Showing posts with label community education council. Show all posts
Showing posts with label community education council. Show all posts

Saturday, March 28, 2009

National Action Network’s Annual Convention | April 1 - 4, 2009

Event: National Action Network’s Annual Convention

Fee: Free and open to the public; please register

Location:
Sheraton Hotel & Towers (811 7th Ave., NY, NY)

Time & Day & Date:
Thursday, April 2, 2009 (Entire Conference April 1-4th)
  • 10:00 -11:00 am: Plenary Session: Arne Duncan, United States Secretary of Education
  • 6:00 - 7:30 pm: American Conversation: Reverend Al Sharpton and Newt Gingrich
Friday, April 3rd: Education Equality Project Day
  • 10-11:30 am: "How to ensure a high-quality education for your child"
    Featuring:
    Joe Williams, Democrats For Ed Reform
    Ginny Ford, Executive Director of D.C. Parents for School Choice [PRO CHARTER]
    Kyesha Bennett, Harlem Parents United [PRO CHARTER]
    Bill Jackson, GreatSchools.net
  • 11:30 am - 2:30 pm: Luncheon - A Conversation on Education
    Featuring:
    Reverend Al Sharpton – President/Founder, National Action Network
    Joel Klein – Chancellor of New York City Public Schools
    James Mtume – Radio Personality
    Margaret Spellings - Former United States Secretary of Education
    Adrian Fenty – Mayor, Washington, DC
    Mike Bloomberg – Mayor, New York City
    Antonio Villaraigoso – Mayor, Los Angeles
    Kevin Johnson – Mayor, Sacramento
    Claudio Sanchez –National Public Radio
  • 4:00-5:30 pm: Panel: "Schools that work"
    Featuring:
    Kevin Chavous, Former Chair of the Washington D.C. Council Education Committee
    David Whitman, Author of Sweating the Small Stuff
    Jarvis Sanford, Principal of Dodge Renaissance School
    Ben Chavis, Principal of American Indian Public Charter School in Oakland
    Ryan Hill, TEAM Academy
    Steve Barr – Green Dot Schools
Co-sponsor: EEP.

Background:
Join the National Action Network in New York City on April 2nd and 3rd as leaders like U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigoso, Washington D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty, Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson, and former U.S. Education Secretary Margaret Spellings discuss how to close the achievement gap in our public schools and restore the civil rights of children to an equal education.

The event is part of the National Action Network’s annual convention. It brings together leaders from government, nonprofits, and the business world to discuss today’s pressing civil rights issues. The discussion will focus on the building blocks we can put in place today to close the achievement gap.

LINK: http://www.educationequalityproject.org/page/s/NANconvention

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Mayor Bloomberg and Joel Klein determined to keep parents seen, not heard

Mayor Bloomberg and Joel Klein determined to keep parents seen, not heard

Updated Wednesday, February 25th 2009, 12:11 PM

Public school parents in this town should be seen and not heard - no matter what state law says.

That's the kind of dictatorship Mayor Bloomberg and Chancellor Joel Klein seem determined to wield over our school system - until someone in Albany gets up the nerve to stop them.

All across the city, parents who serve on local Community Education Councils are furious. The CECs replaced the old community school boards after the Legislature eliminated the Board of Education in 2003 and gave Bloomberg greater control of the schools.

Several provisions of that law were intended to assure parents had some oversight over the mayor's new powers.

Klein and his aides have repeatedly flouted those provisions, CEC leaders say.

The most recent example is a spate of school closings and Klein's creation of dozens of new small schools, all without bothering to consult CECs in the affected districts.

Take Public School 241 in West Harlem. The Department of Education announced last fall it was phasing out the school because of poor performance.

Two weeks ago, Klein's aides suddenly informed the District 3 education council that Harlem Success Academy 4, one of several nonprofit charter schools run by former City Councilwoman Eva Moskowitz, will move into the PS 241 building in September.

That will leave the neighborhood with no regular elementary school for its zone, except for the Moskowitz charter school.

John White, head of portfolio management for Klein, defended the decision.

"Most parents in the northern part of District 3 are already choosing not to attend their zoned school," because of its poor record, White said.

Those children who don't want to apply to the new charter school will be given priority to attend other nearby public schools, he added.

In effect, White and Klein have rezoned a neighborhood school.

State education law requires that the local CEC approve any such zoning change.

"This is a significant change that has been made without any consultation with us," said Jennifer Freeman, member of the District 3 CEC.

Then there's the new 300-student high school for educationally troubled youngsters that the DOE was planning to put into PS 173 in Washington Heights, a thriving school lucky enough to boast a dance studio, a huge science lab and full-size art room.

When they learned the educrats at Tweed were moving forward with the plan, PS 173 parents and local political leaders organized a protest three weeks ago.

Now the people at Tweed are having second thoughts.

"It became apparent that the parents [at PS 173] are concerned," White said. Putting the new high school there is now "one possibility of several scenarios," he said.

In East New York, Brooklyn, parents at PS 72 were suddenly informed that their failing school will be phased out and replaced by two new schools.

Councilman Charles Barron, who organized a protest at the school two weeks ago, said the DOE has starved the school of resources.

"They don't have a decent library, no computers, no science lab and the new principal has been there only one year," Barron said.

"They never had any discussion with the CEC," said Virginia Carlton, a parent at the school.

By June, lawmakers in Albany will have to decide whether to reauthorize mayoral control of city schools.

The way Klein and Bloomberg keep abusing the law, the Legislature needs to put some stronger safeguards against a complete dictatorship.

jgonzalez@nydailynews.com

LINK: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/education/2009/02/24/2009-02-24_mayor_bloomberg_and_joel_klein_determine.html