A member of the Philadelphia School Reform Commission has
come under fire for yelling at student protesters who disrupted a parent movie
night Wednesday at School District headquarters.
Ruby Anderson, a senior at Science Leadership Academy, a
top city magnet school, and two other attendees said Commissioner Sylvia Simms
asked the students what schools they attended and then told them, "You all
probably go to failing schools."
The students, members of the Philadelphia Student Union,
were there to object to the showing of Won't Back Down, about parents who
become frustrated with the public school system and the teachers' union, and
try to start their own school. They decried the decision to show the movie,
which they see as antiunion, a week after the district canceled its teacher
contract.
"I thought it was pretty inappropriate for a public
official to yell at people she's supposed to be representing," said
Anderson, who was among about 20 students staging the sit-in. "I also
thought it was really inappropriate for her to assert that the school we went
to, if it were failing, meant we had no right to dissent."
Simms said she raised her voice to the students because
they were chanting loudly despite repeated requests for them to stop, and she
wanted to communicate. Simms, 53, a North Philadelphia grandmother, parent
organizer, and mayoral appointee, said she talked about failing schools, but
denied saying the students attend them, though she said she could not remember
exactly what she said.
"I've noticed we have a lot of failing
schools," she said. "It's my job to try to fix as many schools as I
can."
Simms said she was annoyed that the students disrupted
the event, which drew about 30 parents and was held for parent appreciation
month, and sponsored by the Women's Christian Alliance.
"I thought that what they did was really
inappropriate," said attendee Jay Cohen, who has a daughter at Central
High. "It's very important for students to have a voice and exercise that
voice in a democratic society, but what they were doing is preventing other
people from getting information."
Simms also noted that the event had been planned well
before last week's SRC vote. A former School District bus attendant and union
member, she said she didn't see the film as antiunion but as a good example of
parental involvement.
At the event, students sat on the floor in the front of
the room and chanted "Philly is a union town" and "Hey, hey, ho,
ho, the SRC has got to go."
When police showed up, the students left the building,
and no arrests were made. The movie then was shown in its entirety.
"I'm appalled and I'm angered, and I feel let
down," said Nomi Martin-Brouillette, a senior at Science Leadership
Academy, who objected to police being called.
The incident drew Twitter traffic, with calls for Simms'
resignation.
Lori Shorr, Mayor Nutter's chief education officer, said
the incident shows how tensions have flared as the district deals with a lack
of adequate funding.
"Everybody is stretched to such extremes . . . given
the underfunding of our schools, that unfortunately these tensions start to
play out even among people who are on the same side of the issue," she
said, "the issue being, we need more funding in our schools."
Source: Philly.com
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