Here is what Sue reported on the NYC Department of Education not having a minimum student attendance policy:
Going to class is not required to receive a city diploma.
It’s not widely advertised, but under Department of Education rules, students cannot be denied credit or graduation “based on lack of seat time alone.”
Under state law, school districts may adopt a “minimum attendance standard.” New York City does not. While city schools must take attendance, kids can still pass or be promoted even if chronically absent, which is missing more than 10 percent of days.
Students can pass classes because there is no minimum seat time policy in New York City schools. This isn't exactly new news. We have been writing about this since 2009. I guess it's news as Maspeth High School shows that the problem is worsening now. I used to think the high school diploma was being rendered meaningless because of pressure on administrators and teachers to pass everyone, regardless of student ability but since 2009, the students no longer have to even show up. We advocated for the enforcement of a minimum attendance requirement while serving on the UFT Executive Board when the meetings were still held at 260 Park Avenue South circa 2001.
I have said before that I was a lucky teacher. When I got a job at Middle College High School in 2014, I discovered that the Principal enforced a seat time requirement. For the first time in my 32 year career, I had to defend passing grades for students who had more than 8-9 absences for the trimester. It was a good policy. For the previous 28 years, Jamaica High School administrators never questioned me if I failed a student who seldom showed up. I understand there are extenuating circumstances but I can't comprehend how this grade fraud has not yet been stopped by anyone in authority. Teachers should not have to fight this alone but should do it as Chapters backed up by their Union.
Sue also has an article on the Absent Teacher Reserves.
The city still keeps 930 excess teachers on the payroll, and many other school employees without permanent jobs, The Post has learned.
As of this month, the tenured teachers alone cost the Department of Education close to $100 million a year in salary and benefits, but remain idle or serve as roving substitutes.
DOE officials refused multiple requests to reveal the number of guidance counselors, social workers, secretaries and others in the “Absent Teacher Reserve.”
Despite the surplus personnel, the DOE continues to beef up its workforce.
“We hired over 5,000 teachers over the summer,” Chancellor Richard Carranza boasted in a radio interview on Hot97 last month.
DOE spokeswoman Danielle Filson corrected Carranza, saying the department hired about 4,800 new “teachers, guidance counselors and social workers.”
As someone who was an ATR and has someone very close to me in the ATR pool, I find it quite uninformed that teachers are referred to as being "idle or serve as roving substitutes." When teachers in the ATR are given long term assignments, they are teaching a class like everyone else but with no job security in a particular school. In addition, roving substitutes can be a very difficult assignment when going into some NYC schools. I will say it is positive that Sue got the DOE to turn over ATR numbers for teachers but who knows how accurate any figures from the DOE are?
LOL
ReplyDelete“The DOE is responsible for quality control, but the city seems complicit in these practices as a way to raise the graduation rate,” Bloomfield said. “The repeated scandals are the worst kind of Groundhog Day.”
In 2015, ex-Chancellor Carmen FariƱa announced a $5 million “Regulatory Task Force on Academic Policy” to guard against grade-fixing and credit fraud after a series of schemes were exposed in The Post. The panel last filed a brief two-page report in June 2017, and the DOE gave no update.
The DOE’s Filson denied that guidelines are lax.
“All instruction must meet rigorous standards and we have a strict academic policy citywide to ensure our students are challenged and meet their full potential.”
Everything low down, dirty deed being done by the DOE was perfected by Bloomberg. Only now it's worse, the UFT is in on it and profiting from it.
ReplyDeleteThe UFT is a shameful Union.
DeleteThe UFT is complicit in msking older teschers ATRs, and eventually pushing them out of the system on made up charges and nonsense.
ReplyDeleteYou dont realize we are just going in circles?
ReplyDeleteIf there is waste in the ATR program it pales in comparison to the enormous waste in other programs like charter scams. But if Sue wanted to report on the waste in charters the NY Post would shut her down.
ReplyDeleteThey spent a lot of money in unscrupulous lawyers targeting older teachers.
DeleteAll the wrong policies during years and agreed with the UFT is dragging out schools to the ground
ReplyDeleteThe NYS Compulsory Education law requires HS students to attend 180 school days per year. The city must get a waiver to change this
ReplyDeleteCorrection. The schools must have 180 days of school. There's nothing saying the students have to attend those days.
ReplyDeleteAsk Kim Suttell, DOE Director of Attendance Policy, why there isn't a minimum student Attendance Policy
ReplyDelete