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Tuesday, May 11, 2010

GothamSchools - What to expect from today’s teacher evaluation agreement

GothamSchools - Breaking News and Analysis of the NYC Public Schools

Parent ire grows over city plan to shuffle space at ASL school


Students, parents and alumni of the American Sign Language and English Lower and Secondary Schools protest a plan for the Clinton School for Artists and Writers to move into their school building. Many Clinton School parents also oppose the plan.
A prolonged battle against the city’s plan to shuffle space at five Manhattan schools spilled onto the sidewalks of East 23rd Street yesterday.
The plan to relocate Chelsea’s Clinton School for Artists and Writers into the building shared by the American Sign Language and English Lower and Secondary Schools has drawn fierce criticism from parents at all of those schools. City officials have argued that even with the Clinton School in their building, the ASL schools will have ample space to maintain their unique sign-language based instructional program. But parents contend that moving the Clinton School’s nearly 300 students into the building will create overcrowded classes and prevent students from seeing each other as they sign.
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What to expect from today’s teacher evaluation agreement


A new teacher evaluation system that’s likely to become state law could mean that, for the first time, school districts will fire teachers if they repeatedly fail to boost their students’ test scores.
But to do that, the state and school districts will have to track student work in more detail than they ever have before. And state and city teachers union officials sold the idea as a way to create better professional development for teachers and principals.