Proposed new charter school
Dec. 8th, 2011 12:42 pm![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
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There is a proposal for a new charter school in Somerville. The state (DESE) will be reviewing the application for the next few weeks and will possibly grant the charter on February 28th. If granted this charter school will undermine the existing Somerville Public Schools by reducing school funding by nearly $5 million a year, which is almost 10% of the current school budget. This cut in funding will lead to devastating cuts in public school programs, loss of 60 -75 teachers, and potentially closure of an entire school. This would represent a huge set back for public education in Somerville, setting back much of the progress that has been made in our schools in the last 25 years.
There will be a public hearing by the DESE on this on December 14 2011 at Somerville High School. More info can be found at:
https://sites.google.com/site/progresstogetherforsomerville
http://www.thesomervillenews.com/archives/21168
http://www.doe.mass.edu/news/news.aspx?id=6532
This program is one of the good ones...
Date: 2011-12-08 10:45 pm (UTC)This group was started, from what I've read, by parents who believe the schools are not serving their kid's needs and who believe that they can do better.
So maybe you understand now why this might actually be a very good thing for Somerville?
Re: This program is one of the good ones...
Date: 2011-12-09 03:13 am (UTC)I think their intentions started out good, and that they truly were not happy with how the schools were serving their kids' needs and wanted to find a way to do better. But I just don't see 'better' in any of the bullet point items they propose to do.
Really?
Date: 2011-12-09 12:31 pm (UTC)I mean, this certainly is a challenge to make it really work, but it's dramatically different from anything a mainstream school offers, that are run with an authoritarian approach and kids are all expected to "behave" and "obey the teacher" and do everything pretty much in whatever way the teacher decides they should. I think a progressive school (rather than the mainstream conservative approach) is something many, many families will very much appreciate, and it will help Somerville's young people grow up far more beautifully, so that they can be their best, unique selves.
Re: Really?
Date: 2011-12-09 05:27 pm (UTC)The words about the ELL program, for instance, sound promising, and then it turns out that what is actually offered/described is incredibly limited, and that making it "really work" by getting the kids they target to not have barriers to attending the school in the first place is a BIG DEAL to me. Nice language in a somerville journal article is one thing, reality of what they can offer to who is quite another.
I'm sending my child to a progressive school that is part of the Somerville Public School system, that I do think is up to the challenge of making that work over the next 8+ years, and that is already supporting my child in being creative and valuing her as a unique individual. And it's serving a diverse immigrant community, too.
And compared to that school, the proposal is not dramatically different from where I the future of our school, and I don't have any confidence that they can implement it, make it work, and actually serve the kids they say they want to serve.
OK, so don't send your kid there.
Date: 2011-12-09 05:39 pm (UTC)I'm sure you agree that this is better than families being forced into a school that doesn't work for them, and better than complaining about it. :-)
Re: OK, so don't send your kid there.
Date: 2011-12-09 06:08 pm (UTC)It's not just that I'm happy with it (which I am, right now) - I'm quite positive there are things that I will want to see changed over the next decade and a half and that I'm going to be part of changing them - it's that I believe it serves our ENTIRE community and I believe it is vitally important to keep free and public school options that serve our ENTIRE community open, well-funded, and available to all.
Re: OK, so don't send your kid there.
Date: 2011-12-10 01:09 am (UTC)Of course I am not happy with the status quo of my kid's school; that school is changing and evolving over time (as all decent schools arguably should). I would like to help *that* school become the best it can become. This will be harder if there is less funding for that school, or fewer children from middle-class families, or fewer engaged parents. *That* is the change I want to be a part of. Does that mean that I will oppose any charter school proposal in Somerville? No, of course not. But it does mean that a new charter should demonstrate to me why it will be *better* than what we have now or could have soon.The SPCS has so far failed to do so for me. I understand you disagree; that does not mean I approve of your condescension.
[I'm starting a stopwatch to see how soon someone suggests that I should be supporting the SPCS because otherwise we will end up with a worse charter.]