Monday, September 1, 2014
Monday, April 29, 2013
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
In Failed Race to the Top Application, a Glimpse of Tensions Between Teachers and Administrators
Monday, December 3, 2012
Friday, November 30, 2012
Jersey City council votes to move school board elections to November next year
Jersey City’s school elections are
moving from April to November next year, thanks to a nearly unanimous vote by
the City Council Wednesday night.
Voters overwhelmingly approved a nonbinding referendum earlier
this month approving the change, a ballot initiative the council had intended
to use as a guide to determine whether the community was OK with the switch.
Ward E Councilman Steve Fulop championed the move, saying it will
save taxpayers about $200,000 a year and increase voter turnout. Voters this
November, who approved the change 73 percent to 27 percent, “spoke loud and
clear,” Fulop said last night.
In Hudson County, Guttenberg, Hoboken and Kearny have moved
their school elections to November.
The council approved the change 7-1, with Councilwoman at large
Viola Richardson voting “no.” Richardson said she is concerned that voters
didn’t know that once school elections are moved to November, school budgets
that don’t have tax increases above the 2 percent tax-levy cap won’t have to be
approved by voters.
“I think that perhaps people didn’t really understand, and I
didn’t really understand what it would mean,” she said.
Fulop said it’s “presumptuous” to think that the 24,000 voters
who cast their ballots in favor of the change didn’t know the consequences of
the decision.
The Jersey City council’s decision essentially increases the
length of the terms of four sitting school board members, Carol Lester, Gerald
Lyons, Angel Valentin and Sterling Waterman, whose terms were set to expire
next April.
Some 468 school districts in the state have moved their school
elections to November, according to the New Jersey School Boards Association.
Gov. Chris Christie signed a bill into law last year that permits school
boards, voters or municipal councils to make the switch.
NJSBA spokesman Mike Yaple said schools boards that have OK’d
the move were attracted by the idea of “budget stability.”
School districts with elections in November do not have to seek
voter approval for budgets unless they come with an increase over 2 percent. In
that instance, voters are faced with approving or voting down just the tax
increase, according to Yaple.
This November, three school districts asked voters to approve
tax increases. Two of those districts succeeded.
Wednesday, November 21, 2012
Jersey City schools chief gives assessment 60 days into job
MARCIA
V. LYLES
The Jersey City school district needs to lower its high dropout rate, increase the academic achievement of black and Latino students, and better prepare students for college, Schools Superintendent Marcia V. Lyles said last night.
The Jersey City school district needs to lower its high dropout rate, increase the academic achievement of black and Latino students, and better prepare students for college, Schools Superintendent Marcia V. Lyles said last night.
Lyles made the comments during a roughly
hour-long speech at last night’s Jersey City Board of Education meeting, where
she presented a “60-day review” of the 29,000-student district. Lyles became
the district’s new chief in September.
“There are pervasive inequities throughout the
district,” she said, adding there has been “slow and steady” progress on
standardized testing.
Lyles, who came to Jersey City from Delaware’s
largest school district and was a longtime administration for New York City
public schools, lavished praise on some of the Jersey City district’s
high-profile initiatives, including the dual-language program and
early-childhood education.
But even those programs have faults that need
to be addressed, she said. Regarding the dual-language program, Lyles noted
that it’s only implemented in select schools and the admission process is
different at every school.
“These are equity issues that must be
addressed,” she said.
Among the initiatives Lyles pledged to
implement are a program to increase student participation in
advancement-placement classes; a new evaluation system for district employees;
and a plan to address the district’s aging facilities.
Lyles’ presentation will be uploaded to the
district’s website at jcboe.org.
Monday, November 12, 2012
A Union Leader Joins the Honor Roll
A site to discuss better education for all
A Union Leader Joins the Honor Roll
November 12, 2012 //
1
Ronnie Greco, who is leader of the Jersey City Education Association, joins our honor roll of heroes of public education. Ronnie refused to sign Jersey City’s application for a Race to the Top grant for $40 million. Ronnie quickly figured out that not a penny of the $40 million would solve any problem that Jersey City public schools have. It would not be used to improve teaching and learning conditions. It would not be available to reduce class size. It would be used to impose merit pay, which has never worked anywhere. It would be used to find and fire “ineffective” teachers, based on unproven test-based measures.It would be used to implement top-down mandates devised in Washington, D.C., by the U.S. Department of Education. The issues in Jersey City are no different from the issues that led to a strike in Chicago. It is tough for a union leader to say no to a big federal grant because the media will blame him (or her) for turning down “free” money. But Ronnie figured out the trap. The money comes with strings that get fashioned into a noose for teachers. The money will not reform the schools of Jersey City. The money will not help the children of Jersey City. The schools of Jersey City have been under state control for 23 years. For 23 years, the state of New Jersey has failed the children of New Jersey. The teachers of Jersey City work under difficult conditions. They are heroes. And their leader, Ronnie Greco, joins our honor roll for his courage, insight, wisdom, and conviction–all qualities in short supply today in our public life.
Share this:
Like this:
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)