Showing posts with label Harlem Success Academy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harlem Success Academy. Show all posts

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Only 700 applicants with how many tens of thousands of flyers and ads? Pretty low return rate.

 
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Parents at an Upper West Side high school are suing the city and incoming Schools Chancellor Dennis Walcott to stop an elementary charter school from moving into their building.Parents at the Brandeis Educational Complex want to block a plan by the Department of Education to move the Charter Success Academy into the building that currently houses four small high schools on West 84th Street.
Among the things the lawsuit alleges is that the DOE used inaccurate enrollment figures at the high schools in making its proposal.
Supporters of the suit say the plan will lead to overcrowding and a loss of space for science labs, classrooms and arts programs.
"Here's a chance with a very high-profile situation for the Department of Education to say, 'You know what? We're willing to listen to parents, we're willing to be flexible,'" said Public Advocate Bill de Blasio.
"They spread out, and the pre-existing schools get less resources, less space and less opportunity for the kids to learn," said Ric Cherwin of Global Learning Collaborative.
NY1 has reached out to the Department of Education for comment.
In a statement, a spokesperson for the Success Charter Network says in part, "This is a frivolous lawsuit that seeks to deny the 700 Upper West Side families who applied to Upper West Success Academy access to another great public school in their neighborhood."

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Please Join Our Press Conference and Protest Today to Reject the Success Charter Network's Pending District 3 Application and Co-Location at PS 145: Tuesday 10/19, 3:45 PM at PS 145, 150 West 105th Street


For Immediate Release

Please Join Assemblyman Danny O'Donnell, Council Member Gale Brewer, Other
Elected Officials, Community and School Representatives, and District 3
Parents at a Press Conference Today, 10/19 at 3:45 pm at PS 145 (150 West
105th between Amsterdam and Columbus) to Reject the Success Charter
Network's "Upper West Success" Application and Instead Improve the Prospects
of All of Our District 3 Schools

Currently, the SUNY Board of Trustees is considering an application
submitted by Success Charter Networks for a new K-8 school to be co-located
within a district school building within Community School District 3.
Apparently, however, the legislated charter approval process and its public
input component do not apply to Eva Moscowitz and her Success Charter
Network Schools. While the SUNY Board of Trustees vote on her latest
Success Charter network application has yet to take place (it is planned for
tomorrow, 10/20), and no building location has been specified within her
pending 1000+ page charter application, Ms. Moscowitz has picked out a
public school building of her choice and already begun advertising her new
"Upper West Success" school at bus stops on the Upper West Side and on a
website.

IMG_0411.JPG

Meanwhile, the faculty, parents and administration at Ms. Moscowitz's target
location, PS 145, are none too happy to have been told by the DOE's Office
of Portfolio Planning that the SUNY vote and the mandated Educational Impact
Statement process for co-location already is a foregone conclusion: "We
were informed by the DOE last week that it is 95% certain that the new
Success Charter School will be co-locating within our school come next
September" said PS 145 PTA President Tina Crockett.

In fact SUNY had scheduled a vote to approve the application over a month
ago on September 15, long before the end of the required 45 day public
comments period for charter applications, but postponed the vote after being
threatened by a lawsuit from the District 3's Community Education Council,
and the Co-Presidents of the Parent Elected Citywide Council on Special
Education, Jaye Bea Smalley and John Englert in the attached letter.
"Clearly, SUNY knew it would have broken the law by approving the Success
Charter application in the middle of the 45 day mandatory public comments
period," stated CEC 3 President Noah E Gotbaum.

The CEC 3/CCSE Presidents' letter further protested a SUNY Trustee's
sub-committee resolution recommending approval of Success Charter's
application only 11 days after the application had been filed. The late
August draft SUNY resolution also claimed that "no comments" on the
application had even been received by SUNY, a statement met with amazement
by the dozens of District 3 parents and community members who had sent in
emails to SUNY seeking Success Charter's rejection.

When queried by the CEC on this omission of community input into the
application process, SUNY Charter Institute Director Jonas Chartock
explained that the only "comments" the Trustees "are required by statute to
have considered..prior to a vote" are those sent in by Chancellor Klein, who
in fact had not forwarded any comments on the application. Is this the
public input process as envisioned by the legislature?

And what happened to the dozens of comments from the community not penned by
the Chancellor? According to Ralph Rossi, Vice President for Legal Affairs
at SUNY, those are to be summarized by SUNY and sent to the Trustees at any
point in the approval process. Mr Rossi continued, however, that many of
these comments became "null and void" after Ms. Moscowitz's organization
suddenly withdrew its application on the last day of a prior public comments
period, only to reapply a few days later - with a clean slate and no
community comments on record to that point.

Back at PS 145, the school's plans to increase its enrollment and reach into
the broader Upper West Side and Harlem Community are under threat by the
Success Charter incursion. In fact there is a palpable fear that PS 145
students will be squeezed into hallways and basement space as has occurred
in PS 149 and PS 241, the other District 3 schools co-located with Ms.
Moscowitz's Success Charter schools. The PS 145 community is justifiably
worried that eventually it may have to close down completely in order to
accommodate the 698 proposed Success Charter students, since by the DOE's
own assessment there are only 320 unutilized seats within the PS 145
building.

Where will the remaining 370 seats come from needed to accommodate the
Success Charter application? The DOE isn't saying. Given, however, that
many of PS 145's students are in self-contained Special Education classes -
which not one of Ms. Moscowitz's schools offer - possibilities are extremely
limited for a substantial number of PS 145 students to move across the hall
and matriculate in the newly established charter. Regardless, in a rezoning
plan unveiled last week to CEC3, the DOE proposed to freeze the 145 zone
size thereby limiting its enrollment increases and maintaining the
building's "underutilized" status for the pre-ordained Success Charter
co-location. "Underutilized buildings are extremely hard to come by and as
such we seek to use them for co-locating new schools" commented Elizabeth
Rose, the Director of the DOE's Office of Portfolio Planning.

Sadly, Success Charter's approval and co-location within the PS 145 building
likely will negatively reverberate far beyond the Bloomingdale School
community and across all of District 3, not simply by taking up seats that
our overcrowded district desperately needs, but also by putting at risk a
Federal magnet grant awarded to PS 145 and seven other District 3 schools.
The $11 million grant, which seeks to increase racial integration and
performance, stipulates that every magnet school involved must have adequate
space to grow their programs in line with the grant application. In PS
145's case this is not a curtailment of students but rather an increase in
racial diversity and enrollment of some 8-10% over a 3 year period. The
grant further stipulates that if one school is out of compliance, as PS 145
is likely to be, all schools will be, thereby forfeiting the grant funding
for all 8 of the magnet schools.

For these and numerous other reasons as delineated in the attached Class
Size Matters and CEC3 comments on the Success Charter Application, and the
PS 145 Community Comments - we ask that you join Assemblyman Daniel
O'Donnell, Councilmember Gale Brewer, PS 145 and District 3 Teachers,
Administrators and Parents, and Elected members of Community Education
Council 3 and the Citywide Council on Special Education today at 3:45, at PS
145 - 150 West 105th Street between Columbus and Amsterdam.

For comments and questions, please contact:

Noah E Gotbaum - President, Community Education Council District 3: 917
658 3213

Tina Crockett - President, PS 145 Parent Association: 646 315 4462

Jaye Bea Smalley - Co-President, Citywide Council on Special Education*:
917-601-8924

John Englert - Co-President, Citywide Council on Special Education*: 973
907 0319

Leonie Haimson - Executive Director, Class Size Matters: 917 435 9329

*for affiliation purposes.

Thursday, July 29, 2010

CEC 3 Public Comments on the proposed new Harlem Success Academy charter school in District 3

Some of you might be interested in the letter below we sent from CEC3 to the SUNY Charter Institute against the proposed 2011 co-location of a 3rd Harlem Success Academy within D3.  Somewhat surprisingly, SUNY/HSA decided to pull their application sometime on 7/23, either hours before or hours after the 5 pm public comments deadline.  This is the second time within the last 12 months that HSA has at the last minute pulled a public application to expand in D3, perhaps because of the avalanche of anti-HSA letters sent last week to SUNY from every part of our District.   It could also be due, however, to Eva’s belief that she needn’t be bothered with HSA’s charter guidelines, public comments or the law, and instead can simply can expand by Klein/Moscowitz fiat as she is trying to do at PS 241.


Subject: CEC 3 Public Comments on the proposed new Harlem Success Academy charter school in District 3

To the SUNY Charter School Institute;

As District 3's elected public school parent representatives, we, the members of Community District Education Council 3, strongly oppose the proposed 2011 co-location of an additional Harlem Success Academy branch in District 3.

Firstly, elementary school overcrowding has become endemic to District 3 and there is no room for the co-location of Harlem Success without increasing this already dire situation. Overcrowding predominates in the Southern portion of the district and given the level of new development in Harlem, such overcrowding is moving uptown.  Unfortunately, SCA and DOE projections have continually underestimated this enrollment growth - and overestimated existing capacity - leading to increased overcrowding.  Witness the DOE/SCA suggestion to expand the size of the PS 87 zone which one year later has become the most overcrowded zone in New York City.  Additionally, after repeatedly saying that D3 was not overcrowded, the DOE was forced to backtrack and to admit that their numbers were flawed, leading them to create a new school, PS 452, at the last minute and at the expense of our middle school seats.

Yet even if we use the SCA's own projections for 2012 showing a capacity of 4,043 middle school and elementary school seats and projected enrollment of 3,745 students in Harlem, the 298 available seats the DOE show will not suffice for the proposed new school planned by Harlem Success.  And these numbers assume that all the students in the new HSA school would come from District 3, which - unlike the strict in-district policy being imposed by the DOE on all of our D3 elementary and middle schools - is not even the case for Harlem Success who will be drawing students from a number of districts.  Why the favoritism?  And why have they been promised a place within our district?

Additionally, the New York State Legislature has made it clear that any impact of co-locations must be assessed in advance and reviewed with the community including the CEC, as well as with the affected schools.  Yet SUNY and Harlem Success's application provides no specific information for location of the proposed new school.   Without a specific proposed location for Harlem Success, how are we supposed to assess its impact on the community and the schools with which it is co-locating?  Where is the transparency and accountability that the legislature demands, and that SUNY repeatedly has promised? 

Sadly, even without the ability to measure the probable impact of the new Harlem Success co-location, we in District 3 would likely reject a new HSA branch out of hand based on our previous negative experiences with Harlem Success co-locations within our District schools, PS 149 and PS 241.  In fact, unlike our experience with other charter schools co-located within District 3 buildings, relations between Harlem Success and their District 3 host schools are uniformly terrible with our District school children being made to feel as second class citizens within the own buildings.  This comes down to a lack of cooperation by Harlem Success's management team, who fail to share resources, segregate their classrooms and hallways from their District school neighbors, and routinely and falsely demonize those co-located district schools as "failures."   It is also due to the DOE favoring Harlem Success's growth at the expense of our District Schools - as they once again are proposing to do. 

Witness PS 241 where Harlem Success IV - which originally was authorized to grow by 125 students next year - now is slated to expand by 175 without any public discussion or review.  And to make room for this unauthorized expansion of HSA IV in an already overcrowded building, PS 241 students are being moved out of their three ground floor classrooms into the school’s basement, including an as yet to be converted food service room.  Additionally, Harlem Success is being authorized to provide Pre-K services in the new school, whereas over the past 24 months the DOE has summarily cut fully enrolled pre-k sections at District 3 schools PS 185 and PS 241. 

The sad message of Harlem Success's proposed expansion at the expense of District 3 schools is and has been that our D3 public school kids are less worthy than their charter counterparts.  It says that it's ok to cut district school programs and shove more and more of our kids - many of whom are English Language learners or have significant special needs which Harlem Success and most other charters don't even pretend to address - into our increasingly overcrowded public school buildings.  

Overcrowding, favoritism toward a small minority of kids, poor relations among schools, and a lack of responsibility to educate all of our District 3 students are only a few of the reasons why District 3's CEC urges you to reject the Harlem Success application.

Yours sincerely,

Community District Education Council 3


Sunday, June 20, 2010

Mosaic Prep/HSA Charter Invasion Follow-up

Follow-up to this story on Ed Notes:

Eva Moskowitz Wants Mosaic Prep Academy- Hearing, Monday

There are hearings on this illegal expansion of Harlem Success 3 on Monday at 141 E 111 ST; come by 4;30 - 5 PM if you want to speak.

The below letter from Rose Jimenez is addressed to Jonas Chartock, the head of the SUNY charter institute, as well as Pedro Noguera, head of the charter committee for SUNY, which has to approve every charter authorized by SUNY, as well as any charter revision, which this is.


Dear Mr. Chartock and Prof. Noguera:

As a parent at Mosaic Prep Academy (PS 375) and a member of the Community Education Council in District 4 in East Harlem, I do not understand how the SUNY Charter School Institute could consider allowing Harlem Success Academy 3, a school that is co-located in our building, to revise its charter to substantially expand from 363 students to 468 students next fall.

Any such expansion would obviously require a significant change in our school building’s utilization, without any of the public procedures outlined in the school governance law having been implemented.

As I’m sure you are aware, the governance law, A8903, requires that any significant change in public school utilization in New York City must be preceded by an Educational Impact Statement issued at least six months before the start of the new school year, as well as a joint hearing of the DOE, the CEC and the School Leadership Team at the affected school; and finally, a vote of the Panel for Educational Policy.

None of these events have occurred in this case, and in fact, it is too late for the DOE or SUNY to allow any expansion of the school to occur without warning so late in the school year, unless these additional students would attend classes elsewhere in a non-DOE building.

A SUNY hearing on the expansion and charter revision of Harlem Success Academy 3 is due to occur this Monday, June 21, at 5:30 PM.

I would very much like to hear from you before that time as to how SUNY could countenance such a potentially illegal expansion.

Yours sincerely,

Rose Jimenez, CEC District 4 and PS 375 Parent Association President



Patrick Sullivan, Manhattan PEP rep, corresondence with Ralph Rossi of SUNY, supposedly the governing body for HSA appeals to modify the charter.

To: Rossi, Ralph
Cc: mosaicparentassociation@univision.com; Charter Schools;
robertjacksonnyc@gmail.com; efox@council.nyc.gov;
classsizematters@gmail.com; MDuffy12@schools.nyc.gov; Erin McGill;
cec4@schools.nyc.gov; pednoguera@gmail.com; Joel Klein
Subject: Re: ILLEGAL CHARTER PROPOSAL

Mr. Rossi,

Ms. Jimenez refers to the schools governance law passed by the State
Legislature in August. As the Manhattan member of the city school
board ("Panel for Educational Policy") I can assure you that none of
the legally mandated process for such a significant change in
utilization of a public school building was followed in this case.
There has been no Educational Impact Statement, no joint hearing of
the Mosaic SLT with the Community Educational Council of District 4
and no vote of the Panel for Educational Policy.

I alerted DOE General Council Michael Best several weeks ago of the
need to follow the required process in this case and several others
involving SUNY chartered schools. I have been told DOE is looking
into the matter but there has been no response otherwise.

The SUNY trustees have a legal obligation to ensure all legally
mandated procedures are followed prior to allowing the expansion of a
SUNY chartered school. Expansion of HSA 3 in the Mosaic building
without adherence to the above process constitutes a violation of law
for which SUNY trustees must be held accountable.

Frankly, given that SUNY recently came very close to losing its
chartering authority, I am extremely disappointed that its first
instinct is to deny any responsibility for compliance with the very
clear guidelines under state education law. This law was implemented
to protect public school students from the very type of encroachment
now being attempted by HSA. Instead of washing their hands of the
very real issues facing Manhattan public schools in co-location
situations, I suggest the trustees begin to more seriously consider
their moral and legal obligations to help all our students.

Patrick J. Sullivan
Manhattan Member
Panel for Educational Policy
NYC Board of Education

On Sat, Jun 19, 2010 at 10:12 AM, Rossi, Ralph Ralph.Rossi@suny.edu wrote:

I am not in the office now but it is SUNY's understanding that all of the steps for the expansion took place before the passage of the amendments to the charter schools act. The hearing would NOT be co-location hearing by the NYCDOE or a SUNY hearing on facility. Rather it is a NYCDOE revision hering required by the charter schools act for a material change to a charter located in the district, in this case enrollment. The timing of the hearing is required by regs of the State Education Commissioner and based on notice by SUNY to the NYCDOE. You can direct any questions about the space process to the NYCDOE.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Haimson on Eva's saturation charter school mailings

Subject: [nyceducationnews] Eva's saturation charter school mailings

See this message from a friend who lives on the Upper West side with a child entering Kindergarten next year, who has received multiple mailings from the Harlem Success Academy in the week:
Today we received the 3d or 4th mailing in the last week from the Harlem Success Academy, looking to enroll [his son’s name].
This really surprises me:
A. How do they get the $ to do direct mail & find out what kids are going to start kindergarten?
B. Why are they direct mailing to White couples on 102nd?
Really curious if you have any thoughts or insight - -
The infamous Eva Moskowitz/Joel Klein emails, FOILed by Juan Gonzalez of the Daily News and posted here, revealed how Klein overturned long-standing policy to provide her with names and addresses of prospective parents through mailing houses; and allowed her to make repeated mailings to promote her chain of charter schools.
Juan’s column in which he showed how she picked out the space she wanted for her schools in existing zoned public schools, which Klein then tried to illegally close for her benefit, is here ;Juan’s earlier column about the preferential treatment she received from Klein, including his help in getting her a $1 million grant from the Broad foundation to build an army of parents to promote their political agenda, is here.
In her emails to Klein, Eva confides her desire to engage in saturation mailings, supposedly to promote “choice”, but really to build up her waiting list; which then she uses as a political weapon in their battle to lift the charter cap.
This may be one reason DOE is making parents register for Kindergartens earlier at public schools, so they can capture their addresses and make them available to charter schools in time for their lotteries.
Though Eva told the NY Times she spends $325,000 on recruitment, a cursory examination of the school’s financial statements shows that her spending on recruitment is actually much more. She has run ads in buses and is now also advertising on NY1. The actual expense must be near a million dollars or more.
Harlem Children’s Zone was featured on American Express ads during the Oscars.
Of course, no district public school could afford this sort of marketing campaign; and if they did, they would be accused of wasteful spending.
Here is Eva’s message to Klein, dated Dec. 21, 2007, in which she says though DOE only allows “one mailing to elementary and pre-K families” she wants to be able to mail promotional materials 10-12 times to each family.
As in all things between Klein and Eva, she gets her way. Her choices are clearly maximized!
Soon thereafter, she is provided with unlimited mailings through a third party mailing house to prospective public school parents.
Here is Michael Duffy’s reply, the head of the DOE charter school office, written the day after Xmas, in which he pledges cooperation and tells her she can always call him, day or night, on his cell:
No one could argue that this is an equal contest, when all the advantages are being given charter schools; not to mention Klein’s relentless promotion of charters, which is priceless.
Eva has now extended the reach of her mailings into large swathes of Manhattan and the Bronx. As one astute observer pointed out, this not only allows her to build up her charter school waiting list, but also to gather names for future battles over the charter school cap, funding, or her own future candidacy.
Her repeated mailings and advertising, financed through contributions from her hedge-fund supporters and billionaires like Broad, resemble the saturation mailings and domination of the air waves that New Yorkers have been subjected to by our billionaire mayor, each time he runs for re-election, sparing no expense.
Just as he has bought his way into a third term, the hostile takeover of public education by charter schools has nearly unlimited financing to back it up. Is this the future we really want for our public schools?

Monday, September 14, 2009

Two GEM NYC Teachers on "The Charter School Invasion of Harlem"


The charter school invasion of Harlem

New York City teachers Emily Giles and Bill Linville describe how the drive to spread charter schools affected one public school in Harlem--and how teachers, parents and the community are organizing an opposition.

P.S. 123 is one of New York City's "well developed" schools, according to Department of Education (DOE) standards.

Also called the Mahalia Jackson Elementary School, it was so successful that the DOE approved a proposal to add 7th grade classes for the 2009-2010 school year--and according to a teacher at P.S. 123, more than 600 students applied.

But P.S. 123 doesn't have the space to accommodate those students. Teachers at the school are dismayed at the loss of two science labs, the United Federation of Teachers (UFT) lounge, a parent room with computers for parent GED prep classes, half the library and the social studies room.

As a matter of fact, the "well developed" P.S. 123 lost an entire floor for this school year. Strangely enough, as the school was given DOE approval to grow, the very same DOE took away classrooms and program space.

That space was given to a charter school called the Harlem Success Academy II (HSA II), the second such academy founded by former City Councilwoman Eva Moskowitz, opened inside the P.S. 123 building one year ago.

Initially, HSA II was scheduled to move this school year to P.S. 194, another public school in the area that already houses a different charter school. But after a pushback from P.S. 194 teachers and parents, HSA II remains inside P.S. 123.

And not only is it staying--it's growing.

Like P.S. 123, HSA II submitted a proposal to add new grades and increase enrollment this year. Both schools were given permission to add classes, but HSA II gained space while P.S. 123 is losing it.

Thus, according to a P.S. 123 teacher, HSA II now has two science labs for 1st graders and Kindergarten students, while P.S. 123 science teachers are sharing one science lab for elementary and middle school science classes. And keep in mind, the teacher emphasized, that P.S. 123, and not HSA II, teaches science for grades that face high-stakes standardized tests.

What's most alarming about the P.S. 123 story is that it isn't unique. The same pattern of new charter schools moving into community public schools is happening across Harlem, where the charter school invasion is at its fiercest, and now across the city, where two dozen new charter schools opened across the city, and more are on the way.

What is unique about P.S. 123, however, is the way that teachers stood up to the activities of Eva Moskowitz and HSA--a struggle that gained momentum this summer and will continue into the new school year as HSA II continues to operate inside P.S. 123.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

MOSKOWITZ MADE the first move at the beginning of this summer. She hired private movers to come into P.S. 123 classrooms, pack up teachers' belongings and put them in the gymnasium, so HSA II could begin its takeover--all without even notifying P.S. 123 staff.

The movers came in and attempted to break into teachers' rooms, but many teachers stood their ground. "I told the other teachers to sit in front of their doors and don't move," one teacher said. "And don't let anybody touch you. If anybody touches you, it's on. You're not coming and breaking and entering with the person right there."

After New York City police and the DOE were called, the move was stopped. But on a walk-through of the school some days later, Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer found "a whole lot of boxes that are unmarked--people's supplies and resources moved into spaces of the school," he said. "No marking of what classroom they came from, no teacher's name on the boxes. They were basically packed up and pushed out. That's what's all over the school."

When students returned to school last week on September 9, materials were still piled up in classrooms, thanks to HSA's dump and run--and the refusal of teachers to clean up after them. Meanwhile, say teachers, HSA II's hallways inside the building have new lighting, remodeled bathrooms (with potpourri!), and every classroom has brand-new air conditioners.

This arrogance provoked protests throughout the summer, and the first day of school was no exception. Beginning at 6:30 a.m., more than two dozen demonstrators gathered outside of the HSA II entrance to the building.

When Moscowitz showed up, she claimed to the media that the protesters were scaring the children--and even had children up outside the building (which they normally don't do) to make it look like the picket line was blocking their entrance.

As parents from P.S. 123 came to drop off their children, parent leaders gathered them together and spoke about the conditions inside the school. The parents tried to enter the building to see for themselves, but were prevented from doing so by the principal. Yet later in the morning, reporters from the right-wing New York Post showed up and claimed that the schools chancellor had given them permission to enter.

After the first week of classes, some of the effects of HSA II's growth at the expense of P.S. 123 began to emerge: a class that lost its room to HSA was meeting in the basement, but had to be relocated after the children and teachers were having difficulty breathing; the former library is now a combination of several classrooms, and students and teachers have difficulty hearing each other because there are no barriers between the classes; a special education class with 12 students and seven adults is crowded into a half-classroom with no closet space.

One parent told a reporter, "I feel like my child is being raped."

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

THIS SUMMER saw a flurry of protests in Harlem in response to charter school takeovers and encroachments of public school buildings.

At P.S. 123, there were three rallies in July drawing between 30 and 50 people, among them parents, teachers and some students, along with community members and teachers from elsewhere in the city.

William Hargraves, a P.S. 123 parent, compared the situation to injustice of the fake separate-but-equal doctrine used to justify segregated schools under Jim Crow in the South. "We need to have charter schools governed with the same criteria that public schools are governed by," Hargraves said. "This is happening all over the city."

Annette Jimenez, leader of the Parent Association at P.S. 375 in East Harlem, said:

We're facing the same problem. The charter school that's in our building started with half of one of the floors in our schools. It moved on take a whole floor this year and next year...It will be servicing more children than we are now, and it's displacing most of our kids.

This is something that we need to stand up and fight now. This charter school system has come in to create a two-tier system for our schools and our students. Our children deserve the same treatment that the charter school students are getting. We see that their numbers aren't better than our numbers. We're going to continue to stand up and fight for this, and we're going to win.

On September 2, activists held a forum in Harlem called "The Truth About Charter Schools," which was attended by more than 100 people--around half of them parents of school kids. State Sen. Bill Perkins hosted the event, and speakers included William Hargraves; Brian Jones of the Grassroots Education Movement (GEM); and Akinlabi Mackall of the Coalition for Public Education.

Perkins opened up the forum by putting the issue of racism front and center. "They say that the charter schools are the prep schools for people of color," Perkins said. "That tells me we have a problem. Parents are in despair over what they don't have, and are hoping for something that is a satisfactory improvement. They're being forced to take action because of benign neglect. I think that's a political issue, and a civil rights issue."

Jones went through five myths about charter schools, exposing each as false. "If the charters are doing something innovative, then why aren't we doing that in the public schools?" he asked. "There's nothing in our union contract that stops us from teaching to smaller classes, from integrating the arts into the curriculum, or from using real science laboratories. If they're not doing anything innovative, then why are they pushing public schools out of their own buildings?"

Mackall talked about how charter schools are focused on the concerns of parents, but in a divisive way. "Who's addressing the problem of academic excellence forall of our children?" he said. "We need to be the parents of all of our children."

During the discussion, teachers from P.S. 123 and P.S. 241 and spoke passionately about how the expansion of charter schools inside public school buildings has caused horrible overcrowding and unsafe conditions for public school students.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

THE CHARTER school invasion and the protests against it have raised a number of questions about how to challenge the drive toward privatization.

The GEM members who helped organize the September 2 forum are mostly New York City public school teachers, who aim to work in coalition with parents and community members. GEM has taken a position explicitly against the expansion of charter schools. But other groups have been more equivocal.

The position of teachers union leaders has been to support charter schools that do the right thing--those that allow unions and that represent "public schools freed from bureaucratic micro-management to be educational laboratories," in the words of American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten, who came out of the UFT.

In fact, the UFT runs two of its own charter schools and has partnered with Green Dot to run a third--even though teachers at these schools aren't under the same contract agreement as public school teachers.

Essentially, the attitude here can be summed up as: "If you can't beat them, join them." According to Weingarten, "Charters have a place in public education, and unions are not impediments to their success, despite some claims to the contrary. We need to get past the politics of conflict by working together and making sure that all New York City public school children attend a quality public school."

The community organization ACORN took the lead at several protests in July, but its organizers have argued that parents and teachers shouldn't be against charter schools, but should ask only that charters find their own space outside of public school buildings. At a July 10 protest, ACORN organizers told members of GEM to take down anti-charter school signs at the July 10 protest.

Meanwhile, Scott Stringer, the Manhattan borough president, said at the protest, "Nobody was disrespectful to the charter school, or that faculty or those children. There really is an ability to create common ground and negotiation and transparency...We should have a cooling-out period until there's a real sit-down between P.S. 123, the charter school, the Board of Education, and area elected officials."

There's nothing in this statement about granting the use of public school space to privately run charter schools. Stringer is merely calling for "transparency" in the process. While this would certainly be a good first step, we need to demand that politicians oppose charter schools and instead favor adequately funding public schools.

What's happening at P.S. 123 and elsewhere in Harlem is nothing short of a hostile takeover, facilitated by an education system under the control of the mayor--with no room for input from the community, parents or teachers. As journalist Juan Gonzalez wrote of the takeover:

[There was] no parent or faculty meeting to gauge whether anyone wants the new school. No official vote of the local Community Education Council. Some young bureaucrat from the city Education Department's Office of Portfolio Development arrives one day with a bunch of maps under his arm, and promptly orders a new allocation of rooms. Boom. Done. All part of Klein's rush to create 100,000 new charter school seats over the next few years.

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WHY THE rush? Is it really, as so many advocates boast, because charter schools are freed from bureaucratic controls, allowing them to be, as former AFT President Albert Shanker put it, "incubators of good instructional practice"?

This idea is unsettling because it suggests that public schools are in some way not set up to be "incubators of good instructional practice." Shouldn't we strive to make changes that enable all public schools to be bastions of "good instructional practice"? Of course we should.

In practice, the bureaucratic freedoms allowed to charter schools have nothing to do with good instructional practice--they have to do with the bottom line. Charter school administrators are freed from constraints like employing only certified teachers, employing unionized teaching staff, abiding by DOE time limits for the school day and year, using DOE contracted unionized support staff--and, above all, serving all students.

So it's unclear how lifting restrictions on teacher certification and unionization facilitate "good instructional practice."

Instead, charter schools are often plagued with high teacher turnover because of the absence of union contracts, longer school days and higher teaching loads. A study released by the Education Policy Research Unit found that the national teacher turnover rate in public schools averages 11 percent--while the average charter school attrition rate is almost 25 percent. In Harlem, Moskowitz's own Harlem Success Academy I fired the principal three weeks before the 3rd grade ELA test.

Charter schools not only have a different population of teachers--they also serve a different demographic of students than public schools.

Data for the 2007-2008 school year showed that 14 percent of students in New York City public schools were English Language Learners--while only 4 percent were in charter schools. Around 15 percent of public school students had special needs, while only 5 percent did in charter schools.

The numbers speak for themselves--charter schools don't serve the same population of students as public schools. Yet the most systematic study of charter schools found that around four in five charter school students had test scores at the same level or worse than public school students.

The primary result of the charter movement thus far has not been to create "incubators of good instructional practice," but instead to develop a separate and unequal system of education.

Charter school operators claim they are just a part of the public school system, but this is only true in the sense that they take money and resources from the public education system. In addition to money that they receive from state, local and federal governments, charter schools receive grants from foundations, and one-quarter of all charter schools are run on a for-profit basis.

In the Harlem community, the response to charter schools is mixed. Public schools in Harlem are segregated, under-funded and overcrowded, leaving parents searching for other options. Parents see fresh, newly renovated, activity-packed charter schools and see an opportunity for their children.

The charter movement operates under the guise of promoting civil rights and preys on parents' dissatisfaction with public schools--but in fact, it's pushing a right-wing neoliberal agenda that is systematically destroying community public schools.

The fight at P.S. 123 is a start in the ongoing battle to stop separate and unequal from becoming reality in our public schools.

Home
http://socialistworker.org/2009/09/14/charter-school-invasion-of-harlem

Tuesday, August 04, 2009

John Elfrank-Dana on Charter Schools and More

John commented on a raging debate on PS 123 and Harlem Success at Gotham Schools:

The heart of the issue seems to me is that America has always paid lip service to equal opportunity. That is the justification for our supposedly competitive society, free market, what have ya. The obvious divergence of the quality facilities and services between these two schools located in the same building just put into focus what is present system-wide. Charter schools must succeed and public schools must fail if the privatization of public schools on a grand scale will come into being. Note, privatization is not for my own children. They go to school in Clarkstown up in Rockland County, where Randi Weingarten was raised and went to school. Come up to the burbs and talk privatization and people will look at you like you are nuts. This is an evolving caste system.

The privatization failure will play out in the cities or poor rural areas where the parents, for the most part, are AWOL. I don’t blame the parents, as victims of economic injustice have lives such that it’s much harder to take care of business; like go to PTA meetings, etc. Thus, BloomKein and others have exploited this situation to move a privatization scheme forward.

Where’s the teachers union in all of this? On the fence would be a gratuitous way to put it. However, our union believes in nothing. It, therefore, stands for nothing. Had we been serious about class size and school closings we would have put that into contract negotiations. We haven’t. We therefore lack the support from and merit the suspicion of parents. The union supported mayoral control and the closing of large schools (by doing nothing). Sure, we have passed one meaningless resolution at the UFT Delegate Assembly after another, but it’s all lip service.

I am the UFT chapter leader at Murry Bergtraum High School. It’s the largest of the remaining large high schools in Manhattan. There once was a time I would have been proud to send my own children to that school. However, in the past 10 years all of that has changed. We at Bergtraum have witnessed Bloomberg and Klein destroy our school. Dumping large numbers of high need students on us (to make their boutique schools look good and provide a landing pad for students from other closed large high schools) without offering any additional supports. Imagine a hospital designed to handle 10% of its patients with intensive care needs. What would happen to that hospital should that percentage increase to 30 to 40% without any meaningful change in support or structure? This is what we are faced with, as well as many other schools in the system.

Only through united action of parents and teachers will there be any progress. Parents need to be educated and the teachers union needs to wake up and realize its future rests only in the democratization of schools, and not cutting deal with the mayor. We have new leadership at the UFT. Let’s see just how “new” it will be.

Friday, April 03, 2009

Harlem Success Academy Organizes Parents to Shut Down Their Local School

The title of an article is arguably its most powerful feature—a more accurate title for the below would be “Harlem Success Academy Organizes Parents to Shut Down Their Local School.”



And while the Chancellor may not be able to do anything about teachers who are just marking time to get their paychecks, surely he could do something about schools being “dirty” and “dangerous, “ no?

Is there any reason why a public school cannot look like this? It defies credibility to blame apathetic teachers for rundown and dirty buildings.

The Ross Global Academy Charter School now occupies classrooms like this one in Tweed Courthouse, where six kindergarten classes, three each for P.S. 276 and the Spruce Street School, are expected to open in September. Carl Glassman / The Tribeca Trib

The Ross Global Academy Charter School now occupies classrooms like this one in Tweed Courthouse

From: nyceducationnews@yahoogroups.com [mailto:nyceducationnews@yahoogroups.com]

Harlem parents say they want their local schools shut down

Harlem parents say they want their local schools shut down
by Philissa Cramer
http://gothamschools.org/2009/04/02/harlem-parents-say-they-want-their-local-schools-shut-down/

A group of parents is sharply criticizing the Department of Education for backing away from its decision to shut down struggling neighborhood elementary schools, saying Mayor Bloomberg should “take a hard line” and turn over the buildings to be used as charter schools.

The parents, who are zoned to have their children attend two of the schools that would have been closed and replaced with charter schools, said that they want the mayor to shut the schools down because the schools are dirty, dangerous, and filled with teachers who are “just there for a paycheck.”

“I live across the street from 194,” one mother, Melissia Daley, wrote of P.S. 194, a Harlem elementary school that would have been closed under the city’s original plan. “Although it’s a zoned school and very convenient for me and my child, I wouldn’t even try to put my child in there because the children are well behind in grade.”

“If they are closing 241 to put a better school in its place, then they should do that,” one parent, Martinique Owens, said, of another Harlem school, P.S. 241, in a similar situation.

Their statements came in a press release issued this afternoon by a spokeswoman for the Harlem Success Academy network of charter schools, Jenny Sedlis. Two Harlem Success schools were planning to become the sole occupants of the P.S. 194 and P.S. 241 buildings after those schools closed. Those schools will have to continue sharing space with district elementary schools next year.

Representatives of the Harlem Success network called parents registered for next week’s admission lottery, told them that the charter schools were being threatened by government action, and asked them to attend a meeting today about the conflict, according to Cherokee Rivero, a mother who has entered her son in the lottery that determines who gets into Harlem Success.

Rivero estimated that about 40 parents turned out for the meeting, where they wrote short statements about why they didn’t want their children to attend their zoned school. “If it takes me to write this letter to get something better for my son, then I will,” Rivero, who attended PS 194 herself from 1994 to 2000, told me tonight.

The release attacks the teachers union for filing a lawsuit opposing the DOE’s plan to replace the two elementary schools with charter schools. The lawsuit was initiated by the United Federation of Teachers and the New York Civil Liberties Union. Its plaintiffs included several community members not otherwise associated with the union, as well as the union’s president, Randi Weingarten. The union and parents alleged that the DOE’s bid to replace the schools represented an illegal alteration of school zone lines.

“Does Randi Weingarten think she knows better than me what is best for my child? The school is broken and I don’t want to send my child there. Why does she think she can speak for me?” a mother named Melissa Anderson, whose child is zoned for P.S. 241, said in a statement.

Weingarten responded today in an interview with Elizabeth, accusing the founder of Harlem Success, the former City Council member Eva Moskowitz, of devolving into personal attack. Moskowitz took on labor unions in council hearings, and then lost a run for Manhattan borough president after Weingarten’s union organized against her. “Let her run great schools and do great things for kids, and let me do great things for kids,” Weingarten said. “But this nonsense that the only way to elevate herself is to bring other people down: she should be above that.”