Seven families will file suit Monday to end teacher tenure in the fiercest attack yet on job protections enjoyed by New York State educators.
The families, including five from some of the most impoverished communities in the city, claim their children were underserved in school due to incompetent teachers who only kept their jobs because of tenure rules that violate kids’ constitutional right to a sound, basic education.
The lawsuit will be filed in Albany and is backed by the politically connected journalist-turned-education advocate, Campbell Brown.
“There’s no reason why my kids should not be reading on grade level. The law should be changed,” said Nina Doster, 33, of South Ozone Park, Queens. The mother of five is a plaintiff in the suit and also a paid organizer for the StudentsFirstNY advocacy group.
“Every child should be subject to the best education and teaching in every classroom,” she said.
One of the plaintiffs is on the StudentsFirstNY payroll as an organizer?
Doesn't that set up at least the appearance of a conflict of interest in the case?
I mean, this parent is part of a lawsuit that is financially backed by the same financial interests that back StudentsFirstNY.
In any case, Brown's lawsuit here in New York is going to have a rougher road than the Vergara lawsuit in California.
But observers say it will take much more than just education horror stories to win the case.
Brown “has to prove inequity, inadequacy and causation — that the different legal constellation in New York causes the learning issues that we see throughout the state,” said David Bloomfield an education professor at Brooklyn College and the CUNY Graduate Center.
Are teacher tenure and seniority rules the reasons why Ms. Doster's kids are not reading on grade level?
And do teacher tenure and seniority rules lead to systemic problems around the state that cause learning issues like this?
That's what Brown and her cohort have to prove.
Is Ms. Doster sitting and reading with her five children every night. Do they have books in the house? Does she take them to the public library? Do they make flash cards to review sight words? Is Ms. Doster doing her part as a concerned parent to ensure her children's literacy?
ReplyDeleteSomeone should make it clear to Ms. Doster that her kid(s) not reading at grade level is probably caused by the simple notion that her kid(a) aren't that bright. Plenty of kids are dumb. Nothing wrong with that. The citywide average if kids reading/writing on grade level is below 50%. Her kid(s) fit the mold. They're just not that intelligent. Even better, they can work for Sanitation and make 6 figures without stepping foot in college.
ReplyDeleteThese two women are going to put teachers on trial with the consequence that the innate intelligence of these children will be up for public scrutiny? Am I reading this correctly?
ReplyDeleteTalk about your cheesy bandwagon jumpers.They can't or won't hold the kleptocrats in Albany responsible or the sorry hack administrators put in place by the fun size mayor, so pile on the teachers, who more often than not have their bscks,and most especially their kids' bscks
ReplyDeleteIf the kids have been subjected to common core the past year or two they probably hate school and don't want to read. My two grandchildren could read at 2 years old because their mom and dad read with them, took them to the library and taught them to love reading and learning, of course common core has taken that love of learning and reading away. Most teachers are good and care about teaching. Sounds like something underhanded going on in this case.
ReplyDeleteStudents First is now led by Eva's former press flack Jenny Sedlis. Eva is not content to not give her own teachers tenure.
ReplyDelete