Wednesday, March 11, 2015

MAYOR DE BLASIO AND CHANCELLOR FARIÑA ANNOUNCE FIRST SIGNS OF PROGRESS IN STRUGGLING SCHOOLS, PROMOTE EXPERIENCED LEADER TO HEAD RENEWAL SCHOOLS


  Turnaround in Progress: Boys and Girls High School, left to languish for more than a decade, has new top-flight principal, more students on-track to graduate, climbing attendance, and new ’Saturday Academy’ for weekend tutoring and Regents Prep

Dedicated Leadership: Aimee Horowitz elevated to spearhead efforts at 94 Renewal Schools

   Mayor Bill de Blasio and Schools Chancellor Carmen Fariña today announced a new Renewal Schools leader to spearhead change at 94 Renewal Schools, and detailed progress happening on the ground at long-struggling schools. 

They made the announcement at Boys and Girls High School, the oldest high school in Brooklyn and an institution that has struggled for more than a decade. Today, there is new momentum at Boys and Girls because of the School Renewal program. There is a new principal with a track record of achievement, new Advanced Placement course offerings to challenge students, twice as many seniors on track to graduate on time, climbing attendance rates, and a new Saturday Academy to provide students with small group instruction and Regents Exam preparation on weekends. As part of Boys and Girls’ transformation, every teacher must reapply for his or her position.

Mayor de Blasio announced the $150 million School Renewal program in November, dedicating experienced new leadership and new resources to 94 schools that have struggled for years. The effort will be overseen by the new Executive Superintendent for the School Renewal Program, Aimee Horowitz, a leader with a track record of turning around troubled schools and raising student achievement. Horowitz has most recently served as superintendent for Staten Island high schools and 14 Renewal Schools, including Boys and Girls High School and Automotive High School. She was also the founding principal of the College of Staten Island High School for International Studies, which maintained a graduation rate of well above 95 percent under her leadership.

In the past three months, initial changes have gotten underway at Renewal Schools, including the addition of extra instructional time in 54 schools, academic intervention teams deployed to overhaul curriculum and course offerings, and groups of experienced principals and assistant principals sent to high-needs schools to strengthen leadership and help change direction. 

“The status quo is not acceptable. That’s why we are giving struggling schools something they’ve never had before: the leadership, focus and support they need to finally succeed. This is what real change will take,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio. “Many of these schools have been broken for years, and they won’t be fixed overnight. But make no mistake: this strategy is working. This is why it is so vital we renew Mayoral Control and secure the fair funding our students need.”

At Automotive High School and Boys and Girls High School, two of the City’s long-struggling schools deemed “out of time” by the State Department of Education, key early indicators—like whether students are earning enough credits to stay on track for graduation—are moving in the right direction:
  • Boys and Girls High School’s new principal has re-programmed the entire school schedule to ensure that students get the courses they need to graduate on time and that teachers can collaborate on comprehensive academic plans for individual students. In addition to an extra 9th period of instruction each day, Boys and Girls has a new Saturday Academy to help students catch up. As a result, more than twice as many seniors are on track to earn the necessary credits needed to graduate on time—90 students now, versus 40 in the first semester.
  • Automotive High School has received special Renewal Coaches to provide professional development to teachers with a focus on students’ writing. The coaches have helped teachers assess student writing for signs of progress and signs of students falling behind. After just one semester in the program, 80 percent of freshman are earning the necessary 10 credits to stay on track to graduate in four years, compared to just 60 percent previously. Credit accumulation rates also rose sharply among upper grade students. Seventy-seven percent each of sophomores and juniors are on track with their credit accumulations, up from past averages of 60 and 50 percent, respectively.

“Real change is happening in our Renewal Schools, and I’m encouraged by leading indicators of better attendance and credit accumulation on the rise, showing many more students are on a path to college,” said Schools Chancellor Carmen Fariña. “The Renewal School team visits schools every day and is giving top-to-bottom evaluation, teacher training and support.”

“We are already seeing tangible progress at our Renewal Schools, and I am confident that we will turn these schools around with more intensive, proven reforms like extended learning time, improved school leadership, and academic intervention teams,” said Executive Superintendent for the School Renewal Program Aimee Horowitz.

“I taught at Boys and Girls back when it was the ‘Pride and Joy of Bed-Stuy.’ Today, after years of struggling, you can really feel change in the hallways. It’s because we finally have the support and leadership we need to bring this school back. This is what progress looks like—our attendance is up, we saw a bounce in our January Regents scores, and for the first time, we have several students enrolled in AP courses with our partner school Medgar Evers College Prep. This is painstaking work—but we are finally on the right track with the School Renewal program,” said Boys and Girls High School Principal Michael Wiltshire.

Each Renewal School’s program is defined by several critical aspects ensuring improved student achievement. Schools have seen notable progress across these areas:

More Instructional Time – Through the Renewal program, 54 Renewal Schools have already added either an extra period each day, before- or after-school academic activities or Saturday class. The extra instructional time can be used for additional subjects, or to reinforce lessons from earlier in the day and provide extra support to students.
  • Bronx High School of Business is offering extra instructional time to its students throughout its school week. There is new instructional time from 2:45 to 5 PM every WednesdayThursdayand Friday, as well as through its Saturday Academy. Bronx Business is also providing its English Language Learners, which account for 30 percent of its student population, with an extra period in the morning before school begins and on Saturdays to support language development.

Strong Leadership – Since the launch of the School Renewal program, seven new principals have taken over leadership of struggling schools, and the Department of Education is dispatching crack teams of dedicated principals and assistant principals to supplement school leadership, providing the focus and experience to change direction.
  • John Starkey, former principal of the International High School at LaGuardia Community College—which became known during his tenure for its high graduation and college enrollment rates, as well as strong English and language arts programs and community engagement—started as the new principal at Peace and Diversity High School in the Bronx in February. He has already communicated one-on-one with every parent or guardian of his students, and communicated clear, raised expectations—including parental engagement, student attendance and behavior, as well as rigor of teaching and learning that is designed to meet students’ academic and personal needs.

Deeper Accountability at Every Level – Chancellor Fariña replaced 16 of 45 Superintendents, and invested each with authority to hire and remove principals, and the tools to help principals improve. Each Renewal School is required to meet performance targets identified in its school renewal plan, and schools that fail to do so are subject to faculty and leadership changes. Schools are also embarking on the use of more effective data systems that allow teachers and administrators, as well as students, to evaluate academic progress in real time. For example, some schools are using innovative tools to create standards-based reports that allow teachers to target instruction based on deficits they see in students’ work.
  • P.S. 112 in Bronxwood uses SuccessMaker software in both ELA and Math to assess and target deficits in instruction. In 2012-2013, 80 percent of kids scored the lowest level, Level 1, in math. The following year, 2013-2014, P.S. 112 started using SuccessMaker and reduced that number to only 50 percent Level 1’s and increased their Level 3’s and 4’s by 5 percent. This year, they continue to use the instructional interventions to deepen the trend.

More Professional Development in Key Subjects – More than 600 teachers in Renewal Schools have received professional development and training in key academic areas, ranging from mathematics to literacy. 
  • To increase students’ writing skills, a key pillar of success in high school, 35 teachers at nine elementary and middle schools in the Renewal program are receiving a year of intensive professional development at Columbia University’s Teachers College Writing Institute. As a result, their students are writing more and are becoming more proficient in three key areas: registering opinion, creating narrative, and imparting information. This month, 240 more teachers across all 79 Renewal schools serving elementary and middle-school grades began participating in the program. 

Wrap-Around Services to Eliminate Barriers to Learning – Every Renewal School is being turned into a Community School that offers mental health, physical well-being, or other vital supports to better support the social, emotional, physical and academic needs of students and overcome issues that impede learning. The Community Schools partner selection process is well underway, and, by June, Community School Directors will be in place at all 94 schools, with services to launch this September.
  • Many Renewal Schools have partnerships with CBOs that are making strong impacts. While it hasn’t transitioned to a Community School yet, Renaissance School of the Arts in East Harlem has been working with Citizen Schools, and they are already seeing improvements in student engagement as measured by attendance rates (up three points, from 89 percent last year to 92 percent this year). Starting last year, Citizen Schools has worked with the principal to add 2.5 hours of additional learning time for every sixth grader and are supporting small-group literacy interventions for students who struggle with reading comprehension.

“For too long, struggling schools throughout our city have not received the sufficient support to make significant gains and remain open to serve their community. I commend Mayor de Blasio and Chancellor Farina for this effort to provide renewed support to struggling schools, and strengthen standards to ensure that school performance remains competitive, including increased Advanced Placement and college preparatory courses. This renewal will enhance our education system, and better serve children throughout our city,” said Public Advocate Letitia James.

“The Renewal Schools program is infusing new energy into our struggling schools,” said Council Education Committee Chairperson Daniel Dromm. “Educators know best what schools need to do to improve. That’s why I am glad to see experienced school leaders spearheading the effort to raise student achievement. Local control over our schools is vitally important if we are to succeed. We know our schools best. Students need a challenging curriculum and lots of teacher support. I look forward to what the future has to hold for our Renewal Schools.”


Learn more about Renewal Schools: nyc.gov/renewalschools.

Editors Note:
It has been over one year that Mayor Bill deBlasio has been in office, and when I asked him in November why nothing had been done to improve the public schools his answer then was the following. 
  "The Chancellor will be announcing new initiatives very soon, and the mayor went on to tout the new Pre-K program". 


BP DIAZ TO DISCUSS RECENT TRIP TO ISRAEL


  On Thursday, March 26, Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. will host a discussion and question and answer session on his recent visit to Israel.

The event will take place at the Riverdale YM-YWHA, 5626 Arlington Avenue, Bronx, NY, at 6:30 p.m. It is co-sponsored by the Jewish Community Relations Council of New York City and the Riverdale Jewish Community Relations Council.

In January, Borough President Diaz visited Israel with a delegation of Latino leaders, sponsored by the Jewish Community Relations Council of New York City. Later that month, Borough President Diaz hosted a dialogue with the President of the State of Israel, H.E. Mr. Reuven Rivlin, at the Bronx Museum of the Arts. Both events were designed to help foster greater relations between the Latino and Jewish communities of New York City and beyond.

“The relationship between the people of The Bronx and Israel remains as strong and vibrant today as it has ever been. I look forward to discussing my recent visit to Israel with my constituents, as well as our efforts to strengthen relationships between the Latino and Jewish communities both at home and abroad,” said Borough President Diaz. “The Bronx has come back a long way from two to three decades ago. Our employment is up, our crime is down, and our housing is headed in the right direction. We want to share those successes with Israel, while also learning more about their accomplishments and how we can use those examples to improve our own community.”

“Joining members of the City Council Delegation and the Jewish Community Relations Council on their mission to Israel was a beautiful experience. We were able to meet with a varied spectrum of people within the Israeli society and learn about their culture, business and education. Like Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr., I saw an opportunity to strengthen my constituency’s relationship with Israel and I believe that goal was achieved during my visit,” said Council Member Andrew Cohen, who recently completed his own visit to Israel.

"I was delighted to accompany Bronx Borough President Diaz on the Latino Leadership Mission he recently led to Israel and I am looking forward to joining him once again at this important event. The bond between New York and Israel is unbreakable and it is influential leaders like Borough President Diaz who ensure that this link will only continue to grow stronger,” said Michael S. Miller, Executive Vice President & CEO of the Jewish Community Relations Council of New York City.


 WHAT:          Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. hosts a discussion and question and answer session on his recent visit to Israel.

WHEN:          Thursday, March 26, 2015
                        6:30 p.m.

WHERE:       Riverdale YM-YWHA
                        5626 Arlington Avenue
The Bronx

Monday, March 9, 2015

Building Worker Strike Looms




   It's not as if your superintendent will be going on strike on Friday March 13th , but building managing agents and landlords have sent out notices that the labor contract of the Service Employees International Union Local 32B-32J will be expire at midnight Friday March 13th. The notices that have been sent out include warnings that come midnight Friday March 13th the service workers in your building may walk off the job, what to do in the case of the strike by building service workers, including other items such as Security, Housekeeping, Deliveries Elevator service, Emergency repairs, Vandalism, Alterations or renovations to an apartment, Real Estate Brokers and Sales people, and the Laundry rooms.

   Some notices are giving local emergency phone numbers also for the police or fire department, Con Edison, Sanitation Department, Ambulance, and the management or landlord phone number. The last time building workers struck was 15 – 20 years ago which lasted a few days. Just be ready Saturday morning when you don't see the doorman, superintendent, or any other building worker around. 


BCEQ Annual Meeting


Water Conference 2015 Postcard



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Click here for more information about The Bronx Council for Environmental Quality's Annual Membership Meeting and Water Conference. Wednesday March 18th, 2015 from 3-7 PM at Manhattan College's Leo Engineering Building  3825 Corlear Avenue in The Bronx (1 block west of Broadway at 238th St.)
The Program is free and open to the public.  Special thanks to Con Edison for their support and the refreshments for this conference.


RSVP to pre-registerrsvp@bceq.org
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    Saturday, March 7, 2015

    Finally - Mr. Chairman, Bronx Democratic County Organization




     





























      
      I wrote in a February 1, 2015 st blog posting When Carl Heastie announced he was stepping down that there were only two possible candidates to fill his county leader position.  Two weeks later in my Bronx News political column '100 PERCENT' it was narrowed down to the next county leader, and just why. That is the reason that I have not been in a rush to tell you who the new Bronx Democratic County Leader was, because I already told you weeks ago. 

      My congratulations once again to the new Bronx Democratic County Leader Assemblyman Marcos Crespo. I know that Assemblyman Crespo will step up into the position of Bronx Democratic County Leader just as he did when he stepped up into the role of the new 85th assemblyman in 2009 when his predecessor 85th A.D. Assemblyman Ruben Diaz Jr. was elected Bronx Borough President. 

      I have already spoken to Bronx Democratic County Leader Crespo, and said that I will be watching him like I have past county leaders. I offered some advice to Marcos, and told him that he is now going to be the new target of certain people including those who have been trying to go after his predecessor, now Speaker Carl Heastie.  


    Upcoming Bronx Chamber of Commerce Events




    Here are a listing of Upcoming events sponsored by the Bronx Chamber of Commerce. Please read each one carefully for all the information.



    Join the Bronx Chamber of Commerce at our upcoming events: 




    Friday, March 6, 2015

    Is Oliver Koppell Moving out of Riverdale?



      Pictured above holding the Riverdale restaurant Guide that he and KRVDC produced when he was in the City Council, Oliver Koppell has put his home in Fiedston up for sale according to Crains New York. Crains quotes Koppell "It has nothing to do with politics," Crains adds that Koppell says the decision to sell the $2.5 million asking price for his current home is due to the desire to find a smaller place to live for just him and his wife Lorraine now that they are the only 2 occupants of the home. 

      The Crains article goes on to say that the Koppells have not decided where to live and can be found here.

    Editors Note:   The Koppells have grandchildren near the Washington D,C, area where they have vacationed at in the past few years. Perhaps Congressman Eliot Engel might be thinking of retirement. Could we then see a congressional run by Oliver Koppell?



    Women's History Month Celebration 2015 By Bronx BP D



    Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr.

    Invites you to celebrate

    Women's History Month

    Honoring Outstanding Leaders of the 21st Century

    Thursday, March 19, 2015 
               
     Breakfast will be from 10:00 am - 11:30 am
     Program to begin at 11:45 am.


    Sukanya Krishnan  
    PIX 11 Morning News  
    Mistress of Ceremoni

     Pelham Split Rock
            870 Shore Road, Bronx


         

           HONOREES 
    Marissa Shorenstein
    President of AT&T NY
    at AT & T Corp.














    Sonia Manzano
    Actress & Author

    Verona Greenland
    Founder, President & CEO Morris Heights Health Center, Inc




                                                                                               
    Musical Entertainment 
    Sophisticated Ladies Jazz Band
    Celia Cruz Bronx High School of Music

    Seating is Limited.  Please call 718-590-3522 to confirm your attendance or