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Posts Tagged ‘high school’

Congratulations to Montgomery Blair High School!  Blair was honored on February 16 with the Maryland Excellence in Gifted and Talented Education (EGATE) award. It is one of just five schools statewide—and the only high school—to receive the prestigious award, which recognizes outstanding gifted and talented education.  MCPS actually issued a press release!  For those readers outside of MCPS, Blair’s Math Science and Computer Science program is a perennial of rival of Fairfax’s Thomas Jefferson High School for most Intel wins.  The school also houses a highly regarded communications arts program.

Here are the application requirements for an award to the school.  ALL criteria must be met to qualify:

  • Administrator shows leadership in expanding/improving programs and services for gifted and talented students in the school or school system.
  • Administrator allocates resources (time, people, money) to expand and improve gifted and talented education programs and services.
  • Administrator leads the expansion or improvement of parent, community, and/or business partnerships that directly support the education of gifted and talented students.

But wait!  There hasn’t been any mention of this on the school’s own website.  No announcement on the school listserv.  Nor in the school’s award winning paper.  What gives?  Isn’t the school justifiably proud of the award?

Hmmm.  Well there is this story in Silver Chips.

…Student Member of the Board of Education (SMOB) Alan Xie spoke with members of Blair’s Students for Global Responsibility (SGR) about the Gifted and Talented (GT) label Today. SGR is working with the countywide organization Montgomery County Education Forum (MCEF) to remove the GT label in elementary schools across the county.

Student Member of the Board of Education (SMOB) Alan Xie met with Blair’s SGR after school today.
According to SGR sponsor George Vlasits, the club is currently working to inform Blazers about how the Montgomery County Public School (MCPS) system begins separating students in second grade. After seven-year-olds take a test, they are sorted into the GT track or the non-GT track. “The [non-GT] kids get very little opportunities,” Vlasits said. “They would like to try more challenging material but those things won’t fly.” According to Vlasits, due to a discrepancy in teacher expectations, it is hard for students not on the GT track to get into magnet middle schools or magnet high schools. “If [non-GT] are constantly told they cannot perform as well as GT kids, they will eventually believe it,” he said. “It gets back to what we do early on….”
Ah, it’s our good friends the MCEF, they of the “no labels, no limits” campaign!  (I’ve written about them in the past, such as here.) I don’t know about you, but it strikes me as rather…icky…to have a club adviser pushing a personal agenda through a student group.   Particularly one that essentially is about sowing divisiveness in the school’s community.
Worse, Mr. Vlasits’ comments are patently wrong.  “They would like to try more challenging materials but those things won’t fly.”  Fly by whom?  Please!  Last time I checked there is no gatekeeping for accelerated and enriched instruction in MCPS (some would argue that’s the problem).  Any student or parent of a student showing the willingness and interest for more advanced instruction ask for it and get it.  Not there is a lot to ask for–we’re essentially talking accelerated math instruction, and in future that is going to be ratcheted back now that MCPS has decided that it over-accelerated in the past.  Plus a smattering of William and Mary.  So please show me this “GT Track” because I and other GT parents haven’t been able to find it in the 10+ years I’ve been around MCPS.  Instead we hear over and over and over again that GT identification is completely meaningless.  (40%+ identified as GT.  Thanks MCPS!)  Is he talking the Centers for the Highly Gifted perhaps?  Well, that program is there to meet the legitimate needs of outlier students whose needs can’t be met in a regular classroom.  Kids who would otherwise be bored and alienated in school. Is that what he’s advocating?   Denying the right of every student to learn something new every day?  Because it seems like the total elimination of all honors, magnet, Center, accelerated etc. etc. classes and programs is the only thing that will satisfy.

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Okay, one week in and it’s time to post.  Last Thursday we packed up the Prius, C. said her goodbyes and we headed north.  Those last few days were really sweet, capped by a lowkey sendoff with close friends and family at our local pool.  As we pulled out of the driveway, M. “piped out” her sister on her Irish tin whistle, their little joke.  C. came to hate the whistle and made her M. promise not to play it for the remainder of her time home in exchange for going on a quick trip to explore Ellicott City.  I’m proud to say that we did an awesome packing job, and with the seats folded down we were still able to have a clear view through the rear window.  Ziploc packing cubes and super jumbo bags rock!

I love roadtrips, the sense of “going” and anticipation, and I had anticipated this one for a long time.  Our first stop was Connecticut to visit my mom.  C. did about a third of a driving, handling the stretch of I-95 from north of Baltimore to the first rest stop on the Jersey Turnpike, and then from Armonk to my mom’s.  She drove the Saw Mill River Parkway for a stretch and that had me positively white knuckled.  I’m white knuckled when I drive it.  It’s two lanes and twisty with grass to the right and a Jersey barrier to the left, and no breakdown lanes.  Cars going 55 mph-plus.  Gulp.  The next day/night was spent in Cambridge.  And–at last–Saturday.  Move in day.

The weather was picture perfect.  C. drove to the school and at the turn off we were greeted by a gaggle of–what can I call them?–”school spirit people.”  Fun, but C. is soooo not a rah-rah kind of girl.  Or at least, she’s never felt rah-rah about any school she’s ever attended.  She kind of cringed and refused to beep the car horn.  Registration was painless.  On the way to her dorm we had to once more pass through the spirit people gantlet, only this time C. was in the passenger seat and of course we got caught at the light.  Had to have been the longest red light of her life.  What does when do when 50 or so of your future schoolmates are screaming and pointing, and thumbs-upping and just plain looking at you?  Well mom honked the car horn, as bidden by the masses. What else was I going to do?

Safely past that, it was on to her dorm.  We were able to pull right to the front door and several girls helped us quickly unload the car and ferry things to her room, a single.  We also were greeted by one of the house counselors.  Her room is small but comfortable. The bookshelf we brought fit perfectly and she quickly got things arranged.  Her window looks onto the roofline and she can spy a bit of the quad.  Nice bonus:  The sound of church bells wafting from somewhere.

We were so busy unpacking that we nearly missed lunch.  We got back in time for a house meeting, where everyone, including parents had a chance to meet for the first time.  “She reminds me of Ms. J,” I whispered to C., nodding towards one of the three house counselors.  Ms. J. was one of C.’s (few) favorite elementary school teachers.  She had that no-nonsense but warm thing going that seems to work for C.  The girls she’ll be living with are a mix of lowers (freshman), juniors (sophomores), uppers (juniors), seniors (seniors) and PGs or post-grads.  Hard to say much more than that at this point.  After the meeting we did a quick walk into town and which meant we were late for the schoolwide welcome.  Oh well.  Afterwards the parents and kids met separately.  Among all the blah, blah, blah two statements stuck out.

  1. When parenting teens you’re moving from being a manager to being a consultant, and
  2. We’ll believe half the things they tell us about you, if you believe half the things they tell you about us.

From 5:00 to 5:5o p.m. was designated as goodbye time, and parents were emphatically to be gone by 6:00.  When it was time for me to leave there was no drama, no tears, although there were two calls before I even hit the interstate–me to her ask if she had relinquished her library book for me to return, and her to me asking for advice on a stuck roller shade.

To be continued….

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I was hanging out in the biography section of Borders, banished there because History was M’s section, when the book caught my eye. Red and white cover — curiously several books I’ve bought recently are red and white.  And the title?  “wis·en·heim·er:  A Childhood Subject to Debate” by Mark Oppenheimer.  Hmm.  Interesting.  I pulled it from the shelf.  It had me from the first sentence of the flyleaf:  “Have you ever met a child who talked like an adult?  Who knew big words and how to use them?”

Hell yes.

It continues, “Was he a charmer or an insufferable smart aleck–or maybe both?  … Frank and comical, Wisenheimer chronicles the travails of a hyperarticulate child who finds salvation in the heady world of competitive oratory.”

“Hyperarticulate.”  I love that.

Needless to say, I bought the book.   And I have to say:  Wow.  It has to be one of the best depictions I have ever read of what it’s like to be a verbally gifted kid.  It’s also painfully honest about the less than lovely parts of that gift. (There is one particularly awful incident.)  What makes it so special, in my opinion, is that Oppenheimer not only has the ability to tap directly into his childhood and teen experiences and vividly give voice to that gifted kid, but now, a parent himself, he can muse on what it what it must have been like to parent a kid like himself.  Chapters II and III gripped me.  I found myself nodding and nodding and nodding.

Compared with other kids in my gifted classes I was nothing remarkable.  Yet the average adult, if introduced to two smart nine-year-olds, a girl who can do geometry and a boy who uses words like dissembled and eviscerated, find the boy more astonishing.  At that age, speaking well is a better party trick. But my gift, my verbiage, presented a unique problem:  you can have the words but without the wisdom they don’t count for much.  There are nine-year-olds who can do post-collegiate mathematics, and nine-year-olds whose music virtuosity does not betray their age, but there has never been the nine-year-old who wrote accomplished adult poetry or a moving novel.  If your gift is for words, you can write stuff that’s good given your age, but not stuff that’s good, period.

I felt this constraint, keenly.  I even think that, if asked I could have described what I was feeling:  that someday I could be a fine wordsmith, but for the time being I just had all these words and no place to take them.  So I did what millions of boys before me–and girls too, but not as frequently as boys–had done.  I began to think of myself, around fourth grade, as a master of words.  I became a wiseacre.

His humorous description of his family life and their liberal social milieu, while perhaps a bit more “out there” did, I confess, sound rather familiar.

It was especially hard for my parents to convince me there were boundaries to how I could talk, because they surrounded themselves with people who thought talking and arguing were really good things.

Chapter II opens with this sentence: “From the beginning, I had a hard time with teachers, and teachers had a hard time with me. “  From there he describes his experience of attending a Montessori school that clearly wasn’t a fit for him.

It wasn’t just that the school’s theoretical matrix encouraged neglect of verbal kids, but also that the teachers had no interest in teaching language arts. …  The math and science kids thrived, one of them, the redoubtable Eli Brandt, used the school’s freed to start simple algebra when he was eight.  He’s now a Google software engineer.  My gifts, however, seemed to be held against me. The school sold itself as a place where students could be individuals, but my endless quarreling, my hunger to challenge my teachers, wasn’t seen as a good urge that needed proper channeling; rather it was treated as a rebellion against the harmony that the school was supposed to embody.

It’s one thing to have a child to speak about unhappiness with school.  But no matter how empathetic one is, there still is that little voice thinking, “Yeah, but he’s a kid.  It can’t really be that bad”  It’s a totally other thing to hear that alienation filtered through the words and perspective of a thirty-something Yale professor.  Yeah, it can be that bad.

And his description of his “thing” with his teacher Lisa.  Whoa.  Just whoa.  His  description of how this spilled into his relationship with his brother.  Again,  close to the bone.  Switch genders and it could have been a scene from our house.   A pivotal passage (starting page 34) is when he finally tells his parents it’s just too much, that they just don’t understand how deeply different he feels.  I don’t have space (nor the right) t0 reproduce it here, but let’s just say that for parents of profoundly gifted kids, it is very likely a conversation, a moment, that you have lived.

The second half book moves on to describe how Oppenheimer stumbles into — and eventually triumphs in — the world of competitive debate.  In 7th grade he moves to a private school where the high school allows middle schoolers to participate on the debate team.  “We were not a student body with brilliant futures,” he writes, “But the other ten students who joined the debate team that fall — all from the high school — were among the most interesting characters on campus.”  “Interesting.”  Ah yes.  Oppenheimer is about ten years younger than me, which makes the book a double pleasure.  Not only does he write authentically about the life and mores of homo teenagerus — a stage I am experiencing firsthand as a parent — but he nails the details of place and time, namely what it was like to be a teen in Connecticut in the 1980s, when things were still a little, shall we say, “looser.”  (Full disclosure, that’s where I grew up.)

In debate, Oppenheimer “finds his people,” so important for highly gifted kids; at the prep school Loomis Chaffee, he soars.  As a parent about to see her child off to boarding school, an entirely new world for all of us, it was fun to read a “teen’s eye account” of that adventure.  This second half of the memoir  immerses the reader into the world of competitive debate and although there is a fair amount of debate arcana, there is also enough description of the colorful characters and humorous situations to see the reader through.

So would I recommend it? Absolutely.  An Amazon reader reviewer huffs that “It was a bad choice for a graduation gift.”  Oh please.  I would disagree.  I think mature and savvy teens–especially ones with a love of words (I’m looking at you, C.) would enjoy it.  I know I did.

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The other day Husband Dear pointed out a blogging milestone that slipped my notice:  sometime in the past month I exceeded 200,000 page views.  Thanks to everyone who’s stopped by and who continues to read my musings.

A milestone which most certainly did NOT escape attention took place this morning:  For the very last time, I drove C. to school.  Her last day ever as an MCPS student.  Hard to believe this MCPS chapter, such a huge part of our life for the past 10 years, has drawn to a close.  Seems like just yesterday that I stood with her on the playground as she lined up with her class for her very first day of first grade.  I didn’t have to drive her, and normally I don’t, but hey, it was her last exam and she needed the extra half hour of sleep.  Besides, she’s leaving in three months–I have to spend some time with my baby while I can!

So was C. the least bit wistful?  Um, no.  Not a bit. She attended the drama picnic a week ago and will miss her drama friends, but has no interest in attending her classwide picnic tomorrow afternoon.  Didn’t want to buy the yearbook.  Laughed how all of a sudden people who never talked to her were posting to her Facebook wall about how her leaving is a “betrayal” of the ol’ alma mater.  Nope, no looking back.

It’s a nice half hour drive to her school, so I asked, what were her reflections on this, her last day in MCPS?  What would she do differently, what should have been done differently?  Because one could argue, hey, it didn’t really turn out too badly.  You’re in the best school in the county (Newsweek says so!), and you’re leaving to go to one of the best boarding schools in the country.  Can you really complain?

Her answer, unequivocally, was that she should have been allowed to grade skip.  Really?  I pressed her.  Really, she insisted.  Socially, she has always gravitated to kids a grade, and more often several, ahead of her.  The teachers she looked back on most positively were the ones who understood, and gave her more challenging material beyond what was offered to everyone else.  The second grade teacher who gave her unlimited access to the library.  The third grade teacher who let her read different books from the rest of the class. Aha!  So doesn’t that just prove that MCPS does differentiate and that it works?  Alas, those teachers were, according to her, the grand exceptions.  The counter example would be offering to “reward” a verbally gifted kid with math acceleration and sitting in heterogeneous classes where all the other kids loath you because you “know everything” (being called “The Walking Dictionary” comes to mind) and you resenting them for being so painfully slow.  So much for having bright students serve as “role models” in the class.

I told her that it had recently been suggested that we could/should have pursued a legal remedy back in her middle school days.  Part of me so wanted to, however I also knew that legally gifted isn’t like special education. And really, when you are in the midst of the crisis, stressed beyond belief, does it really make sense to launch a lawsuit?  How is going to make the immediate situation at hand better?  Which sadly means that the system continues along, unchallenged.

I’ve suggested that she document her experiences and maybe even share them with members of the school board. Heck, ask to meet with Jerry Weast and Jay Mathews.  It’s what her friend up in the Boston area is doing.  Only he’s actually been invited by a member of the school committee to speak to them about the needs of “high-end learners.”  When’s the last time AEI ever asked students what they think of gifted education in MCPS?  Oh, that would be never.

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And so the school year is ending with a whimper.  On Tuesday the Board of Education will vote on the the FY2011 Operating Budget, working from proposed budget cuts put forth by the Superintendent.  Chances are very good that Board will accept them.  Here’s what’s very likely ahead:

  • Class Size Increase -  1 additional student per class over last year’s class size. Consequences include combination classes (where two grade levels are combined) in elementary schools for math and reading.  Middle School and High School will see fewer course offerings due to the cut in staff.
  • Academic Intervention Teachers – Reduced by 24. Total staffing will be 110 for FY2011.
  • Special Program Teachers – Reduced by 12.9 (Specific staffing cuts at College Gardens ES, Sherwood ES, Piney Branch ES, Einstein HS, Poolesville HS, Wheaton HS, Thomas Edison are all mentioned in the memo. In addition, the 5 International Baccalaureate Middle School Years Programme schools will have their coordinators reduced from a FT position.)
  • Secondary School Counselors – Reduced by 6
  • Focus Teachers – Reduced by 9
  • Reading Initiative Teachers – Reduced by 8
  • Reading Teachers – Reduced by 5
  • ES Paraeducators – Reduced by 27
  • Staff Development Teachers – Reduced by 10.4

The allocation of many of these positions will be determined by the Community Superintendents. Schools apply for these positions by submitting a comprehensive plan and the Community Superintendents decide where these resources can best be utilized for maximum impact. Submissions showing excellent staff AND community support are viewed favorably.

  • Media Assistants – Reduced by 5.5 This impacts 11 elementary schools.
  • Maintenance Positions – Reduced by 6. Yep, increases the current backlog of repair orders.
  • Textbooks and Instructional Materials – 30 percent cut.
  • Elementary Class I Stipends and Activity Buses – Results in no extracurricular programs except for Chorus, SGA, and Safety Patrol (and PTA-sponsored programs such as Hands-On-Science and FLES).

At the middle school level, arguably the weakest link in MCPS and the one where the lack of gifted options in the home middle school is particularly acute, given the move toward heterogeneous “Advanced for All” classes in science and social studies. Here are some details:

  • Special Program Teachers – $830,038.  (Page 7) The reductions in middle schools include a 1.0 position decrease (a .2 position for each of the five schools) in International Baccalaureate Middle Years Programme (IBMYP) staffing and a .6 position decrease in immersion staffing (a .2 position for each of the three schools). FY 2011 is the fourth consecutive year of special program reductions at the middle school level. The five IBMYP schools will have their coordinators reduced from a full-time position to teaching one class a day. IBMYP coordinators will have less time to coordinate the unique courses for the program and less time to coordinate the personal projects each IBMYP student must complete. This reduction makes it more difficult for schools to reach the goals of the International Baccalaureate Organization.
  • Middle School Reform – $1,716,701.  (Page 10) The elimination of $1,292,031 in stipend funding for Middle School Reform cohort collaborative work will limit the time classroom teachers and paraeducators have to work together to design, implement, and evaluate effective instruction.  Work after school, on weekends and other non-duty days, or hiring of substitutes to complete tasks, will be limited. This type of work is challenging to complete in a single class period. Cohort collaborative work has been greatly valued by instructional staff and provides cohorts the time to create rigorous lesson plans and assessments that are challenging and engaging to students; determine re-teaching strategies for students who did not master the objectives in cohorts; examine student work and analyze individual student, class, and course data to determine students‚ mastery, identify trends in performance, and inform instructional planning; and identify and integrate a number of strategies to support differentiation and equitable practices in order to meet the range of student learning needs.

The latter is particularly worrisome for GT students.  MCPS’s mantra has long been “trust us, we differentiate.”  And for years frustrated parents have sworn up and down that it’s not happening.  On occasion they’ve been able to wrest a rare moment of candor from MCPS officials, an admission that yes, implementation of differentiation is indeed spotty; it’s a high level teaching skill and they’re trying to do the training to get there.  Well, that thread of hope seems to be breaking and what we will see in middle schools is “advanced” science and social studies classes with the entire wide spectrum of student abilities and teachers who are not receiving the requisite training and preparation time.

Still under the gun:  The Visual Arts Center.  So glad that the Post is finally giving this program cut some coverage. Kudos to parent advocate Sue Katz Miller and others who have worked tirelessly to stop the halving of this program, which will save MCPS a measily, paltry $65,000.  In a multi-billion dollar budget, this cut is just shameful.

[To keep up with some of the egregious examples of MCPS waste, keep an eye on the Parents' Coalition Blog].

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MCPS talks a good game about “Success for Every Student.” The new curriculum page on their website declares:

The MCPS curriculum serves all learners. It includes the basics — language arts, mathematics, science, social studies, and the arts. It supports exceptional children — those with disabilities, the highly able, and English language learners….

I would beg to differ, and nothing demonstrates the disconnect more clearly than the planned halving of the Visual Arts Center at Einstein High School (VAC). 50% of the VAC staff (one of the two teachers) is being cut from the budget.

Never heard of the VAC?  Neither had I until about two years ago.  It’s a small program, not as flashy as the Blair Math Science Computer Magnet.  But it fills a critically important niche for those students who excel in the visual arts and don’t plan to march lock-step into a STEM career.  Or rack up APs for that matter.  Check out the Seven Keys to College Readiness again.  See any art there?  Nope.  Make no mistake, those Keys are the priorities that are truly driving your child’s education. (For that matter, there’s no writing, science or social studies there either.)  But art matters. A lot.  Just read what Prof. Ellen Winner (wife of Multiple Intelligences guru Howard Gardner) has to say. Heck, read what I have to say.

I was slow off the mark blogging this because I’ve been up-to-my-eyeballs busy (Sorry Sue!)  However here’s some important background information that’s been making the rounds of area listservs:

  1. The VAC is nationally known and respected. Recruiters from the nation’s best art schools and liberal arts colleges compete for VAC graduates. Fully 100% of VAC students go to college.
  2. The two VAC teachers won the Montgomery County Executive’s Award for excellence in education last October, and Ike Leggett personally presented the county’s most prestigious award to the VAC teachers in a ceremony at Strathmore Hall. Kristy Callaway, executive director of the International Network of Schools for the Advancement of Arts Education, who charts trends in the field, called the VAC among the “top-tier programs” of its kind anywhere.
  3. Cutting the VAC staff in half isn’t fair. It exceeds other program reductions and imperils the VAC’s future. The VAC has only two teachers, no administrative funding support, and no transportation funding. It is already as lean as possible.
  4. The VAC serves Montgomery County. Students from 11 high schools attend the VAC this year. Unlike other magnets, it accepts sophomores and juniors. It is also unusually diverse for a magnet: 43% of the 74 students this year are students of color.
  5. The VAC serves Einstein. VAC students perform well academically, and garner awards and recognition for the school. They paint murals and posters, design sets, and otherwise help to enliven the school and other community facilities. The annual art show attracts outside interest to Einstein.
  6. The VAC gives aspiring artists, fashion designers, film makers, and art educators a place to thrive including many who otherwise might struggle. Many large school systems offer special schools for the arts, but our school district – the largest in Maryland and the 16th largest in the country – offers only a two-teacher program for our top art students. It deserves our support.
  7. One teacher should not teach all the students in an intense, four-year program of two to three periods a day. Two teachers allow complementary, alternating semesters These two teachers meet with every parent, and help all their students to apply for scholarships and other honors. The results are remarkable.

I’ll add an eighth point:  The students served by this program by and large cannot afford to get their art yayas out at pricey Corcoran or Interlochen summer classes.

UPDATE: I’ll add a ninth point:  The VAC is part of MCPS’s “continuum of gifted education services.”  That’s right.  The VAC is a program for “students whose needs can’t be met in the home school.”  Bottomline, this is a gifted education program.  Check the COMAR language:

(18) “Gifted and talented” means an elementary or secondary school student who is identified by professionally qualified individuals as having outstanding abilities in one or more of the following areas:

(a) General intellectual capabilities;

(b) Specific academic aptitudes; or

(c) Creative, visual, or performing arts.

How did we get to this juncture?  Thank the good Dr. Weast, whose 2010-2011 budget reduces the number of teaching positions (cuts to central office…not so much).  The cluster superintendents instruct the principals on how many positions to cut, and then it’s left to the principals to make the hard choices.  When the numbers on the line are those math and reading scores, one can easily see why a program like the VAC would be at risk. And the Board of Ed?  As Janis Sartucci of the Parents Coalition has written, “[W]hen parents complain to the Board of Education they can throw up their hands and say ‘too bad, so sad, we didn’t make the decision to cut X program or X class’.”

Bottom line:  A 50% cut to this two-teacher program will prove devastating.  (Only two teachers to serve artistically gifted students in the county?  It’s an embarrassment.)

If you’re in Montgomery County, please consider emailing the Board of Education at  boe@mcpsmd.org.  Other folks to e-mail include:

Superintendent of schools: Jerry_D_Weast@mcpsmd.org

Community Superintendent: Bronda Mills: Bronda_L_Mills@mcpsmd.org

Montgomery County Council education committee:

  • Phil Andrews: Councilmember.Andrews@montgomerycountymd.gov
  • Mike Knapp: Councilmember.Knapp@montgomerycountymd.gov
  • Valerie Ervin: Councilmember.ervin@montgomerycountymd.gov

Montgomery County Executive Isiah “Ike” Leggett:
ocemail@montgomerycountymd.gov

You can also join this Facebook fanpage:  Save the Visual Arts Center at Einstein.

All kinds of kids deserve to have their needs met, their talents fostered.

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Thanks to the Parents’ Coalition, a January 8, 2010 memorandum from Superintendent Weast to the Board of Education has come to light.  In the memo, Weast answers some questions from unidentified Board members about his proposed FY 2011 Budget cuts.

I’ll leave aside the point well made by the Parents Coalition,

Pants, gifted education...not the same thing.

that the cuts to academic intervention teachers and paraeducators are not justified one way or another based on any studies or data.  I’ll even leave aside the non-answer to the question: “Please break down how the special program teachers will be reduced by school and program. Describe the specific impact of these cuts on each special program and school.

No, I’m going to focus on Question 7 (page 4), which asks about the impact on “each optional regular education program and impacted school proposed for the elimination of transportation.”  The answer, in a nutshell, is that transportation costs $942 per student, and yes, fewer students would attend if transport were cut but they would still have the “opportunity” to attend.  They would just have to get themselves there.  Oh, and yes, cutting consortia transport was considered, “but the consortia are not optional programs.  The school the student selects is the assigned school and transportation must be provided.” [emphasis added]

Pardon me if I am slackjawed. Consortia programs absolutely are optional.  As a commenter posted a few days ago, what really is the difference between Entrepreneurship & Business Management (Blair) and Finance, Business Management, and Marketing (Einstein)?  And no matter what, students can always opt for their base schools–they’re assured a place there.  They call it the Division of Consortia Choice and Application Program Services for a reason.

So can we get something straight right now?  Magnets and Center Programs and yes, I’ll got out on a limb and say that even the RM IB, are not “optional.”  They are part of the much vaunted MCPS “continuum of gifted services.”  They are for “students whose needs cannot be met at the home school.”  They are not some frill, some “extra,” some “goodie.”  Here’s what Policy IOA says:

Children with special abilities and talents are part of the human mosaic in our schools and communities. They typically learn at a pace and depth that set them apart from the majority of their same-age peers. Because they have the potential to perform at high levels of accomplishment and have unique affective and learning style needs when compared with others of their age, they require instructional and curricular adjustments that can create a better match between their identified needs and the educational services they typically receive. [emphasis added] (Section B)

For students who require a markedly different programming, centers for highly
gifted and other special programs including magnet programs will continue to be provided, and new programs will be developed as needed. (Section C 3 c)

Finally there is this:

The superintendent shall direct implementation of this policy and specifically shall ensure that every school has a program that meets its requirements. Among the specific actions the superintendent will take are the following:

8. Prepare budget requests that provide adequate resources to implement the policy

Of course there is lots in Policy IOA that has never been carried out–that’s why they wanted to scrap it.  However the fact remains:  You take away transportation and you effectively kill the magnets, centers and immersion programs.

Don’t let it happen.  Sign the petitions here and here. (Who knows if they’ll have any impact.  At minimum the comments are inspiring.).  And be sure to come to the Board of Education hearing on Wednesday night, 7 p.m.

Here’s a notice that’s been floating around some school listservs…  Please repost.

TOMORROW: WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 20th at 7pm

BOE Meeting on Proposed MCPS Operating Budget

Carver Educational Services Center
850 Hungerford Drive
Rockville, MD 20850

Testimony will include Blair PTSA co-chair and others within our cluster. We need your presence. Students are especially encouraged to attend. This is Civics in action!

Wear yellow to protest cuts in transportation for special programs. Wear red to support Blair. Wear both if you can!

Whether you can make it to the meeting or not, please write to the Board to let them know that these cuts are unacceptable and damaging to the integrity of appropriate academic opportunity for all students. Then continue to write to the County Council and your representatives in Annapolis.

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Remember how Superintendent Weast’s proposed FY 2011 budget cuts included cuts to transportation?

The original proposal listed:

Item H: Transportation for optional regular education programs -

Eliminate transportation to optional regular education programs outside normal attendance zones, including magnet, immersion, IB, high school consortia, and other special programs. Fees are not permitted for these services. This reduction would not impact special education transportation.

FTE – 65  $4,900,000

Well it appears that on Wednesday evening, at the last minute (6:54 pm?  9:54 pm? The details are hazy), word went out that “MCPS has taken the proposed budget cut for the DCC and Northeast Consortium transportation off of the table for this year.”

The MCCPTA’s cluster rep’s message continued:

My understanding is that the proposed transportation cuts for “other special programs” would include the Highly Gifted Centers (ours is located at Pine Crest ES and Oak View ES), the language immersion programs, the middle school magnet programs and the high school magnet/special programs. Transportation for students in the Middle School Magnet Consortium (MSMC), which is Parkland, Loiederman, and Argyle is only provided for students living in the base areas. Students from outside those three middle school areas must provide their own transportation starting with the 2010-2011 school year.

No doubt, someone realized that eliminating transportation for the popular consortium choice programs would have caused all kinds of parental freak out–and effectively kill the consortia.  Which may still happen down the road because they were not found to be particularly effective.

Which leaves those (sniff) expendable “boutique programs.”  Well, at least we now have some clarity:   Proponents of gifted education stand alone.

Question: If the idea was to “save” $4.9 million, and you take out the transportation costs for the consortia, how much is really being “saved” now?  Well, there may be a way to check.  Please refer to the MPCS Consortia Report 2009-4, prepared at the behest of County Council member Valerie Ervin (press release 11.28.08). Starting on page 28, the report breaks out the cost of consortium transportation, and for FY ’09 it was determined that  $856,397 in transportation costs could be saved by eliminating the high school consortia. Even adjusting to FY 2011 dollars, that seems low to me.  I would love to see detailed numbers on the remaining programs slated for transportation cuts.

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