Tuesday Open Thread
Important article from the Seattle Times about earthquakes and school buildings in Washington State. While no SPS school was included in the survey, it's still good reading.
One thing - parents, I know it's now summer so you want to leave school worries behind. I get it; I've been there. But put a note on you calendar to ask at the first PTA/PTO meeting - what will happen at our school if there is an earthquake during the school day that forces everyone from the building? What kind of supplies do we have to meet that challenge? What happens if the building is unsafe and it may take parents more than a couple of hours to come get their students?
OSPI has unveiled its new website which I have not explored yet.
Superintendent Denise Juneau's message about accomplishments this school year.
I talked to a friend yesterday who has one last kid in high school. She talked to her Friend, Ms X, who said that at least two people told the friend - straight out - that they lied about their address to get their child into Roosevelt over Lincoln. And Ms. X told my friend they didn't even rent an address; they just picked a random house near RHS.
Ms. X said her child asked why they didn't just do that and Ms. X told her child there was a waitlist and how did he think those kids at the top would feel if someone who lied cut the line? College admission scandals? Hmmm. Back in the day, the district would, upon a complaint filed, investigate addresses. I haven't heard of that being done in years. I also note that there are several brand-new apartment buildings right by RHS; I suspect someone might rent one for the address.
The Washington Charter Schools Association announced that four new charter schools will get new funding via the national group, New Schools Venture Fund. This is a powerhouse funder. From their press release:
California, Oregon and British Columbia have spent hundreds of millions of dollars to strengthen school buildings, but Washington does not require seismic upgrades or have dedicated state funding for retrofits.Good for SPS.
“We did select these schools to be a representative, meaningful sample,” said Corina Forson, DNR’s chief hazard geologist. The researchers chose not to include Seattle Public Schools, which has invested tens of millions of dollars from local construction bond to fund seismic retrofits.
One thing - parents, I know it's now summer so you want to leave school worries behind. I get it; I've been there. But put a note on you calendar to ask at the first PTA/PTO meeting - what will happen at our school if there is an earthquake during the school day that forces everyone from the building? What kind of supplies do we have to meet that challenge? What happens if the building is unsafe and it may take parents more than a couple of hours to come get their students?
OSPI has unveiled its new website which I have not explored yet.
Superintendent Denise Juneau's message about accomplishments this school year.
I talked to a friend yesterday who has one last kid in high school. She talked to her Friend, Ms X, who said that at least two people told the friend - straight out - that they lied about their address to get their child into Roosevelt over Lincoln. And Ms. X told my friend they didn't even rent an address; they just picked a random house near RHS.
Ms. X said her child asked why they didn't just do that and Ms. X told her child there was a waitlist and how did he think those kids at the top would feel if someone who lied cut the line? College admission scandals? Hmmm. Back in the day, the district would, upon a complaint filed, investigate addresses. I haven't heard of that being done in years. I also note that there are several brand-new apartment buildings right by RHS; I suspect someone might rent one for the address.
The Washington Charter Schools Association announced that four new charter schools will get new funding via the national group, New Schools Venture Fund. This is a powerhouse funder. From their press release:
The Washington State Charter Schools Association, in partnership with our member schools, is proud to announce that four charter public schools, all on track to open in Fall 2020, were chosen to be part of the Invent cohort at NewSchools Venture Fund.
Cascade Public Schools, Catalyst Public Schools, Impact Public Schools, and Lumen High School represent four of 18 organizations from across the nation selected for the Spring 2019 investment group (see school details and website links below).What's on your mind?
Comments
Too bad
Good luck
FNH
You are correct and it was troubling to hear those families denigrate the students and experience that was to be RESMS. I guess they are extra special. I wonder now if those same families will have to "move" again to avoid the Lincoln experience since it won't be a fully formed school on opening day. It must be hard to have to live a lie for so many years.
-long road
HP
Anyone taking over the mantle from you to cover SPS on a daily/weekly basis and serve as a watchdog on the district? If so, who and in what outlet?
Seems Seattle Times doesn't bother to attend most of the mind-numbing meetings that can surface what's happening in the district, given district's overall lack of transparency and communication other than overly sunny superintendent missives that say virtually nothing about program, policy and budget decisions and tradeoffs being made at the district that impact all our kids.
Thank you again for your service and for letting readers know who might be stepping in to fill the void.
Concerned parent
The SPS Community Discussion and Resource Exchange group at Facebook does cover some SPS stuff. (They are an outgrowth of Soup for Teachers.) How well is up for debate and fyi, they allow attacks and name-calling so reader beware.
I also note an Eastside blog that may be of some interest. It's called Eastside Education Network. It was started by a Special Ed parent, Beth Sigall. Her blog mostly covers legislative issues and some Sped issues. She is ed reformy with ties to both LEV and Stand for Children but she has a passion for the work.
The Eastside Education Network covers Bellevue, Everett, Issaquah, Lake Washington, Mercer Island, Northshore, Riverview and Snoqualmie Valley. Their mission:
"Eastside Education Network brings together parents committed to ensuring our public schools achieve successful outcomes for all students."
https://eastsideedu.com/
I had always wanted to start a parent group like this in Seattle because PTSA is too big and unwieldy with so many units and also schools with no PTSA. I think PTSA can get bogged down with state and national agendas as well. A focused Seattle Schools parent group - with satellite groups for regions so that schools in the same area could have their own regional focus - would probably have great power.
I'm sad at Melissa and her contributor's have been the target of an attack.
I'm afraid there is a cadre of extremists in our midst. Some think a Marxist approach to education is the way to go. There has been little attention to the notion of "alienation".
I support advanced learning opportunities. I didn't support Amplify.
FWIW, my family is not white.
Tired Parent
- Persephone
BHS actual
HCC students that decided to keep their children at the local high school received a double whamy. These are the same kids that have been moved multiple times through out their educational experience.
I feel for incoming sophomore students.
This is part of the continuum of moral bankruptcy found in the recent scandal of faking credentials to get Junior into USC et al.
Your kids are watching and you won't live happily ever when your kids follow you down the cesspool.
Progressives until it affects you.
Pathetic
Code Pink
A 14% lower school age population could happen by 2025 and would result in the need to reconfigure the Seattle school district to avoid operating half empty school buildings.
2018 - 53,000
2019 - 51,000
2025 - 45,000
A district with only 45,000 students will not require the funding levels that many are attempting to force the state legislators to implement. There will be the possibility of building closures as the SPS student population continue to shrink.
SPS is heading into a rough patch with enormous uncertainty. SPS has spent the last 15years building up an TOP down heavy bureaucracy with a palace for its rulers.
Those days are coming to and end. It turns out that is not what the people wanted. Who knew.
RF
https://www.seattleschools.org/district/calendars/news/what_s_new/school_director_appointment
Another View
Biden was viewed by the (African American) commentator on NPR as more than likely truly believing he was doing the right thing at that time. He apparently was vocally pro-integration, and for building new schools, equity in African American majority schools etc. but like many people of all races including African Americans at the time was against bussing being imposed by the federal government.
I am curious if Seattlelites from all backgrounds currently believe our schools should have forced bussing today? Do you feel it works well or not to truly integrate schools and provide equal opportunity?
Curious
Curious
Case closed
I also believe he was self conscious not to appear to talk over Kamala Harris due to a male-female dynamic. It was clear he did not get a chance to explain his position in full. As a female, I did notice the women talking more than the men, which I think was intentional. I think many of the males in the debate were trying to be sensitive to a gender dynamic as to not appear to be a bully.
KL
They also have encouraged me to send my (white) child to Franklin through the choice system if possible. however, my child's schools is majority white. Therefore, we have made efforts outside of school for her to have friendships with kids of diverse economic as well as ethnic, racial and religious backgrounds.
I feel that my black friends overwhelmingly (of course) expect and want for majority minority schools to have all the resources and classes available same as majority white schools. I like Joe Biden's idea of tripling money for Title I schools as many Title I schools are also majority minority.
I do believe that when you are a minority in the greater society, it can be quite powerful to be in a school with majority students and teachers who are of a similar race, culture & background. Also think about historically black colleges which can be so empowering. My friend who is a darker skinned African American person with some Jamaican ancestry has also told me how much more comfortable in fact she feels when visiting Jamaica or Africa because of a lighter/darker skin divide in some black communities in the US.
JK
good news
What was interesting about Franklin is when the district went to the Supreme Court over their use of race in enrollment, they used the numbers of white kids, a minority there, to show that white students used the race option to get into Franklin. Meaning, it wasn't just kids of color using the race option in the enrollment plan.
KA BOOM