Mr. Mayor, Members of
the School Committee:
I’d like to start out by publicly thanking Mayor
Mitchell for sending a letter last week to Commissioner Chester asking him not
to approve the City on Hill Charter School. I would also like to thank Mayor
Mitchell, Dr. Larry Finnerty and City Councilor Henry Bousquet for recently
testifying against the same charter.
Charter Schools claim amazing educational
results but when one looks beyond the hype and puffery of their claims, a
different picture emerges. And we don’t have to look much further than the
Global Learning Charter School for evidence.
Global Learning claims that they educate all
children – but they don’t. Department of Elementary and Secondary Education
data shows that they lose most of their students from the date of enrollment
through grade 12. Over the last 10 years of their existence they have had
hundreds of children enrolled in their school but fewer then 80 children have
graduated. That is not success.
They claim they don’t really take any money from
the school district because the money follows the student. In essence they
claim they are cost-neutral. This so-called cost neutrality is costing New
Bedford Public Schools millions of dollars each year - this year alone, over $6
million. That is not cost-neutral.
They claim that most, if not all, of their
students pass the MCAS and go to college – Not true. They don’t count the
hundreds of students who drop out or are counseled out of their school and come
back to New Bedford Schools.
In spite of all Global’s claims and all the
dollars they waste, they have not performed any better than New Bedford Public
Schools. This year they were designated a level 3 school by DESE.
Although we don’t have any control over what
Commissioner Chester will ultimately do, he has in the past approved charter
schools in communities that do not want them - We do have local control over
whether or not to approve charter-like schools in New Bedford – Innovation
Schools.
These schools are asking you for the very same
supports and services that you, the New Bedford School Committee, have told us
you cannot afford.
Some of the items we have requested on behalf of
our students and teachers are:
· Smaller classes sizes so that we better serve
our children.
· New books. And in many cases, books because we
don’t have them.
· More Art, Music, and Physical Education classes
for our students.
· More paraprofessional services, especially in
the younger grades.
· Social workers in our schools to meet the demand
of the growing needs of our students.
· More after school educational and sports
programs for our children.
· Monies for field trips and other enrichment
opportunities for our children.
· Working computers and other technologies in our
classrooms.
· More health classes.
· More technology teachers.
· More individual planning and common time for our
teachers.
· More professional development opportunities for
our teachers.
As you can see, we been asking for the same
supports and services the Innovation School proponents say are necessary for
success. The difference is that we’ve been asking for these items for all
of our children and teachers.
They want these supports and services just for
the schools they are proposing.
In fact, they have designed their prospectus so
that their proposed schools will be immune from possible future budget cuts and
shortfalls. Their school budgets and services would be maintained and the rest
of the district would take the hit.
In closing, I'd like to say that the proponents of these schools say that you should approve them because they are necessary, but equally important is that they say all of the extra services these schools will provide are cost-neutral
If that is correct, why have you, the New Bedford School Committee, denied the supports and services that we have been requesting years, for our kids and teachers across our district?
1 comment:
"In fact, they have designed their prospectus so that their proposed schools will be immune from possible future budget cuts and shortfalls. Their school budgets and services would be maintained and the rest of the district would take the hit."
The key line. They get their set aside upfront. If there is a fire, more snow, state cut, shifting of staff , other increases, staff buyouts, they are unaffected. The hit is spread elsewhere. And we havent even mentioned Special Ed costs.
They admitted to this inequality in their op ed, saying, "it happens.Get over it"
Yes, small inequities happen. But who in their right mind will set up large inequities in advance?
The "four superintendent" school committee , that's who.
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