Laura Fuchs: Testimony on “Schools First in Budgeting Amendment Act of 2021” ”

Listening to Council Chairman Phil Mendelson speak on this bill I am glad to see that we are focusing on one of the chief concerns many of us have had for a long time – the size of Central Office. I hope that, as others have brought up, that we do everything we can to protect the neighborhood public schools from being closed.

I do think that Central Office provides important logistical support for our schools. Something it is failing in dramatically. Teachers wait for months to have basic paperwork processed. Pay is done incorrectly. Teachers still haven’t gotten paid for work done last year. In that vein if DCPS needs more money to hire additional workers for these important functions, I think that it is reasonable to increase the “Central Administration” staffing to make sure they can increase staffing in this highly necessary area.

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Schools First In Budgeting- Cathy Reilly

We share the Chairman’s concern for financial stability for the city’s DCPS schools. They are the core of the public infrastructure. I believe DCPS’s survival, strength and growth are vital to our city’s civic health.

What you are considering today addresses some of the most complicated and difficult parts of running a school system. I have served on Local School Advisory Teams pretty consistently for the last 20 years- mainly high schools as well as on DCPS budget committees and the USPSFF committee.

The task has only grown more difficult even as the city has more money now. Enrollment is not steady. There are more citywide seats and citywide schools then we can afford. Policies prioritizing choice and competition mean the city has increased capacity unrelated to need. This is a challenge for both sectors as new schools become dependent on recruiting students from existing schools. This has created a structural instability that will become even more stressful as costs grow and enrollment declines which seem to be on the horizon.

There is no silver bullet or simple budget fix especially in this environment.

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MacArthur Blvd DCPS High School Capacity

I, as the head of the Senior High Alliance of Parents, Principals and Educators and the convener of the Ward 4 Ed Alliance continue to make the argument that a DCPS high school at the MacArthur Blvd location should be 750 not 1000.

- The projected population of 14 to 17 year olds in Neighborhood clusters 4 and 13 is 953 by 2025[i]

- The grade level enrollment at Hardy is about 180 per grade (4 times 180 is 720)

- Students graduating from Hardy will attend the MacArthur School as well as School Without Walls, Ellington, Banneker, private schools as well as potentially some charter schools. They will not all attend MacArthur, similar to the choices available to families from middle to high school across the city.

- There are 204 out of boundary students across the grade span at Hardy. This indicates there are opportunities for students from across the city to have access[ii]

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Education Research Collaborative Listening Session

Thank you for this opportunity to give you input into your agenda I am Cathy Reilly of the Senior High Alliance of Parents, Principals and Educators as well as the facilitator of the Ward 4 Education Alliance and the C4DC – Coalition for DC Public Schools and Communities.

I filled out your survey and look forward to hearing from others. There are a lot of areas we need more insight into including policy that allows for virtually an ever expanding supply of schools regardless of space in existing school buildings.

My ask tonight is that you focus on providing research on the measures supported by the SBOE to OSSE on indicators including school climate, safety, student engagement and satisfaction, teacher retention as well as student growth. https://sboe.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/sboe/page_content/attachments/2022-01-19-Signed-SR22-1%20STAR%20Framework%20Resolution-AS%20AMENDED_0.pdf

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Valerie Jablow testimony to DC Council on Literacy

My name is Valerie Jablow, and I have been a DCPS parent for the last 17 years. Both of my children were taught to read starting in preK4, their first year in DCPS. In that time, my children also had access to high-quality school libraries, which provided a rich source of materials for them to not only read, but to enjoy. Those school libraries were led by school librarians, who ensured that reading materials were up to date, appropriate, plentiful, and engaging, while also ensuring that students had regular and supportive access and guidance around those materials. Those librarians worked with my children’s teachers directly, as integral partners in student literacy.

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DC Teacher Turnover: A 2022 Update

A recently released report on the DC public education workforce includes teacher turnover between SY 2020-21 and SY 2021-22 (Office of the State Superintendent of Education, https://osse.dc.gov/node/1597311).[1] The report itself does not differentiate results from DCPS as opposed from the charter sector, nor provide school by school data. The OSSE website, however, includes a dataset with demographic and classroom teacher retention data for each school in both sectors. I have adapted that dataset to show school-by-school teacher attrition numbers in a more user-friendly form, and have added analysis by ward, level of instruction, and percentage of students identified as at-risk. It can be viewed here. I have also updated files going back over seven years showing the correlation between DCPS teacher ratings and teacher attrition. See here.

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SHAPPE letter with Added Signatures on MacArthur Rd High School

We appreciate your focus in this year’s capital budget on the DCPS neighborhood schools. Both those identified through the PACE Act as well as those with additional pressures on crowding.

The Capital budget has funding for a new high school in Ward 3 at the MacArthur site of the former Georgetown Day School. This school is planned to relieve the crowding at Jackson Reed HS which is acute. Students from Hardy MS will feed into the new school.

The PACE Act document identifies the projected capacity of the MacArthur HS as 1000, and the capital budget identifies 45m. Our request is for the capacity of this high school to be held at 750 and the budget adjusted to fit that number.

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Valerie Jablow- Council Budget Oversight Hearing

The proposed capital plan for DCPS is both wasteful and inequitable and will result in great harm to students and families east of Rock Creek Park and to their DCPS schools.

On March 14, Jennifer Comey, director of planning and analysis with the office of the deputy mayor for education, shared a slide deck with C4DC.

It shows that DC’s birth rate as well as student enrollment are not increasing—and that kindergarten enrollment hit its peak in 2016. The kindergarten students then are now hitting middle school, so we are consequently seeing a slight increase in middle and high school enrollment. That increase will soon disappear.

Yet, days after that presentation, and with the knowledge that DC has at least 20,000 empty seats in its publicly funded schools, the mayor announced more than $100 MILLION to increase capacity of DCPS schools in the wealthiest area of the city with the some of the fewest resident kids; highest private school participation rates; and lowest births.

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Testimony of the WLC on Civil Rights and Urban Affairs on FY23 Budget

The Washington Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights and Urban Affairs urges the Council to redouble efforts to reverse the effects of generations of systemic racial discrimination and poverty, and to invest in a racially just education system in DC. The legacy of a segregated and unequal education system is still the reality for many parents and students today: Black and Latino students in DC are more likely to attend public schools that are under-resourced, outdated, and over-policed.

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Valerie Jablow testimony on Fairness in Use - bill 24-0554

I am Valerie Jablow, and as a DCPS parent and taxpayer who has for years encountered secrecy regarding even the most basic aspects of our publicly funded schools, I cannot emphasize enough the need for bill 24-0554, “Fairness in use and negotiations for all recreational property”—and for extending public scrutiny around contracts, leases, agreements, and other legal ties with private entities for ALL DC’s public spaces and buildings, particularly DCPS buildings.

Consider how in less than 8 years, Mayor Bowser has repeatedly and unilaterally written the public out from its own public school assets:

--demolished more buildings for DCPS schools of right (Shaw, Marshall, now Winston) than many (possibly all) of her predecessors;

--closed Washington Met and subsequently leased it to Howard without public process;

--seized a field from a DCPS high school (Duke Ellington) to assuage public outcry over the privately executed lease of another public field to a private school;

--signed over for 15 years a public school building (Old Hardy) to a private school (Lab) without any notice to the public;

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