In the swirl of upcoming performance oversight hearings (see the list below and this site's calendar) and council actions regarding our public schools, what’s notable is what’s not being said. For one, the mayor has just requested for DCPS buildings a lot of reprogramming of money originally slated for other uses--to the tune of $54 million. The … Continue reading What’s Not Said: Hearings & Budgets
Three Events: January 22, 2019
Tomorrow, Tuesday January 22, three different events will mark an interesting convergence on the idea of justice in public education in DC. First, at 4 pm, the public charter school board will hold a special board meeting at its headquarters (3333 14th St. NW), to vote on revoking the charter of National Collegiate Prep. (For … Continue reading Three Events: January 22, 2019
Better School Quality Measures–And Hearings
Herein a rundown of events on the horizon: DCPS calendar feedback: DCPS is soliciting feedback on calendar proposals. See here for more information. School will start August 26 (traditional calendar) or August 12 (extended year calendar). OSSE school report card feedback: The office of the state superintendent of education (OSSE) would like your thoughts on … Continue reading Better School Quality Measures–And Hearings
Happy 2019! Continuing Odds & Ends From 2018
Amount of money that DCPS is paying this school year to a private charter entity to sublet a DC-owned, former DCPS school in which DCPS is operating a DCPS school that used to be a charter school: $904,166.69 Number of leases of DC-owned, former DCPS school buildings rented out to charter entities available to the … Continue reading Happy 2019! Continuing Odds & Ends From 2018
Failing High School, DC Style
Silence. That was the response on a sunny afternoon several weeks ago, in a 12th floor DCPS conference room with sight lines to the hills of Anacostia, when three DCPS officials (Sarah Parker; Claudia Lujan; Eli Hoffman) and Jennifer Comey, a staffer for the deputy mayor for education (DME), were asked who made the decision … Continue reading Failing High School, DC Style
Prediction: Erecting Roadblocks To Educating Our Kids Will Not End Well
As with the revelation last week that DCPS is not providing required science and social studies at some of its middle schools, yesterday's City Paper investigation about generally unregulated interim education providers was met with a lot of silence from city education leaders. The City Paper report detailed how a 5th grade child with special needs, … Continue reading Prediction: Erecting Roadblocks To Educating Our Kids Will Not End Well
The Week In Review: Just Like The Year In Review, Only More So
Soooo, in addition to a new chancellor apparently selected against the wishes of the chancellor selection panel (and who comes with both scandal and ed reform kudos), we have his new supervisor, Paul Kihn, who as deputy mayor for education stated the city must “look at [the] role” of schools of right (which I guess … Continue reading The Week In Review: Just Like The Year In Review, Only More So
Why DC Needs Independent Education Data: Ellington Edition
So, a DC education agency makes mistakes--a lot of them, turns out--in determining who is a resident of DC at one DCPS high school (Ellington). Then, in the wake of several lawsuits, the agency quietly issues an (undated) report that shows (but doesn't admit) how the agency made a lot of mistakes, and then--well, read it all … Continue reading Why DC Needs Independent Education Data: Ellington Edition
Forum On DC Teacher & Principal Retention: November 28
This Wednesday November 28, from 6 pm-8 pm, the DC State Board of Education (SBOE) and teacher advocacy group EmpowerEd will hold a joint forum on staff retention in DC’s publicly funded schools. The forum will be held at Walker-Jones Education Campus, 1125 New Jersey Ave. NW. RSVP here. The idea is to brainstorm how … Continue reading Forum On DC Teacher & Principal Retention: November 28
Second Time’s The Charm: DCPS Budget Hearing
Each fall, DCPS is mandated to hear from the public concerning the DCPS budget. The exercise for 2018 was supposed to have happened back on November 7--but an electricity outage at Phelps forced the event to be postponed. Now, the budget hearing is slated to happen this coming Tuesday November 27, starting at 5:30 pm, … Continue reading Second Time’s The Charm: DCPS Budget Hearing