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Entries from Gothamist tagged with 'schoolschancellorjoelklein'

February 21, 2008

Last month, a Queens kindergartener was handcuffed after a temper tantrum at PS 81, prompting his parents to threaten a lawsuit. Now a lawyer representing Dennis Rivera and his parents reveals they are filing a notice of claim against the city for $15 million. According to the notice, Rivera, who the Daily News reports as suffering from "speech problems, attention deficit disorder and asthma," suffered injuries to his wrists as well as psychological and emotional......

Continue Reading "Cuffed Kid (and Parents) to Sue City for $15 Million"

February 14, 2008

After a parents of a rejected student filed a class action lawsuit, the Department of Education asked a federal judge to overturn a 1974 ruling that set in place quotas to keep the school 40% minority and 60% white. The DOE wants the court to overturn the ruling immediately so the 2008-2009 will be quota-free. Last June, 11-year-old Nikita Rau was denied a place at Coney Island magnet school, Mark Twain School - IS 239.......

Continue Reading "DOE Wants to Overturn Brooklyn School's Racial Quota"

January 18, 2008

One of the Stuyvesant High School students seriously injured in last Saturday's Vermont van crash has returned home to New York. Junior Lucia Hsiao, a member of the girls' junior varsity track team, had suffered serious neck injuries but was able to "gingerly walk" to her room on her own. The Staten Island resident is wearing a halo around her head and will require a lot of rehab, but her dad said, "It could have......

Continue Reading "Schools Chancellor Calls Stuy Van Crash "A Real Tragedy""

December 14, 2007

Yesterday, the Daily News revealed that an East Harlem high school principal told teachers to effectively pass more students. Principal Bennett Lieberman's report card stated: "If you are not passing more than 65% of your students in a class, then you are not designing your expectations to meet their abilities. You are setting your students up for failure, which in turn, limits your success as a professional...most of our students ... have difficult home lives,......

Continue Reading "Dumbing Down High School Classes Not Acceptable"

November 16, 2007

City Schools Chancellor Joel Klein characterized last year's assessment test scores as "good," but critics say that they represent a lack of progress and a failure of Mayor Bloomberg's efforts to reform city schools. City kids' scores stayed flat on national assessment exams in math and reading, with a slight improvement in 4th graders' math scores and a drop in 8th graders' reading scores. "New York City’s eighth graders have made no significant progress in......

Continue Reading "City Students' Progress Stalled"

November 11, 2007

The city is showing the door to a daycare facility that has called P.S. 122 its home for 26 years. The Children's Liberation Daycare Center (CLDC), which serves 88 kids between the ages of 2 and 6, is going to court later this month to object to its ejection from the building, with no plan for the daycare center's return. The CLDC shares P.S. 122 with three arts organizations and it's the city's Dept. of......

Continue Reading "Daycare Center to Be Expelled"

October 25, 2007

Oh, Catholic League - it isn't even Halloween and you're getting ready for Christmas already! The Sun reports that the Catholic League sent a letter to Schools Chancellor Joel Klein questioning why nativity scenes cannot be displayed in schools. Christmas trees are allowed, as are menorahs and symbols for Ramadan. But the Department of Education does not allow actual images of "religious figures or deities." The DOE e-mail to the Sun read, "Our holiday policy......

Continue Reading "Catholics Want Baby Jesus in Public Schools"

October 17, 2007

Debbie Almontaser, the erstwhile head and founder of Brooklyn's Khalil Gibran International Academy, will sue the city for violating her freedom of speech. She also claims Mayor Bloomberg and Schools Chancellor Joel Klein forced her to resign as principal under threat of closing the dual-language school. The KGIA, named after the Lebanese Christian poet, teaches students Arabic and English and aims to foster cross-cultural understanding, but critics accused Almontaser of establishing a madrassa to indoctrinate......

Continue Reading "Almontaser Wants to Go Back to School"

October 6, 2007

Back in March of 2003, Mayor Bloomberg opened up the City Hall Academy at the Tweed Courthouse. The school offered two-weeks "residencies" for students, giving them an "inter-disciplinary approach" to learn about NYC and its history. Mayor Bloomberg, who made education reform one of the cornerstone of his mayoral platform (it's a big part of his "national" persona, too!), had said, "The opening of City Hall Academy demonstrates our commitment to excellence, achievement, and innovation......

Continue Reading "R.I.P., City Hall Academy "

September 29, 2007

With the U.N. General Assembly in session, the city has been hopping with dignitaries. On Wednesday, Mayor Bloomberg and Schools Chancellor Joel Klein were praised by President Bush at P.S. 76 in the Bronx. The President noted, "The city tackled the challenges of underperforming schools in such a way that it's become a model for urban schools. This achievement is a hopeful sign for other school districts across America. New York City can do......

Continue Reading "Bloomberg's Big Week: Bush, Clinton, Shakira"

September 13, 2007

The Colbert Report got a double dose of the Bloomberg administration yesterday. Not only was Schools Chancellor Joel Klein the interview guest, there was a short bit about Stephen Colbert "interrupting" a mayoral speech in Times Square to ask Mayor Bloomberg to sign his cast. The Bloomberg video is above and video of Klein's segment is below. During his appearance, Klein discussed the city's cash incentive pilot program for the poor where family members......

Continue Reading "Video of the Day: Klein, Bloomberg and Colbert"

September 12, 2007

Schools Chancellor Joel Klein is many things. He's the head of the largest public school system in the country, he's a lawyer (he was a former Assistant Attorney General - biggest case: going after Microsoft) and he's a businessman (he was chairman and CEO of Bertelsmann). But who knew he was someone who should appear on The Colbert Report? The Daily News reports that the Department of Education's media relations department approached The Colbert......

Continue Reading "Schools Chancellor Klein Heads to Colbert Report"

September 11, 2007

After the Daily News revealed that a school officials actually forbade school deans to call 911 (in order to lower crime stats) only for a 14-year-old student who suffered a stroke to wait 90 minutes for medical attention, the Department of Education is launching an investigation. The News now reports that Schools Chancellor Joel Klein will launch a probe, saying, "We'll look into it and take appropriate action." A memo from Assistant Principal Guy Venezia......

Continue Reading "DOE Says Schools Can Call 911 For Emergencies"

September 4, 2007

Students of all ages are headed back to classes this morning. The NYC public school system is opening its doors this morning all over the city. Insideschools reminds us there are 1.1 million students and 150,000 educators in the system - and that quite a few charter schools have been open since last week! Reforming the education system has been a cornerstone of Mayor Bloomberg's platform, and this school year starts with, per the......

Continue Reading "Back to School Time"

July 24, 2007

Mayor Bloomberg loves the arts and supports many arts and cultural institutions as a (billionaire) philanthropist. And yesterday, he made sure that NYC public school students get a chance to love the arts as well, by introducing ArtsCount, a way to make sure schools and their principals are offering arts programs "through accountability and quality improvement initiatives." Schools Chancellor Joel Klein said, "We demand results in math and English and now we are demanding the......

Continue Reading "Mayor Bloomberg Wants Arts in the Schools to Count"

June 26, 2007

Schools Chancellor Joel Klein offered his opinion of the Brooklyn school situation that raises questions about racial quotas set in place 33 years ago. Eleven-year-old Nikita Rau was rejected from the competitive IS 239/Mark Twain School in Coney Island because her admissions test scores were too low: Her 79 was lower than the 84.4 average score minority students need; white students may be admitted with scores of 77 or lower. Klein said, "I think probably......

Continue Reading "Schools Chancellor Quotes On Quota Mess"

May 31, 2007

If you have kids, we sure hope they like taking tests. Not only do they face regular tests in classes, but the city is set to expand their regimen of periodic tests for the 1.1 million students in the city's public schools. The tests, which the city is paying $80 million over five years for, will be administered 5 times a year for students in the grades 3-8 and four times a year for high......

Continue Reading "City Students to Face Test After Test, Test, Test, Test"

March 30, 2007

Governor Spitzer and other state leaders finalized this year's budget, to the tune of $121.8 billion, just in time for tomorrow's deadline. While Spitzer has touted greater transparency with public process, the budget deal has been notable for negotiations taking place behind closed doors. The Times Union had Spitzer's opinion on the secrecy, "Do we all wish there had been more public articulation? You bet," but "said a 'wide chasm' between his plan and the......

Continue Reading "The Secret...Is Our State Budget"

March 20, 2007

The Daily News' series, School Bus Disgrace, is nothing short of amazing. There's just tale after tale of questionable behavior by school bus drivers - and that doesn't even include the drivers who have been convicted to convicted of attempted murder and other crimes. And then there's a story about a driver and a class field trip. The driver Ronald Eldridge felt kids were making fun of him, and he ended up arguing with the......

Continue Reading "Bad Drivers By The School Busload"

February 7, 2007

It's always great when surveys confirm what we know, because then it helps make us seem a little less crazy. amNew York reports on the NYC Transit Rider Council's bus survey that shows buses are typically 5 minutes and 15 behind their published schedules. The culprit is traffic and congestion that causes "bunching," which is when "one, two, or even three buses arrive at the same stop almost simultaneously." Another interesting finding: Some buses'......

Continue Reading "Like Clockwork, MTA Buses Are Late"

February 3, 2007

The chaos caused by mid-year school bus route changes that included things like 5 year old being told to take public buses and kids being picked up after school begins seems to have settled down. The Department of Education apologized for the umpteenth time and even Mayor Bloomberg admitted that the changes didn't go very well (he did emphasize the savings were worth it). Of course, it's questionable how much the DOE will save after......

Continue Reading "DOE Says Sorry Sorry Sorry About School Bus Mess"

October 18, 2006

Learnin' ain't what it used to be. Gothamist is so glad we're not a small child in the public school system anymore because the state tests required sound insane. Brooklyn parents Eve Gartner and Joe Morris, whose son goes to PS 372 in the Slope, created a site, Brownie the Cow, that include passages from the state s fourth grade English exam. The NY Times takes up the cause, outlining the fight between parents and......

Continue Reading "How Now, Brownie the Cow?"

September 5, 2006

Did the sidewalks and subways seem a little more crowded this morning? See more yellow school buses? That's because New York City public schools are open for the 2006-2007 school year. This year, the Department of Education is continuing to change, most notably with one-fifth of school principals becoming more autonomous (aka "empowerment schools") - they'll have more oversight over budgets, no more superintendents, but needing to meet DOE's performance goals. Here that principals......

Continue Reading "Back to School"

May 10, 2006

It's an ending fitting for Broadway, except in this case, Broadway is East Tremont Avenue. The students at Lehman High School will be able to perform their high school musical, Chicago, when city officials intervened on their behalf. Their sob story about being served a cease-and-desist by the guardians of Chicago's rights and licensing struck a chord in the hearts of many who realized it would be a great press op: Saving the drama......

Continue Reading "Show Goes On for Bronx High School Students"

April 27, 2006

The Department of Education meant business when they started their new random scanning system - cops found a knife, boxcutter and some mace at the Acorn High School in Brooklyn. Plus the scanning set-up made a kid run away only for the cops to find that he had pot on him! But the real haul was 129 cellphones (and 2 iPods), which Schools Chancellor Joel Klein says the kids will get back. Cellphones have been......

Continue Reading "Parents Like Their Kids to Be Cell-Outs"

April 12, 2006

After this weekend's big NY Times article about NYC's Schools Chancellor Joel Klein's "rethinking" of how to makeover the public school system, the Department of Education announces that schools would be graded each year. Plus, parents, teachers and students will have to complete satisfaction surveys that will enter into the analysis. What's interesting is that the DoE will concentrate on schools' teast scores as a barometer of success; from the Times: Mr. Klein and his......

Continue Reading "Report Cards for Public Schools"

November 17, 2005

What the hell is happening in Queens? Two women were attacked by the same man yesterday morning, while a man fleeing someone was shot in a diner. In the first incident, Queens reading teacher Jill Brogan was outside PS 86 in Jamaica when Frank Cabrera demanded her purse. Brogan only had keys to a Dodge Durango SUV and handed them over, and Cabrera took them but knifed her twice in the abdomen anyway. He drove......

Continue Reading "Crazy Attacks in Queens"

November 11, 2005

- Two elderly sisters could be thrown out of their Cobble Hill home by their nephew - Schools Chancellor Joel Klein suggests a school where teens have three hours of class and the rest for study time as his "science chief" says the schools are failing - We agree with FourFour - we rather have more ANTM than less - This Sunday, there will be free parking at meters, so you may see people scoping......

Continue Reading "Extra, Extra"

September 22, 2005

Mayor Bloomberg has 52 points to Democratic challenger Fernando Ferrer's 38 points in the latest Quinnipiac Poll. While it's a "likely lead," one political consultant told the NY Post, "If that's [Ferrer's] bounce — uh-oh." Ferrer himself doesn't think these numbers "reflect the new Democratic party unity," as the numbers were mainly from before the primary, as The Politicker noted. Then why release them? Just to show movement next week? Hmm. And the Mayor gets......

Continue Reading "Waiting for the Bounce"

September 10, 2005

Did you notice that it's an election year here in NYC? Oh, you did. So you've probably also noticed that education is being touted as one of the "big" issues? Yeah, us too. So it'll probably come as no surprise to you that this weekend, the first after public schools started and the last before the democratic primaries, has a flurry of edu-centric stories floating around. Of those stories the two main ones are that......

Continue Reading "Fewer Schools Fail as Klein Pushes Charters"
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