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xchrom

(108,903 posts)
Fri Mar 14, 2014, 08:43 AM Mar 2014

Teachers, Students Caught in Charter School Fight, Success Academy Employees Say

http://www.thenation.com/blog/178844/teachers-students-caught-charter-school-fight-success-academy-employees-say


Eva Moskowitz, CEO and Founder of the Success Academy (Photo courtesy of House Committee on Education and the Workforce Democrats, CC 2.0)

On the first Tuesday in March, thousands of students, parents and teachers rallied at the New York state capitol in Albany to protest what the media quickly dubbed New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio’s “war” on charter schools and minority students. Eva Moskowitz, the founder of the Success Academy charter network and one of the mayor’s fiercest critics, closed all twenty-two of her schools so that students and staff could participate in what she called “the largest civic field trip in history.”

But it wasn’t merely a field trip; the rally was a political event, in protest of de Blasio’s decision not to approve plans for three Success Academies to co-locate with traditional public schools, and more broadly his proposal to charge rent to charters occupying city school buildings. (The mayor approved forty-five other co-location proposals, five of them put forward by Success Academy.) Moskowitz has been the most vocal opponent of the new mayor’s education policies, though few have been enacted. As the debate intensifies, staff and students at Success Academy are being increasingly drawn into the political battle—or pushed into it, according to several employees who spoke to The Nation on condition of anonymity.

“I don’t want to say it’s hostile, or abusive, but definitely I feel that coercive measures are taken,” said a staff member who works in the school’s administration. “The rally really demonstrated this lack of boundaries.”

The teachers and staffers who spoke to The Nation said that although they were never told they would lose their jobs if they did not attend the rally, they didn’t think they had much choice and were afraid to ask for an exception. “An option was not presented. The schools assigned everyone with a job, so you were either going to be an instructional coach or a bus captain,” one teacher explained. “They weren’t really asking us if that’s what we wanted to do. They were telling us that that’s what we were going to do instead of teaching for the day.” Many charter schools like Success are nonunionized, and celebrate the fact that they can fire teachers more easily than schools with teachers' unions can; many charter teachers have described a culture of fear resulting from job insecurity.
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Teachers, Students Caught in Charter School Fight, Success Academy Employees Say (Original Post) xchrom Mar 2014 OP
Oh Madam Mossfern Mar 2014 #1
yes. they get to pick and choose. xchrom Mar 2014 #2
They absolutly do, and quite often tech3149 Mar 2014 #3

Madam Mossfern

(2,340 posts)
1. Oh
Fri Mar 14, 2014, 08:50 AM
Mar 2014

I thought it was some sort of melee; couldn't get the picture out my head. Teachers and students in a food fight?

Seriously though, I'm quite conflicted about charter schools. Shouldn't all public schools have the same excellence? I do know that there's a lottery, but do charter schools have the authority to expel a non-performing or disruptive student?

xchrom

(108,903 posts)
2. yes. they get to pick and choose.
Fri Mar 14, 2014, 08:55 AM
Mar 2014

and that's just 1 of the problems.

in this case -- the few schools that de blasio wanted to deal with were taking rent free space in public schools -- there by limiting space for public school students.

tech3149

(4,452 posts)
3. They absolutly do, and quite often
Fri Mar 14, 2014, 08:59 AM
Mar 2014

I never had a problem with the concept of charter schools. I thought it a good concept for finding ways to improve educational quality.

Everything I've seen and read over the years proves to me that the concept has been hijacked to provide a revenue stream for the investors much more often than it is about education.

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