Stringer calls on city to overhaul “chaotic” space planning
Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer called today for an overhaul of the city’s process for matching student demand to building space, charging that the city’s current process is causing “chaos and uncertainty” for parents and students.
Standing outside of the Upper West Side’s P.S. 334, Stringer reported that more than four out of 10 Manhattan schools are either overcrowded or are losing classroom space as the city tries to cram more students into a finite number of school buildings.
The report details what are by now familiar complaints about overcrowding in Manhattan schools, which have seen their population of young students boom in recent years without a corresponding addition of seats.
Remainders: NY Mag names Greenpoint #1 for public schools
- New York Magazine ranks the city’s neighborhoods, naming Greenpoint #1 for its public schools.
- Michele McNeil reports that most i3 applicants are focusing on standards and turnarounds.
- One of Miss Eyre’s middle school students reminds her what it’s like to be an adolescent.
- A teacher says the city’s failed plan to pay students for performance puts teacher merit pay in doubt.
- Chaz: principals’ power to change grades is partially to blame for the high numbers in remedial classes.
- The budget crisis is an opportunity for the city and union to give on some issues, writes a UFT member.
- Parents who helped create “meatless Mondays” at their children’s school suggest others do the same.
- LGBTQ students in Chicago are asking for the ability to formally report school staff who harass them.
- Teachers respond to the question: should HS students read aloud in class?
- Chester Finn says he’s “outraged” that China is paying for U.S. public schools to teach Mandarin.
- Thinking of parents as consumers actually gives them less power, writes Kenneth Libby.
- And FL Governor Christ says he’s going to spend the week listening, then decide on tenure bill.