About the time that school lets out tomorrow Thursday, September 29, at 3:30 pm, deputy mayor for education (DME) Jennifer Niles will hold her third stakeholder phone call concerning the DCPS chancellor selection process. You can register for the phone call here. There will be time for (some) questions after the DME gives an update on … Continue reading DCPS Stakeholder Phone Call: Thursday September 29, 3:30 pm
Lead in Water and Modernizations: Discuss
On Thursday, October 6, starting at 11:30 am, expect a perfect storm of testimony at the Wilson Building. That is when the city council convenes a hearing on two, seemingly unrelated, items: summer modernization work in DCPS and new legislation for lead testing. (For more information and to sign up to testify, see here.) The … Continue reading Lead in Water and Modernizations: Discuss
Candidate Education Forum: September 28
This coming Wednesday, September 28, at 6:30 pm, at the Columbia Heights Education campus (3101 16th St. NW), DC Education Coalition for Change will hold a debate and (brief) question and answer forum for a variety of state board of education and council at large candidates. Scheduled participants include council education committee chair and at … Continue reading Candidate Education Forum: September 28
Ellington and the Disappeared Western High School
[The following is by Peter MacPherson, DC schools activist; see his original on Ellington here.] There are few who will dispute that the new Duke Ellington School of the Arts building being constructed on the periphery of Georgetown is going to be a stunning piece of architecture. The District of Columbia Public Schools will have … Continue reading Ellington and the Disappeared Western High School
Determining Residency for Schools
A few weeks ago, the office of the state superintendent of education (OSSE) sent out notice of proposed amendments to rules for residency verification. The comment period ends October 24; comments can be sent in via email (information at the link above) or snail mail (ditto). The purpose of the rule making, according to a … Continue reading Determining Residency for Schools
School Nurses: Going Extinct in DC?
[updated: see 9/23/16 update below] The school nurse situation as we DC residents have known (and loved/hated) it will be no longer come January 2017, barring changes by the mayor and/or council. Specifically: January is when the current contract for school nurses will expire. A new plan will provide what is effectively 1/2 nurse per … Continue reading School Nurses: Going Extinct in DC?
Tuesday September 20: Chancellor Selection Committee Meets–and More
Now, more than halfway through September, racing toward an October deadline for picking the next DCPS chancellor, the chancellor selection committee--the 17-member advisory body that is advising the mayor on the next DCPS chancellor--will have its next public meeting on Tuesday September 20. The meeting will take place at the Main Hall, Trinity Washington University, … Continue reading Tuesday September 20: Chancellor Selection Committee Meets–and More
At Large State Board of Education Election: Money, Might, and a Missing Candidate
On September 15, the DC board of elections published a list of candidates for the November general election. But the candidate for the state board of education with perhaps the largest campaign chest—Jacque Patterson--was not on that list. The reason? Lack of qualified signatures on his ballot petition, identified in a challenge brought by the … Continue reading At Large State Board of Education Election: Money, Might, and a Missing Candidate
“How Does That Comply With The Law?”
(Screen shot of video provided by DC office of cable television, DC council channel on demand) This picture, of deputy mayor for education Jennifer Niles, is from hour two, minute 24 (2:24:02) of a video of a July 11 hearing held by the education committee of the city council, on proposed legislation to rework the master … Continue reading “How Does That Comply With The Law?”
Lost In Translation
[NB 9/10/16: See comment below in response.] From a 8/12/16 post on the blog of David Grosso, chair of the city council education committee, summarizing conversations with 50 DC public school teachers from 12 charter and DCPS schools at two summer educator townhalls on July 18 and August 2: “Teachers are pressured by school leaders to reduce their reliance … Continue reading Lost In Translation