Mizrahi and Clark Issue a Throwdown (of sorts) to the Seattle Superintendent and Staff

 The Urbanist has printed an op-ed by Director Sarah Clark and Director Joe Mizrahi called: 

Seattle Public Schools Enrollment Practices Starve Schools and Harm Students

That's pretty blunt.

They lay out every single thing that was learned at the last Work Session on enrollment. Now staff might say that there are good reasons for the way enrollment currently works but I think those reasons might pale in comparison to  what Clark and Mizrahi have stated. (I am changing the formatting in the following paragraph so I can use bullet points. Bold mine)

At the most recent board meeting, district staff detailed current enrollment practices that assign teachers to schools before students, keeping families on waitlists even when space exists at their preferred schools. The stories reaching us through public comment, emails, and community meetings are devastating: 

 - CODA children (Children of Deaf Adults) unable to attend TOPS, a K-8 school with a deaf and hard of hearing program; 

- children of color who qualify for Highly Capable programs denied access to established programs, an experience so traumatizing that parents are leaving SPS rather than endure continued harm;

- newcomer students waitlisted for dual language programs in their native language; and

- siblings separated despite available space.

These aren’t isolated incidents or misunderstandings. According to the district’s own presentation, these enrollment practices are by design.

Administrators claim they’re balancing staffing and neighborhood enrollment, but it’s increasingly clear some want these option schools eliminated entirely.

What the data shows about enrollment:

SPS data shows the number of students not getting their choice school and then leaving the district has more than doubled last year. When students leave, state funding leaves with them, causing cascading budget challenges and program shortages for remaining students.

After fighting proposed school closures, it’s shocking that we’re losing an elementary school’s worth of students each year because we’re putting adult needs ahead of children and refusing to enroll students in schools with available space.

It is deeply inequitable to limit school choice based on zip codes, parent income, or convenience. The right way to address equity is not by reducing choices and starving popular programs that meet important needs. This problem demands creative, collective solutions. Eliminating dual language, exploratory learning, K-8, advanced math, and Highly Capable programs contradicts SPS values and isn’t real equity. True equity means expanding access to quality programs for historically disadvantaged students, not eliminating them.

I note that what is being said by staff is that they do teacher assignment for the next school year BEFORE enrollment happens. That makes little sense UNLESS you are trying to control who gets into what schools.

Also to state, the enrollment procedure DOES keep sibs together but it's just that the older sib (established at one school) is more likely to have to change to a school where the younger sib is assigned. So the district can say, "Yes, we do keep sibs together" without explaining how hard on families the district makes it. 

Families follow SPS’s process: they apply on time, their chosen school has space, and yet without explanation, their children remain stuck on waitlists that never move. 


What can you do? Stand up. Clearly this drumbeat is being heard.

But we can’t do this alone. We stood together to stop school closures last fall, and we need to continue that momentum. We’re deeply grateful to the parents, teachers, and community members whose advocacy has already made a difference.Your advocacy matters, and we are listening: together we can create the thriving, equitable, and diverse public schools that Seattle’s children deserve.


I do want to point out two things also in the op-ed but not about enrollment.

- "...we’re putting adult needs ahead of children ..." I perceive that comes from the Board's governance system - Student Outcome Focused Governance - because that phrasing gets used there. A lot.

I'm sure A.J. Crabill (Mr. SOFG) would say these two directors are waaaay out of line here. But I would posit that they are actually doing THEIR jobs. Listening to public testimony, reading emails, asking for data, asking about execution of Board policy, are all exactly in their wheelhouse.

- As I wait for the final day of filing for School Board positions, I do want to throw out there that another part of parent advocacy that should happen is to ask organizers for every - single - debate to include a question on SOFG. Something like:

Do you support the current form of Board governance and explain your stance. (For bonus points, ask each candidate what the acronym means.)

This election very much comes down to either supporting that governance or not as it guides what directors do. Clark and Mizrahi may support SOFG in theory but clearly not in practice.

Lastly, I do hope that every candidate for superintendent gets asked the same question at any public forums.

Comments

Anonymous said…
It feels like the tide is turning on this one. Parents want choice (especially in SE Seattle), and reading into the constituencies of Smith and Mizrah, so does the Seattle business cohort and unions. Am really hoping for some new Board members willing to boot SOFG and get back to the business of policy and strategy, not this back channel stuff we’ve had under Rankins tenure.

Bout Time
Anonymous said…
I hope SPS changes their practices, and that the School Board improves so that families stay in SPS. Families deserve to be told what is what. Waitlists should have more transparency to them. This has been going on longer than the current school board.
NESea mom
Anonymous said…
1) As school board directors, they can work to find a majority to change this practice as soon as the next board meeting. Airing it out in an Op-Ed like this feels more like trying to create an issue to make it look like they are taking action for their election campaigns (and perhaps an attempt to sow division with other board members) than to actually create policies that drive student outcomes and families staying with SPS.

2) It is increasingly clear that there are decisions that support the admin of SPS and decisions that support students needs. This feels like a situation where the admin is setting procedures that make their jobs easier (in this case they appear to be trying to maintain some level of students/teachers at neighborhood schools) while ignoring what parents really want (clearly more option schools and transfers to schools perceived to be higher performing). It seems like exactly the role of a school board to clarify what the policy for enrollment should be and to direct the superintendent to implement that policy. What exists appears to be woefully broken with an awkward mix of good intentions and bureaucratic protectionism.

SPS doesn't seem to know where its going with its option programs and it needs to urgently set its vision and implement according to that. This may be substantial realignment of enrollment and could clarify other decisions about how to manage school campuses.
Anonymous said…
Agree! We need to make sure SOFG is on the ballot in this next agenda and that voters understand what an accountable school board (and superintendent) could look like. In the meantime, this op-ed shows exactly why we need a strong interim in place soon to clean house.

Clean slate
Anonymous said…
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Clean Slate, I agree with your first sentence but not the second. There are moves being made behind the scenes for an interim - rather than openly saying it - and it's not good. I do not support an internal interim.
Anonymous said…
Kudos to Sarah and Joe!

-Breath of Fresh Air!
Anonymous said…
Mkayy… Let me check my notes: Both Clark and Mizrahi VOTED IN FAVOR to allow superintendent to work on closing schools. And now that are all up in arms because they want to garner votes for their campaigns. No thank you.
If they were really honest, they should own to it and admit they were wrong by voting yes. Now they claim “we as community won”.
But did we? Because last time I checked kids at those lower income, under enrolled schools were not doing ok: doomed to lose teachers and staff left and right, without a wealthy PTA to step in.
Let’s be honest, and take responsibility you two. OK, I don’t think Sarah and Joe read this thing so I emailed them. Waiting for a response.

Fed Up
Anonymous said…
Some of the under enrolled schools are not low income (obviously many are). There is more going on at these schools that is keeping people looking elsewhere. In some cases it is things beyond their control like weird zoning and families are opting in to closer schools. So this begs the question, what are we doing to help those schools? A shadow enrollment policy makes the numbers look better and is easier than actually making changes, but is it helping the kids at those schools? Maybe we need to rezone. Maybe we need to let them teach hicap kids appropriately so they stay, maybe there is some support that school needs that they don’t have. Why aren’t we asking those questions? Why do we think that just putting kids in a building will make them learn?
Anonymous said…
Agree this is a weird op-ed. Both authors very quiet at Board meetings. Some good questions here and there but then no follow up. You want parents to come back you up? Stand up yourselves and give parents something to stand behind.

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