Tag Education In Reverse

Plans to Boost Two-Year CUNY Colleges Fall Victim to Budget Cuts

During his bid for a third term, Mayor Michael Bloomberg promised to make community colleges a top priority if he were re-elected. That campaign promise to help the City University of New York, which runs the two-year public schools, has now been abandoned in the face of proposed cuts of over $50 million in city funding for the next fiscal year.

This change has sparked criticism from many advocates who have protested Bloomberg’s cuts in funding to CUNY during a time of high enrollment and tough economic times — especially after the state already cut $95 million, according to CUNY officials.

“With the increasing need of services for students at both community colleges and senior colleges in the CUNY system it is unacceptable to continue to cut CUNY’s budget the way the administration has done the past few years,” said Councilmember Ydanis Rodriguez, who chairs the higher education committee. “These drastic cuts come on top of a quarter of a billion dollars worth of cuts that have been handed down to CUNY over the past three years.”

… [C]ommunity colleges around the city find themselves in a precarious position, with record admissions and decreasing funds. Many blame CUNY’s financial woes on the lack of commitment from the state. According to State Sen. Toby Stavisky of Queens, the state’s share of CUNY funding fell sharply in the past 20 years from 65 percent in 1991 to 40 percent this year.

“That’s not the fault of CUNY; it’s the fault of the state — because we had budget crises and higher education has not been a priority,” she said.

(via Gotham Gazette)

NY Post: The Chancellor earns a dunce cap

The Chancellor earns a dunce cap, N.Y. Post, Feb. 19, 2011, at 22.

Schools Chancellor Cathie Black hung a kick-me sign on herself yesterday, foolishly refusing to inject a little common sense into the Department of Education’s ridiculously inflexible “zero-tolerance” bullying policy and doing the right thing by a nine-year-old Upper East Side boy.

The lawyers win another one.

The youngster had written “kick me” on a Post-it note, stuck it on the back of a 4th-grade classmate — and promptly was suspended.

Clear English being something of a novelty among educators these days, PS 158 Principal Darryl Alhadeff said the youngter’s prank was “in violation of the Discipline Code and is classified as ‘infraction A37′ — engaging in bullying behavior — and will result in a Principal’s Suspension for a period of two days.”

NYCLU: City schools are suspending more students, and for longer

New York City’s public schools are suspending more students than they did a decade ago, and for longer periods of time, according to a report released today.

Data on student suspensions obtained by the Student Safety Coalition through Freedom of Information requests and analyzed by the New York Civil Liberties Union shows that the city’s public schools have doled out increasingly large numbers of suspensions each year since 2002. Black students are being suspended in disproportionate numbers, and a third of the suspensions have taken place during months when students spend weeks sitting for state exams.

The NYCLU’s report concludes that the spike in suspension rates over the years is connected to changes in the city’s discipline code, which now categorizes more infractions as being suspension-worthy than it did a decade ago. It also notes that the police presence in schools has increased since 2002, when former Chancellor Joel Klein started Operations Safe Schools.

Texas Conservatives Approve Changes to School Curriculum

Democracy Now: Texas Conservatives Approve Changes to School Curriculum

Conservatives on the Texas Board of Education have approved a series of major changes to the state’s social studies curriculum. The new curriculum stresses the superiority of American capitalism, questions the separation of church and state, and presents Republican political philosophies in a more positive light.

Cuffed for doodling on school desk

Yet another reason among the 15,090 annually that I’m joining the CUNY Law Chapter of the Suspension Representation Project:

Rachel Monahan, Cuffed For Doodling on a Desk, N.Y. Daily News, Feb. 5, 2010, at 4.

Alexa Gonzalez, a student Junior High School 190 in Forest Hills, Queens, was handcuffed and detained at police precinct for doodling on her desk with erasable marker.

A 12-year-old Queens girl was hauled out of school in handcuffs for an artless offense – doodling her name on her desk in erasable marker, the Daily News has learned.

Alexa Gonzalez was scribbling a few words on her desk Monday while waiting for her Spanish teacher to pass out homework at Junior High School 190 in Forest Hills, she said.

“I love my friends Abby and Faith,” the girl wrote, adding the phrases “Lex was here. 2/1/10″ and a smiley face.