What We Have Lost.
An open letter to Dr. Yohuru Williams
Dear Dr.
Williams,
Aixa B. Rodriguez, Dr. Yohuru Williams, and Melissa Tomlinson |
A second point you made is the selling of the "college and career ready" lie. There is not enough scholarship money for everyone to be a scientist, a doctor or a lawyer. There is bias inherent in the statement, which implies that any other job that doesn't require college is somehow less valuable. What have we lost that in our effort to encourage students to aim for higher education, we have denigrated every other profession? Everyone is worthy of respect. From the waitress and bus driver to the teacher and scientist.
Why
is the push for college and career ready leading to narrowed curricula? Where
does CTE (Career and Technical Education) come in? Why are those classes being
pushed out or completely taken away? High school used to be a place where you
could leave with skills that could get you a job. We have lost this. You know
from our conversations how I feel about the small schools movement in New York
City. I have gone from thinking it was
innovative and responsive, to seeing what it was really being used for;
breaking unions, pushing out veteran teachers of color, and setting the stage
for structural, institutional ageism. I
am now seeing it from the student’s perspective.
NY BAT Aixa B. Rodriguez |
What
have students lost with this deform? Students and families are sold the idea
that all of these schools have a theme and they have more choices. In reality,
their “schools” are hallways. Turf mentality is reinforced as students are
banned from walking in certain areas, uniforms and paint on walls designate
which school's territory is which. As a student, you get to take the classes
the school offers and that is it. Small schools cannot afford everything that
big comprehensive community schools did. They never will. We have accepted less
for the generations of students who have been subjected to these reforms due to
the narrative of failure and the subtext of the stereotypes of violent black
and brown youth. Not everyone can find things to fit their bodies in a
boutique. That’s why we have department stores. Not every student can find what
he or she needs in a small school that is why we need to return to big schools.
Accepting the small boutique school model is essentially forcing a square peg
into a round hole.
What
have teachers lost in small schools in NYC? We have lost departments, where an
experienced and knowledgeable department head provided mentoring and curricula
guidance. Teachers of all experience levels were in the same department. Incidentally,
many teachers with advanced degrees, suffering poverty as adjuncts would be
perfect department chairs. We have lost the ability to serve all special needs
students with the programs they need and instead pile all of them in ICT
classes, add an extra teacher and hope for the best; counting on resilience,
instead of giving the kid what they need. Classes are disrupted, teachers can’t
teach and students struggle to learn. Many a small school just asks parents to
agree to IEP changes because the services are not available.
We
have lost languages, and students take whatever the school offers and do not
have a choice. What a loss in a global economy. English Language Learners,
which I teach, are not able to receive the proper leveled classes with clear
separate curricula. Small schools don't have the numbers, so they are all piled
together to form a class. This is not allowing the advanced to progress at
their pace, the intermediates to have targeted instruction, nor the beginners
the nurturing they need.
Don't
get me started on STEM, STEAM, or whatever acronym they have come up with
lately. In buildings with shared facilities we don't have proper fully
functional, staffed and supplied science laboratories with lab technicians.
Teachers have to take one day out of their week to do labs in class. WE LOST
INSTRUCTIONAL TIME!
Tests,
tests, tests. A simple comparison of the regents tests before they were
required for graduation and after they were required for graduation will
evidence my next point. When everyone has to take the test, the quality and
comprehensiveness of the test is lowered to the lowest common denominator. ELA
used to be a 2-day test. It used to include more than one essay, and students
used to be able to retest on the components they did badly on, not wait a whole
year to retake the test.
Finally, what is the human cost of
sending the message to kids that they are failures, their teachers are
failures, their schools are disposable, and can just be shut down. What is the
cost of not having schools as community anchors, with alumni associations and
networks that last into adulthood? How do we quantify the magnitude of such
loss? What is the agenda when these school reforms are done to largely minority
communities and nothing similar can be found in predominantly white
communities?
We have lost so much. We have lost our minds
and schools are losing their souls.
In solidarity,
Aixa B.
Rodriguez
Bravo! Ditto... and all truth... I feel for the losses of our youth... STOP THIS MADNESS... bring back authentic education and FULLY FUND IT!!!
ReplyDeleteBrava! THis is exactly what I lived through for 10 years - 3 completely autonomous schools on one campus (and me the shared librarian - at once Switzerland and Belgium). We are slowly coming back from that, having reconstituted as a comprehensive community school. We shall see if we can get it back because 80% of the staff have less than 10 years experience.
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