Blog: Archives

HS admissions: 48% get 1st choice; 10% get no match

Fewer than half of the nearly 80,000 8th-graders who applied to up to 12 high schools last fall were matched with their first choice school, and 10 percent got no match at all, the Department of Education announced today. This year's crop of 8th-graders fared worse than than last year's when 52%...

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Kindergartners waitlisted at more than 150 schools

More than 2,600 children are on the waiting list for kindergarten at their zoned school, with another 553 awaiting spots at an out-of-zone school their sibling attends.  A total of 3,195 children are on waitlists at 157 schools, many more than the 2,200 at 88 schools who were on waitlists this...

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Charter school applications due April 1; see our new reviews

We have been visiting charter schools this spring and have posted 20 new profiles, just in time for the April 1 application deadline. In addition, we have posted nine previews of charter schools that are scheduled to open in the fall. You may apply directly to each school; some schools also...

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Budget cut protests set for Albany & City Hall

Parents and community members concerned about Governor Cuomo's budget, which slashes aid to city schools, can get on a bus to Albany tomorrow, March 30, at 10 a.m. to protest the cuts. The trip is organized by advocacy groups including the Alliance for Quality Education., with the main buses...

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Ask the College Counselor: Only my "safety" school accepted me

Q: I applied to five colleges, but now I'm thinking I ought to have applied to more.  I was rejected by my reach school -- but it was a real reach, so I was not shocked.  I got into my safety, which is a branch of SUNY.  But the other three schools all wait-listed me!  I thought for sure that I...

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Want to get involved? Apply now for a seat on a parent council

Nominations are open for parents who want to serve for the next two years on Citywide or District Community Education Councils, advisory boards which advocate  on zoning, how school buildings are used, and how DOE policies affect schools in each district.  If you'd like to serve on a council, you...

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DOE & advocates invite students to "celebrate inclusion"

Parents for Inclusive Education and the NYC Division of Students with Disabilities and English Language Learners are inviting students to enter a 2011 - Inclusion Contestanswering this question: "How does Inclusive Education make my school great?" Students from kindergarten to 12th grade may...

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Elementary Dad: Real men carry pink umbrellas

After dropping off my kindergartner one rainy morning, I found myself exiting the schoolyard behind a father who worked at one of those knuckle-busting jobs where a man gets intimately acquainted with dirt, steel and sweat. He wore an oil-stained cap, dust-covered boots and a quilt-lined Carhartt...

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Parents are mobilizing for faster removal of PCBs in schools

Valerie Watnick is a professor at Baruch College, teaching environmental and business law, and is a past Co-PTA President of PS 199 in Manhattan. She has written about the dangers of PCBs. This is her third update for Insideschools.org about the efforts to rid New York City schools of PCBs and...

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Fitness Focus: Get nonprofits on the team!

AtMS 210, an overcrowded school in Ozone Park where 81 percent of the 2,070 students get free lunch, Principal Rosalyn Allman-Manning has gone outside the Department of Education to add to her phys-ed menu. She's one of four principals this year to pilot a partnership between the DOE and Row New...

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Ask Judy: How to ease the transition to middle school

Dear Judy, I  have a wonderful and very respectful daughter who suffers  from anxiety and ADHD. She has never had a fight or behavioral problems. I am concerned with the change of school because this year she will be going to middle school and I am hoping you could help me with some tips on what...

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Living with a learning disability

The other day, I was on the phone with my daughters’ pediatrician. I had called with concerns about my 6-year-old, Night Owl, who has learning disabilities and motor delays, and in her most reassuring voice the doctor said: “You know, we live in a highly competitive place. A lot of the kids at...

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Why I served on a CDEC… and why I no longer do

This month the Department of Education is calling for public school parents to run for a seat on the citywide and community district parent councils. Applications will be available on March 23, according to the Office of Family Information and Action (OFIA). In 2009 I answered such a call and...

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Apply now for charter schools: See our new reviews & 16 new schools

Parents interested in charter schools should fill out applications before April 1. We have posted more than a dozen new reviews of charter schools and will post more this spring. You may apply directly to the school. In addition, you may apply to some of the schools via a common application on...

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Elementary Dad: Protesting budget cuts? Count me in

AQE Lobby Day in Albany (Photo Courtesy of Alliance for Quality Education) Last week, activists hoping to avert budget cuts in New York public education — cuts that will have a direct and lasting impact on my child’s future — asked parents like me to join a pro-schools rally on the steps of City...

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Parents rally against budget cuts; meeting tonight

UPDATE 3 p.m.: See a press release issued after the rally here. Note there is a  citywide schools meeting at 6 pm this evening  (March 10) at The High School of Fashion Industries (225 West 24th Street) to continue the discussion about education budget cuts and determine next action steps for...

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Fitness Focus: Get heart rate up & test scores will follow

Students enjoying- see?- the NYC FITNESSGRAM test (Courtesy DOE) Gov. Andrew Cuomo says he needs to trim fat from public budgets. Here's an unbeatable move: cut test-prep time in half and staff up physical education. The numbers prove that athletic testing creates confidence, while academic...

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Pre-K Corner: Scrambling for spots

Now is the time of year when  parents of 3 and 4-year-olds fill out applications, take deep breaths, and then…wait. The pre-K application period begins today, Monday March 7, but placement letters won’t go out until early June. So how’s a parent to plan ahead? For some 4-year-olds, winning a...

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Diane Ravitch & Jon Stewart talk school reform

Jon Stewart this week blastedconservative media and politicians for protecting Wall Street while calling teachers “greedy.” Last night Stewart’s guest was education historian and NYU Professor  Diane Ravitch, discussing her book The Death and Life of the Great American School System. I watched...

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Applications for kindergarten due March 4. See our new reviews

Parents whose children will turn five this year should submit their applications for kindergarten by Friday. You may apply at your zoned neighborhood school as well as any other schools that may interest you. The good news: Overcrowding in Manhattan has eased a bit as new schools have opened. The...

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Ready for pre-K? Registration, info sessions begin March 7

Is your child turning four-years-old  this year? The pre-kindergarten admissions process for next fall begins Monday, March 7 with  applications due by April 8.  All children who turn four in 2011 are eligible for public pre-K, although they are not guaranteed a seat. For newcomers to the...

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Elementary Dad: Mean girls meet the Old Maid

If trend-watchers are correct, today’s girls will feel the cruel sting of social bullying at a younger age and with more lasting damage than girls of their mothers’ generation. I want to shield my daughter against this gathering Mean Girl storm of rejection, snarky gossip and social ostracism. So...

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Lobby Day(s): Parents mobilize for more school aid

March 1 is "Lobby Day," the annual event when New York City parents, teachers, and activists travel by the hundreds to the state capitol and legislative office buildings to make their case for more funding for the city’s public schools. This year budget cuts, teachers’ jobs, and school closings...

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Fitness Focus: Better fitness leads to better test scores

That was then: Henry Street Settlement gym class, 1910. - via leposters.com In recent years, many schools have cut gym time in an attempt to focus more on academics. But research shows they should be doing the opposite: Better fitness means  better performance on academic tests. Studies in...

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Principal's Perspective: School choice and diversity

In December, Arts & Letters won approval to expand our middle school downward to include elementary grades, eventually becoming a K-8 school.  And now, happily, we are engaged in the important and exciting work of recruiting children, families, and teachers to build a vibrant, meaningful...

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City agrees to replace PCB-leaking light fixtures in schools

The city today announced a 10-year plan to remove and replace all school lighting fixtures contaminated with PCBs, allocating $708 million in its capital budget to implement the plan which will also include an audit and recommendations by energy companies to determine  how to improve energy...

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Ross Charter will close...with yet another new principal

The Ross Global Academy Charter School will close in June after five tumultuous years.  The school's founder, multimillionaire  Courtney Ross, made the announcement with "heavy heart," and "disappointment and anguish" in a five-page letter to parents and supporters, as reported on the nyc...

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Register now for Green Cup Challenge

Insideschools' Going Green contributor Jennifer Freeman alerts us that February 23 is the last day for schools to sign up for the Green Cup Challenge. Schools that join the challenge spend four weeks working to reduce electricity consumption in their buildings, tracking and comparing energy...

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High School Hustle: No more tears! Why, and how, admissions must change

After two New York City public high school searches in four years, I’m convinced it’s time to revamp the admissions system to make it more transparent and humane. I don’t want to overhear another conversation about who got into certain schools and who didn’t. I don’t want to listen to teenagers...

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New high school open houses; applications due Feb. 28

More than 2,000 eighth-graders and their families attended a fair last weekend to learn about a dozen new high schools that will open in September. The fair came a day after the distribution of lettersto some 28,000 students who learned whether or not they had been received an offer to attend one...

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Poll: How's sharing space going at your school?

With massive budget cuts to education threatened, the charter cap raised, and new school construction unable to keep pace with demand, it’s no surprise that more than half of all the city’s public schools share space with at least one other school. Peaceful co-existence is the gold standard for...

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Ask the College Counselor: Wait until May 1 to say yes

Q:  I applied to six colleges, regular decision.  One of the reasons I didn't apply Early Decision anywhere is because getting financial aid is important.  I really wanted to see if I got more than one acceptance and then could compare the costs before I decide which college to choose.  I like...

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Elementary Dad: What kids learn on the way to school

Confused cries of “Leave me alone!” rang down our street, and I gripped my daughter’s hand a bit tighter. Ahead, directly in our morning path, a cluster of New York police officers were carefully but firmly leading a disheveled elderly woman down the stairs of a brownstone toward a waiting...

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High School Hustle: The envelope please -- but in the mail or at school?

There’s a middle school scene my youngest child will never forget. On the day when eighth-graders received decisions about who got into the city’s nine specialized high schools, the sounds of sobbing reverberated through the hallways. While plenty of students got good news, others experienced the...

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Fitness Focus: Get phys ed back in shape!

Alec Appelbaum writes about urban design and policy for the New York Times and others, focusing on ways cities can become healthier. He is a parent at PS 126 in Manhattan and enjoys exercising on his own and with his family. In "Fitness Focus," he'll be blogging about how to get physical...

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Apply to pre-K beginning March 7

Applications for pre-kindergarten will be available starting March 7 and are due by April 9, according to the Department of Education website.  Any child who turns four in 2011 may apply, but seats are not guaranteed. Programs are housed in public schools or at  community-based organizations, and...

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HS update: New schools fair & specialized test results this week

A fair at the Martin Luther King, Jr. high school building on the Upper West Side this weekend will introduce the 12 new high schools that are scheduled to open in September. A handbook listing the schools will be is posted online and  available at the fair on February 12-13, from 10 a.m. to 1...

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Ask Judy: How can we attract families to our zoned school?

Dear Judy, I am concerned that the parents in my neighborhood are automatically bypassing the zoned school, that my children attend. My kids have had academic success and I have gained appreciation for the principal and staff. How can I convince others to give it a try? Lonely at my zoned...

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Going Green: Upper West Side aims to ban dirty oil from schools

Over 400 of the city's public schools burn a type of heating oil that is known to injure New Yorkers' health, according to a 2009 report by the Environmental Defense Fund (EDF). Though just one percent of New York City's buildings use No. 4 or 6 oil, those few buildings belch out 87 percent of...

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Pre-K Corner: Gifted & Talented test is "just like homework"

On the eve of my four-year-old daughter’s date with the gifted & talented examiner, we sat down together with the Department of Education's sample test, a stack of papers I’d printed out the week before. The goal was not to drill Leia, but to familiarize her with the testing format, so she...

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Panel votes to close 10 schools; approves Upper West Side charter

Some 2000 people -- including many parents with young children in tow -- filed into the Brooklyn Tech auditorium Tuesday night for a six hour meeting, the first of two Panel for Educational Policy (PEP) sessions this week to consider the closure of low-performing schools and the opening  of new...

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Ask the College Counselor: Help! I was deferred

Q:  My first-choice college sent me a letter saying my application is "deferred" and will be looked at again in March.  Does this mean I still have a chance of getting in, or are they just going to reject me anyway? A:  Being "deferred" means that when the college admissions officers looked at...

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Parents say "fix schools, don't close them", as panel prepares to vote

UPDATE Feb. 1: Two dozen protesters were arrested at Monday afternoon's rally, NY1 reports. Brooklyn City Council members Charles Barron and Jumaane Williams were among those carted off in paddy wagons. Tonight's PEP meeting at Brooklyn Tech High School, the first of two this week where panel...

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A student's view: How not to close a school

By MELISSA KISSOON Melissa Kissoon is an 18-year-old graduate of Brooklyn’s Franklin K. Lane High School, which will close this year. The school began to “phase-out” to make way for new small schools while she was a junior. She is a youth leader with Future of Tomorrow and the Urban Youth...

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Elementary Dad: First step in a grade journey

On Friday, the kindergarten teacher sent home my 5-year-old daughter’s first report card, and I ripped open the sealed envelope with a tingly mix of anxiety and sorrow. The first report card marks a rite of passage in a child’s life, the start of many official judgments. The winter breeze blowing...

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No school means no Regents exams

Earlier this week parents, including our High School Hustle blogger Liz, were scratching their heads about the high school Regents Week exam schedule which meant no classes for most high school students. Thursday's snowstorm added a new level of uncertainty for some students. When school was...

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High School Hustle: What? No school during Regents Week?

I keep getting caught up and confused by high school exam schedules. Of course, I knew about final exams that took place in most New York City public high schools last week. And I vaguely recall seeing something about a reduced schedule during Regents week, which runs through Jan. 28. But I...

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Special ed reform roll-out pushed back a year

The special education reforms which are being piloted in 265 schools this year will be rolled out to all city schools a year later than was originally planned. In a memo to principals, Chancellor Cathie Black said delaying a full-scale launch of the reform until 2012-13 would allow time "to...

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Join a conversation with UFT head Michael Mulgrew

"Struggling Schools, Hard Times: Teachers, communities and school improvement in a time of fiscal uncertainty,"  a conversation with Michael Mulgrew, president of the United Federation of Teachers will be presented by the Center for New York City Affairs on Wednesday from 10-11:30 a.m. at the...

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Saturday kindergarten fair offers info on dual language programs

Parents who want New York’s schools to help their children become bilingual can learn details about the city’s dual language programs on Saturday, Jan. 22, at a kindergarten information fair on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. The 60-minute documentary Speaking in Tongues, about four students who...

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