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AN IRONIC “PROMISE” OF SCHOOL REFORM

16 Sep

Reflections: Then and Now

Submitted by Frank Murphy, Sept. 16, 2010

Vaux High School opened as one of thirteen Renaissance Schools in September of this year. It is being marketed along with five other schools, under the title of “Promise Academies”. These Promise Academies are considered to be turn-around schools that are managed by the School District of Philadelphia. A turn-around school is one that has been determined to be a low-performing school. Once identified, the school’s principal is replaced and a maximum of 50% of the former staff may potentially be “rehired”. The district is spending an additional $7.2 million on these six Promise Academies. This money will cover the cost of items such as new curriculum materials and additional enrichment activities. The students who attend Promise Academies will have an extended school day and school year.

Schools were selected to be Promise Academies based on their PSSA test results, climate data, and in the case of the high schools, graduation rates. It isn’t surprising that Vaux was included in this targeted group of schools. When examining its test scores, suspension rates and graduation rate, it is clear that it is a low-performing school.

Vaux is a small high school. Many of the students who are enrolled in this school were not selected to attend any of the citywide or magnet high schools. Vaux is their only high school option. These are the youngsters who either scored in the Below Basic range on the PSSA math or reading tests, received average or less than average report card grades, had poor attendance records, a number of disciplinary infractions or all of the above. These students are the most likely to become disengaged and disinterested with school and therefore, are at risk of becoming involved in serious misbehavior or dropping out of school. Given the homogeneous population of low achievers that it serves, it isn’t surprising that Vaux High School is among the lowest performing schools in the city.

Providing extra money, resources, and instructional time to the students of this school makes sense. These are the children who are most in need of experienced and capable teachers. If they are provided access to a talented and seasoned corps of teachers, they will make steady and incremental academic progress. They will also benefit from being members of a school community in which the teachers are experienced and knowledgeable about how to set and uphold clear and reasonable standards for appropriate behavior.

Access to teachers of this type is not what they will receive in a Promise Academy.
According to published accounts in the local media, 25% of the teachers who will staff these schools will be new teachers. At Vaux, the number of new teachers will be slightly higher than 50%. Only 28% of the teachers at the Promise Academies will have taught at the school in the prior year. Less than half of all current Promise Academy teachers taught in the district last year.

Interestingly, during the protracted contract negotiations between the School Reform Commission and Philadelphia Federation of Teachers in 2004, the main point of contention was the SRC’s determination to achieve the right for principals to choose their staff at every school in the city. It was communicated that site selection was an important tool that principals needed in order to put together a staff of experienced and effective teachers. The SRC won a partial victory as a result of that contract negotiation. It was agreed that a site selection process would be utilized to fill a minimum of 50% of the vacant positions at all schools.

In the current PFT/SRC contract, the number of positions filled by school site selection was expanded even further. In the creation of Renaissances Schools, both parties agreed that the site selection process would be utilized to fill all of the staff vacancies at these schools.

It is the belief of the district leadership that the negotiated contract language allowing for the creation of Renaissance Schools is a school reform victory. The resulting Promise Academies such as Vaux, will give the district the authority to place its most highly effective teachers in the lowest performing schools.

The implementation of Promise Academies is barely under way and it is already clear that few highly experienced teachers are being employed at these schools. For years, the school district’s leadership has argued that it was a high priority to redeploy its best teachers to the schools that most needed them. Now when they finally have the ability to do so, they chose to primarily employ new or relatively inexperienced teachers.

How ironic is this?

 
  1. Annette John-Hall: Masterman was the right choice Notes from the news, Sept. 17 | Philadelphia Public School Notebook « Parents 4 democratic Schools

    September 17, 2010 at 9:18 am

    […] Reflections: Then and Now. AN IRONIC “PROMISE” OF SCHOOL REFORM City School Stories Notebook blogger Frank Murphy recently launched his own blog. This post looks at Vaux High’s new incarnation as a Promise Academy. […]

     
  2. Inexperienced teacher

    September 19, 2010 at 7:16 am

    This is a fair examination of Promise Academies. As a teacher is my second year, I know that a school full of new teachers is a mistake. I am successful only because of the support of the seasoned teachers around me. Teaching is something that cannot be mastered fully in a college classroom. Every year teaching is a learning experience, especially those first few years. Why then would you want a large part of the school learning? Who are they learning from? In the teaching profession, experience is a large factor in teacher effectiveness which directly effects school effectiveness. Our students deserve the best. Wouldn’t you agree?

     
  3. cityteach

    September 24, 2010 at 11:05 pm

    It is ironic, especially since the district totes the mantra of establishing relationships with the students, to create a school community, and then decides to destroy that community and replace the adults in the community with inexperienced adults from outside the community. Who have no idea about the rich story of the community, to pass on to the future community.

    Being a part of the Diaspora from University City I speak from experience. The whole “Promise” seems like a “threat” to any teacher with more than 5years within the district.