Blog: Archives

Supplementary round high school results out

All eighth and ninth graders who applied to high schools should have a placement by today, although they may not all be pleased with their assignment. The 7,455 students who were not matched in the first round of the high school process were asked to re-rank their preferences from a list of...

Read More 

Preventing parents from helping children

<!--StartFragment-->The hundreds of kindergarteners on waiting lists for schools all over the city are not the only sign of crowding in the schools, as many schools fear being forced to open extra classes in rooms that are now used for art and music. Rather than looking for the source of...

Read More 

Swine flu musings

I have an overactive imagination. I also have an acute sense of impending doom that I inherited directly from my grandmother: "If you're 5 minutes late, you're under a bus." This is a bad combination. Whenever Brooks gets a fever, I need to convince myself that he doesn't have meningitis or...

Read More 

Principal 'resigns' at Queens' MS 8

After a stormy tenure as principal of MS 8, The New Preparatory Middle School, in Queens, and despite strong supportfrom the Department of Education, Principal John Murphy stepped down yesterday, following more than a month of daily protests by parents and teachers and a hailstorm of negative...

Read More 

District 3 kindergarten lottery: Results are in!

Only 100 parents attended the District 3 kindergarten lottery last week after the Department of Education announced that many popular schools did not have available seats. “Parents were disappointed that they didn’t have a full range of options as they have had in the past four years since the...

Read More 

NAEP "progress" slow and far from steady

This week, 8th-graders across New York City are taking standardized science tests, part of the battery of state tests public school students undergo every year. The National Assessment of Educational Progress, or NAEP, is the national yardstickagainst which state tests are measured; newly...

Read More 

Flu guidelines: Intelligent caution

As reporting and speculation about the emergent swine flu virus continues to dominate the local media, city health authorities urge caution and common sense precautions to prevent illness and potential transmission. Look here for detailed information and recommendations from the New York City...

Read More 

Wait list frustration building at PS 3, 41

Stories today in the Daily News and on the Huffington Post highlight parent frustrations with kindergarten enrollment; chatter we're hearing describes hundreds of children waitlisted for the most desirable Manhattan primary schools. Up to 90 children are waitlisted at PS 3and PS 41,popular...

Read More 

Abysmal grad rate for students in self-contained classes

A new report released today says that for the 160,000 students with special needs, educational options and services have not improved much during the past seven years of Mayor Bloomberg and Chancellor Klein's education reforms. Students in self-contained special education settings - classes...

Read More 

Charter lotteries: Chance, change, and geography

Later today, Chancellor Joel Klein will speak at the Harlem Success Academycharter lottery. Harlem Success, founded by former City Councilmember Eva Moskowitz, can't ever be faulted for thinking small: The draw will be held tonight at the Harlem Armory Track at 5:30 pm, a facility that can host...

Read More 

Guidance counselors: solace or punishment?

Last week one of my teachers raised a topic that brought up some difficult questions: He reminded us that if he knew a student was cutting him or herself, he was legally required to report them to a higher authority. He expressed his own contradicting feelings on this issue, which prompted an...

Read More 

Schools track energy use to fight global warming

Since today is Earth Day, it seems a good time to mention that all New York City public schools are now members of the Green Schools Alliance, a national organization helping schools to cut their carbon footprints. Last Saturday, more than 650 students gathered at a conference at the...

Read More 

A charter school holds first lottery

Jacob Mnookin stood on the edge of the boardwalk in Coney Island, greeting the families who had come to witness the inaugural lottery for Coney Island Prep, south Brooklyn’s first charter school. Mnookin, the founding principal, still wasn't sure where he would be holding classes in the fall,...

Read More 

Ed Koch's on the phone for CEC vote

The familiar honk of a fabled New York City mayor coursed across tens of thousands of telephone lines yesterday, as robocalls voiced by former Mayor Ed Koch reached out to parents to encourage them to vote in the straw-poll Ccommunity Education Council elections. Whether Hizzoner was pressed into...

Read More 

Leading by example: Learning Leaders

Talking about 'giving back' is easy -- yet too often, between the talking and the doing lies a deep gulf of good intentions. But volunteering doesn't have to mean giving up a career or sacrificing your home life; New York City's long-established school volunteer program, Learning Leaders, asks...

Read More 

Poll: Ho hum straw voters, school safety concerns

Our question about the Community Education Council vote drew an anemic response -- in itself, perhaps a reflection on the Department of Education'sfledgling effort atonline parent engagement. About half of the respondents said they planned to vote, but the next largest group said they...

Read More 

Broad $upport for two charter networks

The Department of Education has earned a reputation for making under-the-radar announcements in school 'slack times' -- often, just as a vacation begins. In its recent announcement of a $ 2.5 million donation by the Eli and Edythe Broad Foundationto two charter school networks, made on the first...

Read More 

Two takes on parent involvement

It's Friday, and time for theInsideschoolscommunity poll. This past week, we asked about bullying in school, and the majority voice was clear -- zero tolerance for any kind of bullying, actual or virtual, with strong consequences and required parent meetings for students involved in bullying....

Read More 

CEC candidate forums attract few parents

When Community Education Councils (CEC) candidates walked into school cafeterias and auditoriums across the city this month to declare why parents should vote for them, they got a shocking reality -- few parents showed up. During the past two weeks, public school parents were invited to meet the...

Read More 

District 28 CEC calls for principal’s ousting

At a jam-packed and raucous meeting on Monday night, the Community Education Council of District 28 in central Queens passed a unanimous resolution recommending the immediate removal of Dr. John Murphy as principal of MS 8 in South Jamaica.  The resolution came at the end of the monthly meeting,...

Read More 

Charter schools remain a hot-button topic

Yesterday, the City Council members called on state legislators to establish a process by which charter schools are sited in public school buildings. Charter schools, which receive public money but are not managed by the Department of Education, are not entitled to space rent-free in DOE...

Read More 

"Baby boom tsunami" of retiring teachers

Half of the teachers working in American classrooms today could retire over the next decade, according to a reportfrom the National Commission on Teaching and America's Future, a non-profit, non-partisan advocacy group based in Washington, DC. Because many teachers today are near 50, and because...

Read More 

Charter hearings before City Council, lotteries

April's a busy season for New York City's 78 charter schools, which currently serve 18,000 students. This coming school year, 24 new charters will open, and charter-school advocates tout high demand. Since most of the city's charters receive more applications than they have seats, the law...

Read More 

Poll results: Not enough good high schools

Parents who responded to our high-school choice poll have strong opinions on the matter: More than half say there aren't enough good schools for students and families to choose from, with demand strongest for progressive, rigorous high schools. About 20 percent of responders say the system only...

Read More 

DOE backs down on lawsuit

The Department of Educationhas decided to back down on its planned closing of three neighborhood schools and creation of charter zones without Community Education Council approval, the subject of a recent lawsuit filed by the United Federation of Teachersand the New York Civil Liberties Union....

Read More 

Money talks in mayoral control debate

The Post, the Times cityroom blog, and GothamSchools all highlight Comptroller (and mayoral hopeful) William Thompson's testimony on outsized Department of Education budget overruns, which he outlined at a crowded, consistently adversarial City Council hearing yesterday afternoon. At issue, in...

Read More 

Long lines at supplementary round high school fair

While thousands of parents and students showed up at the supplementary round high school fair on Tuesday, many of the schools on the Department of Education list of available seats were not represented. We asked a few schools how many seats they actually have available. This is what they...

Read More 

"Twilight" comes too early

WARNING: This blog may include spoilers for the Twilight series. A few weeks ago I was talking to my neighbor, a 10 year-old boy at PS 321in Brooklyn, and found out that he had just started reading Stephanie Meyer's Twilight series. Many of his friends and classmates were doing the same. This...

Read More 

High school process in the press

In the Daily News, Merideth Kolodner profiles a familywhose talented, accomplished son was not matched with any high schools on the first admissions round, echoing comments we're hearing from readersand parents citywide. On TV, Cindy Hsu at CBS Channel 2 covered the story, and Brian Lehrer...

Read More 

New school in 2009 for 151-zoned families

(See the bottom of the post for an afternoon update from the DOE) Upper East Side families zoned for the long-shuttered elementary school PS 151 do not have a zoned school for their children and have instead been permitted to apply for seats at other Upper East Side elementary schools. This...

Read More 

Pre-K application deadline April 3

It's admissions season at the Department of Education -- another week, another deadline. This week,parents of 2009 pre-Kindergarten students must submit applicationsfor the coming year; links here to the online applicationand school directory. You can also pick up a paper copy of the application...

Read More 

Poll Results: Parents on immigrants and inclusion

More than half of the readers who responded to our poll said that parents who didn't speak English were involved in their child's school. But the biggest segment, 28 percent, said that non-native speakers weren't part of the school community, and nearly one in five readers said they weren't much...

Read More 

Stringer, deBlasio vs. DOE

Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer weighs in on the mayoral control debate, with areport that urges strengthening Community Education Councils (CECs) and increasing their independence, by transferring their training and supervision from the Department of Education's Office of Family...

Read More 

High schools with available space

The 7,455 eighth grade students who did not get matched with a high school in the first round are scrambling to research their options and find a good fit. The Department of Education has given middle school counselors a list of schools with available space. Some schools have space for incoming...

Read More 

High school hustle: Choice, and crying teens

My children came home from their middle school yesterday looking solemn and ashen-faced, and I knew immediately that something was up. They reported seeing hallways filled with sobbing 8th-graders who learned they did not get into their first, second or even third choice of high school. At least...

Read More 

The glass is three-quarters full...

Maybe Brooks is just going through a particularly promising phase, or maybe I'm seeing him through my Mom's rose-colored glasses, or maybe, just maybe, my little boy with autism is no longer so definitively a little boy with autism. Hmm. When my Mom, who's visiting from Canada, wakes up in the...

Read More 

High school news out

This afternoon, the city's 86,169 8th graders finally got news about their high-school placements for September. According to the Department of Education, just over half got good news from their first-choice school, three-fourths got one of their top three picks, and 86 percent got one of their...

Read More 

Kindergarten update from DOE

Parents have been asking how the kindergarten placement process works; we asked the DOE for details -- and why they advised families to "wait until September" for possible placements at local schools. Zoned schools fill their seats drawing from the applications they receive before the March 6...

Read More 

New elementary & middle schools to open in September

Still looking for an elementary or middle school for your child? You might want to consider one of the new schools opening in September. In addition to the new high schools and charter schools opening this fall, 26 schools with elementary and middle school grades will also open their doors. Many...

Read More 

Parents sue DOE for school closings

Charging that the Department of Education has broken state law by announcing school closures without community consultation, the New York Civil Liberties Union announced today a lawsuit against the Department of Education in New York State Supreme Court, filed by New York City public school...

Read More 

Ask Judy: 
Advanced Regents diplomas

Dear Judy, What is the use of taking an Advanced Regents diploma? Do colleges even know what a Regents exam is? Wouldn't it be just as well to take the five basic Regents exams and not bother with more? Or not take them at all? -- High school parent Dear High School Parent: For a long time,...

Read More 

Locals denied kindergarten seats

Elissa Gootman writes today about families whose kids didn't get kindergarten seatsin their local schools, a block and a half from home. We're also hearing from parents whose children haven't been offered seats in nearby schools -- and, in District 28 in Queens, of students offered kindergarten...

Read More 

Kindergarten registration extended

The deadline for kindergarten registration has been extended by the DOE to April 20, to accomodate the school vacation in mid-April. Thanks to our commenters for the calendar check, and watch the blog for more kindergarten news in the coming days.

Read More 

What do tests measure?

E.D. Hirsch, Core Knowledgefounder and longtime education advocate, asks good questions today in the Times about testing, even as he endorses 'teaching to the test,' provided the test is a good one. Meanwhile, families are still waiting for results of an urban test without any bubble-in,...

Read More 

Too much test prep (but not at every school)

In the latest weekly poll, we asked whether you thought there was too much focus on test preparation at your school. The majority of you said yes, with 33 percent reporting "way too much" test prep and 20 percent responding that while there may be too much test preparation, the system, not the...

Read More 

Kindergarten: Letters in mid-March?

According to the DOE, kindergarten letters were scheduled to go out to families from individual schools in mid-March. In fact, registration's already underway: It began on Monday, March 16 and continues through April 13, which is the last day of the April vacation week. From what we've heard,...

Read More 

Three new citywide gifted & talented schools

Citywide gifted and talented programs will open for the first time in Brooklyn and Queens this September, according to an announcement this afternoon by the Department of Education. Until today, "citywide" meant Manhattan -- now, it seems the DOE has expanded the definition to three...

Read More 

Apply now for free prep program

Most 6th-graders aren't yet thinking about high school, but students who aspire to attend the city's most selective high schools, should start planning now. The Specialized High School Institute, a free 16-month, tutoring and test-prep program geared to help kids prepare for the specialized high...

Read More 

Immigrant parents feel unwelcome at schools

Immigrant parents want to participate in their children's school, but too often experience barriers that make it difficult to do so, according to a 52-page report released today by Advocates for Children of New York. | | "There is a common misconception that immigrant parents are not...

Read More 

Language learners: DOE responds

It can't be pure coincidence that the DOE released a report highlighting gains made by English language learners less than a week after aboisterous mayoral-control hearingin the Bronx. And even though the report cites gains -- three times as many students tested as English-proficient in 2008 than...

Read More 

Fewer city schools faulted for inadequate progress

Today in Albany, the New York State Education Department issued its annual list of schools and districts in need of improvement(SINIs and DINIs, in education jargon.) Because these schools receive Title I funds, they are accountable to No Child Left Behind benchmarks, and face consequences that...

Read More 
Load More
×