An ATR writes to the UFT, explaining that ATR placement can deal with the class size crisis:
As always, I want to follow up on my phone call today. Over
the past three days I have been commended by parents and student alike.
Tuesday and Thursday,
students have gone as far as telling me that I "saved their lives" this
past month in American History and parents have asked why I will not be
back next year.
What could I tell them? That the city
has targeted senior teachers and that if one gets turned to an ATR (much
like the Walking Dead) we can never be whole. Now the argument that
there are ATRs that get appointed is true if that ATR has under 10 years
in the system. The rest of us must be content being shuffled around
like so much baggage.
Leonie Haimson keeps talking about
class sizes. I have emailed her on the simple remedy, us. Why can't
the union fight to put teachers like me back into the classroom? After
next year the war begins anew about us. The answer is simple.
Eliminate the ATR classification and make ALL salaries transportable.
I await your answer on this and the other questions that I have asked about.
With videos: Press Conference on school overcrowding and the need for an expanded capital plan
Yesterday,
Class Size Matters hosted a press conference on the steps of City Hall
about the need to address school overcrowding by expanding the capital
plan and appoint a Commission to improve school planning and the
efficiency of school siting.
CSM press conference 6.18.15 Council Member Daniel Dromm, chair of the NYC Council Education Committee from Class Size Matters on Vimeo.
CSM press conference 6.18.15 Councilmember Stephen Levin, Brooklyn from Class Size Matters on Vimeo.
CSM press conference 6.18.15 Council Member Mark Levine, Northern Manhattan from Class Size Matters on Vimeo.
CSM press conference 6.18.15 Council Member David Greenfield, Chair of the Land Use Committee from Class Size Matters on Vimeo.
CSM press conference 6.18.15 Part II: Fe Florimon, CEC 6 member & Chair CB12M's Youth & Education Committee- Washington Heights from Class Size Matters on Vimeo.
CSM press conference 6.18.15 CEC 8 Treasurer Eduardo Hernandez of the Bronx from Class Size Matters on Vimeo.
CSM press conference 6.18.15 Wendy Chapman of Build Schools Now in Lower Manhattan from Class Size Matters on Vimeo.
CSM press conference 6.18.15 Zakiyah Ansari of the Alliance for Quality Education from Class Size Matters on Vimeo.
Speakers included NYC Council Member Danny
Dromm, Chair of the Education committee, David Greenfield, chair of the
Land Use Committee, and Council Members Mark Levine, Inez Barron, and
Stephen Levin, along with many parent leaders.
I introduced the press conference by releasing a letter
from the Public Advocate to the Mayor and the Chancellor, co-signed by
22 Councilmembers and many parent leaders, urging them to double the
seats in the capital plan and appoint a Commission to make
recommendations on how school planning and siting could be improved.
Then I pointed out that when the Mayor ran for office he promised that he would
support a more ambitious capital plan that would provide the space
necessary to eliminate overcrowding and allow for smaller classes. He
also pledged to reform the Blue Book formula so that it more accurately
reflected overcrowding and incorporated the need for smaller classes. Yet
the opposite has happened; the city cut $5B for schools compared to the
last ten year capital plan under Bloomberg, and $2B compared to the
preliminary ten year plan released just a few months ago.
This
is despite the fact that about half a million students are enrolled in
extremely overcrowded schools and the problem is getting worse. NYC
is the fastest growing large city in the country, according to recent
Census data, and yet the city has no realistic proposal to address the
exploding student population. The current school
construction capital plan will meet less than half the need, given DOE’s
own enrollment projections and utilization figures.
Moreover,
the mayor has proposed the creation of 160,000 market rate housing
units and 200,000 affordable units, without any plan for where the
additional students will attend school. The Blue Book
working group also came up with recommendations to improve the accuracy
of the school overcrowding formula in December that have yet to be
released.
The
result of this dysfunctional lack of planning is that hundreds of
schools have lost their cluster rooms; thousands of students are
assigned to lunch as early as 10 a.m.,
and/or have no access to the gym. Many special needs students are
forced to receive their services in hallways and/or closets rather than
in dedicated spaces, and class sizes in the early grades have reached a
15-year high.
Then Council Member
Danny Dromm talked about damaging impact of overcrowding at the school
in Queens where he once taught, with rampant overcrowding and class
sizes as high as 38: “The problem in my school we had no place to put
the students. …One day they opened the maintenance closet, took out the
rakes and shovels and turned it into a speech classroom, without
windows, so small you could barely get through the door, it was
unbelievable to see that happen. This is happening in many schools throughout the city… With the expansion of affordable housing, the situation is only going to become worse with the influx of new students.”
CSM press conference 6.18.15 Council Member Daniel Dromm, chair of the NYC Council Education Committee from Class Size Matters on Vimeo.
Council
Member Stephen Levin spoke of the need for responsible planning with
huge development occurring in downtown Brooklyn, with residential high
rises springing up rapidly: “What we’re seeing in downtown Brooklyn and in a lot of neighborhoods in NYC is that our schools will continue to be overtaxed. There has not been appropriate planning. We are always playing catch up, we’re building well after the impact has already been felt… We
need to recognize that when we’re seeing these housing starts, we need
to be pro-active, we need to put the money up front, and ensure the
schools are ready when the housing comes online and not the other way
around.”
CSM press conference 6.18.15 Councilmember Stephen Levin, Brooklyn from Class Size Matters on Vimeo.
CM
Mark Levine pointed out how the DOE's Blue Book formula wrongly
identifies many of the schools in his area of Washington Heights and
West Harlem as underutilized, “where schools bear the scars of decades of overcrowding. They
have lost their computer rooms, their music rooms, have no gyms or
cafeterias, because it’s all been reclaimed for classroom space. They
have trailers comically referred to temporary structures even though
they’ve been in place for a decade or more. For years the DOE has
accounted for capacity by claiming these schools are not overcrowded,
but only because we’ve lost all the space needed for a truly enriching
education … There is virtually no construction planned in
Northern Manhattan and they are going to leave in place a status quo
that is unacceptable. We are here to say, we need to correct the wrongs
of the previous era and build in upper Manhattan and give our kids the
space they need.”
CSM press conference 6.18.15 Council Member Mark Levine, Northern Manhattan from Class Size Matters on Vimeo.
Then
CM David Greenfield spoke as the chair of the Land Use Committee: “We
approve all zoning changes; when you you’re submitting a development
project, there has to be coordination with the DOE and the Mayor’s
office to make sure that the resources are there for schools for kids. You
can squeeze another person on a bus or in a park, but squeezing an
extra child in a classroom has a lifelong impact on many of these
children, and it is not fair. We need to think about
development holistically; not just about housing, or quality jobs; it’s
also about infrastructure, and #1 in infrastructure has to be school
seats for our children. “
CSM press conference 6.18.15 Council Member David Greenfield, Chair of the Land Use Committee from Class Size Matters on Vimeo.
CM Inez Barron spoke as a former principal and teacher: “I spent 18 years as teacher, and 18 years as an administrator. One year I had 34 students, which was very challenging. The capital plan is not adequate of allocation for construction of new school buildings. In the Mayor’s plan for expanding housing in East NY, he hasn’t included even one new school.”
Fe Florimon, chair of the CB12 Youth and Education Committee in Washington Heights and a member of the Community Education Council in District 6: “We don’t need 38 kids in a classroom. A
budget of $25B [the city’s education budget] should be sufficient to
reduce class size; this needs to be a top priority but we’re continuing
the same pattern. As much as I love you and voted for you,
I beg you, Mayor de Blasio and Chancellor Farina, to pay close
attention to this matter, we need small classes, it’s for our kids.”
CSM press conference 6.18.15 Part II: Fe Florimon, CEC 6 member & Chair CB12M's Youth & Education Committee- Washington Heights from Class Size Matters on Vimeo.
Eduardo
Hernandez of CEC 8 in the Bronx spoke about how it has been thirty
years since District 8 got a new school: “Finally we’re getting a new
school, even if it's right near a highway. School construction has been
neglected for many years; also co-locations which take away classrooms
have exacerbated this problem. Hopefully this mayor will take notice and finally do the right thing.”
CSM press conference 6.18.15 CEC 8 Treasurer Eduardo Hernandez of the Bronx from Class Size Matters on Vimeo.
Mario
Aguila VP of the CEC in District 14 described how the high schools
were hugely overcrowded, with up to forty students in a classroom.
CSM press conference 6.18.15 Mario Aguila, VP, CEC 14 in Brooklyn from Class Size Matters on Vimeo.
Kristin Gorman reported that there had been a Kindergarten waiting list of 70 children at her zoned school in Queens. The waiting list was finally brought down when the preK program was eliminated, but “this is only a band-aid. Why is a Democratic mayor, who many of us voted for, removing funds from education? I’m concerned about my children’s future.”
CSM press conference 6.18.15 Mario Aguila, VP, CEC 14 in Brooklyn from Class Size Matters on Vimeo.
Kristin Gorman reported that there had been a Kindergarten waiting list of 70 children at her zoned school in Queens. The waiting list was finally brought down when the preK program was eliminated, but “this is only a band-aid. Why is a Democratic mayor, who many of us voted for, removing funds from education? I’m concerned about my children’s future.”
Wendy
Chapman, co-founder of the organization Build Schools Now, dedicated to
expanding school seats in the rapidly growing neighborhood of Tribeca,
discussed the fact that even when funding is allotted for a school, the
DOE often seems incapable of finding a site: “There has
been a school for this neighborhood in the capital budget for over a
year; we’ve identified 11 possible sites for the school but it’s still
not sited. It’s very personal for us, every building that goes up just means more pressure that’s coming.”
CSM press conference 6.18.15 Wendy Chapman of Build Schools Now in Lower Manhattan from Class Size Matters on Vimeo.
Zakiyah
Ansari of AQE spoke about how the Campaign for Fiscal Equity lawsuit
was brought in part to address the need to reducing class size “Our
children would learn better, our teachers will be able to teach better
if only they had smaller classes.“
CSM press conference 6.18.15 Zakiyah Ansari of the Alliance for Quality Education from Class Size Matters on Vimeo.
MC
Sweeney, a parent at PS 196 in Queens, decried the fact that the DOE
refuses to use real population data to properly plan for schools, and
the result has been growing Kindergarten waiting lists, the loss of art
rooms, and special needs students receiving their services in hallways
and closets. She said that parents are going to demand the
doubling of seats in the capital plan to be voted on at the PEP meeting
on June 23.
Beth Eisgrau-Heller, a new parent at PS 8 in Brooklyn, also described
the huge Kindergarten waiting list at her school, and how the capital
plan needed to be expanded to prevent the disruption and divisiveness
created by waiting lists and school overcrowding. (sorry no video!)
Here is a DNAinfo news article about our demands for a doubling of the seats in the capital plan .
Here is a DNAinfo news article about our demands for a doubling of the seats in the capital plan .
We've all been saying this for years. The UFT doesn't give a shit about ATRs, teachers, or students.
ReplyDeleteWhat does this mean? "After next year the war begins anew about us."
ReplyDelete