Sunday, January 09, 2022

CHAPTER LEADER OF BRYANT HS IS ASKING FOR A MORATORIUM ON OBSERVATIONS AND AN INDEPENDENT INVESTIGATION ON TEACHER EVALUATIONS IN THE SCHOOL

Georgia Lignou guest blogs again today on observations. Although she is writing specifically about Bryant, we believe observations should be waived throughout the state this school year, including in NYC.


What if a school had decided to use a rubric of evaluation for student work, and although all teachers were normed on how to use it, one teacher deviated and kept applying the rubric differently? Even after students tried to explain their reasoning, their work was still rated based on what was not there and not really on what they did. As a result, students were downrated and no matter how hard they tried to comply to the teacher’s strict definition of effective work, their scores remained very low affecting their progress and their mental health. What if these students went to the principal with good evidence, they collected proving that they were rated with much stricter standards year after year? What would this principal be expected to do?

This is an analogy to what has been happening in Bryant HS pertaining to teacher ratings. For years we have been claiming that the Danielson Rubric is used inappropriately and unfairly by the Bryant administration. For years we have been claiming that the average rating we receive in our school is Developing and it is far lower than the average received in other schools. For years we have been pointing out the adverse effects this has on instruction and teacher morale. For years we have made the connection between the ratings and micromanagement, fear, narrow-minded and inflexible teaching strategies, low morale, and high teacher turnover. We were ignored and when we asked for our school’s teacher evaluation data the Principal and the Superintendent turned us down.

Now we have proof (see chart below). After filing a request under the Freedom of Information Law, we got the data, and the numbers are clear. In the period between 2016 to 2021 every single year in every single category of the Danielson Rubric teachers at Bryant High School have been rated significantly lower than our counterparts in the Borough of Queens and the City of NY overall. The average rating is at times close to one point lower on the Danielson Scale of 1-4. So, on average, what is rated as 3-Effective in other schools, in Bryant it is rated 2-Developing. The rating of 4-Highly Effective is almost never used, and although the Borough of Queens and the City averages are inching up, in Bryant they are inching down, so the gap is widening. The biggest gap appears to be during the school year of 2020-2021, the year of the pandemic when even the Danielson Group had made a public appeal to reprioritize, over thirty teachers at Bryant were found Developing on the MOTP measure. In addition, a compiled list of educators who left the school during the same period counted 140 teachers and guidance counselors, not including about 40 retirees and about 15 Assistant Principals who were -- for the most part—pushed out. Meanwhile, the level of trust for the administration recorded on the School Environment Survey has been abysmal year after year.

The question then became what to do with this information. First, we went to the Principal and the conversation held no surprises. Then we went to the Union and pleaded with the Union officers all the way up to UFT President Mulgrew to take some action, go public, and include the issue in their consultation. They responded by telling us that the chapter needs to organize, and they will help us do it. A point well taken, and assistance well received as a long-term plan, but for the issue at hand, as effective as asking a battered spouse to find the courage to fight the abuser. Then we went to the DOE and the union mediated a meeting between the Superintendent, the Principal, and the Chapter Leader. This might have been effective if we were telling Superintendent Lindsey something she did not already know. So, again no surprise, we were faced with the whole range of responses on the dismissal scale from avoidance to denial, to cheap excuses and victim blame. Overall, the argument seems to be that teacher ratings are inflated so it might be this Principal who rates with fidelity which by omission and deductive reasoning can be interpreted to mean that the overwhelming majority of Principals in NYC even of the most successful High Schools are incompetent in rating their teachers. If this argument had any merit, it is rebuttable by our MOSL data that elevate about a third of our teachers from a Developing to an Effective rating every year. We asked Superintendent Lindsey how she can explain the discrepancy among the schools she supervises. The only response clear enough to be understood was that the data presented did not reflect only her schools. So, we filed another FOIL and we saw how Bryant compares to the average of the schools supervised by Superintendent Lindsey in Queens North (see chart below). The results showed the overall average to be close to the Borough and the City averages while again Bryant is lagging far behind, and the results from this current school year are equally abysmal.

Many teachers at Bryant feel the work is excruciating and the expectations unrealistic but still the greatest source of frustration is that what we are asked to do does not always best serve the students. In fact, even good instructional practices when they are used every day, in every class, across all subject areas become repetitive and counterproductive lacking spontaneity and creativity. The claim is made that the school has improved, and in some ways, it has, but numbers are never enough to tell the whole story and a well-presented facade can hide a lot of abuse. If we were to accept that nothing is wrong in Bryant, we also must accept the unlikely and highly illogical premise that it has become a magnet for bad teachers. However, ten years into this school administration there is enough evidence to show that this is in no way true. Not only the MOSL results of some of the lowest rated teachers in the school are exceptional, but time after time teachers left Bryant with a Developing rating only to become Effective and have successful careers serving students in schools sometimes only a few blocks away.

We are calling on the DOE to pay attention to the plight of the teachers in Bryant HS. If what they dream is the unlikely situation that the style of management and teacher evaluation enforced in our school becomes the norm in the city, I will remind them of the shortage and the mass exodus of teachers we are already facing, and I will ask how much more of that the system can afford? We are calling on the UFT to pay attention to the plight of one hundred and eighty members in Bryant HS. The argument that the MOTP does not matter if the MOSL is Effective, is invalidated by the fear of the untenured teachers as they see their career endangered, the frustration of our young teachers who all they can see is years of this abuse ahead of them, and the humiliation and insult our veterans feel to be told that after years of teaching their content knowledge and pedagogy does not stand to scrutiny. The attitude that “they have power over you only with your permission” is a valuable Zen outlook on life, but it cannot be a Union strategy. We are calling for a real discussion on instruction and pedagogy because if we do not engage, others have it in our absence.

Teacher evaluation was supposed to establish norms in a system big and diverse. The Danielson Rubric was designed on the premise of objectivity. An ambitious and probably unattainable goal but nevertheless a promise on the side of the DOE and the UFT to teachers who at the time were very nervous on how it could be used in the hands of abusive principals. So, when we bring evidence that it is used subjectively, punitively and retaliatorily, we demand and deserve attention. Unfair evaluation is not only unethical. It is negligent and it is illegal. We demand that our teachers are not penalized for the failures of the system. Teachers are not expendable, and their health and career cannot be collateral damage. 

We are asking for a moratorium on observations in the school and an investigation by outside evaluators. We are publicly asking the DOE to pay attention to our school and to stop the abuse. How many teachers must be destroyed as they are broken and shaped to fit a principal’s vision? It’s been too long and too many already.

PS. Any legal advice will be appreciated.



37 comments:

Anonymous said...

Here is what nobody wants to admit, yet everyone knows and that is the most important part of a school is the principal.

Take dwarka out of Bryant and watch morale rise.

Friends of mine who knew dwarka at Bowne said that when Howie Kwait announced she was leaving Bowne that staff members stood up and cheered as a sigh of relief. They felt for Bryant staff, but knew their lives would be better now that dwarka was not an AP.

Sadly, with banks as chancellor, dwarka is going by nowhere.

Anonymous said...

TWO POINTS: 1) Observations should be waived for the rest of this year in NYC. 2) There should be a push by all teacher unions to go back to the much missed "S" and "U" system of evaluations. The reason the evaluation system was change a while ago was to ensure that states like NY would get extra money from the Feds. That time has passed. There is no reason to keep the current shitty evaluation system in place. However, here in NYC we have Mulgoon who has been preaching that our eval system is the coolest thing since the other side of the pillow.

Anonymous said...

Fair raitings for teachers. Not going to happen. I always treat students fairly and never pass one that has not earned it. After 3 years of Danielson Ratings I am ready to call it quits. Was told my lesson was not Rigorous enough for my 11th grade self contained class, yet in tbe same observation it mentioned that most students struggled to complete the work. The highest grade level in this class is on a 3rd grade reading and writing level. How can I be held to tbe same standards as teachers in Stiverson?? I want to see what their teacher rating would be before the ran for the hills.

Anonymous said...

Student walkout over covid safety is planned for Tuesday at 1152am, message is spreading across social media.

Anonymous said...

Hey Namita....and M Morales (or is that "moral less?"...

Are you still double dipping the same students, in the same semester, in earth science and "geology"...both classes terminating in the same NYS reagents, receiving NCLB/RFTT federal money, and missing $200,000 in your budget?

Moises...be careful...she'll throw you beneath the wheels of the bus in a heartbeat!

nerd said...

If current union leadership doesn’t change with the upcoming election, this union runs the risk of collapse. I’d like the NYPD or FDNY unions to admit teachers . I’ll get my money’s worth there.

Anonymous said...

Danielson has said that her method was not designed for the way it is being used to evaluate teachers. In New York City, the Danielson Rubric is used as a stick to control teachers.
The Danielson ratings given are very inconsistent and subjective.

Anonymous said...

Would join the FDNY union in a second. Firefighters would refuse to enter any classroom that wasn’t ‘burning with learning’.

Anonymous said...

If there should be a student walkout on Tuesday—they should make sure they are wearing layers and thermals-temps only in the teens for Tuesday.

Unknown said...

There is a huge discrepancy in how teachers are rated across the City. Oh wait a second, wasn't this rubric supposed to be for the whole State. My friends teaching in Long Island and Upstate do not even know what it is. We need an independent committee on evaluations. A body that analyzes data from different schools and where teachers and Chapter Leaders can appeal to idf there is a problem. The existing APPR process is a joke.

Anonymous said...

1218... a return to S/U means that the Principal has more power. Didn't u read how all the teachers at Bryant were saved by MOSL? This desire to return to autocratic Principal power has always mystified me.

Anonymous said...

Do teachers have the right to ask their supervisors to model what an effective classroom lesson —should look and sound like-for any classroom in the building?
And if a supervisor agrees, let’s see if they practice what they preach.

Anonymous said...

2:05 PM I agree. One of the worst fails on the part of our union well before Covid was agreeing to have teachers rated using the Danielson rubric along with state test scores.

Anonymous said...

A well written letter which prevails in logic, but again administration and logic don't go hand in hand. When I was an ATR, I was asked several times to come in for an interview at Bryant. This is how desperate they are and each time I turned down the interview. If you think it's bad now, wait a little while when administration is told to rate teachers of color higher than white teachers.

Anonymous said...

The only qualm I have about going back to the S/U ratings is that with that ratings system, you can get a U for the year if you get a discipline letter in your file. Principals will use this as a way to get rid of teachers easier.
About the Danielson rubric, yes it is easier to get effective or higher on your MOTP if you are in a top school. Every time I was observed teaching an AP or honors class, I got effectives and highly effectives. Whenever I got observed in gen. ed. class I would get effectives and developings. At least 75 percent of the Danielson rubric is based on what kids are doing and what they are understanding making it easier to score higher in a high functioning class.

Prehistoric pedagogue said...

2:28 PM you have every right to ask for a demonstration lesson. The supervisor is under no obligation to provide it

Anonymous said...

But under the new system with MOSL, ineffective ratings are almost non existent. That's hardly a fail.

Not will to die yet said...

Prehistoric pedagogue /2:28
Looks like AP s are under no obligation to support even when asked.
Same as Mulgrew..

Anonymous said...

Most APs won't do a demo lesson since most of them became APs because they weren't effective in the classroom. Instead, they will send you to other teachers to observe their lessons.

Anonymous said...

Mayor of Chicago criticized her city teachers saying they abandoned their students. I'm sure if nurses went on strike, nobody would say they abandoned their patients or if cops went on strike that they abandoned the public. She needs to look at what she is doing wrong. Analyze whey they walked off their jobs and not blaming them for something that could have been prevented.

Anonymous said...

I thought before u can get a u, the supervisor must prove that they tried to help, ie demo lesson.

Anonymous said...

The best decision anyone could make is to remove Namita Dwarka from that school. SO many of our talented untenured colleagues leave while bootlicking scabs become lifers. Do we want our students to be taught by teachers with no moral backbone?

Anonymous said...

If you ask for the demo lesson and document it it means something even if they don't do it

Anonymous said...

To 1-9-22, 2:19 P.M.:

No, it wasn't supposed to be used by every single school district in the entire State. The Danielson Rubric is only one of several approved teacher evaluation rubrics as far as NYSED is concerned:

https://usny.nysed.gov/rttt/teachers-leaders/practicerubrics

Ask your LI and Upstate friends to inform you which rubrics are being used by their respective school districts.

Anonymous said...

They do say that nurses are abandoning their patients. Any boss that lets things get so bad that workers walk out will say whatever. No worker walks out for nothing.

Anonymous said...

Our Mayor is abandoning our students and our teachers. It hurts like hell when you hear one of your students is in the hospital because of Covid. It hurts even more knowing that schools are breeding grounds. I guess Adams lied when he said he would listen to parents. Are they not speaking loud and clear by not sending their kids to school. Keeping schools open is only causing more students to fail and entire families to get sick. It is okay though, our Mayor is safe in his office hiring more criminals and family members.

Anonymous said...

ITs really a shame that this namita dwarka continues to make the lives of hard working educators miserable. How does she get away with this continued onslaught of the staff.

Anonymous said...

2:19 PM...TIL that it was a choice to use the Danielson rubric when there were other options. Wow, thank you for that info.

Anonymous said...

Do you have a source with information about the number of teachers rated ineffective versus unsatisfactory? I'm not understanding how you made that comparison. From my own experience, the observation process was much simpler when we were rated s/u.

Anonymous said...

Years ago when s or u was used, principals weren't out to get veteran teachers. Now they are and it will be easier to give teachers a u than an overall ineffective. You have to be pretty bad to get an overall ineffective.

James Eterno said...

Principals can get teachers without giving them an ineffective rating. Anyone can be brought up on 3020a charges, regardless of rating.

Anonymous said...

Yes, but too many of those and the principal will look suspicious. U's are a more behind the scenes way to remove unwanted teachers.

James Eterno said...

Too many ineffectives and principal looks suspicious too.

Anonymous said...

The CDC director just said over 75% of “covid deaths” occurred in people with at least four comorbidities. Since Biden can’t shut down covid, suddenly all this data is getting shared publicly.

Unknown said...

Principals engaged in unfair practices should be reigned in, but unfair practices can easily cross into illegal practices. Fair evaluation of employees is written in the law. The question is what effective mechanisms do we have to properly investigate and identify what is happening in schools. Many of the processes we have take too long to the point that justice deleyed is justice denied. Many times teachers because fear of the principal, lack of knowledge or disappointment in the process do not even report legitimate complaints. When the evidence of abuse is clear and based on data the system should respond even if teachers do not report it. I know it is easier said than done but we need to do better.

Anonymous said...

Georgia, this is a very informative article. There is an interesting video on YouTube of Namita’s motivational speech to a church group:

www.youtube.com/watch?v=JUySqfH72Ok

Take some transcribed “sound bites” from the speech and liberally insert them into observation report rebuttals and rating appeals.

Anonymous said...

Selected to be a dean second year smells like she was so bad they wanted her out of the classroom. Is she thst clueless to make this sound like an honor?