Important Information
****************************************
Charter School Proposal
Kenneth Byalin, Ph.D.
President
The Verrazano Foundation
777 Seaview Avenue
Staten Island, NY 10305
718-667-2832
fax: 718-667-2344
www.verrazanofoundation.org
The Verrazano Foundation
Combating Discrimination, Creating Opportunity!
777 Seaview Avenue, Staten Island, New York 10305
(phone) 718‐667‐2832
· (fax) 718‐667‐2344 · (email) information@verrazanofoundation.orgwww.verrazanofoundation.org
December 4, 2007
Dear 4
th Grade Parent:Your support can help make the John W. Lavelle Preparatory Charter School
a reality on Staten Island. Lavelle Prep will provide a college preparatory
education with a strong arts focus and will serve students in grades 6
through 12. All students entering 6
th grade will be eligible for admission.Preference will be given to Staten Island residents, and a majority of the
seats will be reserved for youngsters who are at risk of underachievement as
a result of disturbances of mood, thought, cognition or behavior.
Over the past two years, The Verrazano Foundation has been working with
the Center for the Advancement of Children’ Mental Health at Columbia
University, the Education Department of the College of Staten Island, the
New York City Center for Charter School Education, the Staten Island Mental
Health Society, and local individuals and organizations to make this possible.
We are now at the point of applying for a Charter through the New York City
Department of Education. As part of this process, we need supportive
signatures of parents whose children will be entering the 6
th grade inSeptember 2009.
We have attached a fact sheet which outlines important features of the
proposed school as well as an Intention to Apply form. By completing and
signing the Intention to Apply, you are not making a binding commitment.
During the Spring of 2009, you will have the option of applying, but only if
Lavelle Prep exists.
Without the signed petitions of you and parents like you, Lavelle Prep will not
become a reality. By signing and returning the Intention to Apply, you help
insure that this option is available. It does not, however, guarantee your
child’ admission to the school.
If you need further information, please leave a message for me at 7186672832
and I will return your call as soon as possible. Thank you for your
support.
Sincerely,
Kenneth Byalin, Ph.D.
President
---------------------------------
The Verrazano Foundation
Announces the Proposed Charter School
John W. Lavelle Preparatory Charter School
The John W. Lavelle Preparatory Charter School will provide a college preparatory
education for students in grades 6 through 12 who are at risk of academic failure or
underachievement as a result of disturbances of mood, thought, cognition or
behavior. While admission to Lavelle Prep is not limited to students with a psychiatric
diagnosis, the majority of seats will be reserved for these students.
John W. Lavelle Preparatory Charter School:
·
Will be located on Staten Island.·
Will serve youth in grades 6 to 12.·
Classes of approximately 15 students·
Will enroll 75 6 th graders each year beginning in September 2009.John W. Lavelle Preparatory Charter School will achieve percentage levels of graduation
from high school with Advanced Regents Diplomas, and college entrance, which meet or
exceed the levels achieved boroughwide
by students in regular education.
In addition to the core college prep curriculum, John W. Lavelle Preparatory Charter School
will include:
·
An intensive arts curriculum which will enhance students’ understanding of the corecurriculum and build confidence and selfesteem.
·
A unique Wellness Curriculum, through which students will acquire the knowledge andskills essential to maximize their strengths and manage their disabilities.
The design of John W. Lavelle Preparatory Charter School is rooted in the belief that
people with disabilities can live, work, learn and participate fully in the community.
• John W. Lavelle Preparatory Charter School will instill in all students the expectation
of success in middle school, in high school, in college, and beyond.
• John W. Lavelle Preparatory Charter School will provide a structure of emotional and
academic support for parents.
Lavelle Prep grows out of the collaboration of The Verrazano Foundation, the Center for the
Advancement of Children’s Mental Health at Columbia University, the Education Department of the
College of Staten Island, the Staten Island Mental Health Society, and other local organizations and
individuals.
For further information, contact:
The Verrazano Foundation
Combating Discrimination, Creating Opportunity!
777 Seaview Avenue, Staten Island, NY 10305
Phone: 718-667-2832 Fax: 718-667-2344 E-mail: information@verrazanofoundation.org
-----------------------------
The Verrazano Foundation
Combating Discrimination, Creating Opportunity!
777 Seaview Avenue, Staten Island, New York 10305
(phone) 718‐667‐2832
· (fax) 718‐667‐2344 · (email) information@verrazanofoundation.orgwww.verrazanofoundation.org
Letter of Intention to Enroll
To whom it may concern:
I am interested in the possibility of enrolling my child in the proposed John W.
Lavelle Preparatory Charter School. My child will be entering the 6
th grade inSeptember 2009. I understand that completing this form does not guarantee my
child admission to the School.
Child’ Name: ______________________________________________
Child’ Date of Birth: ________________________________________
Name of Parent/Guardian: ___________________________________
Address (Number and Street): _________________________________
City: _______________________________________________________
Zip Code: ___________________________________________________
Phone Number: ______________________________________________
Email Address: _______________________________________________
School District: ______________________________________________
Signature of Parent/Guardian: __________________________________
Date: ________________________
Please mail the completed “ntention to Enroll”to The Verrazano Foundation,
777 Seaview Avenue, Staten Island, NY 10305.
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New Immunization Requirements~Tdap vaccine (tetanus, diphtheria a
The Tdap vaccine (tetanus, diphtheria and pertussis) is now a
requirement for students entering the 6th grade and who are at least 11
years old. This is the first year this vaccine has been required.
| Children in day care, pre-K, kindergarten through 4th grade, or 6th
through 8th grades, must now have a chicken pox vaccine to attend school
(4th and 8th grades were added this year). It is now recommended that all
children receive two doses of the varicella vaccine to prevent chicken
pox. | |
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Friend,
Last night the Governor and Legislature came to a tentative agreement to increase school funding, but they have not yet agreed on a set of accountability measures for this funding. Governor Spitzer wants to make sure increased education funding makes a difference for students by targeting funding to strategies that work – strategies like reducing class sizes, quality teaching, universal pre-k and after school programs.
Governor Spitzer’s “Contracts for Excellence” would hold superintendents & the Chancellor accountable for increasing educational achievement in our schools. It would also require parent & community input in the decisions around how funding is spent in your local schools.
But the Senate Majority plan – supported by Senators Frank Padavan, Serphin Maltese, Martin Golden and Andrew Lanza - is soft on accountability. It would give a blank check to DOE & Chancellor Klein to spend billions of dollars however they see fit with no consequences if schools don’t improve.
In the next 48 hours the Governor and Legislature are expected to come to some sort of agreement on accountability. It is critical that the Senate hears from people in support of the “Contracts for Excellence” that the Governor has proposed.
Please call and email your Senator Lanza in support of the “Contracts for Excellence”.
Tell him to support:
· Class Size Reduction
· Governor Spitzer’s Contracts for Excellence for all 32 NYC school districts
· No Blank Check for Chancellor Klein!
Call Senator Lanza at 1-866-KIDS-NYC (1-866-543-7692) or to send a Fax, go to www.ourkidscantwait.org
We are in the final push and we cannot let up now.
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COMMUNITY EDUCATION COUNCILS
CEC DISTRICT 31: Community District Education Council
Community
Education Council Members
JULY
2007 – JUNE 2009 TERM
Salvatore
Ballarino
Toni
Ann Barone-Franciosa
Peter
J. Calandrella
John
R. Chadwick, Jr.
Ting
Lei
Donald
Pagano
Sam
T. Pirozzolo
Marianne
Howard Siewers
Frank
Squicciarini
Staci
Weile
Diane
Wellington
Administrative
Assistant to the Council: Kathy Baldassano
COUNCIL
OFFICERS
JULY
2008 – JUNE 2009
President
~ Sam T. Pirozzolo
1st
Vice President ~ Frank Squicciarini
2nd
Vice President ~ Staci Weile
Recording
Secretary ~ Donald Pagano
Treasurer
~ Toni Ann Barone-Franciosa
715
Ocean Terrace, Room 225A
SI,
NY10301
718
420 5746
email: cec31@schools.nyc.gov
#############
CCSE: City-wide Council on Special Education
President:John Englert
45-18
Court Square.
Rm
260
Long
Is
718-752
7475
email:
ccse@schools.nyc.gov
#############
CCHS - Citywide Council on High Schools
President: Susan Shiroma
45-18
Court Square.
Rm
259
Long
Is
718
752 7478
email:
cchs@schools.nyc.gov
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REVIEW:
PROPOSED 2005 – 2009
FIVE-YEAR CAPITAL PLAN
PROPOSAL
http://schools.nyc.gov/Offices/SCA/Reports/doedproposed2006amendment.htm
http://source.nycsca.org/pdf/11_06_plan_amendment_comprehensive_region_base.pdf
Staten
**************************************************
The Department of Education to Establish New York City Center for Charter Excellence and to
Implement Precedent-Setting Practices to Support Charter Schools
http://schools.nyc.gov/OurSchools/Region84/default.htm
Education Issues??
Here are the emails of some top education reporters:
JWisloski@edit.nydailynews.com
dahers@nytimes.com
cMelago@edit.nydailynews.com
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FYI ~ The InsideSchools website has
more information on the new DOE restructuring plan. (see
below)
This
article originally appeared online in the Gotham
Gazette on January 23, 2007:
Reorganizing
the schools (again)
Last week Mayor
Michael Bloomberg and Chancellor Joel Klein announced yet another round of
reform and reorganization for the city’s public schools. Among the plans:
Change in the school budget system, tighter rules for granting teacher tenure,
more autonomy and accountability for principals, and a restructuring of the 10
geographical school regions into four new "learning support
organizations" (LSO) which will be led by current superintendents Kathleen
Cashin, Judith Chin, Marcia Lyles, and Laura Rodriguez. Schools may choose to
become part of these LSOs, or to join the
empowerment schools network, or to contract with an outside non-profit group for
support.
More details
about the reorganization can be found on the Department of Education’s
website. For parents who want to weigh in
on the reforms, the City Council Education Committee is holding a hearing this
Thursday. Parents are also
invited to give input to the DOE on the budget reforms.
See the website for more information or e-mail fairstudentfunding@schools.nyc.gov.
The
adjustments to the city’s school system announced by Mayor Michael Bloomberg
in his State of the City speech – empowering principals and making them more
accountable, reforming tenure and changing the school funding formula -- are
“profoundly important changes that will shift the way we think about
education,” Schools Chancellor Joel Klein told a group of business leaders the
next day.
The
administration mounted a public relations drive for the changes, complete with a
press briefing and the speech to business leaders in a spacious conference room
at the
And
the plan surprised many people. The pre-speech releases from the mayor’s
office focused on tax cuts, the other main topic in the speech, and apparently
did not mention education. Robert Jackson, chair of the City Council education
committee, said he had not been consulted on any of the ideas and, according to
him, neither had parent councils set up by the Department of Education as part
of mayoral control.
“We
need more transparency. We need to be more involved not at the tail end but at
the beginning,”
Numerous
questions about the plan remain, such as where parents will go for what
information, who will oversee the high schools, the cost of the proposals and
the role of different parts of the education bureaucracy, including the largely
moribund district offices, which may have gotten a new lease on life. “The big
problem at this stage of the game is that there are no details to speak of and
there are more questions than answers,” said Brian Gibbons, spokesman for the
Council of School Supervisors and Administrators.
In
an effort to fill in some of the blanks,
The
mayor's plan
Amid all the questions and uncertainties, the plans
set out by Bloomberg and explained by Klein, has several key parts:
Power
to the principals
Building
on the system of empowerment schools, whose principals have control over key
issue in their buildings, all principals will have
more autonomy next school year. Under the new regime, Bloomberg said, “The
principals will be in charge of what's best for their students, always.”
And
Klein said, “No longer will principals be the agents for the bureaucracy where
principals were told what that needed—whether they wanted it or not.”
The
principals will choose from among several systems – or school support
organizations, as the education department calls them – to help them run their
schools. The school can become an empowerment school, with the administration
getting assistance from a network of other principals. Other principals will
select from among four Learning Support Organizations to be created by former
regional superintendents, the details of which have not yet been determined. Or
the principal can chose to work outside the school system with a so-called
Partnership Support Organization, a private group such as a nonprofit agency or
university.
In
all instances, the school will determine its staff, manage its budget and decide
how to teach. The Department of Education will set standards, hire and fire
principals and allocate money to the school. The support organization – public
or private – will provide professional development, help principals interpret
test results and other data, and identify teaching approaches that may prove
helpful.
The
chancellor took pains to say that the schools would remain public and under the
control of the Department of Education. Prior to Bloomberg’s address, reports
said he planned to put significant parts of the system in private hands. After
the speech, which tamped down some of those fears, concerns remained that
further efforts at privatization lurk under the surface of the
administration’s rhetoric.
The
effect this new structure will have on what goes on in classroom remains
unclear. Some experts question whether giving principals greater control will
improve troubled schools. Norman Fruchter, director
of the Community Involvement Program at the Annenberg Institute for School
Reform and the author of a report highlighting problems afflicting
Accountability
for the principals
In
return for their increased power, the principals will have to succeed, based on
an array of test scores and other rating techniques. Those “grades” will be
accessible to parents. “Personally, I can't think of a better way to hold a
principal's feet to the fire than arming mom and dad with the facts about how
well or poorly, their children's school is performing,” Bloomberg said.
Beyond
attracting the ire of parents, principals whose schools do not succeed could
lose their jobs, see their schools restructured or even have their schools
close. Schools that do well could get bonuses in the form of additional funding.
This
has raised concerns at the Council of School Supervisors and Administrators, the
principal’s union. In a statement, union president-elect Ernest Logan
applauded the mayor for reaffirming “his belief that great principals make
great schools” and said the union had long urged that principals receive more
power and resources to improve their schools. But
To
determine the principal’s performance, the school system will use a number of
measures, many of which were initially announced last spring. These include:
| a letter grade for each school based on test
scores, student attendance, safety and so on) | |
| evaluations conducted by a team that will visit
schools to observe classes and interview people | |
| increased testing (called interim assessment) of
students | |
| new
ways of reporting and interpreting all that data. |
Such
techniques, Klein said, will “take the guesswork out of what good teaching
looks like.”
The
mayor sees the combination of autonomy and accountability as bringing corporate
tools to the schools. "Schools have traditionally not felt that they had to
work for the students," Bloomberg reportedly said at a conference.
"Very seldom are they being held to the standard of having to provide a
good service or losing their job, which is exactly what most people who work in
the private sector face every single day."
But
some educators question such reasoning; "What does the mayor know? He knows
how to establish a good corporation," Jacqueline Ancess,
co-director of the
Reorganizing
the reorganization
When
Bloomberg took control of the city’s school system he virtually closed down
the community school districts, doing away with the community school boards and
stripping the offices of most of their power. They remained in existence largely
to satisfy state law.
In
their stead, the mayor created 10 education “regions.” But now, only four
years later, the regions are going the way of neighborhood high schools, the
Board of Education and typing classes. “With this reform,” Bloomberg said,
“the regional offices that we established four years ago to stabilize a
failing system will be eliminated now that their job is done.”
The
elimination of the education regions, Klein said, would free up money for
individuals schools. But he left questions as to how high schools, currently
under the regional offices, would be administered and how admissions for middle
schools would be handled. Would parents needing a form have a local office to go
to – or would everything be at the centralized
“It’s
scared parents,” said Johnson. “They barely have time to adjust to these
reorganizations before they do them again.”
The
move surprised many, none of whom could recall that Bloomberg had ever indicated
the regions were intended to be temporary. “I was stunned,” said Fruchter.
Tightening
Tenure
Klein
has long criticized the system under which after three years on the job teachers
generally receive tenure, making it extremely difficult to remove them from
their jobs. Now, he said, the department, wants to
collaborate with the United Federation of Teachers and toughen standards.
This
is part, Klein said, of an overall move to improve teacher quality, which has
included salary increases, a program for experienced “lead teachers,” and a
housing bonus for teachers whose area of expertise is in short supply, such as
special education specialists. He would also like to make it easier to remove
teachers “who stand in the way of student success.”
He
noted that 99 percent of teachers who seek tenure get it. “We want to make
tenure a well deserved honor, not a right,” Klein said. “We want to make
sure teachers earn it with good teaching, not the passage of time.” But
critics say the 99 percent figure is misleading – and does not include the
thousands of teachers who quit the system before becoming eligible for tenure.
Calling
tenure, “a vital protection,” teachers union
president Randi Weingarten said in a statement that tampering with it would not
improve teacher quality. Instead, she said, “Let’s work on the things good
teachers tell me they need, such as lowering class size, making safety important
and giving educators the latitude to tailor instruction to the needs of their
students.”
Any
sweeping changes in the tenure system would require consent from the UFT –
something no one thinks the union would readily provide. And since the union and
City Hall recently agreed on a new contract running until October 2009, no
negotiations on tenure are likely to occur soon.
A
New Funding Formula
According
to the mayor, the system for allocating funds to individual schools is
needlessly complex, replete with political calculations, and unfair. Bloomberg
hopes to replace this with a formula to “fund the child.” Every school will
receive $3,000 to $3,750 for each student with additional money added for anyone
who is poor, does not speak English, is in special education or performs at a
low academic level. Funds might be added for gifted and talented kids as well.
Such
a program “has succeeded across the country and drawn broader political
support – because it’s good common sense,” wrote John Podesta,
who advised Klein on the plan.
But
it could be hard to put into effect. One thing that accounts for funding
disparities now are teacher costs: Schools with large numbers of senior
teachers, who make more money, have a higher spending level. To reduce spending,
they could get rid of some well-paid staff. But that could violate aspects of
the teachers contract and would be sure to enrage
parents.
Some
fear tying funding to the student could set a precedent. “The money will
follow the child and that’s opening the way for the legislature to say it’s
not going to the system,”
What
Bloomberg did not say
Although Bloomberg made education a focus of the State of the City
speech, the address was as notable for what it did not say about education as
what it did say. The mayor did not mention many other changes supported by lots
of education advocates and backed by many parents, such as reducing class size,
creating more free pre-kindergarten programs and expanding vocational education.
Fruchter, for example, said he did not think the
changes would improve the city’s middle schools.
The
omission of new classroom programs seemed particularly striking since the city
is expected to receive at least $1.9 billion in additional state funding – the
result of the Campaign for Fiscal Equity suit on school financing – sometime
this year. Bloomberg did not mention that windfall, other than to say the money
might help the city readjust the funding formula for individual schools.
Not
only did the mayor fail to mention any new classroom programs but some experts
say his tax cuts (see related story) mean the city will not have the money to
support such improvements as a significant reduction in class size.
The
mayor’s omissions seem particularly striking when contrasted with Governor
Eliot Spitzer’s State of the State speech delivered earlier this month. In his
address, Spitzer called for smaller class size, a longer school day and year,
more after school programs, better technology in school libraries, and universal
pre-kindergarten programs for four–year-olds. Agree or disagree with these
ideas but they are a lot easier to understand than creating “school support
organizations” to build “system-wide empowerment.”
Will
it work?
In
putting forth his latest proposal, the mayor cited what he has accomplished so
far: better test scores, a smaller “achievement gap” between racial groups
and improving the graduation rate. But while the mayor has shaken up the school
system – closing schools, creating new ones, establishing a more standardized
curriculum, setting stricter standards for promotion and so on – many
observers questions whether the results have been as promising as he would
claim. Test scores here have risen, but they also have gone up in other cities
in the state. The state education department has indicated the city
overestimates its graduation rate, and the number of failing schools in the
city, again according to the state, has increased slightly this year. While
there have been some gains in elementary scores, said Fruchter,
it’s “not translating into middle school gain.” The school system, he
said, “has not figured out how to build conceptual skills at the eighth grade
level.”
And
so some observers, surprised by the latest reorganization, have sought to
interpret it. “The scrapping of the Bloomberg/Klein plan unveiled just four
years ago should be taken for what it is – an admission of the failure,”
wrote Andrew Wolfe. But the latest change won’t solve the problems either, he
continued: “There is no evidence that the schools can ever be fixed by
changing the structure.”
"It’s
very peculiar to say how successful we have been but, ugh, even though we have
been so successful, we are reorganizing again,” Merryl
Tisch, a member of the state Board of Regents who
supported Bloomberg’s earlier effort told the Times. “The whole concept of
mayoral control was to bring some stability and order to the system…The more
they continue to jimmy around with stability and order during a time when
academic achievement has not been soaring, the more difficult it is for people
to accept.”
Bloomberg
and Klein would concede that many problems remain. Even using their contested
statistics more than 40 percent of the city’s teenagers do not graduate from
high school on time, 60 percent of eighth graders cannot do academic work at
their grade level and the achievement gaps persists. But, many believe, that
does not mean he has failed. Making changes now, Bloomberg would say, is not an
admission of failure but a way to build on success.
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FYI ~ Below are links to a website GreatSchools.net that compares schools in any location to each other or to other locales… interesting.
If you place a check mark next to particular schools, you will find an overview of each, parent reviews, academic statistics, teacher-to-student ratios, percentage of free lunch/reduced price lunch students, English language learners, ethnicity, etc. You can even compare public schools to private schools.
To view public & private Staten Island schools ONLY:
http://www.greatschools.net/schools.page?city=Staten+Island&p=5&state=NY&showall=true
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