Thank you to Eleanor Coleman for taking these excellent minutes so the community can share in this important information.
School 16 Revitalization:
A discussion With Ralph Spezio & Luis Aponte
August 13, 2012
In attendance: Luis Aponte, John Boutet, Marian Boutet, Angie Burch, Eleanor Coleman, Brenda Driscoll, Kathy King, Deb Leary, Bill Nichthauser, Joan Roby-Davison, Chojy Schroeder, Ralph Spezio, James Swank, Diane Watkins, E.J. Watkins, Deb Wight
Regrets: Mary Thomas
Purpose:
Timing is very important. Superintendent asked Dr. Spezio to be part of the Facilities Assessment & Master Plan (FAMP) Committee. He is pushing hard for a few things:
Next Step: Ralph has recommended that the FAMP Committee go through the Superintendent with their recommendations and then hold a formalized, authentic process that includes the community to discuss possibilities and options. Community should be able to view a “menu of options” and provide their input and requests.
Anita Murphy, new Director of Operations, has been supportive.
Community organization is crucial; we must position ourselves for leveraging community input. Need a grassroots infrastructure. Window will open and close quickly (deadline is 9/15 for this Committee to give Superintendent a list of recommendations and options).
School #16 Data
Two Key Concepts
1. Recognizing the power of a neighborhood school
2. Community's insistence and documentation of their expectations for a community school
SED lists WHAT the child must learn, not HOW they must learn it.
Community Accredited Schools Model
Important to make clear our expectations for a new school.
School #17 area is smaller; School #16, 19th Ward, is much more expansive. There is an opportunity, for example, to have several schools in one neighborhood that serve several grade levels.
Challenge: There are 13,000 extra seats in the district; 4 charter schools are to open up; One option the RCSD could solve this issue is by closing schools.
Steps:
Steps taken at School #17:
Concern: Current school system is principal-dependent (if the principal leaves, the school climate is at risk).
Solution: Community needs to advocate for what they want (e.g., write a letter to Committee and Superintendent that says we want a neighborhood school); then, develop our expectations. Use these clear expectations to search for a principal; principals can judge for themselves whether or not they should even apply. Community expectations also serve to identify outcomes desired…and these can be measured so that the community will know if their expectations are being met.
Community Member Comment: Appears as though a health center attached to a school increases the tax base offering more resources for the area (as opposed to a school that has a junkyard in the backyard).
Important concept: You want the schools to be community-driven vs principal- or Central Office-driven.
Important concept: Transformative change is needed (this is a grassroots approach, one that was used to transform School #17 - community partnerships, collaboration, etc.); we need to be accessing resources from the global community. Local businesses are no longer available to assist us; money is sent out of the neighborhood.
Luis Aponte, Leader for Sector 3 (JOSANA Neighborhood)
K-8 is not a desirable model UNLESS there is a clear physical separation (K-4 and 5-8). Elementary schools typically have much more nurturing and wrap-around services. Ralph believes that some of the challenging issues around adolescent behaviors could be alleviated if the school is neighborhood-based.
Eleanor will ask NCYJ and SW Safety Net for support.
Tags:
On August 16, Mayor Richards attended the SouthWest Common Council meeting and listened to all the presentations before speaking. One point he made was that he was delighted to see the SWCC had formed an Education Committee to get involved with the School 16 revitalization issue. He stressed how important it was for the community to get involved in guiding the renovation of the school to be a true community school that can serve the many needs of the community. He stressed many of the same points that Ralph Spezio and Luis Aponte had made:
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