Pre School discussion event





SEATTLE SPEAKS
PRESCHOOL POLITICS
Join the conversation
Should Seattle invest in prekindergarten education? Join Seattle Channel, Seattle CityClub and Town Hall Seattle for a live, televised community forum about the future of early childhood learning and hear from the supporters of two competing ballot measures—a city-backed plan to make high-quality preschool accessible and affordable and a union proposal seeking better pay and training for child-care workers.
Wednesday, September 24
6 p.m. doors|6:30 p.m. audience prep | 7 p.m. live show
Watch live on Seattle Channel 21 or SeattleChannel.org.

Register
Admission is free, but seating is limited.
Sign up at SeattleCityClub.org or 206-682-7395.

Weigh in
Follow the conversation #SeattleSpeaks | Take the pre-show poll!

Comments

Transparency Please said…
To be clear:

If the city's initiative passes, the City of Seattle (COS) wants principals to start working with the city. This is an opportunity for Holly Miller to act as a de facto superintendent. The city already has too much information about our children...they don't need more.

Allowing the city to work with principals (K-5) is another opportunity for the camel to stick their nose further under the educational tent.

We've already seen too many instances of the city working with SPS staff and keeping the directors in the dark. Now, I'd have more trust if the city acted in a transparent manner-- they didn't. We have no reason to trust the city.

Please vote NO and send a message to the city.

IMHO- The city should have worked with unions. The union wants to make sure felons aren't working with children. Is it too much to ask the city to help protect the children under the care of 4500 care providers? Instead, the city decided to cozy-up to Gates and Seattle's business class.



Vote NO to the city's proposal. We need transparency.

Anonymous said…
It's great to see this issue being recognized as politics. I wonder what stance will emerge from this meeting.
Anonymous said…
anonymous above was Chris S.
Transparency Please said…
I also believe that there is a very large potential for the city to use preschool dollars to set-up an administrative structure, which would make transition to mayoral control easier. Why does the city need one administrator to every fifty children?
Transparency Please said…
Please be aware that Ellen Frede is a high ranking administrator with Acelero. Acelero is a for-profit entity that wants to restructure Head Start. That is ok.

I've asked the city if they plan on partnering with Acelero- - crickets.
Anonymous said…
This debate isn't much of one at all because the viewpoint is whether the union or city proposal is best. This is a PR evening.

Not represented viewpoint: We should not fund this.

Not represented viewpoint: We should fund this, but neither plan is ready.

I want preschool for this city but I don't think either plan as offered is tenable. I want to see it voted down and brought back with

-better labor-city agreement
-free funding up to a lower family threshold than currently offered. certainly below $100K.
-better coordination between SPS and city
-very clear understanding of where academic, funding, labor, programming and capital (e.g. buildings and maintenance) lie.

Presumably I will vote yes on this the next time it is presented, if it fails this first time, because these issues will be addressed.

However, I don't expect it will fail this first time. Seattle is big picture "pro" public schooling. Therefore, I hope these points continue to get an airing even after the vote because none of them are resolved.

EdVoter
Transparency Please said…
How much time does the district want to study late- start times? Yet, the district waits until 2 months before the election to discuss the city's preschool plan, which will involve many SPS administrative and financial structures.

Why didn't Charles Wright bring this initiative to the board's attention? He has been involved...all along.
Anonymous said…
This liberal pro-education voter wants to know:

Where can I get NO signs for the yard or window?

(If the city wants SPS help for preschools, the city should: 1) pony up 2 football practice fields at Sandpoint so Roosevelt, Ballard, etc can have portables on their fields beginning fall 2015; 2) announce Discovery Park land for a new high school serving QA, Magnolia, Downtown and part of Ballard; and 3) allow portables on the park lands next to crowded schools.

City council controls Parks now through the new district. City Council can do this basically unilaterally - and should.

That's my starting point. Until the city does those, SPS shouldn't even return their freaking calls about preschool. Or every memo about preschool and every email should have a paragraph requesting high school capacity mitigation help. Every single communication. It needs to be a given: we need high school capacity mitigation help, from the city, and that's the first step.

Signed: Math Counts
Math Counts, there is no organized opposition to either measure and that surely hurts the discussion.

I have been speaking out on my own accord but unless people are paying attention, it might be "it's for the kids."

Anonymous said…
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
StringCheese said…
The poll does allow for a "neither" vote and there are plenty of opportunities to leave comments. I made sure to write, repeatedly, that SPS does not have the capacity, time, or expertise to give to this project. All of SPS's energy needs to be focused on K-12. If the city wants to pursue this, then great, do it with the knowledge that it falls completely outside of SPS.
Greenwoody said…
I'm also planning to vote no and I think it's time we amplified our voices. I have a young child, not quite kindergarten age, and I am all for universal preschool...in concept. I'm not for charter preschools ruled by Gates Foundation ideology that are a vehicle for a city takeover of the school district. Oh, and I don't support preschool that comes at the expense of classroom space for K-12 kids.

Yes to the concept, no to the specific plan. Tell the City Council to go back and get it right.
Anonymous said…
This comment has been removed by the author.
zerry ht said…
The location you have hired for this event is just perfect and reminds me of my wedding ceremony. I reserved event venues Seattle for my wedding day and it was really amazing. We really enjoyed there and cherish those beautiful moments till now.

Popular posts from this blog

Tuesday Open Thread

Breaking It Down: Where the District Might Close Schools

MEETING CANCELED - Hey Kids, A Meeting with Three(!) Seattle Schools Board Directors