Anonymous wrote:On IB degradation beyond personnel: the staff letter provides quite a bit of specific evidence.
Here’s what it documents:
The MYP Coordinator resigned in February with no succession plan and no communication to families. Community and Personal Projects, which are IB requirements not optional programming, are currently operating with little to no guidance for 8th and 10th grade students right now.
IB coordinator roles have been restructured to include unrelated coaching duties, in some cases supervising double or triple the number of teachers they previously did. This directly reduces their capacity to manage IB program requirements, which are substantial and non-negotiable.
Teachers no longer receive consistent IB-specific training. The IB has very specific professional development requirements that must be documented and verified at program evaluation. The letter describes the process as having become “convoluted and difficult to maneuver.”
The French language track has had multiple phases collapsed into single courses that the letter says serve neither set of language learners. Current middle school students are not receiving the same degree of target language instruction as previous cohorts and will arrive in DP years at a deficit. The board presented biliteracy outcomes at the March meeting as evidence the program is strong, but the letter points out those outcomes reflect students who were taught under the old model. The current cohort is a different story.
And what we do know about the DP Coordinator is that he had a history of only strong performance evaluations per the staff letter, that 744 students signed a petition to reinstate him, and that the ED told an alum inquiring about his status that conversations about his future at DCI were ongoing when verifiably no such conversations were happening.
Here is why the personnel and the IB program degradation are not separate issues: the DP Coordinator oversees the Extended Essay, Theory of Knowledge, and the full diploma candidacy process. The MYP Coordinator manages Personal and Community Projects. These are not general administrator roles.
They require IB-specific training and certification and years of program experience. Losing both simultaneously, with no succession plan, at a school with an IB re-evaluation coming in 2027-28, is not a personnel matter. It is a program integrity matter.
Anonymous wrote:When lamb removed their ED after the Fernández situation, we were in a long period of instability. Then we got a truly awful ed who was eventually fired. Then more instability. Then our current ED who I don’t like at all. None of them ever resolved the many issues parents brought up over the years.
I still feel it was worth removing Diane as ED. She made catastrophic choices. But for years we had instability and the school declined. I don’t want to deal with years of that. I am fine with dci’s ED but I do want them to address the points on the parent petition.
Also fyi when they removed the EDs from lamb usually the Board chair becomes ED. Do you want Pardo in charge, even in the short term?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When lamb removed their ED after the Fernández situation, we were in a long period of instability. Then we got a truly awful ed who was eventually fired. Then more instability. Then our current ED who I don’t like at all. None of them ever resolved the many issues parents brought up over the years.
I still feel it was worth removing Diane as ED. She made catastrophic choices. But for years we had instability and the school declined. I don’t want to deal with years of that. I am fine with dci’s ED but I do want them to address the points on the parent petition.
Also fyi when they removed the EDs from lamb usually the Board chair becomes ED. Do you want Pardo in charge, even in the short term?
Everyone knows Pardo is as evil as the ED. They both need to go. There are other leaders in the school who could step in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When lamb removed their ED after the Fernández situation, we were in a long period of instability. Then we got a truly awful ed who was eventually fired. Then more instability. Then our current ED who I don’t like at all. None of them ever resolved the many issues parents brought up over the years.
I still feel it was worth removing Diane as ED. She made catastrophic choices. But for years we had instability and the school declined. I don’t want to deal with years of that. I am fine with dci’s ED but I do want them to address the points on the parent petition.
Also fyi when they removed the EDs from lamb usually the Board chair becomes ED. Do you want Pardo in charge, even in the short term?
Everyone knows Pardo is as evil as the ED. They both need to go. There are other leaders in the school who could step in.
Anonymous wrote:When lamb removed their ED after the Fernández situation, we were in a long period of instability. Then we got a truly awful ed who was eventually fired. Then more instability. Then our current ED who I don’t like at all. None of them ever resolved the many issues parents brought up over the years.
I still feel it was worth removing Diane as ED. She made catastrophic choices. But for years we had instability and the school declined. I don’t want to deal with years of that. I am fine with dci’s ED but I do want them to address the points on the parent petition.
Also fyi when they removed the EDs from lamb usually the Board chair becomes ED. Do you want Pardo in charge, even in the short term?
Anonymous wrote:
The letter makes claims about things that happened- specifically the undermining of the IB model where I’m most interested- and doesn’t provide specific examples.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If 94% of the people who worked for me said they don’t have confidence in me I’d be humiliated. And I’d resign.
Rosskamm is desperately clinging on because he needs this grift.
Sincerely if 94% said they didn’t have confidence in me my first question would be “I didn’t ask you”.
I’m not worried that the staff has no confidence.
WTF!!!
94% of your staff says they don’t have confidence in you, and you respond, “I didn’t ask you”.
What kind of psychopath thinks this way
Are you our President lol
I get why you feel that way but ultimately the boss often has to make hard decisions. As a parent I want to understand why staff voted this way. That’s the part I’m having an issue understanding.
Really? This again? Many of us are "bosses" who have to make hard decisions that are unpopular.
That's vastly different from being so bad at your job that 94% of your employees vote that they have no confidence in you.
As a point of reference, the current president has a 40% approval rating.
You keep pointing to the 94% as if that’s necessary and sufficient. To a large plurality, if not majority here, there’s not enough detail in anything provided up to this point for that to be the case.
The partisans against the head of school on here and IRL have negatively polarized other parents because their ability to argue is so low. Honestly I would be worried to see this level of argument from a high school kid, let alone an adult who passed a writing class in college.
So you're at the insults stage now? You’re the only one dismissing the staff’s vote and continually complaining there are no details despite ample evidence otherwise.
A six-page staff letter with five numbered categories of specific concerns, dates, names, and figures has been shared in this thread multiple times. 94% of the staff have confidence in the ED.
If that’s not enough detail, I’d genuinely like to know what would be. Not rhetorically. What specific question do you have that hasn’t been answered? I’ll answer it.
As for the quality of argument: attacking how people write instead of what they’re saying is what you do when you don’t have a response to what they’re saying.
The 94% isn’t the whole argument. It’s one data point in a documented case. If you’ve been in this thread and still think there’s no detail, that’s a choice, not a conclusion.
The letter makes claims about things that happened- specifically the undermining of the IB model where I’m most interested- and doesn’t provide specific examples.
Again, you seem to be unable to distinguish between a claim, evidence for a claim, and an emotional appeal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If 94% of the people who worked for me said they don’t have confidence in me I’d be humiliated. And I’d resign.
Rosskamm is desperately clinging on because he needs this grift.
Sincerely if 94% said they didn’t have confidence in me my first question would be “I didn’t ask you”.
I’m not worried that the staff has no confidence.
WTF!!!
94% of your staff says they don’t have confidence in you, and you respond, “I didn’t ask you”.
What kind of psychopath thinks this way
Are you our President lol
I get why you feel that way but ultimately the boss often has to make hard decisions. As a parent I want to understand why staff voted this way. That’s the part I’m having an issue understanding.
Really? This again? Many of us are "bosses" who have to make hard decisions that are unpopular.
That's vastly different from being so bad at your job that 94% of your employees vote that they have no confidence in you.
As a point of reference, the current president has a 40% approval rating.
You keep pointing to the 94% as if that’s necessary and sufficient. To a large plurality, if not majority here, there’s not enough detail in anything provided up to this point for that to be the case.
The partisans against the head of school on here and IRL have negatively polarized other parents because their ability to argue is so low. Honestly I would be worried to see this level of argument from a high school kid, let alone an adult who passed a writing class in college.
So you're at the insults stage now? You’re the only one dismissing the staff’s vote and continually complaining there are no details despite ample evidence otherwise.
A six-page staff letter with five numbered categories of specific concerns, dates, names, and figures has been shared in this thread multiple times. 94% of the staff have confidence in the ED.
If that’s not enough detail, I’d genuinely like to know what would be. Not rhetorically. What specific question do you have that hasn’t been answered? I’ll answer it.
As for the quality of argument: attacking how people write instead of what they’re saying is what you do when you don’t have a response to what they’re saying.
The 94% isn’t the whole argument. It’s one data point in a documented case. If you’ve been in this thread and still think there’s no detail, that’s a choice, not a conclusion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If 94% of the people who worked for me said they don’t have confidence in me I’d be humiliated. And I’d resign.
Rosskamm is desperately clinging on because he needs this grift.
Sincerely if 94% said they didn’t have confidence in me my first question would be “I didn’t ask you”.
I’m not worried that the staff has no confidence.
WTF!!!
94% of your staff says they don’t have confidence in you, and you respond, “I didn’t ask you”.
What kind of psychopath thinks this way
Are you our President lol
I get why you feel that way but ultimately the boss often has to make hard decisions. As a parent I want to understand why staff voted this way. That’s the part I’m having an issue understanding.
Really? This again? Many of us are "bosses" who have to make hard decisions that are unpopular.
That's vastly different from being so bad at your job that 94% of your employees vote that they have no confidence in you.
As a point of reference, the current president has a 40% approval rating.
You keep pointing to the 94% as if that’s necessary and sufficient. To a large plurality, if not majority here, there’s not enough detail in anything provided up to this point for that to be the case.
The partisans against the head of school on here and IRL have negatively polarized other parents because their ability to argue is so low. Honestly I would be worried to see this level of argument from a high school kid, let alone an adult who passed a writing class in college.
So you're at the insults stage now? You’re the only one dismissing the staff’s vote and continually complaining there are no details despite ample evidence otherwise.
A six-page staff letter with five numbered categories of specific concerns, dates, names, and figures has been shared in this thread multiple times. 94% of the staff have confidence in the ED.
If that’s not enough detail, I’d genuinely like to know what would be. Not rhetorically. What specific question do you have that hasn’t been answered? I’ll answer it.
As for the quality of argument: attacking how people write instead of what they’re saying is what you do when you don’t have a response to what they’re saying.
The 94% isn’t the whole argument. It’s one data point in a documented case. If you’ve been in this thread and still think there’s no detail, that’s a choice, not a conclusion.