Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t help but feel that the people who claim to love Stevens probably work there. It’s hard to genuinely love a public school—especially if your child is in the afterschool program. Stevens is deeply flawed for one main reason: the teachers don’t seem to care about students’ academic success, classroom performance, or even basic parent and child satisfaction. Since the school isn't ranked and around 55% of students only stay for a year, there seems to be little incentive for improvement. Plus, there are always families desperate for free childcare, so no matter how bad Stevens gets, there will always be children enrolled.
What academic success do you expect in pre-k? You should probably do the research, the more academics in early years (birth-5) the worse the results later. Play based learning is the best, your child's ‘academic performance’ should be prioritized in older grades.
It’s weird you have such a disdain for public schooling. Private and homeschooling is available.
Anonymous wrote:I can’t help but feel that the people who claim to love Stevens probably work there. It’s hard to genuinely love a public school—especially if your child is in the afterschool program. Stevens is deeply flawed for one main reason: the teachers don’t seem to care about students’ academic success, classroom performance, or even basic parent and child satisfaction. Since the school isn't ranked and around 55% of students only stay for a year, there seems to be little incentive for improvement. Plus, there are always families desperate for free childcare, so no matter how bad Stevens gets, there will always be children enrolled.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’ve had an extremely unfortunate experience with the teacher at Stevens. In our view, she exhibits behaviors and attitudes that make her unsuitable for working with young children. She often positions herself as a moral authority, yet frequently behaves in a way that is condescending and dismissive of both students and parents. Rather than engaging collaboratively, she tends to shame parents for expressing concerns about their children’s safety or academic progress.
She has made unfounded accusations against students, shows little regard for validating their emotions, and seems more focused on advancing her own rigid agenda than supporting the individual needs of the children. Although she outwardly promotes values like kindness, her actions often reflect pettiness, dishonesty, and a lack of empathy—qualities that are deeply troubling in an educator.
How has the administration responded to your concerns?
Anonymous wrote:We’ve had an extremely unfortunate experience with the teacher at Stevens. In our view, she exhibits behaviors and attitudes that make her unsuitable for working with young children. She often positions herself as a moral authority, yet frequently behaves in a way that is condescending and dismissive of both students and parents. Rather than engaging collaboratively, she tends to shame parents for expressing concerns about their children’s safety or academic progress.
She has made unfounded accusations against students, shows little regard for validating their emotions, and seems more focused on advancing her own rigid agenda than supporting the individual needs of the children. Although she outwardly promotes values like kindness, her actions often reflect pettiness, dishonesty, and a lack of empathy—qualities that are deeply troubling in an educator.
Anonymous wrote:I can’t help but feel that the people who claim to love Stevens probably work there. It’s hard to genuinely love a public school—especially if your child is in the afterschool program. Stevens is deeply flawed for one main reason: the teachers don’t seem to care about students’ academic success, classroom performance, or even basic parent and child satisfaction. Since the school isn't ranked and around 55% of students only stay for a year, there seems to be little incentive for improvement. Plus, there are always families desperate for free childcare, so no matter how bad Stevens gets, there will always be children enrolled.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a parent at Stevens Elementary, and I’m extremely concerned about what’s going on at the school. There are safety, communication, and health issues that just can’t be ignored anymore.
A student this year nearly went missing. Another fell down the stairs—and the parents didn’t even get a phone call till late. That’s unacceptable. My own child’s teacher has been out more than half the year, and there have been six assistant teacher changes in just a few months. There’s zero consistency, and it’s affecting my child so much that they don’t want to go to school anymore.
We’ve been asking for the curriculum all year and still haven’t gotten anything. The teacher isn’t open to questions or feedback and often just shuts down the conversation. Instruction is spotty at best, yet the kids are being marked “not meeting expectations”—how is that fair when they’re barely being taught?
There are also health concerns. The teacher had norovirus and kids in class, almost all got sick and we were never told. Kids weren’t kept home, classrooms weren’t cleaned properly. That’s a health risk to everyone.
Aftercare is another issue. I’ve seen a teacher put on cartoons for the kids during class instead of engaging them. And my child has come home hungry multiple times because breakfast / lunch wasn’t provided on some days.
This isn’t just about minor complaints—it’s about basic safety, health, and respect for our kids and families. We deserve better. Stay out of this school.