonie Haimson, Class Size Matters, and her hardy band of parent advocates, New York City is reducing class sizes to meet the requirements of state law. After 25 years of failed “reforms” like high-stakes testing, competition, merit pay, and choice, the city is finally embarked on a reform that has a solid research base and actually helps students. Teachers can devote more time to each students. Discipline problems will be less.
New York City is hiring teachers!
Ahead of a key deadline to reduce class sizes, New York City’s sprawling school system will spend upwards of $400 million as it races to fill 3,700 new teaching positions by the fall, new data shows.
Under the state’s 2022 class size law, 60% of classrooms must comply next school year with caps between 20 and 25 students, depending on grade level. It’s expected to be the first time schools have to make real changes to abide by the regulation.
To meet that benchmark, principals developed and had approved 741 school-specific plans in exchange for more funding. Schools Chancellor Melissa Aviles-Ramos and her deputies revealed during a City Council hearing on Tuesday that costs associated with those plans will top $400 million, paid for with a combination of state and city funds.
While nearly all schools will use those dollars to bring on more teachers, some also expect to hire about 100 assistant principals or convert spaces into classrooms.

great news! Now on to limiting student hours per teacher. No teacher should ever be responsible for more than 80 students a week.
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So refreshing to get some positive news these days. You go, NYC!
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Great to hear some good news these days. You go, NY!
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Although I have gripes with Mike Mulgrew and the Unity caucus; he’s been heavily involved in this push for lowering class sizes, as well.
I’m a delegate for the Retired Teachers Chapter and attend all the Delegate Assemblies. Reducing class sizes has been a consistent topic for a while, now.
Another point that’s been brought up is additional construction funding for schools that need more physical space in order to comply with the class size mandate.
This is definitely great news and kudos to all involved in making it happen!
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Now the NYCDOE must fill these jobs–no small feat, I submit, when there is forecast for school year 2025-2026 a shortage of 200,000 teachers nationwide.
If I knew when I became a teacher what I know now about the profession? I’d have gone back to loading, driving, and unloading trucks.
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