Sunday, December 26, 2010

Joel Klein is proud of his legacy as a disruptive force... and so are we!

Joel Klein, who officially steps down as the Chancellor of NYC Schools this upcoming Friday, had an exit interview of sorts last week after a visit to the Urban Assembly School for Applied Math and Science in the Bronx.  During this interview he listed empowering Harlem parents with choice as his greatest success!  Overall, he feels proud of his legacy as a disruptive force.  

Kiss your brain Joel Klein!  You've gone Way Beyond Z for the children of New York City!  You may have been thought a tyrant, political opportunist or tone-deaf bureaucrat by some, but for public charter school parents, scholars and advocates you will be fondly remembered as a fair and bell-clear voice in the wilderness of DOE bureaucracy.  During your eight year tenure, you were a tireless advocate and gave voice to the youngest and most vulnerable segment of our citizenry... children, who in this case, are tethered to failing schools by their parents' choice of neighborhood or inability to relocate to a more affluent zip code.  

The full article, published by the NY Times, may be read by accessing the following link:
            

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Christmas message from Team Flete

Team Flete would like to wish everyone a Merry Christmas!  During this holiday season of merriment and general excess, Team Flete would like to remind all its readers to think of those less fortunate than ourselves and to challenge and encourage each of you to do something special for someone in need.  Feed a hungry neighbor or donate a new or gently used toy to a child whose family may not have been able to provide a lavish christmas.  Be a Beyond Z role model for your child today!  
   

Friday, December 24, 2010

Jordan Celebrates the Big 8 in a Big Way

Where does the time go?  I remember the day that he was born as if it was just yesterday.  I remember being so anxious to meet him.  Would he have hair?  Would his eyes be light brown like mine?  Finally, after an eventful labor (I'll spare you the details), I remember thinking that my new baby boy was perfect in every way!

He was and still is a joy to have!  His infancy was easy, with the exception of his sleeping as lightly as a cat in a room full of rockers.  Toddlerhood was great, skipping right past the terrible two with hardly an outburst!  He patiently accepted the addition of his sister to our family and team.  Jordan was mommy's little boy!  Fast forward to third grade and almost eight years old.  I'm no longer the focal point of this kid's existence.  He's constantly talking about Sean S., Taj and Max.... sheesh!

Last month, Jordan dropped the bomb!  Birthday with just Team Flete was no longer enough!  Jordan wanted to invite his inner circle of friends over for a birthday sleepover.  Worse yet, his father, sister, nor I were invited to stay!  I admit, I felt woosy at the thought of cutting apron strings, but realized that I could no longer be the absolute center of his existence.  It was finally time for me to acknowledge that this member of Team Flete was spreading his wings.  

Team Flete had a caucus and the decision was made to have an 8th birthday sleepover.  It was agreed upon that Julia would not be allowed to hang out with the boys in the "man cave" (basement) and that the parental units would only provide support services like food, drink, and snack set up.  Jordan would be allowed to choose five guests.

Team Flete has always been of the mindset that televisions and video games are non-essential items and we have only one television and literally go weeks between viewings.  We have never had video games, but for this birthday event, my husband and I decided to make an exception to our no-video-game rule and purchase a Wii video game!

The date of the sleepover had finally arrived and the guests began arriving.  The house was alive with laughter!  The boys got along famously and the Wii was a hit!  Every kid showed up with their own Wii controller, who knew that little boys travel with Wii controllers and games regularly!?!!  Jordan's birthday celebration was a right of passage of sorts for Team Flete and thankfully it was smooth transition for us all.  Jordan is growing from a baby into a young man.  How proud I am of his interactions with his friends and the realization that he and his friends get along well and are kind and fair to each other.  This was a learning experience for Team Flete.  Friends invited into the sanctuary and the ability to nurture healthy friendships make us a stronger team. 
Happy 8th birthday Jordan!  Many thanks to his friends who shared his special day with him!  Huge HSA3 marshmallow cheer for Jordan, Tyler, Taj, Sean P., and Sa'vion.  Mama Glo loves you all!       

Thursday, December 23, 2010

HSA3 Staff Holiday Luncheon is a Success


On Wednesday, December 22nd, as the semester wound down and the anxiety of the approaching holiday was at its highest, the staff at Harlem Success Academy 3 was treated to a relaxing, fun and food filled afternoon hosted by the HSA3 Parent Council.  
There were food selections ranging from succulent roasted pork, rice and beans and mandarin salad to mouth-watering curried chicken, rice and peas and tacos.  There was an assortment of cakes, cookies, cupcakes and pies.

The PCEC strived to create a relaxing environment where teachers were able to let their hair down and mingle with each other and members of the PCEC.  Teachers were invited to take seconds and many were encouraged to take food and deserts home with them for the holiday.

Special thanks to the HSA3 PCEC, for planning and organizing, the parent body, for providing all food, drinks and deserts, and Lourdes DeLaCruz, for her expert setup and food presentation.  HSA3 Rules!!  
   

HSA Math Bee Winners - Interview with Shelley Goldberg of NY1 News Aires

Harlem Success Academy 2nd Annual Math Bee winners, Evelyn Knapp (HSA1), Sean Pena (HSA3) and Brandon Bautista (HSA4), were invited to NY1 News studios to interview with Shelly Goldberg, NY1 Parenting Correspondent, regarding their personal views on their favorite teachers and their personal secrets to their successes.  The full interview is posted on the NY1 News website and may be accessed using the following link:  http://www.ny1.com//Default.aspx?ArID=131074.



The Lottery Film is shortlisted!

Huge HSA3 firecracker cheer for Madeline Sackler for being a Beyond Z documentary film producer and director!!  Alexandra Cheney, writing for The Wall Street Journal media, entertainment, celebrity and arts blog, Speakeasy, highlighted Madeline Sackler and her documentary, The Lottery Film, which has been shortlisted as one of 15 documentaries eligible for nomination for an Oscar this year.  Kiss your Brain, Madeline!     


The Other Documentary on Education

By Alexandra Cheney


Sackler, flanked by Tribeca Film Festival co-founder Craig Hatkoff (l) and Chancellor of the New York City Department of Education Joel Klein (r)
Madeleine Sackler has entered her very own lottery of sorts. The first-time documentary director’s film, “The Lottery” has been shortlisted as one of the 15 titles eligible to be nominated for an Oscar. The 81-minute film follows four families from Harlem and the Bronx in the three months leading up to a charter school lottery.
Sackler, along with CBS news anchor Katie Couric, outgoing New York City schools chancellor Joel Klein and New York’s police commissioner Ray Kelly, gathered for lunch at Brasserie Ruhlmann recently to discuss the film and its Oscar odds.
“We are in peril of losing the American dream,” Klein said to a room filled with parents, journalists, hedge fund managers and film producers. Just before he spoke, Klein scribbled some notes on the back of a restaurant menu. “If you have a heart, this film, and the statistics on education in this country, will rip it right out of your chest,” he said.
Another documentary released this year, “Waiting for Superman,” also concentrates on America’s education system and was directed by Davis Guggenheim, who also directed “An Inconvenient Truth,” the award-winning documentary about global warming. But where “Waiting for Superman” tracks children from Los Angeles to Silicon Valley to Washington D.C. — and, yes, to a Harlem charter school — “The Lottery” strictly focuses on Harlem and the Bronx.
“I wanted to show that it is possible to educate kids in poor communities at an exceptionally high level,” Sackler said during a phone interview later. “This is one school that shows what’s possible.”
“The Lottery” focuses on Harlem Success Academy Charter Schools, a series of free, public elementary schools in Harlem and the Bronx (Bronx Success Academy), the first of which first opened in 2006. Along with the four families vying for a spot, the film dives into the conflict of charter schools versus public schools, a debate which only grew throughout the film.
During her months of shooting, Sackler didn’t receive access to film in traditional public schools, nor would anyone from the United Federation of Teachers, a union with over 200,000 members, including public school teachers, speak to her.
Despite limited access, Sackler presents a film laden with statistics and insight from the likes of Cory Booker, the mayor of Newark, New Jersey and Geoffrey Canada, the president of Harlem Children’s Zone.
Sackler isn’t a parent nor does she have a personal connection with the Harlem neighborhood. But according to the possible Oscar contender, education is the most important topic across America. “What does this circumstance, the education crisis, the achievement gap, mean for families and communities all over country when 58% of black fourth graders are functionally illiterate?” she said.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Teaching Math to Spark Creative Thinking

The Wall Street Journal highlighted the Harlem Success Academy, running a short piece and video on December 14, 2010.  The piece focused on the Cognitively Guided Instruction or CGI method of teaching math that HSA implemented this year.  

CGI is not a traditional primary school mathematics program.  Children in CGI classrooms spend most of their time solving problems, usually problems that are related to a book the teacher has to read to them, a unit they may be studying outside of mathematics class, or something going on in their lives.  Various physical materials are available to children to assist them in solving the problems.  Each child decides how and when to use the materials, fingers, paper and pencil; or to solve the problem mentally.  Children are not shown how to solve the problems.  Instead each child solves them in any way that they can, sometimes in more than one way, and reports how the problem was solved to peers and teacher.  The teacher and peers listen and question until they understand the problem solutions, and then the entire process is repeated.  Using information from each child’s reporting of problem solutions, teachers make decisions about what each child knows and how instruction should be structured to enable that particular child to learn.

A math class being taught by Ms. Jenny Cloncs at HSA4 was featured in the WSJ video.  HSA4 scholars, Ms. Cloncs, and CGI are definitely going Beyond Z!      

One Harlem charter school gets creative with problem solving. WSJ's Christina Tsuei sees how the school is developing ingenuity and reasoning in their students at a time when research shows Americans are less creative.

HSA3 Parent Council Newsletter - December 2010

Monday, December 20, 2010

Success Charter Network Hosts Reception for Chancellor Joel Klein


On Friday, December 10, 2010, a reception for Joel Klein was held at the Charter Success Network Offices in Harlem.  The small and personal gathering was held to thank Joel Klein for all his hard work and unwavering support of parent choice and Public Charter Schools during his eight year tenure as the NYC School Chancellor.


Chancellor Klein gave a rousing speech regarding the importance of taking up his torch and moving the parent choice movement ahead, despite his imminent absence at the forefront of the movement.  Klein has been well known for his expansion of small schools and charter schools to provide more high-quality educational options for students.  He encouraged all in attendance to never give up on the children of the City of New York.



Eva Moskowitz, Founder of the Success Charter Network addressed the gathering as did Ex-Senator Craig M. Johnson (D-Nassau).  Senator Johnson, who lost his seat to Senator elect Martin after two terms, is a staunch supporter of public charter schools and parent choice.  










Saturday, December 11, 2010

Joel Klein is awarded the HSA3 2010 Beyond Z Award


back row: Sabrina Williams (HSA1), LiSandra Rivera (HSA3), John Bosley (HSA3)
middle row:  Tom Perna (HSA1), Mashairi Motta (HSA3), Chancellor Joel Klein, Glo Anderson-Flete (HSA3)
front row: Ny Whittaker (HSA3), Valencia Motta (HSA3)   
A representative group of Harlem Success Academy (HSA) parents joined the HSA3 Parent Council Executive Committee (PCEC) on the stairs of the Tweed Courthouse in lower Manhattan on Wednesday, December 8th as they awarded outgoing NYC School Chancellor, Joel Klein with the 2010 Beyond Z Award.

The chancellor was awarded a framed certificate, thank you cards and a Harlem Success Academy themed gift basket in appreciation for his unwavering support of parent choice and Public Charter Schools during his eight year tenure as the NYC School Chancellor.  

At one point during the meeting, Chancellor Klein was visibly touched and moved to tears when a current Harlem Success Academy parent recounted his tale of trying to educate an older child in the NYC traditional Public school system before charter schools and parent choice were an option.  “Traditional public schools failed my oldest child.  There is no comparison between the rigorous curriculum and total-child focus of public charter schools and what I was offered in traditional public schools before all of this was an option.  My youngest son is thriving.  Thank you, Chancellor Klein for being our champion for change.  My family thanks you.” said parent, John Bosley, with tear filled eyes.   

Chancellor Klein lamented about the inequity of not being able to find good quality, free education 56 years after the Brown vs. The Board of Education ruling.  Brown vs. The Board of Ed was a landmark decision of the United States Supreme Court that declared state laws establishing separate public schools for black and white students unconstitutional. The decision overturned the Plessy v. Ferguson decision of 1896 which allowed state-sponsored segregation. Handed down on May 17, 1954, the Warren Court's unanimous (9–0) decision stated that "separate educational facilities are inherently unequal." As a result, racial segregation was ruled a violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.  This ruling paved the way for integration and the civil rights movement.  He encouraged parents to fight tirelessly for what they believe in even after his departure from the office of the Chancellor.  

The event was covered by Fox 5 new and aired at 5 o’clock and 11 o’clock on December 8th.  





     

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Math?? No problem!!

HSA3 2010 MATH BEE PARTICIPANTS


Sean Pena
Nervous parents adjusted ties and ponytails in the lobby outside the auditorium at HSA2.  Cameramen from NY1 news adjusted their lenses and the audience buzzed as the third grade scholars from the Harlem Success Academies 1, 2, 3 and 4 gathered on Tuesday, December 7th for their second annual Math Bee.  In early November each third grade homeroom class held their own math bee and three scholars from each homeroom were selected to represent their class and school in the network math bee and all contestants received a medal for their participation.  

At promptly 5:00pm the opening remarks were made and the bee was officially underway!  Slowly, third grade contestants made their way to the front of the stage for a practice round where they were given simple questions to acclimate them with the format of the bee.  After the practice round, the bee kicked into high gear with scholars being asked to answer questions related to addition and subtraction with and without regroup, multiplication and division.  Scholars were given 5 seconds to answer each question.  Our scholars fought hard and the competition was fierce!  Finally, the field was narrowed and a victor emerged!




Evelyn Knapp (HSA1) emerged victorious!  Sean Pena (HSA3) and Brandon Bautista (HSA4) shared second place!  Kiss you brains scholars!  Job well done!  The winners are pictured below with Eva Moskowitz, founder of Success Charter Network.   

After the competition, the winners were invited to the NY1 studios and were interviewed by Shelley Goldberg.  The segment will aire on December 16th throughout the day.  Be sure to tune in!
HSA 2010 Math Bee winners with Eva Moskowitz



HSA Math Bee winners with Shelley Goldberg of NY1
BRANDON BAUTISTA
SEAN PENA
EVELYN KNAPP

  

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

City Sued Over Cathie Black Waiver


December 8, 2010, 2:51 PM

Second Suit Challenges Waiver for Chancellor

Cathleen P. Black
A group of public school parents and advocates, including a member of the Assembly, filed suit in State Supreme Court in Albany on Tuesday to stop Cathleen P. Black from becoming the next city schools chancellor.
The suit, whose plaintiffs include Hakeem Jeffries, an assemblyman from Brooklyn, is the second legal challenge to Ms. Black’s appointment. Last Friday, Eric J. Snyder, a Brooklyn parent and bankruptcy attorney, also sued for her appointment to be annulled.
The new suit argues that David M. Steiner, the state education commissioner, erred in interpreting the law or acted arbitrarily when he decided to grant Ms. Black a waiver that allows her to become the next chancellor without educational credentials.
In a compromise, Dr. Steiner granted the waiver after the city agreed to appoint a senior deputy with strong educational credentials to serve under Ms. Black. But the law, the suit argues, does not allow the commissioner to rely “upon the educational qualifications of the staff the candidate is to supervise” as a substitute for her own qualifications.
The suit also repeats an argument made by Mr. Snyder, stating that while the law allows the commissioner to excuse Ms. Black’s lack of teaching experience and graduate courses in education, she must still have a master’s degree of some sort.
Ms. Black, 66, a successful publishing executive, holds only a bachelor’s degree in English from Trinity University in Washington.
Norman Siegel, the civil rights lawyer who will be the lead counsel in the case, said he expected the court in Albany to consider his and Mr. Snyder’s suit together. Oral arguments in Mr. Snyder’s case are scheduled for Dec. 23.
A spokesman for the state Department of Education, Tom Dunn, said Tuesday that the department had been notified of the suit, but that he would not comment on pending litigation.
Among the plaintiffs are members of a group called the Deny Waiver Coalition, a collection of parent groups critical of how the mayor has managed the city’s 1,600 schools. They include Khem Irby, the former president of the Community Education Council for District 13 in Brooklyn; Lydia Bellahcene and Julie Cavanaugh, members of Community Advocates for Public Education; Mona Davids, the president of the New York Charter Parents Association; and Noah E. Gotbaum, the president of the Community Education Council for District 3 in Manhattan.

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

14 Schools Slated for Closure

Gotham Schools report:
http://gothamschools.org/2010/12/07/city-adds-14-schools-to-planned-closure-list-bringing-total-to-26/ 

Citing improvements the schools have made over the past year, the city is sparing four of the 19 schools the city proposed closing last year: the Choir Academy of Harlem, W.H. Maxwell Career and Technical Education High School, the Middle School for Academic and Social Excellence and the Business, Computer Applications and Entrepreneurship High School.

The city is proposing that most of the schools on its list stop admitting new classes next year and phase out over time. For two schools, KAPPA II and the Academy for Collaborative Education, the city plans to shutter all grades at once at the end of this year.

City officials culled the final list of 25 district schools to close from a larger list of 55 schools that they 
targeted for possible closure earlier in the fall. Of the 30 schools on that list that were spared today, 14 may still undergo one of two federally-approved strategies for school improvement.

One of those scenarios, known as the “turnaround” model, requires that the schools’ principals be replaced and its staff and teachers re-apply for their jobs; only half may be re-hired. The other model, known as “transformation,” relies on replacing the principal, bringing in outside support services and experimenting with new teacher training and school schedules.

The city and union are currently in talks over which schools might use each model.
Here is the final list of schools the city wants to close. The schools highlighted below were announced today.

picture-2

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Joel Klein: What I Learned at the Education Barricades - WSJ.com

This is a fascinating article that was published in The Wall Street Journal this morning.  Klein, who has always been a friend of charter schools and parent choice, gave a major kudos to Harlem Success Academy in the second paragraph!  Roller Coaster Cheer for Chancellor Klein!!  
Over the past eight years, I've been privileged to serve as chancellor of the New York City Department of Education, the nation's largest school district. Working with a mayor who courageously took responsibility for our schools, our department has made significant changes and progress. Along the way, I've learned some important lessons about what works in public education, what doesn't, and what (and who) are the biggest obstacles to the transformative changes we still need.
First, it is wrong to assert that students' poverty and family circumstances severely limit their educational potential. It's now proven that a child who does poorly with one teacher could have done very well with another. Take Harlem Success Academy, a charter school with all minority, mostly high-poverty students admitted by lottery. It performs as well as our gifted and talented schools that admit kids based solely on demanding tests. We also have many new small high schools that replaced large failing ones, and are now getting outsized results for poor children.
Second, traditional proposals for improving education—more money, better curriculum, smaller classes, etc.—aren't going to get the job done. Public education is a service-delivery challenge, and it must be operated as such. Albert Shanker, the legendary teachers union head, was right when he said that education has to be, first and foremost, about accountability for "student outcomes." This means there must be "consequences if children or adults don't perform."
When Mayor Bloomberg and I started, there was zero accountability. Instead, bureaucrats, unions and politicians had their way, and they blamed poor results on students and their families. When we talked about managing the system with organizational practices that work in every other sector of our economy—like accountability, incentives and competition—we were told that education isn't a business. Maybe so, but whether it's health care, education or any other service, poorly-structured, nonaccountable delivery systems cost a fortune and don't work.
To counter the dysfunction, we turned the system upside down. We empowered principals, giving them new authority over budgets, hiring and other programs. In return, we held them accountable for student outcomes, rewarding them for success or removing them and closing their schools for poor performance. To attract and retain strong teachers, we raised salaries substantially and paid more to our best teachers who agreed to transfer to low-performing schools. We also increased choices for families by replacing almost 100 failing schools with about 500 new, small schools designed with community and charter management groups. Multiple studies showed that these new choices yielded significantly better results. Competition works.
Getty Images
A math class at the Harlem Success Academy charter school.
Our embrace of charter schools was especially controversial. But why should any student have to settle for a neighborhood school if it's awful? The debate shouldn't be about whether a school is a traditional or charter public school. It should be about whether it's high-performing, period. Low-income families deserve the ability to make the best choices for their kids, as more financially secure families always have.
Changing the system wasn't easy. The people with the loudest and best-funded voices are committed to maintaining a status quo that protects their needs even if it doesn't work for children. They want to keep their jobs by preserving a guaranteed customer base (a fixed number of students), regardless of performance.
We have to rid the system of this self-serving approach. We must stop protecting ineffective teachers and stop basing layoffs on a last-in/first-out rule. With federal stimulus dollars running out, budgets are only going to get tighter and layoffs will be necessary. When that happens, do we really want to lose the talented and energetic new teachers we have hired in the last few years?
Finally, we need to innovate, as every successful sector of our economy does. The classroom model we have used since the 19th century, in which one teacher stands in front of a room of 20-30 kids, is obsolete. We should be making the most of new technology and programs that help teachers deliver personalized instruction and allow students to learn at their own pace. In New York City we've experimented with new models and seen great promise, but it will take larger investments to see real results.
As I leave the best job I've ever had, I know that more progress is possible despite the inevitable resistance to change. To prevail, the public and, most importantly, parents must insist on a single standard: Every school has to be one to which we'd send our own kids. We are not remotely close to that today.
We know how to fix public education. The question is whether we have the political will to do it.
Mr. Klein is the outgoing chancellor of the New York City Department of Education. In January he will become an executive vice president of News Corporation, which owns the Journal.

*This article can also be accessed through the link below or copy and paste the entire address into your web browser.


http://online.wsj.com/article_email/SB10001424052748704104104575622800493796156-lMyQjAxMTAwMDAwMzEwNDMyWj.html