Sunday, June 3, 2007

Parents Needed for C30 Interviews for New Principal on June 11

At 4:00 on the afternoon of June 11, Local Instructional Superintendent Jill Myers will convene a C30 meeting to select a new principal for MCSM in accordance with Department of Education guidelines. From 4:00 - 5:30, the C30 committee of parents, teachers, school staff, UFT representatives, and students will develop a list of interview questions to be presented to the four or five candidates to be presented by Ms. Myers. From 5:30 on into the evening, the candidates will be interviewed one-by-one by the C30 committee and offer their comments and advice to Ms. Myers. Dinner will be served during the meeting.

Four to seven parents are needed to represent the MCSM parent community on the C30 panel. Anyone interested should contact Steve Koss as soon as possible by posting a comment to this blog entry, or by emailing him at mathman180@aol.com. Parents can also contact Parent Coordinator Julia Valentin at MCSM to express their interest in being part of the C30 committee.

Chancellor Klein Announces More Standardized Tests

On May 31, the New York Times published an article by Julie Bosman about the DOE's plans to add another group of annual standardized tests for all NYC public school students. The first three paragraphs of this article are shown below.

"Schools Chancellor Joel Klein announced yesterday that the city school system would spend $80 million over five years on a battery of new standardized tests to begin this fall for most of New York City’s 1.1 million public school students.

The contract awarded to the testing giant CTB/McGraw-Hill will involve a significant expansion of exams, known as periodic tests, which monitor students’ progress and are supposed to help predict how students will perform in the annual state exams. Mr. Klein’s announcement immediately rekindled the debate over whether such testing is emphasized too much or is even a useful tool for teachers.

Pupils in Grades 3 through 8 will be tested five times a year in both reading and math, instead of three times as they are now. High school students, for the first time, will be tested four times a year in each subject. In the next few years, the tests will expand to include science and social studies."

If this article is correct, MCSM students will be required to take eight standardized tests next year, four in English and four in Math. Worse, in a few more years, the DOE plans to double this testing program by adding science and social studies exams. Thus, in addition to PSATs, SATs, SAT IIs, NYS Regents, and AP exams, our children will be taking the equivalent of about one extra City-mandated exam every two weeks! Of course, this means our teachers will also need to worry about preparing students for these exams as well, since regardless what the Chancellor says about how the exams will be used, they will undoubtedly be factored eventually into teachers' and principals' evaluations and school report cards. These extra exams will also foster another boomlet in tutoring services, cram classes, and study aid books like those from Barron's and Kaplan.

These new standardized exams are just one of the important issues that will be facing MCSM's students, teachers, and parents in the coming year. Many of these issues will doubtless be topics for next year's School Leadership Team (SLT) meetings, one of the few places where our principal, teachers, parents, and student representatives can convene to discuss these issues and how they will be addressed or implemented. The SLT has openings for six parents to meet on a regular monthly basis to help set the direction and educational philosophy of our children's high school. Parents interested in serving on the SLT next year, or for those seeking more information, can contact Steve Koss at mathman180@aol.com. Elections for the six parent representatives on the SLT will take place at the first PTA meeting of the new school year, on September 11 at 6:00 pm.