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Entries from DCist tagged with 'michellerhee'

July 15, 2008

Last week, we told you about D.C. Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee’s controversial new merit pay plan for teachers, as well as the impressive jump in DCPS test scores, both of which continued to provoke opinion throughout the weekend. Rhee’s compensation plan, under which teachers could choose to waive seniority and tenure in order to earn significantly higher pay tied to their performance, attracted the attention of both The Economist, which liked the idea, and The......

Continue Reading "Schools Roundup: Everyone’s a Critic"

July 8, 2008

If you’re not already familiar with the way teachers in D.C. get paid, it basically works like this – the longer you teach, the more you make. DCPS teachers are compensated on a seniority-based scale (pdf), something that was designed to encourage retention, but unfortunately also means that teachers are paid for their loyalty, not their performance. D.C. Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee has often said that she wants the District to have “the most highly......

Continue Reading "Schools Roundup: Money Where Your Mouth Is Edition"

July 1, 2008

The kid who fell asleep and was left alone for hours on a bus operated by D.C. Public Schools may have stolen the show in school bus coverage last week, but the real story is a bizarre new proposal from the Federal Transit Authority that would prevent the District from using Metrobus to get kids to school, a long-standing practice that transports about 20,000 kids a day during the school year. The Examiner reports that......

Continue Reading "Schools Roundup: Chasing the Bus Edition"

June 24, 2008

As a former high school teacher, I sometimes hear that past students have joined the military. There’s a decent sized JROTC presence in the D.C. public schools, and it wasn’t unheard of to see a military recruiter around the campus. Students in the JROTC talked up its scholarship opportunities, and several students, usually male, but not always, argued in classroom debates that the military was a good option for kids who couldn’t afford or didn’t......

Continue Reading "Schools Roundup: Stars and Stripes Edition"

June 18, 2008

Last month, D.C. Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee drew some heat for not renewing the contracts of 24 principals, including the principal of Oyster Adams Bilingual Elementary, where her daughters attend. This afternoon, she continued her crack down on administrators, firing 22 assistant principals, who like principals, work on year to year contracts. No specific reasons have been given for the terminations, which is consistent with DCPS's policy of not disclosing personnel details. DCPS spokesperson Mafara......

Continue Reading "22 DCPS Assistant Principals Shown the Door"

June 17, 2008

It’s been a bizarre week in D.C. education, as ostriches rallied on 14th St. and seemingly everyone from Katie Couric to Al Sharpton had their eye on the District’s schools. Thursday was the last day of classes for DCPS students, and while Mayor Adrian Fenty and Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee commemorated the one year anniversary of the schools takeover at a press conference at Langdon Elementary, a smaller gathering at the corner of 14th and......

Continue Reading "Schools Roundup: Heads in the Sand Edition"

June 10, 2008

To the discomfort of many a graduate, this week’s heat wave happens to coincide with the last week of classes for D.C. public schools, and students around the city are proudly perspiring beneath their polyester gowns as local schools hold their graduation ceremonies. In less hot graduation news, Education Week’s annual “Diplomas Count” report has released a dismal assessment of the District’s ability to graduate its students – only 57.6 percent of District 9th graders......

Continue Reading "Schools Roundup: Graduation Fever Edition"

June 3, 2008

Critics and watchdogs, in the best cases, help keep leaders honest and organizations accountable. The D.C. government has a number of them, particularly when it comes to the public schools. But sometimes rhetoric can overshadow reason, even if there is a legitimate point to be made, as was the case last week in a letter from the usual suspects to Council Chair Vincent Gray opposing nominations for researchers to conduct an independent evaluation of the......

Continue Reading "Schools Roundup – Right Thinking, Wrong Reasons"

May 27, 2008

A Post editorial today notes that the most effective action Mayor Adrian Fenty has taken since assuming control of the D.C. public schools a little less than a year ago was to bring schools chancellor Michelle Rhee on board, remarking, “Michelle A. Rhee has done more in months to reshape the system than her predecessors did in years.” However, the editorial also cautions that it will be some time before any true achievement growth takes......

Continue Reading "Schools Roundup – Stop, Look, and Listen Edition"

May 20, 2008

This week, Newsweek and Jay Mathews (both of the Washington Post) released their annual Challenge Index of top U.S. public high schools, which ranks schools based on the number of AP or IB tests given divided by the number of graduating seniors. People like lists, and the Challenge Index always gets a lot of attention despite being heavily criticized for inaccuracy and irrelevance. For example, the highest-ranking District school, Bell Multicultural High School, comes in......

Continue Reading "Schools Roundup – Stand and Deliver Edition"

May 15, 2008

This morning at Coolidge Senior High School, Mayor Adrian Fenty and Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee announced reform plans for the 27 DCPS schools that require restructuring under No Child Left Behind (NCLB) for failing to meet Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) for five years in a row. As we’ve mentioned before, the five restructuring options offered under NCLB include: reopening the school as a public charter, replacing all or most school staff relevant to AYP failure,......

Continue Reading "Fenty and Rhee Announce Big Changes for 27 D.C. Schools"

May 13, 2008

UPDATE 12:42 p.m.: The Council has voted unanimously to reject the Mayor's proposal, maintaining the existing requirements concerning the release of DCPS budget information and hearings. Today, the D.C. Council is scheduled to cast its first votes on Mayor Fenty's proposed fiscal 2009 budget, including $773 million for the District’s schools. However, one proposal in particular by Mayor Fenty has been garnering the attention of parent and community groups around D.C. – the motion to......

Continue Reading "Schools Roundup: Pick Your Petition Edition"

May 6, 2008

With a little over a month remaining in the school year, things aren’t slowing down for Michelle Rhee. Never mind that the D.C. Schools Chancellor is being named in what looks to be a time-consuming vanity lawsuit by Washington Teachers’ Union vice-president Nathan Saunders, or that City Council Chair Vincent Gray is messing with her budget. The woman has work to do. As we mentioned this morning, Rhee has begun the process of notifying many......

Continue Reading "Schools Roundup: Balls in the Air Edition"

May 1, 2008

D.C. Public Schools and New York City Public Schools have a lot in common – both are large, expensive, chronically low-performing systems that have recently come into seasons of serious reform under mayoral control. Both are also currently wrapped up in brewing controversies over excessed teachers, and it’s not pretty in either town. Basically, an excessed teacher is a teacher within a district but without a job, and due to the upcoming closings of 23......

Continue Reading "D.C. to NYC: Breaking Down Unions, Teachers, and Excess"

April 23, 2008

The Washington Teachers Union (WTU) has been getting a lot of attention lately, much of it a result of the growing rift between WTU president George Parker and vice-president Nathan Saunders. First, there was the ruckus when Saunders, who has long-accused Parker for being “too cozy” with D.C. Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee, vocally encouraged teachers to reject Rhee’s new program providing transition bonuses for up to 700 teachers at schools slated for closing or re-structuring.......

Continue Reading "Teachers Union Heads Play Good Cop, Bad Cop "

April 11, 2008

Earlier today, students in the Ballou Senior High School’s marching band were treated to a surprise visit from Mayor Adrian Fenty, Ward 8 Council member Marion Barry, D.C. Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee and Macy’s Parade officials to announce that the band has been chosen to perform at the 2009 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. The parade is viewed by over 3.5 million live spectators in New York City and over 50 million television viewers nationwide,......

Continue Reading "Ballou High School’s Band to March in 2009 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade"

April 10, 2008

It seems that the Post and the Times aren’t the only ones with early retirement plans in the works. Today at 3 p.m., Mayor Adrian Fenty and D.C. schools chancellor Michelle Rhee will announce new Teacher Transition Award Opportunities, meant to provide aging teachers with long service to the district opportunities to retire early with full benefits. Officials from the Washington Teachers Union held a meeting last week to discuss the expected announcement. According to......

Continue Reading "More Housecleaning at DCPS"

March 31, 2008

It seems everyone has an opinion on the new security policies that were put in place today at Wilson Senior High School in NW following the arrest of 13 students in fights earlier this month. Most attention has centered on D.C. Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee’s decision to confine students to classrooms for lunch for two days this week as the students return from spring break, while school officials work out a new plan to keep......

Continue Reading "Multiple Takes on the New Security at Wilson HS"

March 26, 2008

Last week, Mayor Fenty and Chancellor Rhee offered up their FY 2009 schools budget, which at $773 million, is about $23 million less than the current year’s budget. However, because of savings from the scheduled closures of under-enrolled campuses and recent mass firings from the DCPS central office (about $44 million) ,as well as the shifting of special education responsibilities to the Office of the State Superintendent ($231 million), the budget actually increases the amount......

Continue Reading "DCPS Budget Increases Funding for Art, Counseling"

March 25, 2008

When, in early March, D.C. Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee handed 98 central office workers pink slips, the move was heralded as a step forward in cleaning out the District's bloated and inefficient public schools bureaucracy. But you know what they say -- one bureaucracy's loss is another one's gain. D.C. Wire reported yesterday that of the 98 workers fired, 11 have already been put back on the city payroll, though in a different department. According......

Continue Reading "Eleven Fired DCPS Workers Rehired by the District"

March 25, 2008

Federal officials using the District as a testing ground on which to push their preferred domestic programs is nothing new, particularly when it comes to the city’s public schools (ahem, Sen. Landrieu). True to form, nestled deep within President Bush’s 2009 budget proposal is a $5 million increase for a school voucher initiative called the DC Opportunity Scholarship program (OSP). Currently, around 1,900 low-income students receive scholarships up to $7,500 to attend area private schools......

Continue Reading "Millions More for D.C. School Vouchers in 2009 Budget"

March 19, 2008

D.C. Public Schools has some chronic problems keeping good principals around. Over 250 principals have turned over in DCPS in the last ten years, and as research consistently shows that effective principals are characteristic of effective schools, it’s time D.C. start recruiting, training, and (perhaps most importantly) retaining strong school leaders. Over the weekend, the Post covered Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee’s nationwide recruitment efforts to attract new principals to D.C. schools. The District has launched......

Continue Reading "D.C. Holds National Principal Search"

March 11, 2008

Late on Friday D.C. Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee fired 98 central office employees, taking a big step toward her promise to “create a culture of accountability.” Mafara Hobson, Rhee's spokesperson, has said the dismissals were based “partly on employee performance and on Rhee's plans to make the central office more efficient,” and the city's Department of Human Resources has not yet released the names of those terminated, in an effort to preserve their privacy. Predictably,......

Continue Reading "More on the DCPS Firings"

March 7, 2008

WTOP is reporting that today D.C. Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee used her newly gained authority to eliminate jobs at the DCPS central office to fire at least 100 nonunion employees. The employees will be placed on administrative leave until March 22, and include no current teachers or school staff. D.C. Protective Services Police was called to DCPS headquarters to escort the fired employees from the building and keep the peace should there be any disruptions......

Continue Reading "Breaking: Rhee Fires 100 D.C. School Employees "

February 28, 2008

Last night, D.C. Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee hosted yet another community meeting to receive feedback concerning schools scheduled for closure due to low-enrollment and poor building conditions. The Post reports that only about 100 people attended the meeting, which was held specifically to discuss the four schools that were added to a revised list earlier this month. Rhee told the Post why some schools were added to the closure list and others reprieved, citing outdated......

Continue Reading "Parents vs. Rhee (Again)"

February 25, 2008

Mayor Adrian Fenty and Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee today announced that they will hold a community meeting concerning the schools recently proposed for closure on Wednesday, February 27th, at 6 p.m. The meeting will be held at McKinley Technical Senior High School, 151 T Street NE. Earlier this year, Fenty and Rhee were criticized by a few squeaky wheels for their selection of schools to be “rightsized” due to low enrollment, and a revised list......

Continue Reading "Community Meeting on School Closures This Week "

February 21, 2008

Ninth graders in D.C. public schools will not be allowed to enroll in foreign language courses next year, the Examiner reported yesterday. The rationale behind the decision, according to a spokesperson for Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee, is to help students focus on classes they must take for graduation. Audits done by school leaders have shown that guidance counselors are frequently not properly scheduling students. Consequently, as students reach their junior or senior year, they have......

Continue Reading "‘Au Revoir’ to Foreign Language for District 9th Graders"

February 19, 2008

It's been a busy month for D.C. Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee. First she successfully quashed the opposition to her proposed school closures, and then hatched plans to outsource food services for the District's school cafeterias. This week, she's turned her focus to classroom instruction, an area to which her critics say she hasn’t yet paid sufficient attention. The Post reported this morning on an experimental special education initiative designed to reduce one of DCPS's biggest......

Continue Reading "Rhee Turns to Curriculum, Special Ed Issues"

February 14, 2008

Mayor Adrian Fenty and Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee announced this morning D.C. Public Schools' plan to outsource its food service operations—a move that they say will save the city millions of dollars and offer new, nutritious meals to students. "The Mayor and I want to introduce students to a variety of foods to help train their palates to choose healthier foods for the rest of their lives. It is part of what a well-rounded education......

Continue Reading "DCPS Promises Better Cafeteria Food"

February 7, 2008

Next up on Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee’s agenda to make D.C. Schools more accountable? Getting “highly qualified” teachers into the classrooms. Under the controversial law “No Child Left Behind,” all teachers must demonstrate that they are qualified to teach their subjects, usually by completing graduate coursework or passing certification tests like the Praxis series. Last year, nearly half of all core subject classes taught in DC schools were taught by unqualified teachers. The worst-staffed subjects?......

Continue Reading "Nearly Half of D.C. Teachers Unqualified"
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