Archives for category: NYC

Mayor Bloomberg prides himself on being data-driven. And he has certainly turned the public schools into data-obsessed institutions. Test scores rule all decisions. Accountability matters more than anything else.

One of the proudest achievements of Mayor Bloomberg and former Chancellor Joel Klein was the adoption of report cards for schools, with a single letter grade for each school. Unfortunately, the latest report cards show that the Mayor’s reforms have failed. The Mayor decreed that any school that received an F or a D or three consecutive years of a C is a failing school. After a solid decade in which the schools were controlled solely by the mayor, more than a quarter of the schools are “failing schools.”

By any measure, ten years should be enough to prove that your strategies have worked. But failure continues, year after year, with no victory in sight.

As we see in the following post by a New York City data analyst, New York City’s public schools continue to show dramatic disparities along lines of poverty and disability and language. And large numbers of schools, by the city’s own data, are failing.


How can we improve schools if we refuse to tell the truth?
The recent release of school report card grades in New York City provides another opportunity to evaluate the effectiveness of educational initiatives in the nation’s largest school system. As this is the New York City’s Department of Education’s own data it would seem reasonable to expect that the mayor and his education appointees would use it to evaluate whether or not the things they are doing work.
So what does their data tell us about charter schools? What does it tell us about whether or not New York City’s schools are getting better? Are schools who educate the city’s neediest students getting the support they need? Are the reforms in New York City working? Are the people who run the system willing to accept what their own data is telling them? Or does dogma rule. Let’s look at the facts.
1) What does the Department of Education’s own public data tell us about charter schools in New York City?
Here is the data:
Charter Schools Non-Charter Public Schools
% of special education students 14.2 18.1
% of special education students in “resource room” 5.8 4.4
% of special education students with intermediate needs 3.9 5.9
% of special education students with the greatest needs 2.1 7.7
% of English Language Learners 6.0 14.1
Economic need index .63 .67

What it says:
Charter schools in New York City are not serving the same population as New York City schools overall and certainly not the same population as the other schools in the needy districts they initially opened in. And they are definitely not educating students with the most needs. They serve fewer students with disabilities, fewer English Language Learners, a more economically advantaged population and fewer of the highest needs students. Recent research has shown that charter schools in New York City have a tendency to use suspension and other means to get rid of challenging students. So why does the mayor insist on claiming that charter schools are putting non-charter public schools to shame? Why do his educational appointees repeat the same tired lines? Do they not know that their own data shows that charter schools are not serving the neediest students? Or will they insist of touting charter school no matter what the facts say?
Whatever the answer is, as citizens we must acknowledge that the neediest students deserve an education too and schools that work with such students should not be shamed publicly for taking on the challenge.

2) What does the Department of Education’s own public data tell us about tell us about schools that work with the neediest students?
Here is the data:
Poorest 20 Schools Richest 20 Schools
Average % of students proficient in English 30 88.6
% of students proficient in English in
lowest school in category 8 79.9
% of students proficient in English in
top school in category 59.4 99.5
Average % of students proficient in Math 45.7 91.9
% of students proficient in Math in
lowest school in category 21.4 80.4
% of students proficient in Math in
top school in category 61.8 100

What does it say?
The lowest performing rich school has a 20% higher level of students scoring proficient on the New York State English test than the highest performing poor school. The lowest performing rich school has an almost 20% higher level of students scoring proficient on the New York State Math test than the highest performing poor school.
Although the mayor and his appointees in education insist that poverty is irrelevant their own data suggest that it isn’t. Although they claim that there are schools that prove that poverty is irrelevant their own data shows that the highest performing poor schools don’t even come close to the lowest performing rich schools. This does not mean that we should throw up our hands in despair. What it does mean is that the mayor and his education appointees need to face reality and take ownership of and responsibility for the situation. They need to fund poor schools, at the very least, at the same level as the rich schools. Right now they are giving the rich schools more money than the poor schools. They also refuse to look at what needs to happen inside and outside of schools to help them meet the needs of students from challenging circumstances. They would rather refuse to admit the facts that their own data reveals. Why? Is it because it is easier for them to deny the truth? Is it because they have no idea what to do?

3) What does the Department of Education’s own public data tell us about tell us about the last 10 years of education reform in New York City?
The Data (New York City grades schools on a curve so the number of grades in each category in a single year are predetermined):
23 schools got Fs

80 schools got Ds

114 schools got Cs or lower for each of the past 3 years

3 schools got As that got Fs last year

12 schools got As that got Ds last year

8 schools got Bs that got Fs last year

16 schools got Bs that got Ds last year

6 schools got Cs that got Fs

Roughly 40 other schools got Ds or Fs in one of the 2 years prior to this one, but did not get a C or lower 3 years in a row.

What does it say?
Based on the New York City Department of Education’s own method of school evaluation over 25% of their schools have been deemed failures and worthy of closure (not including schools they are already closing). Of course, although the mayor and his educational appointees swear that the school report card grades are accurate they must know otherwise. After all, they haven’t attempted to close a quarter of all New York City schools!
They claim that the school grades are steady from year to year and point out that only 14% of schools moved more than one grade this year. Of course, since there are only 5 possible grades that doesn’t mean very much. It is like a teacher telling a student “your test grades have held steady between 30% and 90%.”
They give 60% of schools A or B grades but only 10% of schools have 75% or more of their students reading on grade level.
Again we wonder if they know their own data or refuse to acknowledge it for other reasons. Is it easier for them to assign grades with little underlying meaning than to help schools improve?

Juan Gonzalez of the New York Daily News is appalled at the steadily shrinking proportion of black and Hispanic students in the city’s elite exam high schools:

He writes:

In 1999, three years before Michael Bloomberg became mayor, black students comprised 24% of the student body at Brooklyn Tech. This year, the percentage of black students has plummeted to 10%.

Stuyvesant’s student body was nearly 13% black in 1979; it then dropped to 4.8% by 1994; this year it’s an atrocious 1.2%.

Only 1.4% of students offered admission to Stuyvesant this year (13 of 937) were Latino, even though Latinos comprise 40% of all public school eighth-graders and were 21% of students who took the specialized high school test.

Our mayor, Michael Bloomberg, who so often boasts of reducing the racial achievement gap in education, sees absolutely nothing wrong with this picture.

His first schools chancellor, Joel Klein, actually extended the same test to determine admission to five more top city high schools, with similar results.

“Stuyvesant and these other schools are as fair as fair can be,” Bloomberg said. “You pass the test, you get the highest score, you get into the school no matter what your ethnicity, no matter what your economic background is.”

The mayor would have you believe it is all about merit, which even my 13-year-old knows is nonsense.

He acts as if the giant test prep industry isn’t raking in billions of dollars precisely to offer anyone with enough cash a leg up on the rest of the city’s children.

……Asked about this, Bloomberg reacted with his typical rich man’s arrogance.

“Life isn’t always fair,” he told a City Hall reporter. “I don’t know how you would take away the right to get tutoring.”

….It’s time our school system stop glorifying the best-trained test takers and start nurturing great students.dmitted to the city’s elite examination high schools.

Admission to New York City’s elite high schools is determined by one test and one test only. As a result of this policy, few black or Hispanic students are admitted to these schools. Diversity has dropped sharply in the past several years.

Civil rights groups are suing the city.

Consider these startling facts:

“Although 70 percent of the city’s public school students are black and Hispanic, a far smaller percentage have scored high enough to receive offers from one of the schools. According to the complaint, 733 of the 12,525 black and Hispanic students who took the exam were offered seats this year. For whites, 1,253 of the 4,101 test takers were offered seats. Of 7,119 Asian students who took the test, 2,490 were offered seats. At Stuyvesant High School, the most sought-after school, 19 blacks were offered seats in a freshman class of 967.”

Imagine that: Only 19 black students in a class of 967.

At a news conference, Mayor Bloomberg said that the exam schools are “designed for the best and the brightest” and he saw no reason to change the policy or state law that permits it.

Will Hollywood make this movie?

It is not “based on a true story.”

It is a true story.

It is a story of parents and teachers in Red Hook, Brooklyn, who joined together to fight off the invasion of a billionaire-owned charter school.

It is an inspiring story.

The powerless against the powerful.

The people who love the school standing up to those who see it as real estate.

Read and see what happened.

I wrote a post about the NYC Department of Education’s determination to destroy once-esteemed John Dewey High School in Brooklyn. The post was called “The Ugly Face of Reform in New York City.”

First, they turned it into a dump for the low-performing kids rejected by their small schools and charters. Then they began systematically starving it of needed resources. As this comment shows, even the students know the score:

I am currently a student at the school. Many people don’t realize how hurt we really are, we lack so many things. Our budget is dry, insufficient equipment, low enrollment, slashed programs and classes, new inexperienced teachers replacing traditionally great ones that have been their for DECADES before I was even born! We’re turning into a typical high school. A conventional one at that, and that’s not a good thing. There’s no such thing as bands or cycles anymore. Where is the liberty we used to have of changing our schedules to fit our own needs academically? Where is the freedom of being metal detector free (even though many high schools throughout NYC are implementing metal detectors anyway) and where are all the students on the campus?

It’s exasperating. We did not deserve this. I personally try my best to make a number higher in that school, my 92 average is for the school, and for my family. Not necessarily for me. I want to turn that 62% graduation rate into a 63, and I want my classmates to want the same thing. I don’t want Dewey to be another school on the list that reads “Closed Schools Due to Poor Performance” and I certainly do not want Dewey to be restructured into small schools with a sugar coated name. I also do not want another Insideschools page that reads “This school was closed in due to poor performance.” in the header. And no, I hope the administration doesn’t win this time. They’ve closed enough schools, far too many, and this is the breaking point!

Can’t anyone volunteer to be a principal? One who actually cares about the school? Not Elvin and her inexperienced crew. Shockingly, some of the new appointed AP’s have never taught/are not teaching any classes. The DOE knows the demise of Dewey, but they’re purposefully ignoring it. And they can get away with it, like the corporate rats because the people are sheep. A herd of sheep. They would rather kiss *** than to speak up for themselves. It’s sad. This is not like me, I don’t even know how I managed to type this much. Just know this proves my anger, as a Dewey student. This will not be the end for us. Trust me, we’re in this too deep and we’ve fought too much to go down now. The DOE picked the wrong school to mess with. The worst part is that this corruption is not only happening in NYC, but also in Chicago, and other cities.

Remember the story in yesterday’s New York Times that described the increase in income inequality in New York City? That’s the one that said that the gap between the richest quintile and the poorest quintile has not only grown but is one of the largest in the world, putting us in the same league as countries like Namibia.

Well, there is good news from Mayor Bloomberg’s own publishing house. Poverty is really not so bad in the U.S. because the Census Bureau didn’t count all the benefits and transfers that the poor get. So when you read that someone is subsisting on $8,844 a year, don’t forget that they get food stamps! And an earned income tax credit. And so many other freebies. Don’t you feel better already?

Just by coincidence, Forbes published its annual listing of the richest people in the world. It is here: http://www.forbes.com/billionaires/#p_1_s_a0_All%20industries_All%20countries_All%20states_

Mayor Bloomberg is not all that rich. He is #20 on the list with $22 billion.

Everything is relative.

This teacher worked in a New York City public school that won high marks because of its use of teams.

It was an exemplar of “lean production.”

It did all the right things.

Teachers were constantly conferring.

Only problem: the kids weren’t learning.

Read this article and learn about lean production.

With the expanded use of business thinking in education, it’s coming your way.

The New York City Department of Education decided to kill John Dewey High School in Brooklyn a few years ago. John Dewey (ironic name, no?) had long been considered one of the city’s best non-selective high schools.

When the city began creating small schools and closing large schools, it had to find a place to dump low-performing students so that the small schools would appear successful. So John Dewey became a dumping ground for students unwanted by the new small high schools, which the Bloomberg administration treated as the jewel in its crown.

As more students were assigned to Dewey who were far behind their grade level in basic skills or who have special needs, Dewey’s scores began dropping. Soon Dewey was classified as a failing school.

The teachers fought to protect the school, but it was a losing battle. In this article, read how the city has stripped the school of AP courses, electives, foreign languages, etc., and the graduation rate dropped. As the school was picked apart, enrollment fell, and teachers were laid off. This is a death spiral created by the NYC Department of Education. This year’s school opening was marked by scheduling confusion, not only at Dewey, but other so-called “turnaround” schools that are locked in a legal battle over when and if they will get the “turnaround” treatment (meaning, will the staff be fired and the school closed).

It is a war of attrition, and the administration will win.

Next time you hear a story about the “success” of New York City’s small high schools, remember John Dewey High School.

Arthur Goldstein, veteran English teacher in Queens, New York, is tired of all those meetings and all those consultants, all those well-paid traveling professional developers who waste his time with the latest Big Thing. Until the next Big Thing comes along. He wishes they would leave him alone and let him teach.

A reader comments on an earlier post by a Chicago teacher who explained why he was striking:

I was a high school teacher in New York City, and I agree 100% with Kevin. Before teaching in NY I was a public school teacher in Hong Kong. What struck me the most about teaching in the US is that teachers here are expected to be “supermen” and “superwomen” who should be able to turn classrooms of kids, no matter how difficult and how little support they receive from parents and politically-driven administrators, into high-achieving academic-minded students.

The worst schools in Hong Kong have their own school campus (buildings and playgrounds). In NYC, 5 schools share one building, and the students are shut in the classrooms the whole day with only one lunch break. Their gym class takes place in a parking lot.

The American culture, more than any I have know, places supreme importance on glamour, fame, money, beautiful bodies; modeling and entertainment industries are highly esteemed and looked up to. Teenage sex is not eschewed upon in the name of freedom; public school teachers are mandated to hand out condoms to students who ask for them.

Teachers, day-in and day-out, have to fight this up-hill battle against the overwhelming larger culture, to tell students not to take short cuts or the easy way out, that having boyfriends to show off and thinness are not as important as hard work, kindness, and discipline.

“No,” the administrators say, “If you class is interesting enough, students will be engaged and they will do better in their grades.” And so if anything goes wrong with the children, if they are not learning, it is the teacher’s responsibility!

There are irresponsible and horrible, lazy teachers in the profession, just like in any other profession, but the system and the treatment of teachers–which largely comes from being ignorant of what the teaching job entails–make it extremely difficult if not impossible for the ones who have the heart to teach to do it.

Being Asian, I’m shocked and appalled at how little respect the teaching profession receives in this country, as reflected in the political dialogue, from both Republicans and Democrats, and in the salaries teachers receive compared to other professions. Get this, on the salary chart that I received when I first started teaching, the maximum salary that a teacher could ear was a little over $80,000K, that is, if the teacher possesses a PhD degree and has taught 25 years.