Saturday, May 18, 2013

Walcott's Audience Uninterested In Walcott's Message

Funny:

Warning that the fate of New York City education was “hanging in the balance,” Dennis M. Walcott, the schools chancellor, suggested on Saturday that the school system was at risk of falling into disarray in the hands of a new mayor. 

Mr. Walcott, in his latest salvo against the Democrats running for mayor, said city schools had reached a “new day” and that efforts to chip away at Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg’s 11-year reform effort were misguided. 

 “Halting the momentum of this extraordinary transformation would be a tragedy,” Mr. Walcott told an audience of more than 1,100 school administrators gathered for a conference at Brooklyn Technical School. 

...
 
Mr. Walcott’s speech seemed intended to be a rallying cry before a friendly crowd, but the response was muted. While his calls for preserving the authority of principals and eradicating nepotism were met with applause, some principals seemed uninterested in his message. 

Laughter broke out in some corners after Mr. Walcott explained that he was not looking to be a kingmaker. “I don’t like to involve myself in politics,” he said. 

Renel Piton, the principal of Brooklyn Lab School, said he shared Mr. Walcott’s concern about the candidates for mayor and did not want them to “gut reform for the sake of gutting.” Still, he said he was surprised the chancellor chose to use a speech at an academic conference to weigh in on a political battle. 

“We need to focus on what’s going on in schools,” Mr. Piton said. “I don’t come on a Saturday to listen to their views on the candidates.” 

Brian DeVale, principal of Public School 257 in Brooklyn, applauded when Mr. Walcott began discussing the old way of running schools, before the State Legislature handed the mayor authority over the school system in 2002. Mr. DeVale, an opponent of mayoral control, said he thought Mr. Bloomberg and Mr. Walcott were too authoritarian in their approach. 

“I sat and listened to a political lecture from an administration I have no interest in,” Mr. DeVale, who is a union representative, said after the speech. 

The principals didn't want to hear Walcott's speechifying today.

Perhaps he should have filled the audience with some Tweedies, the 100 or so members of Educators4Excellence, some charter school supporters and a couple of hedge fund managers who don't spend their weekends in the South of France.

Maybe he would have gotten a better reception.

I'm sure they're not happy in the Bloomberg administration tonight that the "big speech" Walcott gave to push back on education policy was met with principals mostly sitting on their hands waiting for it to be over.

Like the rest of this city, the principals are just waiting for these people to go away.

5 comments:

  1. I am at an "A" school. A quarter of the kids graduate this school because of credit recovery, BS extra credit assignments mandated from the administration, or fear from teachers that if they do not pass the students they will live through uncalled for observations. That's it - plain and simple. Again, I am at an "A" school. The ugly truth about city schools that no reporter has yet picked up is the fact that the only way a student does not move up to the next level or graduate is literally being a phantom.

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    1. I should have stated the following: This, of course, is all due to Villian bloomberg and his "sponge" and whore walcott.

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    2. You're right . But I doubt a Truth Commission will expose this - the media, the powers that be, and their political functionaries will not want that exposed.

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  2. I posted some comments on the meeting from insiders who sent me some reports at ed notes. I was able to print most of it. Also with Leonie's comments on the speech. Why would principals who fear having their buildings taken away by charters support that policy?

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    1. I just used some of your post for a new post about the Great Ed Deform Whine Moment.

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