Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope Rocketship can pull through. It is a tough environment but the model is innovative and the students are capable. They could hire more experienced staff in ELA and Math for targeted academic interventions. I think they wil reach their goal of 35% at Legacy and Rise. The communities need those schools and with more time, I think there will be academic improvements.
I also hope that Rocketship starts to thrive. The PCSB has given them time and kids are there so those wishing for Rocketship's failure are wishing for the failure of kids during critical elementary years. What I don't understand is the model -- is it really innovative today when so many schools now rely on technology to support instruction and have blended software/online programs into their core offerings. Can you say more about the model and how it's innovative?
Oh FFS. Nobody is wishing for failure of the kids! The kids will do better if Rocketship is closed and they are sent to any of the many better-performing schools in the area. Yes, Ward 8 has many schools that are better than Rocketship. Enough already. Five years of poorly serving these kids is enough. Accountability means closure happens when performance is low.
I don't disagree with "enough already" BUT here's what is being missed -- Rocketship isn't closed. It isn't being closed. It isn't in danger of being closed. The PCSB has already decided that they are getting more time so the kids in Rocketship now need it to improve. In fact, the PCSB has given Rocketship at least three years for continued failure. Or to thrive. I'm hoping for thriving because a PK-5 student losing three years of a quality education is rarely repairable.
On the contrary, it is in danger of being closed if it does not meet the performance metrics starting in school year 27-28. Now, the PCSB does whatever they want so they might not close Rocketship even if it doesn't meet the stated goal. But if you look at how terrible Rocketship Legacy's scores are, it's hard to see how it can improve fast enough.
Rocketship DC is also in danger of being closed by the Rocketship organization if enrollment continues to decline. Ridiculous Rocketship booster PP whines about not comparing to pre-COVID metrics, but that's beside the point. Rocketship's DC enrollment in the current school year is 1078, down from 1197 last year and 1376 the year before that. (I did this with the Subsequent Financial Memo). Legacy, the worst-performing camps, lost 92 kids relative to the 530 it had last year. This is simply not sustainable. No kids = no school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope Rocketship can pull through. It is a tough environment but the model is innovative and the students are capable. They could hire more experienced staff in ELA and Math for targeted academic interventions. I think they wil reach their goal of 35% at Legacy and Rise. The communities need those schools and with more time, I think there will be academic improvements.
I also hope that Rocketship starts to thrive. The PCSB has given them time and kids are there so those wishing for Rocketship's failure are wishing for the failure of kids during critical elementary years. What I don't understand is the model -- is it really innovative today when so many schools now rely on technology to support instruction and have blended software/online programs into their core offerings. Can you say more about the model and how it's innovative?
Oh FFS. Nobody is wishing for failure of the kids! The kids will do better if Rocketship is closed and they are sent to any of the many better-performing schools in the area. Yes, Ward 8 has many schools that are better than Rocketship. Enough already. Five years of poorly serving these kids is enough. Accountability means closure happens when performance is low.
I don't disagree with "enough already" BUT here's what is being missed -- Rocketship isn't closed. It isn't being closed. It isn't in danger of being closed. The PCSB has already decided that they are getting more time so the kids in Rocketship now need it to improve. In fact, the PCSB has given Rocketship at least three years for continued failure. Or to thrive. I'm hoping for thriving because a PK-5 student losing three years of a quality education is rarely repairable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope Rocketship can pull through. It is a tough environment but the model is innovative and the students are capable. They could hire more experienced staff in ELA and Math for targeted academic interventions. I think they wil reach their goal of 35% at Legacy and Rise. The communities need those schools and with more time, I think there will be academic improvements.
I also hope that Rocketship starts to thrive. The PCSB has given them time and kids are there so those wishing for Rocketship's failure are wishing for the failure of kids during critical elementary years. What I don't understand is the model -- is it really innovative today when so many schools now rely on technology to support instruction and have blended software/online programs into their core offerings. Can you say more about the model and how it's innovative?
Oh FFS. Nobody is wishing for failure of the kids! The kids will do better if Rocketship is closed and they are sent to any of the many better-performing schools in the area. Yes, Ward 8 has many schools that are better than Rocketship. Enough already. Five years of poorly serving these kids is enough. Accountability means closure happens when performance is low.
I don't disagree with "enough already" BUT here's what is being missed -- Rocketship isn't closed. It isn't being closed. It isn't in danger of being closed. The PCSB has already decided that they are getting more time so the kids in Rocketship now need it to improve. In fact, the PCSB has given Rocketship at least three years for continued failure. Or to thrive. I'm hoping for thriving because a PK-5 student losing three years of a quality education is rarely repairable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope Rocketship can pull through. It is a tough environment but the model is innovative and the students are capable. They could hire more experienced staff in ELA and Math for targeted academic interventions. I think they wil reach their goal of 35% at Legacy and Rise. The communities need those schools and with more time, I think there will be academic improvements.
I also hope that Rocketship starts to thrive. The PCSB has given them time and kids are there so those wishing for Rocketship's failure are wishing for the failure of kids during critical elementary years. What I don't understand is the model -- is it really innovative today when so many schools now rely on technology to support instruction and have blended software/online programs into their core offerings. Can you say more about the model and how it's innovative?
Oh FFS. Nobody is wishing for failure of the kids! The kids will do better if Rocketship is closed and they are sent to any of the many better-performing schools in the area. Yes, Ward 8 has many schools that are better than Rocketship. Enough already. Five years of poorly serving these kids is enough. Accountability means closure happens when performance is low.
Anonymous wrote:Students have the potential to improve under the right conditions. It is unreasonable to compare enrollment numbers from pre- and post-COVID periods, as academic performance relies on many interdependent systems.
Rocketship deserves another opportunity to navigate these complexities and identify the best path forward for institutional success.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope Rocketship can pull through. It is a tough environment but the model is innovative and the students are capable. They could hire more experienced staff in ELA and Math for targeted academic interventions. I think they wil reach their goal of 35% at Legacy and Rise. The communities need those schools and with more time, I think there will be academic improvements.
Hello Rocketship staff person. Please explain why you think the communities need these schools given that they are performing lower than many nearby schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope Rocketship can pull through. It is a tough environment but the model is innovative and the students are capable. They could hire more experienced staff in ELA and Math for targeted academic interventions. I think they wil reach their goal of 35% at Legacy and Rise. The communities need those schools and with more time, I think there will be academic improvements.
I also hope that Rocketship starts to thrive. The PCSB has given them time and kids are there so those wishing for Rocketship's failure are wishing for the failure of kids during critical elementary years. What I don't understand is the model -- is it really innovative today when so many schools now rely on technology to support instruction and have blended software/online programs into their core offerings. Can you say more about the model and how it's innovative?
Anonymous wrote:I hope Rocketship can pull through. It is a tough environment but the model is innovative and the students are capable. They could hire more experienced staff in ELA and Math for targeted academic interventions. I think they wil reach their goal of 35% at Legacy and Rise. The communities need those schools and with more time, I think there will be academic improvements.
Anonymous wrote:Students have the potential to improve under the right conditions. It is unreasonable to compare enrollment numbers from pre- and post-COVID periods, as academic performance relies on many interdependent systems.
Rocketship deserves another opportunity to navigate these complexities and identify the best path forward for institutional success.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope Rocketship can pull through. It is a tough environment but the model is innovative and the students are capable. They could hire more experienced staff in ELA and Math for targeted academic interventions. I think they wil reach their goal of 35% at Legacy and Rise. The communities need those schools and with more time, I think there will be academic improvements.
Hello Rocketship staff person. Please explain why you think the communities need these schools given that they are performing lower than many nearby schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope Rocketship can pull through. It is a tough environment but the model is innovative and the students are capable. They could hire more experienced staff in ELA and Math for targeted academic interventions. I think they wil reach their goal of 35% at Legacy and Rise. The communities need those schools and with more time, I think there will be academic improvements.
Hello Rocketship staff person. Please explain why you think the communities need these schools given that they are performing lower than many nearby schools.
Anonymous wrote:I hope Rocketship can pull through. It is a tough environment but the model is innovative and the students are capable. They could hire more experienced staff in ELA and Math for targeted academic interventions. I think they wil reach their goal of 35% at Legacy and Rise. The communities need those schools and with more time, I think there will be academic improvements.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any insight on the SSMA additional provisions? Did the school agree to them?
I don't recall hearing anything about the process or if an agreement is needed for that, but I might have missed it. The only way I can do these long hearings is to listen to them on chipmunk speed. It seems like SSMA has to agree to whatever is put in front of it, because their performance is so poor that PCSB would have the right to shut it down (I think-- hard to say in this crazy time of incomplete performance analysis).
I don't understand how the process works here -- there seems to be a startling lack of transparency and due process. The conditions call for Shining Stars doubling proficiency to reach a higher percentile or they will close. I don't have a problem with the rigor of the condition -- the school needs to do better obviously -- but putting the condition into the consent agenda with no public discussion? No public interrogation of the school that they can meet the conditions and their plans to do so? Not having these conditions examined publicly means that parents choosing this school (and the broader public) have little chance to consider if they want to be part of this.
Also, the PCSB can vote at one meeting that there will be continuance/renewal/probation etc with conditions and then set any conditions they want with a future consent agenda item? Consent agendas should be for routine, non-controversial, and procedural items. This is anything but that.
Yeah, I don't know the answers to your questions. Honestly the PCSB makes it up as they go along, which is how SSMA got a probation concept here in the first place.
EXACTLY. The 15-year renewal is supposed to be an up or down vote to renew the charter or not. In the past, PCSB has asserted that conditions are only possible during the 5-year charter reviews. It is maddening from a process perspective.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any insight on the SSMA additional provisions? Did the school agree to them?
I don't recall hearing anything about the process or if an agreement is needed for that, but I might have missed it. The only way I can do these long hearings is to listen to them on chipmunk speed. It seems like SSMA has to agree to whatever is put in front of it, because their performance is so poor that PCSB would have the right to shut it down (I think-- hard to say in this crazy time of incomplete performance analysis).
I don't understand how the process works here -- there seems to be a startling lack of transparency and due process. The conditions call for Shining Stars doubling proficiency to reach a higher percentile or they will close. I don't have a problem with the rigor of the condition -- the school needs to do better obviously -- but putting the condition into the consent agenda with no public discussion? No public interrogation of the school that they can meet the conditions and their plans to do so? Not having these conditions examined publicly means that parents choosing this school (and the broader public) have little chance to consider if they want to be part of this.
Also, the PCSB can vote at one meeting that there will be continuance/renewal/probation etc with conditions and then set any conditions they want with a future consent agenda item? Consent agendas should be for routine, non-controversial, and procedural items. This is anything but that.
Yeah, I don't know the answers to your questions. Honestly the PCSB makes it up as they go along, which is how SSMA got a probation concept here in the first place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any insight on the SSMA additional provisions? Did the school agree to them?
I don't recall hearing anything about the process or if an agreement is needed for that, but I might have missed it. The only way I can do these long hearings is to listen to them on chipmunk speed. It seems like SSMA has to agree to whatever is put in front of it, because their performance is so poor that PCSB would have the right to shut it down (I think-- hard to say in this crazy time of incomplete performance analysis).
I don't understand how the process works here -- there seems to be a startling lack of transparency and due process. The conditions call for Shining Stars doubling proficiency to reach a higher percentile or they will close. I don't have a problem with the rigor of the condition -- the school needs to do better obviously -- but putting the condition into the consent agenda with no public discussion? No public interrogation of the school that they can meet the conditions and their plans to do so? Not having these conditions examined publicly means that parents choosing this school (and the broader public) have little chance to consider if they want to be part of this.
Also, the PCSB can vote at one meeting that there will be continuance/renewal/probation etc with conditions and then set any conditions they want with a future consent agenda item? Consent agendas should be for routine, non-controversial, and procedural items. This is anything but that.