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Horace Mann Yields Surge as Schools Stuck By Auctions

Horace Mann Yields Surge as Schools Stuck By Auctions

Horace Mann School, the $29,000-a- year preparatory school in the Bronx, and dozens more New York educational and cultural institutions just got stuck between the collapse of auction-rate bonds and an expired New York law.

Rates on $60 million of the securities sold by Horace Mann in 2002 rose to 5.4 percent last month from 3.4 percent. At nearby Riverdale Country School, where tuition is $35,250 for grades six through 12, interest jumped to 11 percent from 3 percent.

Interest costs almost doubled for borrowers in the $330 billion auction-rate bond market this year after banks stopped buying unwanted securities for the first time since they were created in the 1980s. Unlike local governments across the country, the New York institutions can’t convert the bonds into other types of debt after a state funding law expired Jan. 31.

“It’s a horrible situation,” said Andrew Alper, former chairman of the New York City Economic Development Corp. and a board member at Riverdale. “The only solution is to pay the bonds off or to pay a higher interest rate.”

Horace Mann officials declined to comment. Graduates of the 121-year-old school, located on 18 acres overlooking Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx, include venture capital investor Alan Patricof, founder of private equity firm Apax Partners, and Eliot Spitzer. Spitzer, who in 2004 received the Alumni Council Award for Distinguished Achievement when he was attorney general, resigned as New York’s governor this month amid allegations that he patronized prostitutes.

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Orono & Bronx Kids Learn ABout Each Other: The Laramie Project

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Orono & Bronx Kids Learn ABout Each Other: The Laramie Project

ORONO, Maine - This weekend’s production of “The Laramie Project” is about bringing attention to some tough issues, while offering students the chance to learn about their peers and make some new friends.

Orono High School students have been participating in a program called Operation Breaking Stereotypes that pairs up schools from Maine with schools from New York City with the goal of addressing the issues of stereotyping and working to build awareness of the problem.

Students from Orono have been working with students from Riverdale/Kingsbridge Academy in Bronx, N.Y., for several months. The Orono students went to the Bronx last fall where they put on a joint performance of “The Laramie Project.”

“I think it sends a really important message that the little things that people say and do can really add up quickly, and horrible things can happen because of things that people don’t think about,” OHS sophomore Emily Bottie, 15, said Thursday. “It’s great to show a bunch of different people this story.”

The play is based on reactions to the 1998 murder of a young gay man, Matthew Shepard, in Laramie, Wyo., and demonstrates how a small town reacted to one of the most publicized hate crimes in the country.

After the production, the students will assist in leading a discussion with the audience to talk about some of the issues brought up in the play, including homosexuality, homophobia and stereotypes.

“We need to look beyond what we see every day,” OHS sophomore Colby Brown, 16, said. “Everyone in their own way is being discriminated upon by someone somewhere. I think people need to have a reminder in today’s society. As much as we don’t want to believe it’s happening, it is.”

During their stay, local families are hosting students from the Bronx, and on Friday the students got a chance to shadow their OHS partners during the school day.

“What surprised me the most is that the kids there are exactly like us,” Brown said. “They talk a little bit different, but that’s about it. They live and do everything else just the same way we do.”

“It really surprised me how alike we were from the kids that live in the Bronx,” Bottie said. “I thought they would all be the stereotype that I have in my head.”

The students were scheduled to perform “The Laramie Project” for their peers Friday and will host a free performance open to the community at 7 p.m. today at the Church of Universal Fellowship, 82 Main St.

“Hopefully they can see what reality is as far as people discriminating — what really happens,” OHS sophomore Jake Doing, 15, said. “I’ve heard of a few things, but I never heard it’s a big problem. People don’t really come out and talk about things like that, and this is right in your face.”

SOURCE: BangorNews.com

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St. Pius V School in the Bronx Being Closed

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St. Pius V School in the Bronx Being Closed

Diana Santana was making her usual morning rounds at St. Pius V School in the Bronx on Wednesday when the principal, Violeta G. Domingo, pulled her aside to tell her something. As she spoke, Ms. Domingo stumbled over her words, and her voice cracked. Ms. Santana, who has two children at the school, sensed something was wrong.

The principal finally let it out.

“We are closing,” she said. “They are closing us down.”

On Friday, the Archdiocese of New York made public its announcement that St. Pius was one of six schools that would close for good in June because of financial struggles and declining enrollments. St. Pius has 229 students in prekindergarten through eighth grade, 75 fewer than it had in 2004, the archdiocese said.

Ms. Santana, who is the public relations officer for St. Pius’s parent-teacher association, said she cried when Ms. Domingo told her the news.

“It’s devastating,” Ms. Santana said on Saturday. “It’s really devastating. There’s no words to explain how I feel right now.”

Ms. Santana said that St. Pius, open for 95 years, is more than a school. It is the hub of a close-knit community in the mostly Hispanic Mott Haven section of the Bronx, linking generations. Ms. Santana graduated from St. Pius in 1971. Three of her children have graduated from the school, and she now has twin daughters there in seventh grade, a grandson in second grade and a granddaughter in first grade.

“I feel like we’re being robbed out of something we need in this community,” Ms. Santana said. “It’s a family thing.”

Most St. Pius students live within walking distance and come from poor backgrounds, Ms. Santana said. Everyone, teachers, parents and students, knows one another, she said.

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New York Grades Set Off Debate on Judging Schools

27schools-600.jpgFor South Bronx Academy for Applied Media, receiving an A in the city school rankings was a vindication, said the principal, Roshone Ault.

16schools2190.jpgEmily Borges teaching English at South Bronx Academy for Applied Media earlier this month.

New York Grades Set Off Debate on Judging Schools

Not long after Schools Chancellor Joel I. Klein announced plans last year to give grades of A through F to schools, principals at some of New York City’s coveted specialized high schools grew concerned. With the city looking to reward gains among the lowest-achieving students, how would the elite schools be judged?

The principals peppered the administration with ideas for extra credits for their schools: perhaps counting how many Advanced Placement tests students pass or the college credits they accumulate. In the end, the city decided to tie bonus points for these schools to high scores on state Regents exams.

That served the gold-standard Stuyvesant High School well, propelling it from a high B to a comfortable A. But the principal of Brooklyn Technical High School, Randy J. Asher, called the decision “ridiculous,” saying it contradicted a core principle of the report cards: the need to gauge how far students have come, rather than simply how they perform.

“I think we all really came to the table saying, let’s find something fair for schools like ours,” Mr. Asher, whose school earned a B, said in a recent interview. “And I don’t think we succeeded.”

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg has called the report cards released this month the best way to “hold a principal’s feet to the fire.”

Behind the simple grades are several years’ worth of critical and painstaking decisions about how to measure achievement, what to measure, and when to acknowledge that certain qualities in a school cannot be measured.

But instead of definitively establishing how New York City’s public schools stack up, the grades have set off an impassioned debate about just how schools should be judged.

James S. Liebman, the schools’ chief accountability officer and the architect of the report cards, said that he welcomed the dialogue. “I have a number of e-mails that start with, ‘How could my school get this grade?’” he said in an interview. “And that’s exactly the right question.”

Such questions are also surfacing across the country and producing a variety of conclusions.

In Florida, where former Gov. Jeb Bush put in place a school grading system in 2002, hundreds of schools that have received A’s from the state have landed on the list of failing schools under the federal No Child Left Behind law. In California, the state’s Academic Performance Index, which has been repeatedly altered since it was instituted in 1999, has been criticized by some parents and business leaders as inscrutable.

“Discussion and debate is fine and healthy, but we need to quickly come to some consensus about how to judge schools,” said Michael J. Petrilli, a vice president at the Thomas B. Fordham Foundation in Washington, which supports the school accountability movement. “If there’s anything an accountability system is supposed to do, it’s to provide transparency to the public.”

It took Mr. Klein and his staff several years to put together the report card system, which entailed hundreds of conversations with principals, statisticians, labor leaders, testing experts and scholars. Many of its basic contours have roots in other places.

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More schools adopting ASL as a foreign language

More schools adopting ASL as a foreign language

The classroom at Bronx Leadership Academy II was silent as Arsenio Merced, 17, stood in the front of the room and told a story. When he finished, his fellow students, instead of clapping, held up their hands and shook them around.

Merced, a junior, is taking American Sign Language at this public school in the South Bronx section of New York City. Starting this academic year, students at Bronx Leadership can select American Sign Language to fulfill their language requirement instead of more traditional spoken languages.

“Most of the students are here because they had trouble in other languages,” said David Buie, 29, the school’s sign language instructor. “They seem to be doing a lot better here than they did in Spanish or French.”

For the past two years, Buie has been teaching ASL as an elective, or what the school calls a club, at Bronx Leadership. Students who join the club learn basic vocabulary, and Buie teaches them a popular song of their choosing. Last year the students learned “Irreplaceable” by Beyonce, performing the song for the whole school at the end of the semester.

But this year, the school approached Buie, who has been studying ASL since 2005, to redesign the class from a club that meets once a week to a formal language course that counts toward graduation.

Merced decided to take the class not because he was having trouble in other languages, but because his aunt is deaf, and both her children are fluent in sign language.

“I wanted to learn it so I can talk to my aunt,” he said. “And by luck, I can teach it to some of my cousins.”

Merced said, with a deaf member of his family, he had always wanted to learn ASL but didn’t know where to take lessons. His aunt had a book, but it wasn’t enough to teach him.

“When I heard I could take it here, I was really interested,” he said. “I wanted to learn more.”

Bronx Leadership Academy II is one of a rapidly growing number of high schools across America that are using ASL as a foreign-language requirement. In 2000, according to a survey of state education departments by Teachers College at Columbia University, there were 456 high schools that taught ASL, not including high schools targeted toward deaf students. By 2004, the number had jumped to 701.

Steve Ackley, director of communications for the American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages, in Alexandria, Va., said this sudden rise helped bring about his organization’s recent recognition of ASL as an official foreign language.

The council never deliberately left ASL teachers out, he said. “But there was a growing interest, a growing number of people in the ASL community that asked us to support it.”

Ackley said there was no opposition he could recall from inside or outside of his organization when it adopted the stance that sign language is a foreign language.

The council believes that ASL teachers are a legitimate part of the foreign-language community, he said, “and since we are the umbrella organization for all languages at all levels, it was a natural progression for them to become part of that.”

Geoffrey Poor, associate professor in the department of sign language and interpreting services at the National Technical Institute for the Deaf in Rochester, N.Y., said in an e-mail that in the linguistics community, the issue of ASL as a foreign language was “laid to rest” with the publication of A Dictionary of American Sign Language on Linguistic Principles in 1965 by William Stokoe, a sign language teacher at what is now Gallaudet University, the world-renowned university for the deaf in Washington. But in popular culture, he said, those who accept ASL as a foreign language are harder to come by.

“For a long time people figured, out of ignorance, that it was just miming, broken English, etc.,” he said about ASL. “However, there is no deaf cuisine or clothing or country,” which, Poor believes, is why “many people have resisted giving it a foreign-language status.”

Resistance to ASL seems to be waning. As of 2006, 41 states had approved of adding ASL to the foreign-language curriculum, with Nebraska being the most recent addition.

“A group of hard-of-hearing and not-hard-of-hearing people wanted to encourage more people to go into sign language,” said Jim Scheer, member of the Nebraska State Board of Education. He said the group wanted to encourage people to not only work in the deaf community, but also gain a skill that would give them a competitive edge in other professional fields, such as medicine and social work.

“The only problem we encountered was to teach the course, you need to be a certified teacher,” Scheer said.

Scheer explained that a teacher needs a college degree or an official endorsement, and there is only one college in the state, the University of Nebraska at Omaha, that teaches ASL. Right now, he said, only two high schools offer courses in ASL, but the hope is that since state approval, certified teachers from outside Nebraska will be attracted to the state.

“It’s like the chicken and the egg,” he said. “No teachers are currently certified, but we might give people interested in ASL an opportunity to get a degree and come back to teach.”

At Bronx Leadership Academy II, outside of Buie’s classroom, all the students have posted their names on a bulletin board with the various hand signs spelling out each one. Inside, they go over vocabulary words for an upcoming quiz. Merced eagerly shouts the words as Buie signs them out.

“This means a lot to me right now,” Merced said. “This is the reason I am doing this. Sometimes it will be hard, but I will take the chance.”

SOURCE: Rutland Herald
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