Chandra Hampson and Her Quest to Level Seattle Schools
By that headline, I don't mean she wants to literally blow them up but she certainly has ideas about what should stay and what should go.
But there are two programs she is working to upend - Advanced Learning and Option Schools.
I had written this post believing I would talk about the direction of both programs until I listened to a discussion of the Student Transition Plan (basically updates to the Student Assignment Plan) at the Board meeting on January 22, 2022. Director Hampson said some pretty appalling things about Option Schools (at least the ones in the north end).
She does NOT believe that there is any public engagement necessary about either dual language schools nor Option Schools if the district/Board wants to make changes.
If you have a student at one of those or care about those programs' existence, you need to write to the Board. It's spsdirectors@seattleschools.org OR if you want to include the superintendent and senior leadership, it's schoolboard@seattleschools.org.
- 7 out of 15 SPS Option Schools are majority white with the majority white schools where you'd expect them - in North Seattle and Ballard. (And by majority, I mean just over 50% - the two that skew way white are The Center School at nearly 74% white and Thornton Creek at 64% white.)
- What's fascinating is that schools you might think would be majority white are not. It's schools like Orca K-8, Louisa Boren K-8, McDonald, JSIS, TOPS and Queen Anne Elementary. In fact, Boren, Orca, TOPS and Queen Anne Elementary are very diverse schools for not being dual language schools.
- One school that skews to a majority of one minority race is South Shore pre-K-8. They are 50% Black.
- Option Schools with the largest transportation areas have the largest populations of FRL students.
- Option Schools with the largest transportation areas are located in neighborhoods with the lowest mean median household income.
- The majority of FRL students eligible for transportation at Option Schools will lose service, even if transportation is maintained for high-FRL schools.
- We also found the proposed transportation reduction would not provide a significant cost savings. (This is one thing that Hampson says would help transportation costs.)
- Do Option School students live far away from schools? At least half of Option School students live within their GeoZone.
- Are adjacent neighborhood schools under enrolled perhaps because of Option Schools? The authors looked at "enrollment relative to capacity at Option Schools and neighborhood schools. There is no clear pattern of very high capacity rates at Option Schools and low capacity rates at adjacent neighborhood schools, as defined by Middle Schools service areas.
- Option School students are privileged (low BIPOC, FRL and EL populations) and therefore bear the greater burden of any proposed reductions in the interest of recalibrating equity throughout the district. Generally speaking, the percentage % of BIPOC and percentage % of FRL students for individual Option Schools are comparable to the percentage % at their adjacent neighborhood schools. Neighborhood schools across the district range between 1-44% ( average 15%) of % EL students and between 22-98% BIPOC students (average 57%). Option Schools show comparable ranges. (bold mine)
- What I'm not seeing here necessarily is any suggested progress toward the elimination of racial equity gaps, in particular but that are present in our Option School environments, our dual language environments.
- We know we are providing dual language opportunities in schools that don't represent geographic areas areas where we have the abundance of dual language or multilingual speakers in our school system.
- I'm wondering about this (issue) whether or not because one of the most egregious things that I that I know about is the Option Schools for example is that they're only available to really limited high income neighborhoods in many instances, particularly in the elementary level which are all in the north end. So I would just like to hear from you where are we that work and why we haven't tried to take any moves to chip off any of those inequities that are represented in our SAP.
- Davies says, "Thank you for the awareness; our department has spent a year reflecting on the this and current conversations continue on dual language and Option Schools." She said they met regularly with "different partners." She said the "short answer is there is nothing that we identified to 'chip away' at." She then stated that in the spring, they are planning some public engagement on this issue and would be bringing that to the Operations Committee.
- Hampson comes back, "We have to be very careful with engagement. And I understand this is a big nut. But we don't need to do engagement around something that is an inherently segregating or racist practice, right? We need to be responsible and demand because our communities demanded and we have already committed to through our Strategic Plan that we eliminate those aspects in our system.
- She continued, "I think so that doesn't need and we don't need to go to people who are experiencing you know a privilege or an entitlement and say you know we want to hear whether or not you want to lose this entitlement. That is a mistake this district makes a lot. We do NOT need to ask people for permission to remove something that they that they believe is an entitlement that is that enacts racial equities in the system. We do not need to do that."
- And I think in terms of that, I would like to know between now and we come to action because what I'm trying to get to President Hersey is any possibility to improve this because I have major issues with our SAP." She then hilariously says, "It's nobody's fault, not Ashley's because she's doing incredible work on trying to get to a new place. But is there anything such as you know at a minimum increasing the notation of a GeoZone so that every student in the city has access to an Option School which is not currently the case.
- She ends, "I'll take my answer offline." Well, after you sucked up that much time, I hope so. Boy, I feel for Ashley Davies.
Comments
It is abundantly clear that Hampson and her toadies want to kill John Stanford International and McDonald.Thanks for letting us know that these are very very diverse schools.
Shameful that Hampson and her toadies want to kill John Stanford's vision and legacy.
How does the board consider mixed raced students? The board is wading into dangerous territory. John Stanford International has an Asian population of 9.3%, Black 1.6%, Hispanic 24%, two or more races 21% and white population of 44%.
Thanks for flagging this issue, Melissa.
Of course, that is actually what Hampson and Rankin really want. Their goal is now clear: to accelerate the privatization of Seattle Public Schools by turning parents against the system by removing their choices and making it clear to parents they should not expect their child's needs to be met in SPS.
And if transportation is a concern, SPS can very easily fix and fund that. But it would be wrong to make a desert of options and choices in any part of the city. Every part of Seattle needs options for divergent curriculum within the public system. This is essential.
If you are a parent at an option school or a dual language school, you must organize NOW to stop the board from eliminating your program. Hampson is unpopular, she has no actual public support, and her fellow board members will fold quickly once they see a well organized community opposition. They all saw what happened in SF earlier this month. They know the public is against them.
But you have to speak up. You cannot convince the board with facts and figures and pleas. Instead you have to be loud, show up in numbers, and make it very clear to the board that they cannot eliminate or otherwise destroy these programs.
Fight Back
Remember this was the woman who deleted her FB account (1st Amendment problem?) and is currently suing the district for finding her to have violated her own anti-bullying policy. Why is Seattle going along with this anti-process/anti-family approach? Are we all numb to windbag ideologues after the last five years? Can we get a little help from some news outlets here? Anyone but the sound of Chandra’s own voice championing her own unchecked ideas???
Geozone Blues
The Center School is one of the only smaller high schools available to families. Not every student does well at a big high school.
It has an arts oriented focus, which makes it unique. I believe it also still has Jon Greenberg teaching a humanities class about racial inequities, which seems like something Chandra Hampson would care about.
It always has been mostly a white student population. So what? Do we really have to shut down schools because one board member thinks white students are undeserving? Queen Anne students still have to go outside their neighborhood for a comprehensive large high school experience.
The Center School is an alternative school that is easily accessible by bus to many students. It is a jewel in the SPS system, but it does not surprise me that they might eliminate it. I hope its current parents stand up for it, along with parents at other Option Schools they care about.
Honestly, this district seems to want to repel families instead of attracting them.
Step Back
One of the big issues with Chandra is she is a bully, believes she is the smartest person in every room, is convinced she never has to listen to everyone else, that in fact everyone else is just a tool to implement her will, and that her policy goals are to destroy the district so as to drive families to charter and private schools. We need good, dedicated public servants on the board who engage the public and work with the public as partners to fix the district, rather than Chandra's unpopular policies, and rather than board members who act as bumps on a log.
Fight Back
2) Anonymous, please give yourself a name - any name - next time. Yes, Hampson is a real believe in "do as I say, not as I do." She likes to say that "community" has spoken but never explains when or who. Plus, she also seems to only listen to one small group of teen students when, if she asked, many other teens might weigh in.
3) Geozone Blues, I hear that but fix that problem, not end a program.
4) District Watcher, I recently became away that John Hay has lost nearly 300 students out of a 600 student population. My source tells me that it could be a combo of things: a transitory population because some students come from downtown and Mary's Place, first stop for new Amazon families who may move on once parents decide where to live permanently and, well, some parents have probably just had enough of SPS.
I wonder if Hampson ever thinks about how much money the district loses when students exit the system.
4) I would say that the Board needs to demand public engagement for district issues but should also provide it for their own regions.
And yes, Hampson is a bully and, for the life of me, I can't understand why Hersey allows it or other Board members take it.
I do wonder what her end game is - I don't think it's privatization. But I do think that if SPS continues on this path, they will be a smaller district that drives out many parents. She, of course, has made it clear that she doesn't give a fig about certain parents in the district - she's said this out loud - but as powerful as she thinks she is, voters are even more so.
John Hay borders don't include Mary's Place and South Lake Union. Those go to Lowell.