Vision: 2020

This letter was submitted via our open letter form. It does not necessarily reflect the views of Dear JCPS.

Dear JCPS,

I would like to tell you a little about myself and my personal experiences as a child, adult, and educator. I am sure you have heard that we should not decrease the expectations of the Code of Conduct and teacher pay. I am going to tell you why, regardless of what the “data” says, what actual experiences look like. Figures never lie, but liars figure data.

(Excuse structure and grammar, I am writing from the heart.)

I am:
A child of poverty, but I didn’t know at the time.

My parents worked very hard for me to not know this; I thought they were being mean when I couldn’t have what my friends had. However, they lived by a very strict budget and by the time I was in college they had saved enough to help me through school. I was lucky enough to have KEES money, two jobs, and hard work instilled to get me through college.

I attended JCPS because my parents couldn’t afford private school. I received a wonderful education and abided by strict rules and expectations. I was ready for college. I was prepared for the real world. There was 0 tolerance. Students were not able to drink, do drugs, fight, harass others, bully, etc. and stay in a traditional school setting.

I obtained an Economics degree from UofL and in one class the professor taught us about how student vouchers, ideas similar to Charter Schools, would be better economically and I bought in. He was my professor, why would I question his knowledge?

Now, years later, being an educator, I know exactly why the research and data lied and that it was, in fact, not the better option. There were too many extraneous factors he didn’t consider as an economist about serving students in a public school system.

I worked in business for five years and had very clear expectations from my bosses. They told me what was expected. I followed their leadership and thrived. However, I missed working with kids. I had always babysat, lifeguarded, etc. and I had always thought about teaching. I decided to go back from my Masters in Teaching.

Little did I know, expectations for me would never be clear again. I will forever question what my principal wants because for some reason…they have been taught, “Don’t tell them what you want, make them think it was their idea.” I can never get a straight expectation. I have never received a straight expectation unless it was in the form of a threat for my job.

In 2009, I inquired about alt cert. There was not a teacher shortage in JCPS and I could not do that. I was sad. How can I pay my bills and student teach? I worked hard and found a way.
I did a practicum and student taught at a PLA school, shortly after the principal hired me sans interview. I cried because I didn’t want to work at a PLA school, it was not what I wanted but I knew to reach my goal I would.

I worked at a PLA school through ups and downs, culture I didn’t understand but learned to be a part of, my mental stability was challenged, my personal relationships to friends and marriage were challenged because of working in such a tough environment. It affected me personally because I cared and I couldn’t help it. I cried every day my first year, teachers I worked with divorced and called off engagements. Most I worked with were single, divorced, or in a same sex relationship. Odd statement? It seemed as if the principal had staffed to avoid employing teachers with families or planning to start families…

I helped students and I was okay in my first couple years because administration was able to enforce rules. The students began to thrive and everything was getting better! Even through administrative mind games and emotional abuse to all staff. It was worth it! The students were receiving help!

Then, the district said…oh no, no, no. You cannot “punish” the kids in such ways. So then, referrals were ripped up, support was taken away, students began to control the school. They were not being prepared for the real world. Why do rules or consequences have such a negative context in schools now? If we all didn’t have consequences to our actions, the entire world would be chaos. Schools in JCPS are becoming more and more chaotic every day.

I left the PLA School and according to my friends still there, all progress has regressed. Students are running the school. They are playing the mom against dad game with admin and teachers or teachers and parents.

To be specific, before I left:

A student THREW a chair across my room, came back and threatened me after I sent him out. The previous year, this would have been an automatic suspension. But the new AP was under scrutiny for their job, so the student was back the next day. Another student said, “How is he back and not is ISAP?” The student who threw the chair said, and I quote, “I am a black male and I know how to work it when it comes to the white female teachers. They can’t touch me.” To my benefit, I had been there several years and it was well-known that the students overall loved me and I supported them all. I was able to go tell AP word for word what happened and they trusted me and the student THEN received consequences. It should have never come to that. If I was a first year teacher, it would have never come to that…because I would have been forced to resign as the other “white female teacher” he had was forced to do. I was lucky. Isn’t that sad?

I also had a white male student try to fight a black pregnant female student in my class, walk out of school to their house with no consequences. When I questioned the AP, I was told “You will NOT question me. I follow the code of conduct!” I smiled and said, “I understand, but I was just under a different impression that we were responsible for student safety and last year this would have been an automatic suspension. My apologies for not understanding.” I left and understood there would be very little support there.

The same AP cut my legs from under me, so to say, by ripping up a referral I had written on a student. I don’t remember what that referral was for, but I remember being devastated that I did so much for the kids as support and when I wrote a referral it was because they were out of line to extremes. Which honestly, it should never get to extremes in hope of support.

I had another student disrupting class purposefully one day who I finally sent out. Another AP called me to their office later about the referral and asked me, “Why don’t I like said student?” I said, “I like her but she was disrupting and being deliberately disrespectful.” The conversation finally progressed into me stating, “I bought a book for this student’s college class with my own money and had it shipped to her address.” Why is it necessary to defend my actions as a professional and let the students manipulate us? The students need a mom and a dad, which I will get to later. However, they cannot be allowed to play teachers and administrators against each other like a mom and a dad. I was again, “lucky” that day to have a resource teacher in my room witness the whole situation and the resource teacher was well respected. She went and told AP, “I would have kicked her out well before teacher did. How dare you question teacher?” The same AP harassed me and did their best to make me feel insufficient. I am not sure why, but some admin seem power driven and not student driven. The same AP told another teacher in front of me, “I can help you transfer, but not everyone.” And gave me a sideways look. Maybe this seems petty, but these are the petty thing administrators are doing to teachers. Power-based behavior from the top?

Another administrator told me to, “Read my teacher handbook.” After I had been at a PLA school several years and my classes overlapped one year. I DARED to question AP about the bell schedule! In relation to that, AP told me in my final observation that I handled the overlapping bells very well and he/she was proud of that? I sat there thinking…” So, you knew the bells overlapped for some teachers and you chose NOT to fix it, when I gave a solution to altering bells?” I had to send out my one class into hall two minutes early on their schedule, have security watch them, and then bring in my next class three minutes late while security watched them prior?” What about the other teachers on opposite side of building? Did they happen to have security or did we just have students unaccounted for ten to fifteen minutes?

These are the stories you do not hear and won’t because teachers are scared. Administrators are scared because asst superintendents intimidate admin the same way the admin intimidate teachers, the same way the superintendent intimidates the asst superintendents. We are living in a fear-based environment where the teachers are only now speaking up because at this point, take away our raise, take away our ability to discipline…not much left for us before being forced to leave our jobs we want to do right because of working conditions in JCPS or be fired for speaking out.

So let’s speak out. The negatives outweigh the positives at this point because it is about the students. If we change the Code of Conduct all students and all teachers are in danger, real danger.

Students need clear lines and clear consequences. I am all about supporting students, however, support does NOT include taking away consequences. I know as a middle and high school student if I didn’t have consequences, I would have tried to get away with EVERYTHING whether it was at home or at school. And my personal experiences with students speak to this!
We all have possible consequences every day, late to work-could lose job, drive recklessly-ticket or wreck, don’t go to sleep-fall asleep at work, lose job, fall asleep at wheel-get in wreck, don’t take a shower-lose customers at work, don’t pay bills-electric or water turned off, lose apartment, foreclose on house, pay higher interest rates, have bad credit, can’t get a car to go to work, etc. Seems ridiculous, I know…But most importantly, break laws=possible jail time. By not providing consequences while students have the opportunity to learn from their mistakes, we are not setting students up for success.

I went from a PLA school to a top performing JCPS school with HIGH behavior and academic expectations.

I was almost scared to believe administration would support me and enforce the rules. I saw firsthand being too lenient backfire! The students thrived in clear expectations and by me, implementing PBIS ish standards, they took advantage of me. They acted out in ways they never would. I improved in coming years and theses problems decreased. I still gave support, however, I upheld rules and school expectations and the students thrived!

The same students, in shock, have talked to me this week about how the relaxed code of conduct is “insane” in their own words. “We already act bad enough and we aren’t bad. Imagine if there were no consequences? Students would be cussing teachers in face, hitting them, doing all kinds of crazy every day?!” I looked at them and said, “You are lucky. This is already happening in other schools.”

Back to the mom and dad rhetoric…Students need disciplinarians in teachers and admins. They also need care from teachers and admin. If you hire correctly, this naturally happens. If admin and teachers ALL receive support and are treated as professionals, this NATURALLY happens. It’s OKAY that different teachers teach in different ways and have different classroom management styles! This is what creates a well-rounded student prepared for the real world. I get to be the mommy now with clear expectations; all of my students know there is a line. They must follow rules or consequences will be enforced. Yet, they know I genuinely care for each of them. They have “daddies” at the school as well, in the form of authoritarian administration and teachers. And guess what? Our school is prospering! Even though I still believe our school has diminished in recent years because of the lack of ability to enforce rules as they have in the past. Students will rise or fall to the expectations we give them.

I was a student of Louisville Male Traditional High School. I am a teacher of Louisville Male Traditional High School. I was a teacher at The Academy @ Shawnee. I cannot explain all of my personal experiences and I am sure from my letter it would be easy to find my identity. However, I am tired of being scared. I want to stand up for what is best for ALL students. From my experiences, ALL students thrive from clear, consistent behavior and academic expectations. The district is NOT supporting this with their policies. Education in JCPS is becoming about false numbers and perception! Do NOT do this to our kids! I agree that students should have access to support services, however, changing the code of conduct is not supportive to students’ safety or future. The Youth Service centers should be properly funded to provide these services. At the PLA school my first two years, the YSC was instrumental in the improvement across the school. Maybe the data didn’t show the vast improvement, but the environment and the students sure did-and this was while strict rules and consequences were put in place.

The traditional program is CLEAR data that rules work! We have students from all over the district, we do not pick and choose, we are a lottery. The ONLY common consistency is parents CARE and/or INVOLOVED! Imagine that, logical data. From real world experiences.

This letter was submitted via our open letter form. It does not necessarily reflect the views of Dear JCPS. But in this case, it does. 😉

Dear JCPS,

Every employee of every organization is absolutely entitled to work in a safe and secure workplace, just as every student at every school is entitled to an authentic education in a safe and secure school. No one deserves a ticket to a future without hope – not teachers and not students.

That is why I support bringing together stakeholder groups, including students, in a meaningful way to make data-informed, research-based SYSTEMIC changes to school policies and to a school culture which sadly limits everyone’s potential.

Nationwide, the data which schools are required to report to the U.S. Office of Civil Rights demonstrate that the overwhelming majority of classroom removals are for minor misconduct. A disproportionately large percentage of disciplined students are minority or LGBT students or students with disabilities.

Per the 2014 The School Discipline Consensus Report, “There is no question that when students commit serious offenses or pose a threat to school safety they may need to be removed from the campus or arrested. Such incidents, however, are relatively rare.”

And, “It is important to distinguish between efforts to improve school climate for students and educators that can come across as perfunctory—such as hanging student artwork on the walls, announcing teacher appreciation days, or convening monthly student assemblies—and the strategies that have been shown to improve attendance and student success, engagement, and behavior. Although educators, administrators, and the school community universally value a positive school climate, they do not always share an understanding of what it takes to achieve it.”

In 2014, over 700 hundred experts in education (including teachers), behavioral health, law enforcement, and juvenile justice leaders as well as policymakers, parents, youth, and advocates from all over the nation came together in consensus to publish The School Discipline Consensus Report as a joint initiative of the U.S. Departments of Education & Justice. Can we not, in our City of Compassion, do the same?

Judith Bradley
Idea Architect
jackbenimble.org (coming soon)

 

In the meantime, here are excerpts from the Executive Summary section:

“Everyone agrees that schools should provide an environment where students and staff feel physically and emotionally safe, connected, fairly treated, and valued. Research has demonstrated that academic achievement and positive behaviors increase when these conditions for learning are in place. Unfortunately, promoting a positive school climate often takes a back seat to educators’ and administrators’ efforts to address mandates to improve test scores and graduation rates, even though strong conditions for learning have been shown to help improve academic achievement. Where school leaders have not made school climate a priority, disciplinary approaches often rely heavily on the removal of students from school. It is important to distinguish between efforts to improve school climate for students and educators that can come across as perfunctory—such as hanging student artwork on the walls, announcing teacher appreciation days, or convening monthly student assemblies—and the strategies that have been shown to improve attendance and student success, engagement, and behavior. Although educators, administrators, and the school community universally value a positive school climate, they do not always share an understanding of what it takes to achieve it. Schools often lack the means to accurately assess their own climates, and to involve the school community in developing a vision and corrective plan. School administrators and staff need training and professional development opportunities, job-embedded supports, and feedback on their performance to carry out these plans. District codes of conduct should also reinforce steps to sustain a positive school climate, and be routinely assessed and revised to ensure progress.

The extent to which students are safe, connected, engaged, and supported in their classrooms and schools—collectively known as the “conditions for learning”—is critical to their academic and personal success. Schools that create welcoming and secure learning environments reduce the likelihood that students will misbehave, and improve educators’ ability to manage student behavior.

Research and data on school discipline practices are clear: millions of students are being removed from their classrooms each year, mostly in middle and high schools, and overwhelmingly for minor misconduct. When suspended, these students are at a significantly higher risk of falling behind academically, dropping out of school, and coming into contact with the juvenile justice system. A disproportionately large percentage of disciplined students are youth of color, students with disabilities, and youth who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender (LGBT).

There is no question that when students commit serious offenses or pose a threat to school safety they may need to be removed from the campus or arrested. Such incidents, however, are relatively rare, and school typically remains the safest place a young person can be during the day. In schools with high rates of suspension for minor offenses, however, students and teachers often feel they are not safe or supported in their learning environment. Trailblazing student and parent groups, advocacy organizations, researchers, professional associations, and school districts have raised the visibility of exclusionary discipline practices across the nation. In response, individual schools, districts, and state education systems have implemented research-based approaches to address student misbehavior that hold youth accountable, address victims’ needs, and effectively improve both student conduct and adult responses. These approaches also help keep students engaged in classrooms and out of courtrooms.”

This letter was submitted via our open letter form. It does not necessarily reflect the views of Dear JCPS.

Dear JCPS,

When I heard about the stories about a study done on Jefferson County Public Schools, my first initial reaction was “really?”

How many more studies can be done to figure out the underlying problems in a problematic school district?

Listening to the rhetoric about teachers’ salaries and salaries of the support staff, the memories of why I left the district came back again.

I began my short three-year journey with the district in 2009. It was for a classified clerical position at Atkinson Elementary in the Portland neighborhood. They titled it “lunchroom / office assistant.”

Signing on, the district is sure to let you know “other duties assigned” is also in the job description.

It was a wild card that meant whatever they told you, you do it without objection.

For the first half of the school year, I pretty much stuck to helping maintain control in the lunchroom, greeting parents daily and maintained attendance records.

On the flip side, I was the first line of defense in dealing with unruly parents who had issues with teachers or students with behavioral issues who sat at my desk area because they needed a “voice of reason” to help them get through their school day.

It became routine, especially when I moved on to becoming an Instructional Assistant at the same school in 2011.

This time I was under different leadership with a principal who had the mentality of “her way or the highway.”

I was running the SuccessMaker Lab, working with kindergarten teachers and used as a stand-by teacher if they didn’t have a substitute in special areas or if the teacher left work early.

I was two years in and received a “minor” increase in pay. I was at $12,500 for the entire year. Most will look at it like that’s not bad considering working 185 days out of the year.

When you factor in escrow (money taken out of your check so you can earn pay in the summer) health insurance, union dues, and taxes, you were barely left with enough money to put a scratch in the monthly rent.

I kept it classy and put the kids first. However, I did ask about pay raises and was never given a clear answer – yet always given the runaround.

The game changer for me was being pressured into assisting with K-Prep testing without proper training or given any background information as to why these kids are taking these statewide exams.

All I was given was a photocopied handbook on what you can and can’t do when working with students during testing which pretty much let me know that I had to figure things out on my own.

You couldn’t question why you had to do it, it was part of that “other duties assigned” note listed on your job description.

It was a pattern with JCPS because it was a terrible training practice that trickled down from the administrative offices.

Everyone talks about being professional and developing yourself in becoming great at your job, yet the biggest joke and money waster are Professional Development Days.

Having years of experience in training before JCPS and it was going to be different being trained.

Lo and behold, more let downs.

It was very shameful to be handed out photocopies of “teaching tools” only to find out some of the trainers were making more than $100,000.

I instantly thought I could have been more effective with less money spent. What made it even sadder is I never walked away with the feeling of being professionally developed.

Every time those days came around, I cringed. In order of have a day off with the students, you had to sacrifice your soul for 6 hours of bull crap.

When you add a non-supportive principal to the mix, it didn’t make things any better.

Many of the classified staff who have visible supporting roles in the school district are often overworked, underpaid and definitely underappreciated.

For those who paid for the ridiculous study, ask yourself, for all of the things you have to deal with, would be satisfied with someone “freezing” your salary? Many of the support staff and teachers go beyond the call in making JCPS a place where kids can learn to their greatest potential.

 

In closing,

I wanted to share with you a letter I wrote to the principal at Atkinson and purposely sent to all classified staff on August 29, 2012 as the school bell rang.

“Leadership roles in education require lots of dedication, hard work, commitment and responsibility. Understanding how to maintain control of the aforementioned while maintaining professionalism is an added bonus.

Throughout my life, I’ve seen individuals awarded positions based on the buddy system while no one gives second thought of what their qualifications are or how they handle themselves in various situations in professional environments.

It disturbs me when those who are awarded positions in administration are more concerned about the acquired power instead of using the power to influence a quality educational experience for students and a loving environment for their professionals.

Once you sign the dotted line to become the head of the line you have a choice of where your administration is going to go. Most employees who are not used to change have a hard time dealing with it although they fall in line to keep things going strong out of respect for the person in the leadership position.

When inflated egos become a part of the equation, that’s when friction and problems arise on the job.

It’s not appropriate to address staff members in front of their peers. It’s not appropriate when you have an issue with other staff members you belittle them to others. It’s definitely not appropriate to turn off communication with staff at any level because you’ve had disagreements.

Whenever holes needed to be filled, I was there. Whenever substitute teachers didn’t show for special areas, I was there. Whenever children who misbehaved needed somewhere to go, I was there. Never once did I object or complain. It was never about me, it was always about the children and their needs.

A good, reliable staff is harder to come by and having those who are equally as passionate in motivating children to live their best lives, harder. It’s one of many reasons why parents respected my stern, jovial attitude and my passion to always see the good in their children regardless of how others think of them.

Making me feel unwelcomed or as a complete stranger on during these first couple of weeks of school up to my last day left a sour taste in my mouth. I had to remind myself that I walked in this building as a humble individual and I will leave here as one. Being empathetic, sympathetic and compassionate to others why people enjoy me. Thanks to those who helped me realize my smile is more important than small issues.

I’ve been very blessed to have this opportunity at Atkinson as well with JCPS. I grew up in this district and it’s nice to know there are good people who truly cherish the value of children and their employees.”

Jefferson County Public Schools has a lot of work to do and needs to reinvent itself to not only rebuild trust with the teachers but do more in creating an environment where they can continue to help these kids excel.

You shouldn’t need a study to determine the value of the people who are on the front lines daily.

I will support those teachers who I know firsthand are working their behinds off well before students arrive to ensure a great learning experience.

I will support teachers who are often put in harm’s way when students are out of control.

I will support teachers because no one understands the heart and emotion they put in their lessons and how they proudly wear them on their sleeves.

They are my friends and colleagues.

They are definitely JCPS.

-C. J. Daniels

 

 

This letter was submitted via our open letter form. It does not necessarily reflect the views of Dear JCPS.

Dear JCPS,

My life was saved on January 11, 2008 when my mother suggested leaving the public school system. This was days after two girls stole my purse, my money, and my ipod and the Louisville Male staff looked at me and said “oh well, you shouldn’t have that at school.” This was not my first time in the office, I’d been there on several accounts. Why you may ask. Well once it was for the boy that made sexual threats to me and another time it was for the girl that used to pull my hair on the bus. And there were times when I should’ve gone to the office and didn’t, maybe the time my soccer coach told me I looked like a slut because I rolled my soccer shorts like the other girls did. I’d been in the office at my previous schools as well, for the girl who slapped me at JCTMS and for the for the boy who told the teacher I was cursing in sixth grade, in which she called my mother. But for all the times I’d been in the office I’d never once seen anything done about it. No consequence. No punishment. They told me to suck it up or to just stay away from those kids. I was obviously a tattle tale and was doing it all for attention. I’m 23 now and all I hear is that it’s worse, everyone I know with children are wanting to switch their children to private schools. They need to.

I left Male and made my way into the private school system and it was a shock. No one disrupted class. I was in disbelief that these girls had never seen fights in school hallways before. I was far behind when I attended private school. I recall one particular moment when a teacher at my private school assured me that my teachers at Male had taught me MLA format, that they had to, but I was never taught anything like that. The girls at my new school craved education, they loved it while I learned that school was a terrible place.

It’s still hard for me to pass Louisville Male High School, it hurts to know that teachers there try their hardest and can do nothing. It’s hard to think that while I attended it was known as the best school in Louisville. How bad could the other schools be if Male was awful?

That school made me feel stupid and like a victim, I could do nothing to save myself. I reached out for help and no one was there. The administrative offices never helped me and my teachers did everything they could.
If I would’ve stayed at LMHS I wouldn’t have survived. I wouldn’t have gone to college, no one ever let me think I was capable. The damage done to me by that school has left a lasting imprint like it has to so many others. I am one girl with one voice but I know this isn’t just one circumstance. These students need a chance to feel smart and to survive.

Take the students into consideration.

Sincerely,

Public to Private

NOTE: While the author’s identity is protected here, they are not anonymous to Dear JCPS. Any board member wishing to address the concerns shared here can contact our administrators to make a connection.

This letter was submitted via our open letter form. It does not necessarily reflect the views of Dear JCPS.

Dear JCPS,

I am not a teacher. I am not a parent. I’m a former student and a teacher candidate at Eastern Kentucky University. My classmates and I have closely followed the news recently regarding the rubbish that Dr. Donna Hargens and her crew of non-school working advisors have been saying. I am writing this letter on behalf of all teacher candidates at every college in Kentucky, much less America. We WILL NOT be looking for a job in your district once we graduate.

The most disturbing thing about your district is the disconnect that your teachers feel to their support staff. Upon reading on Dear JCPS, talking to teachers in your district and reading the comments from educators and parents on your Facebook I have noticed a trend. You do not support your teachers. You are quick to blame them if at all possible, you are quick to write off a teacher being ASSAULTED in your schools, and you are quick to lie to parents about what is really going on your schools. I’m not sure if you’re scared of Dr. Hargans, scared of parents or scared because you don’t want teachers telling people how horribly they are treated in your district. The problem isn’t the teachers; they are doing their job. The problem is YOU, the central office- the people who think that students can do whatever they want and not get a real punishment for it. It’s time to own up to the madness you have created in your schools. It’s time to reform your district, and time to listen to your teachers.

I was reminded of a story before I wrote this letter, a teacher that is dear to me was struck by a student. Not on accident, this student flat out assaulted this teacher, punched her in the face. To the existent of if it were to happen on the street, the student would have been arrested and charged with assault. This teacher had to explain to her administrators why she didn’t want the student back in class. ARE YOU KIDDING ME?! You have a discipline problem, STOP DENYING IT. As a student I was bullied, when I finally said something to my administrators they couldn’t even suspend the kid for harassing and bullying me because he was on some sort of plan that apparently bars the school from disciplining students the way he should. IT’S TIME FOR YOU TO QUIT BEING SCARED. Stop being scared of parents and backlash. YOU are the school board, you are supposed to have the backs of your students and teachers. Instead you are scared to do your duties because you don’t want to piss anyone off.

Recently, it has come to light that Dr. Hargens and her crew believe it is for the better if we revise the student code of conduct to make it even more lenient. The backlash is astonishing. Every single post about it has 200+ comments about how infuriating it is to not be able to discipline kids in schools anymore. Have we forgotten about the students who go school and do everything they are expected, and never cause a problem? Are we going to interrupt their learning because we have a belligerent student in the class that the school can’t do anything with because it goes against the code of conduct? Not to mention, it already puts teachers that are fighting to maintain order in their classroom even more against the wall. When did we as a district become so concerned with the money we get by having a student in school every day that we don’t teach discipline? When I was a student was I only worth $118 a day to you? That’s what it’s starting to look like. You aren’t doing the city any favors by teaching kids that there are no repercussion for their actions. Stand up for your teachers, LET THEM TEACH.

All I have to say is, it’s time for reform in your district. You already face a teacher shortage. Why do you think that is? No really, answer that. It’s not because there aren’t teachers looking for a job. It’s because you don’t support your teachers and a teacher would have to be crazy to deal with the things this district makes them go through on a daily basis. FIX YOUR DISTRICT. Your teachers are running out of ways to tell you. Listen to them, they know what is going on in the schools- unlike you. You visit schools and the teachers tell students to be on their best behavior. You don’t see what really goes on in your schools. Go sub a day at any high school, you will see the real JCPS. The JCPS you deny is truly there. FIX YOUR SYSTEM, and maybe you can attract some teachers. If you don’t, good luck because your teachers are looking for the first opportunity to exit stage left. Future educators don’t want to work for a district that doesn’t support their teachers, neither do your teachers. FIX IT.

BR

NOTE: While the author’s identity is protected here, they are not anonymous to Dear JCPS. Any board member wishing to address the concerns shared here can contact our administrators to make a connection.

3rs flyer HS smOur Public Forum on #The3Rs of High-Stakes Testing was held on April 28. It was livestreamed on Twitter via Periscope. We also accepted questions via survey and via Twitter. Our handle is @Dear_JCPS.

photos

Our PowerPoint can be found here: The New 3 R’s.

Links to documents referenced during the forum will be posted here, as well.

KDE Opt Out Forms can be found here.

 

This speech was presented to the JCPS Board of Education on April 26, 2016. The video replay can be found here.periscope

Dear JCPS,

My t-shirt says:

We LOVE our teachers
Our school’s the BEST
We are more than a
SCORE on a TEST!

KPREP is May 9-13. Many schools started test prep, boot camps, pull outs, etc. as soon as we returned from spring break. We are already receiving reports of test prep violations, misinformation, and anxiety leading up to the tests. Parents are aware of the national opt out movement and are asking questions about their rights. KDE has provided direction about opting out but there is no information available about how that plays out in JCPS.

Therefore, Dear JCPS and a few partner advocacy groups decided to put on a forum to get those questions answered. It’s this coming Thursday night at the Aeroclub. It’s called the 3R’s of High-Stakes Testing: Parents’ Rights, Responsibilities and Repercussions. We hope you can join us.

On April 11, we sent an invitation and a list of these questions to JCPS. They originally accepted our invite with three names attending.

On April 19, nearly a week after marketing resources had already been expended and wheels were in motion, JCPS suddenly declined citing a recirculated KDE document from a year ago. What changed?

We were informed that the district wants everyone to participate in the assessments so they will not be answering any of our parents questions. Why?

The Supreme Court has repeatedly held that parents posses the “fundamental right” to “direct the upbringing and education of their children.” Furthermore, the Court declared that “the child is not the mere creature of the State: those who nurture him and direct his destiny have the right coupled with the high duty to recognize and prepare him for additional obligations.” In Meyer, the Supreme Court held that the right of parents to raise their children free from unreasonable state interferences is one of the unwritten “liberties” protected by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. (262 U.S. 399).

Many feel the high stakes, standardized tests and test prep that do not guide instruction and instead are used to test and punish have become excessive, and we have a right to this information. So I will ask again.

  • How much money does JCPS spend on KPREP testing, materials, software?
    —->> Instead of freezing teacher salaries, get rid of high stakes tests!
  • How many tests per year/per grade are given and how are they used to guide instruction?
  • How many classroom hours are estimated to be spent on test prep (broken down by grade, subject, school)?
  • How many staff hours are dedicated to assessments?
  • Our parents have been told by many in JCPS that it is not possible to “opt out”? Yet some parents have shared with us that a process exists, while others have had this information withheld from them. And KDE offers two forms. So please provide the process and repercussions for doing so.
  • Is it possible to also opt a student out of test prep? What will the student do during this time instead?
  • How can excessive test prep even be allowed to happen when it is forbidden by statute? (KRS 158.6453)
  • Why are teachers prohibited from speaking up against which of these tests are unnecessary? Or which test prep they feel is ineffective or unnecessary? Is their input being sought to accomplish the Vision 2020 goal sooner rather than later?
  • What impact do these test scores have on admission requirements into magnet and traditional programs?
  • What other potential consequences exist at the district level?
  • How do any of these rights change with the new ESSA law, and when will they be implemented in JCPS?

You say you want more involved parents. Yet we are treated as if we don’t have the capacity to be part of the decisions necessary to educate our own children.

DearJCPS,

Upon reading WDRB’s article “JCPS student discipline policies may ease,” I have concluded that I will have no choice but to seek employment elsewhere. This further confirms the suspicion that Dr. Hargens does not actually care about improving the situation in JCPS; rather, she cares about the public’s perception of improvement.

I normally tell my students that numbers don’t lie but in this case they do. According to the numbers, JCPS suspensions are down this year, however, that data has been purposefully reduced. School administrators are facing pressure at the district level to decrease discipline numbers; in turn, school administrators are not responding to the behavior issues that are present in their schools. Students who curse at staff and other students receive one period of ISAP and are right back in the classroom the next day. Students who refuse to step out of the classroom for a hallway conference (a piece of the restorative practices that JCPS claims are working so very well) are right back in the classroom the next day. Students who threaten to kill staff members are placed in a different classroom instead of being referred to an alternative school setting.

How am I supposed to protect my students’ right to learn when misbehavior is continuously met with no consequences? How am I supposed to create a safe learning environment when students can be met with sexual misconduct, profanity, and constant disruptions from students who fail to follow the rules…and receive no consequences? There is a quote from an earlier article on WDRB from Mike Raisor which states “…I wouldn’t want something I did as a prank when I was 15-years-old to determine the rest of my life.” This statement indicates youthful innocence and lack of foresight is behind the behaviors, however, a large number of students who misbehave consistently do so out of the clear understanding that there are few consequences for them. To quote one such young person, “Go ahead and send me to the AP office—they’re not going to do anything to me.”

While it is my responsibility to educate my students in my subject matter, it is the overall school experience’s responsibility to educate students in the ways of the world. We need to stop thinking of students as these “other entities” who need coddling and remind ourselves of what will occur once students turn 18 and enter into the “real world”—very real consequences for things that would have resulted in a conference and a “don’t do it again” at school. A police officer, a supervisor, a college professor, etc. is not going to care that an adult “has anger issues” or “was just playing around.” By easing discipline policies, we are widening the gap between school and reality, to the detriment of those people that Dr. Hargens claims to have the best intentions for—the students.

Sincerely,
Fed up teacher