CATHIE BLACK CLAIMS TO HAVE EDUCATIONAL EXPERIENCE WITH CHARTER SCHOOL BOARD POST, BUT IT'S MOOT; November 28, 2010; NY Daily
City schools chancellor nominee Cathie Black insists she's connected to public education via a highly touted charter school - but a close look shows she's had no contact with students, parents or teachers there.
Officials at the Harlem Village Academies admit the school's National Leadership Board, which Black joined just five months ago, has never met.
Black primarily advised the school's CEO, Deborah Kenny, on "management, leadership, and the development of a book" Kenny is writing, the school said…
Kenny, who oversees 450 students, is paid $442,000, including a $140,000 "bonus" and $27,780 in "other" expenses.
The schools chancellor gets $250,000 to oversee 1.1 million students.
Many charter schools have a parent representative on their board. Harlem Village does not…
Bloomberg has called the school a national "poster child" for school reform. Conservative media mogul Rupert Murdoch gave $5 million toward construction of the new high school.
The school has been lauded nationally for its high test scores, including for pushing 100% of its eighth-graders to pass state math tests.
A look at the overall scores tells a different tale. In the last round of tests, like schools across New York, numbers dropped precipitously after the state made the tests tougher.
Schoolwide English test scores fell from 81% passing to 41%, while math dropped from 91% to 71%. And by eighth grade, the number of students taking the tests is a small fraction of the earlier grades…
An unusually high number of younger students either drop out or are held back. In school year 2003-04, the year the school opened, only 48 of 73 fifth-graders made it to sixth grade. In school year 2006-07, 46 of 68 moved on; in 2007-08, just 40 of 76 fifth-graders made it to sixth grade…
2 comments:
I went for an interview here and was hired with little regard for my lack of background in education and of NYC (and state) teaching certifications. One thing I noticed is that all the staff members were frowning. I would even go so far as to say they looked downright ornery. Then, right before I was set to begin teaching, the person who hired me (and was supposed to be managing my “team”) resigned and my start date was pushed back for a minimum of two weeks, which put me into a terrible position financially as I’d already quit my previous job. Overall, I got a picture of absolute disorganization and dissatisfaction. Who would want their child to be educated in an environment like this?
I would like for someone to contact me regarding Harlem Village. My child has just been accepted to the school. And I am worried that I don't send my child into the same negative atmosphere that she is currently in. I would love to speak to a parent or teacher from the school
Post a Comment