The fallout from the Philadelphia School District's budget
crisis continues: As of Monday, 139 teachers had been moved to new schools -
seven weeks into the term, and shortly before students' first report card
grades are due.
"Leveling" - moving teachers based on schools'
enrollment - occurs every year.
But it has been particularly painful this year, with fiscal
concerns spurring more changes than usual as schools aim to keep class sizes at
or under their maximums, 30 for the lower grades and 33 in higher grades.
According to data released by the district Monday, the 139
teachers shuffled represents a 70 percent increase in transfers. The district
also added 29 teachers, down from 42 last year. The number of classrooms split
between two grades was reduced to 50 from 100.
For the last several years, there have been no split
classes.
Leveling also happened later than usual this year. Officials
said they needed extra time to work through the complications of the budget
crunch. Teachers' union officials say the delay was unnecessary.
Principals for the first time were permitted to use factors
other than seniority when making their staffing adjustments. District officials
said they did not immediately have data on how many leveling moves bypassed
seniority rules.
Superintendent William R. Hite Jr. said in a statement that
the changes were painful but necessary, and would help overcrowding in several
schools, "providing better learning environments for our students."
"Leveling is an opportunity to address enrollment
concerns early in the school year," he said.
But many see leveling as disruptive. Protests both formal
and informal erupted at schools around the city in the last few weeks.
At Cook-Wissahickon Elementary in Roxborough, a large crowd
turned out to voice displeasure over the process, in which two teachers left
the school and a split third- and fourth-grade class was added.
At Vare-Washington Elementary in South Philadelphia, a group
of parents and teachers protested the loss of multiple staffers.
Yvette Chandler, a parent of two daughters who attend
Vare-Washington, was part of the group that was outside the school last week.
Chandler's older daughter is in a special-education
classroom that used to have two teachers. Now, she said, there is only one.
Other classes at the school are overcrowded, she said.
"The kids don't understand why many of them are being
overloaded," Chandler said. "Do you see how much they're trying to do
to discourage us? Pretty soon, there's going to be more dropouts than
ever."
District-wide, the changes are causing a ripple effect.
Parkway Center City, a magnet high school, lost one teacher, but class
schedules were shuffled for almost everyone. Some students who had been
enrolled in Spanish lost the class and will have to take the subject in another
year, one teacher said.
Social studies teacher Dave Thomer lost one section of world
history and picked up a section of ethics in its place.
"I have to do enough in the next three weeks that I
feel comfortable giving kids a grade," said Thomer. "I'm starting
from scratch, seven weeks into the school year."
Backed by a strong school administration, Parkway Center
City is making do - teachers pitching in; aides working extra, unpaid hours;
students volunteering as office staff - "but it's incredibly frustrating,"
Thomer said.
At AMY at James Martin, a middle school in Port Richmond,
math teacher Rick Haas spent seven weeks building relationships. But he worked
his last day there Friday. The school lost two teachers, including Haas, and
every student got new rosters.
Students started a petition to save Haas and the other
teacher who was bumped, but there was no response from the district.
Haas reported to Penrose Elementary on Monday, reluctantly
starting over almost three months into the school year.
"Going in, I had nothing prepared. I didn't even know
if I had a classroom," Haas said. He's going to make the best of it, Haas
said, but is concerned about the students at his old school.
"These kids have to get grades," Haas said.
"Some of them are struggling, and they need support."
Philadelphia Federation of Teachers president Jerry Jordan,
who welcomed the reduction in split classes but said it did not go far enough,
believes the changes came far too late.
"It's in everyone's best interests to make the
adjustments as early as possible," Jordan said. "The district could
and should have leveled two weeks ago, as scheduled."
BY THE NUMBERS
139 Teachers moved to new schools, compared
with 82 last year.
29 New teachers hired, compared with 42 last year.
50 Classrooms split between two grades, down from 100.
Source: Philly.com
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