Slideshow-1 Slideshow-2 Slideshow-3 Slideshow-4

Other Info


Bronx Gallery Random Image

Bronx Gallery Random Images

Talk Networks
Delaware Chat
Pennsylvania Forum
New York Chat



Large High Schools in the City Are Taking Hard Falls

Students from Christopher Columbus High School and Global Enterprise Academy marched to protest the scheduled closing of their schools  The boos cascaded over the auditorium as a city education official read out the case against Christopher Columbus High School, one of the last remaining large high schools in the Bronx.

Columbus has had “long history of sustained academic failure” and “chronically poor performance and low demand,” Santiago Taveras, a deputy chancellor, told the standing-room crowd. As a result, he said, it should be closed.

But the frustrated teachers, soft-spoken students and former football players who stood up at the hearing said otherwise. They described a school that had served some students well, despite the difficult circumstances faced by many. They told of a school that, even after the city identified it as struggling, continued to receive ever-growing proportions of the city’s most demanding students — the very students that needed the most help.

“And now that they have found a home here, and have been welcomed with open arms to our family, you want to take that away from them, too,” said Jaime Allen, a special education teacher.

Closing schools for poor performance, especially large high schools, has been one of the most controversial hallmarks of Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg’s control of the school system. And it is taking on a new urgency, both in New York and around the country, with the Obama administration putting a premium on “school turnaround” policies in its nationwide competition, called Race to the Top, for billions of dollars in federal education grants. Read more..

 

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...
Email This Post Email This Post





Teacher who called Bronx school kids ‘animals’ is still out of a job

An Ivy League grad who got canned from a teaching fellowship after calling his Bronx students “filthy animals” who belonged in a “f—–g zoo” can’t have his job back, a judge has ruled.

Steven Clarke’s career at the Global Enterprise Academy lasted all of two months, until he ranted last year, “My parents did not sacrifice for me to go to Cornell so I could take care of a bunch of animals.”

Clarke filed suit in Manhattan Supreme Court arguing Principal Richard Levine did not have the power to ax him and only a district superintendent could.

Supreme Court Justice Marilyn Shafer sided with the Education Department when she tossed the suit and wrote that Clarke was “terminable at will.”

“Clarke’s termination was not done for an impermissible reason,” she wrote. “He was terminated after it was found … he had verbally abused students.”

Clarke’s defense was that his comments came in a conversation with another teacher - and weren’t aimed directly at a class of 10th-graders.

That excuse didn’t wash with Levine, who pointed out that Clarke had previously been accused of verbal abuse. Read more..

 

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...
Email This Post Email This Post