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Superintendent moves to delay schools vote

Superintendent moves to delay schools voteBy Edward Mason  |   Tuesday, November 2, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage Photo by Chitose Suzuki Hub Superintendent Carol R. Johnson is asking the School Committee to delay a vote on the lion’s share of her unpopular plan to shutter five schools until December, in a bid to win over angry parents. Johnson told the Herald she’ll spend the next month trying to convince parents the city can’t afford to keep the schools open and improve student performance citywide, as the School Department faces a $63 million deficit next year. “People are focused on their individual schools, but this is the fiscal reality we face,” Johnson said. “We don’t think the community has a sense of the trade off.” Hundreds of furious parents crowded a School Committee meeting at English High last week, angrily demanding Johnson drop her plan to close their schools. Committee Chairman the Rev. Gregory Groover said yesterday he, too, needed to hear more from Johnson before voting. “They need to do their homework to see what we are really saving,” Groover said. Johnson said she’s willing to delay the vote on closing three grade schools until December — the Ralph Waldo Emerson in Roxbury, and the Roger Clap and the East Zone Early Learning Center, both in Dorchester. Kenny Jervis, a Clap parent, said he can’t be convinced. “Closing these schools makes zero sense,” Jervis said. “Even with extra time, I don’t see our opinion swaying.” Richard Stutman, president of the Boston Teachers Union, said Johnson wants a vote when parents can’t mobilize against her. “By delaying and moving closer to the holidays, they’re making it more difficult for people to get involved,” Stutman said. Johnson said she needs time to explain to parents how health insurance, busing and payroll costs are up while revenues are down. Johnson wants to delay the vote to reconfigure the Lee Academy Pilot School and Joseph Lee School in Dorchester; and close the Social Justice Academy and the Engineering School and part of the Hyde Park Education complex. But Johnson wants the School Committee to vote tomorrow to shut the Gavin High School in South Boston, converting it into a charter school run by UP Academy; and to create Green Academy, another charter school, to replace an as yet undetermined high school. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1293236

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Parents blast school closings Demand chief alter plans before Nov. 3

Parents blast school closingsDemand chief alter plans before Nov. 3By Edward Mason  |   Wednesday, October 27, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage WEIGHING THE FACTS: The Rev. Gregory Groover, Boston’s school committee chairman, speaks during yesterday’s meeting.Photo by Chitose Suzuki An overflow crowd of 600 angry Hub parents lashed out at Boston school chief Carol R. Johnson’s plans to shutter two elementary schools, merge two and a close a high school during a School Committee meeting at English High School. “By closing our schools, you’re driving a stake in our community,” said Kenny Jervis, a parent at Clap Elementary, slated to close. “We don’t want to go to the suburbs.” Dozens of parents and teachers clad in yellow T-shirts blasted the decision to close the Early Learning Center day care. “It would be a disservice to the kids of Dorchester and Roxbury,” said Lisa Kincade, a teacher at the ELC. “I’m asking the superintendent to think about the little ones.” After earlier community meetings, Johnson had reversed course and scrapped plans to merge two Dorchester elementary schools and shutter a Hyde Park High School, but kept the lion’s share of her ambitious program to remake the city’s struggling schools intact. Johnson had bowed to the earlier pressure from furious parents angry at plans to merge the Lee Academy pilot school with the Lee Elementary in Dorchester. Johnson made tweaks to her plan ahead of last night’s meeting, such as halting the merger of the Lee schools and allowing the Community Academy of Science and Health — part of the Hyde Park education complex — to remain intact, while possibly moving it from its current location. Green Academy, an in-district charter school, will now replace a current high school in the fall of 2012. Unchanged are plans to shutter a pair of elementary schools — the Ralph Waldo Emerson School in Roxbury and Clap. The East Zone Early Learning Center would be moved to the William Trotter School in Roxbury and James Holland School in Dorchester. If the School Committee votes Nov. 3 to approve the plan, the schools would close in June. Richard Stutman, president of the Boston Teachers Union, called the plan a “disservice” and demanded Johnson scrap the plan and start over. Johnson’s sweeping program for change is part of a dramatic effort to improve the city’s struggling schools. Her proposal targeted several city schools where kids performed the worst on MCAS tests. Johnson said withering criticism from parents and teachers after the plan was unveiled last month led to last month’s changes, and she wouldn’t rule out more. “I’m always hearing to the voices of the parents and teachers,” Johnson said. “I’m always taking notes.” The Rev. Gregory Groover, school committee chairman, said he wouldn’t rubber-stamp the changes: “It’s not a done deal.” Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1291808

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Roxbury Community College receives $2.25 million in federal grants

ROXBURY Roxbury Community College receives $2.25 million in federal grants By Matt Rocheleau, Town Correspondent Roxbury Community College has received two federal grants totaling $2.25 million that will go toward improving academic programs. The college was one of 48 in the country to receive a grant through the federal Education Department’s “Strengthening Institutions” program, designed to increase graduation rates. The $400,000 over five years will have two major components, said a release from the institution, allowing “the college to equip classrooms with technology to support current teaching and learning needs, and to provide faculty training to strengthen the quality of instruction.” “The award comes at a time when resources are limited, and, therefore, will greatly aid the College in its ongoing efforts to enhance the overall academic experience of its students,” said the school’s president Dr. Terrence A. Gomes in the release. The campus on Columbus Avenue also received a $250,000-grant to support education and training for students in the Massachusetts Homeland Security-STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) Bridge Program, the release said, adding that the college will collaborate with Northeastern University on work funded by the federal Homeland Security department’s grant. E-mail Matt Rocheleau at mjrochele@gmail.com.

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"Waiting For Superman" Documentary film on Education in theaters now!!

For all Boston, MA theaters and showtimes http://www.movies.com/movie-times/boston-ma/waiting-for-superman-movie-times/133889 Filmmaker Davis Guggenheim reminds us that education “statistics” have names: Anthony, Francisco, Bianca, Daisy, and Emily, whose stories make up the engrossing foundation of WAITING FOR SUPERMAN. As he follows a handful of promising kids through a system that inhibits, rather than encourages, academic growth, Guggenheim undertakes an exhaustive review of public education, surveying “drop-out factories” and “academic sinkholes,” methodically dissecting the system and its seemingly intractable problems. Written by Sundance Film Festival Waiting For Superman Official websitehttp://www.waitingforsuperman.com/ For all Boston, MA theaters and showtimeshttp://www.movies.com/movie-times/boston-ma/waiting-for-superman-movie-times/133889

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