1hr for Public Comment
8:30 School Board Convenes to Discuss and Vote on Actions
Action #1 Student Enrollment Realignment Plan
Action #2 Allocate $750,000.00 to hire a Curriculum Alignment Consultant
Action #1 Encompasses all of the issues having to do with where students get to go to school based on where they live and the services that must be provided to accommodate them. This means all schools offer inclusive classrooms to accommodate all special education students and all schools offer inclusive classrooms to accommodate ELL students. On the other hand it does not mean that all schools offer inclusive classrooms to accommodate APP students and it does not mean that all schools offer inclusive classrooms to accommodate Spectrum students. These students still get bussed to special service centers. And it grandfathers siblings of students who are already in favorite choice schools no matter where they come from to displace students who live in the geographic regions from which their local school draws.
Steve Sundquist District VI School Board Member was heard saying, "The whole success of this realignment of students to go to their local schools is predicated on every school offering the same high quality education."
Action #2 $750,000.00 of Gates grant money to be allocated to hire a curriculum alignment consultant to supplement and guide the current curriculum alignment team at the Seattle School District office to fully align all high school curriculum to meet "College Readiness Standards" part of the long term strategic plan which provides a common curriculum, with common standards and expectations for all students.
A lone man with a white goatee stands in protest as the school board asks questions about the purpose of the expenditure of these funds.
Director Harium Martin-Morris asks the curriculum staffer why they need to spend this money suggesting that she had already done all this work. The curriculum staffer responds that we've only started it for Language Arts and Math and we are understaffed to do it for Social Studies and World Languages and more. We need some professional to lead us through the process of curriculum adoption, to spearhead our effort to align all of our curriculum so teachers know exactly what we want them to teach and so they can be held accountable for insuring that all students learn what is expected of them without differentiation, the same standard for all. This way we can have accountability to our goal of all students achieving a "college readiness" curriculum. We need some professional to lead us through the process of curriculum adoption to insure that all schools teach from the same materials.
Director Peter Mairer expresses concern that there was a great deal of concern about the Language Arts curriculum adoption. The staffer indicates that her and the superintendantent vetted the program pieces in front of Roosevelt High School and they seemed satisfied that if a teacher wanted to vary from the curriculur demand he/she could bring their lesson plan in front of a committee and argue that it accomplishes the same thing and it could be passed on by the committee.
Director Sherry Carr asks the staffer if in the discussion with Roosevelt there had been any discussion about site based decision making. The staffer appeals to the superintendant without help and answers there wasn't much discussion of this but Roosevelt seemed pleased with what they were hearing. We certainly will be looking for input, none of these things have been worked out yet.
Director Mary Bass asks why only Roosevelt was consulted. The staffer responds that Roosevelt asked for the audience.
Director Peter Mairer asks the superintendant what role the School Board is being asked to play in this. He thought there was a day for curriculum overview to be discussed next Tuesday and here they are already being asked to fund this without being fully clear on what exactly is meant by curricular alignment.
Director Steve Sundquist expresses concern that though he is certainly for alignment what he is uncomfortable with is how far does this alignment range that he would be much more comfortable exploring this in depth then passing this without fully understanding what changes in curriculum we are looking for.
Superintendant Goodloe Johnson explains that all of this discussion about text book adoption while relevant because it will be influenced by this is not the central piece of the recommendation. The central piece of the recommendation is to get a professional in here to help us get our "College Readiness" curriculum aligned so that all students will have access to the same curriculum.
President Michael DeBell making the final profferment suggests that there are too many unanswered questions. What he hears from the conversation that the movement that is being suggested is moving too fast and too far from where schools had been thinking that they were doing something special to curriculum being mandated. That it is in the best interest of the board to attend the full day conference on Tuesday
Director Cheryl Chow speaking out of turn says unfortunately she won't be in town for the conference but as the only educator among them having been a principal that when non-educators hear things like this are having a knee jerk reaction to curriculum alignment, it does not mean that teachers will not be able to bring in supplemental work or be creative.
President Michael DeBell Calls for the vote
The man in the white goatee respectfully sits down having done his best to show incredible discontent at the suggestion that all of the curriculum decision making be centralized. Thinking to himself, where is the teacher in all this discussion?
The Vote is taken
Peter Mairer Aye
Martin Morris No
Steve Sundquist Aye
Mary Bass No
Sherry Carr No
Cheryl Chow Aye
Michael DeBell Aye
4 Aye 3 Nos
$750,000.00 from the Gates Money was approved to turn curriculum alignment over to a professional educational consultant to work with the district staff to come up with their plan which Tim Ames sent you or can be found at the Seattle School District Sight.
The Man with the white Goatee leaves, throwing all of the papers he had gathered in the meeting into the garbage can to express his disgust at a process where despite the board members own obvious reservations were willing to let this major transformation of how curriculum alignment is to be done and by whom become the order of the day funded by the Gates Foundation, the same group which funded the now failed small schools movement.
The man in the white goatee could only ponder, "What do teachers in the classroom have to do with teaching anyway?"
I will follow this lengthy story with my commentary on the next post. But this is how it is done in the Seattle School District. This is what Gates money does. If it was $750,000.00 of their own. No way No how but since it is free money who needs to consult teachers just pretend that you have a real professional doing it for you and that is what it will make it good. Superintendant Goodloe Johnson said that you know we are just receiving advice from the consultants and we can take what we like and leave what we don't. Just like she kept what she liked in the McKenzie Report which now has been used to justify everything in the "Excellence For All" five year plan.
SHMUEL Aka The Man in the White Goatee. The lone voice silenced by the rules of the school board as the railroad running through the school board members, non-educators, who are clearly outmatched by a Superintendant that can spew out phrases like "College Readiness" like its something new and to which the hapless board members nod in obeisance.