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Bloomberg/Klein wage war on traditional public high schools

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tonysam Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-09-09 06:36 PM
Original message
Bloomberg/Klein wage war on traditional public high schools
There is no longer any pretense on what Mayor Michael Bloomberg nd Chancellor Joel Klein wants to do with the large traditional high schools in New York City. They have targeted them for extermination and use the space for small and possible charter schools. In turn, there will be hundreds of additional ATRs added to the ATR ranks, many of them senior teachers as the replacement schools only hire the young, cheap, and nontenured teachers. The media rags, the New York Post & Daily News will rant about the over 200 million dollars the DOE must pay for the over 2,000 ATRs and demand a time limit. Meanwhile, our union will remain defensive and hunker down and hope the bad press will go away.

What about the children? Bloomberg & Klein do not care about the children. For them it is "education on the cheap" and "blame the teacher" for the administrative mismanagement of the schools. Since I am familiar with Queens, let's see how Tweed caused this mess in the first place and the falling of the dominoes associated with the closing of the large traditional high schools..


Years ago under Joel Klein's tenure, Tweed closed down four large traditional high schools in southern Queens. August Martin, Far Rockaway, Springfield Gardens, and Franklin K. Lane . The small schools that replaced these closed schools were allowed to exclude English Language Learners and Special education students for the first couple of years, Moreover, the schools worked hard to discourage level one students with behavioral or attendance problems from selecting their schools by claiming to the parents that their school could not provide the services to help their child and that the large traditional high school would be a better choice. The result was that schools like Beach Channel high school received an influx of these low achieving students once slated to go to Far Rockaway high school. The same happened to Jamaica high school as these very same low achieving students from Springfield Gardens & August Martin high schools ended up at Jamaica high school. The result was a destabilization of both schools who are now slated for closing. Now what happens to these low achieving students who would normally go to both schools? Well if I was a staff member of John Adams, Richmond Hill, Martin Van Buren, and Hillcrest high schools, look for your schools to be destabilized and slated for closing in the next year or two and be welcomed to the ever expanding ATR ranks.

link


What goes on in this school district will be the trend nationally.
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corpseratemedia Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-09-09 07:29 PM
Response to Original message
1. public schools
another public commons being raped and destroyed by corporations


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tonysam Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-09-09 07:30 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. That's it in a nutshell. n/t
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Smarmie Doofus Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-10-09 05:08 AM
Response to Original message
3. Logic dictates that this will EXPAND and not streamline ....
Edited on Thu Dec-10-09 05:09 AM by Smarmie Doofus
>>>>>>>> use the space for small and possible charter schools. In turn, there will be hundreds of additional ATRs added to the ATR ranks, many of them senior teachers as the replacement schools only hire the young, cheap, and nontenured teachers. The media rags, the New York Post & Daily News will rant about the over 200 million dollars the DOE must pay for the over 2,000 ATRs and demand a time limit. >>>>>

bureaucracy. Each small school creates an instant ( largely artificial) "demand" for more out of classroom staff. Principal, APs ( sometimes more than one) Dean, Curriculum Coordinator, Literacy Coach, Behavior Management Specialist, .... there must be a machine somewhere cranking out these friggin' titles... and all the extra clerical/secretarial staff.

Principals will be happy: there will be more principalships and cushy, made-up jobs for those who know the secret handshake. So... where's the $$$ savings not to mention the benefit to kids?

This is not "reform"... it is the opposite of reform.

That teachers as a class will get screwed is a given and is more than likely the aim.
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tonysam Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-10-09 01:19 PM
Response to Original message
4. It won't be long and teachers will be paid the same as child care teachers
Eight dollars an hour, few or no benefits, and lots and lots of turnover.

Faculty morale and students' learning environment be damned.

After all, "anybody" can teach.
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