Tuesday Open Thread
The speaker list is up for the Board meeting tomorrow; not as packed as I thought with just four people on the waitlist. The majority of the speakers are speaking on high school boundaries (with several wanting to talk about Ballard High). There are only three of us speaking about the Green Dot resolution asking the City to not grant the zoning departures that Green Dot has requested. It's me, long-time watchdog, Chris Jackins, and the head of the Washington State Charter Schools Association, Patrick D'Amelio. (I knew Mr. D'Amelio when he headed the Alliance for Education and Big Brothers and Big Sisters; he's a stand-up guy.)
Comments
Those distractor answers and plausible answers are very effective at confusing someone, especially an 8 year old.
Oh, and do make sure you get a solid night's sleep, eat a balanced breakfast, have a reliable way to get to school and are relatively stress-free before you sit down to test.
http://sbac.portal.airast.org/practice-test/
-Opt Out
Everyone who is running for Seattle City Council should be asked if they support mayoral appointment of School Board members. If they demur, or feign ignorance of the issue, or are anything other than flat-out hostile to the notion, then they should be asked why we don't just let the mayor appoint City Council members. We might ask them why are they running for City Council in the first place, if they don't value transparency, accountability, and the very democratic process?
It's our responsibility to raise this issue, and to not let any candidate "off the hook" on it. I believe Ed Murray's people will tell him to back off, maybe even to denounce the idea altogether, if they sense strong opposition, strong enough to endanger his re-election, and his political career.
We have a good opportunity here, and if we fail to seize it, we will be to blame if mayoral appointment of ANY School Board members comes to pass. We absolutely should use it against Burgess, whether he is an odds-on favorite or not.
-- Ivan Weiss
1. The district to be split.
2. Smart and fair board members.
3. Teachers to be held accountable.
4. The district's administrators to support the schools and students and stop LSCing these kids.
5. Some sort of over-site entity with authority to remove ineffective administrators or teachers quickly, no witch hunts just fast and fair results.
If SPS can deliver these soon then there's hope, if not then I see the Mayor taking control.
rekcehc rekcep
And I would say "most parents want" - how do you know this? Is there a poll or survey we all missed?
Define "smart and fair" for Board members.
And, I would say most parents want teachers AND principals to be accountable. You do want to be fair, after all.
SPS cannot,in any way, shape or form, split itself.
A lot of this talk/legislation is just people putting out feelers or seeing what sticks.
What most parents want,
1. The district to remain in one piece.
2. Smart and fair board members, who suport and listen to parents who are their customers.
3. Principals and JSCEE to be held accountable.
4. The district's administrators to support the schools and students and stop LSCing these kids. - OK
5. Some sort of over-site entity with authority to remove ineffective administrators or teachers quickly, no witch hunts just fast and fair results. - Like the Superintendent? What a concept.
I do not want Mayor control. Do not take away my right to vote for my representation. Hale NO!
HP