
Has the "rubber room agreement" worked? The answer is a qualified yes when it comes to the length of the Arbitration process but teachers can still sit for years before the 3020-a arbitration process actually begins.
An Independent Voice That Advocates For The Classroom Educator Without The Corrupting Politics Tied To Our Union And DOE Leadership.

Two days later, an intensifying and massive Hurricane Sandy, with 90 mile per hour winds, slammed into the New Jersey shore, near Atlantic City and caused tropical storm force winds from Massachusetts to Virgina, massive power blackouts, storm surges, and extensive flooding to New York City. In response the Mayor was forced to close schools for both Monday and Tuesday. The Holland and Brooklyn-Battery Tunnels are closed, with many of the NYC bridges slated to close by 7pm. Sustained tropical storm force winds of 50-60 mph with gusts exceeding hurricane force are being experienced in the metropolitan area. The Triborough Bridge recorded a wind gust of over 100 miles per hour!
According to the Mayor, the MTA will close down public transportation when winds exceed 39 mph and that is an almost a certainty as the Hurricane reaches the Delaware/New Jersey coast on Monday. Even if the winds don't reach tropical force in the morning, it will by the time school lets out in the afternoon. The last thing the Mayor wants to be remembered for is how he stranded children in school with no mass transit to get them home. Therefore, it would appear that the Mayor will very reluctantly will close he schools on Monday but because he will not allow schools to be closed for two days. The Mayor will make every effort to open them Tuesday and pressure the MTA to provide mass transit, despite the tropical force winds and torrential rains that will cause massive flooding throughout the City. Alternatively, if the storm slows a little, the tropical storm force winds may not occur until after the evening rush hour. In that case, the Mayor will keep the schools open on Monday and probably close them on Tuesday.
The Annenberg Institute has released a devastating report that should put to rest the education reformers claim that a great teacher and not the community is the main factor in a student's educational development. The report clearly shows that the community the student lived in was the most important factor in his or her academic achievement. For example in New York City the report showed that the majority Black and Latino communities in the City had college readiness rates mostly in the teens. while the mostly White and Asian communities had "college readiness rates" of over 50%. The Coalition of Educational Justice has produced an interactive map for NYC that lists the "college readiness rates" for each neighborhood and can be found here.
I am now in a school for the 2012-13 year that is considered one of the top schools in Queens, even if it is a bit overcrowded. I felt welcomed by the staff and supported by the school's Administration. Moreover, the Chapter Leader is highly effective and keeps the members informed of issues concerning the school and the staff by sending emails on a weekly basis. The fact that this school is only one of two with a working teachers cafeteria is a major plus. Finally, there is ample parking around the school and I can park my car within two blocks of the school.during the day. Of course, the most attractive part of the school is the student body that is academically successful and college bound.
There is some confusion on what the ATR rights and responsibilities are when doing their weekly assignments at a school. Too many times I am hearing that ATRs are being used in duties that no teacher in the school are doing. Why the union has not printed an easy to read "ATR Bill of Rights" is troubling. It's as if the union rather not let ATRs know what they are required to do and what are not appropriate duties. While, for the present, I am in a Provisional position in an excellent school for the school year and don't have to travel to schools weekly, I do understand the frustration of not knowing what an ATR responsibility is.and hope to clarify this somewhat in this post.
Former New York City Chancellor Joel Klein wrote an autobiography on his life and it turns out that much of what he wrote appears to be a severe distortion of reality. A journalist and author Richard Rothstein actually researched the facts about Joel Klein's public school days and found out that the ex-Chancellor's claim that he was an indifferent student, lived in public housing for low income people, and was a street kid was far from the truth. Instead the Chancellor grew up in a two family household, with the father having a federal civil service postal job, and his mother a bookkeeper which placed him in a solidly middle class family situation. He was a high achieving student as early as sixth grade as he was in an accelerated program that squeezed three years of learning into two and was called the Special Progress class, starting in the seventh grade that only the highest achieving students were accepted in. Joel Klein was an Indifferent student? Yeah right, another lie. Moreover, Joel Klein grew up in a middle class 87% white public housing development not a low income minority project like he leads one to believe. In fact the Woodside Houses applicant needed to meet very stringent conditions. Here are just some of the 21 factors that can disqualify an applicant at the Woodside Housing Complex.
According to the report the Assistant Principal and the girl texted each other almost 3,000 times and late night phone calls after midnight. This is not a made up story but actual fact, yet the hypocrite Chancellor does not consider this as severe as lets say an expression of praise by a teacher in front of thirty other students in a classroom. According to the SCI report as stated in the Daily News the Assistant Principal had an "inappropriate relationship" that included thousands of text messages, numerous phone calls as late as 3 a.m, one that lasted nearly three hours and the Assistant Principal's admission of the "inappropriate relationship". Yet with all these "facts on the ground" our hypocrite Chancellor refused to remove the Assistant Principal.