Anonymous wrote:I'm a little nervous that she seems pretty young--graduated from college the same year I did, 2000--and hasn't run a school before. However, she was a Patterson Fellow, and I've had a good experience with the one Patterson Fellow I've met so far--I hope the criteria for this fellowship are stringent.
Any Eaton parents who can comment, since it looks like she rotated through Eaton this past year?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure if the PP knows how to use the quote functions on this site, but the Takoma Education Center principal is out too.
As PP says, yes, she is being transferred to an administrative position in the office. And it's Takoma Education CAMPUS.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure if the PP knows how to use the quote functions on this site, but the Takoma Education Center principal is out too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure if the PP knows how to use the quote functions on this site, but the Takoma Education Center principal is out too.
She is being transferred to a job at DCPS central office.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure if the PP knows how to use the quote functions on this site, but the Takoma Education Center principal is out too.
Anonymous wrote:According to a source who shall remain anonymous, here's the list of 26 DC's School leadership changes for school year 2015-16. It is reported that four more schools may be added later.
Schools
Aiton ES
Bancroft ES
Brookland EC (will be known as Bunker Hill ES in 15/16)
Bruce Monroe ES
Dunbar SHS
Hendley ES
Janney ES
Johnson MS
Kelly Miller MS
ML King ES
Kramer MS
Luke C. Moore Academy SHS
Malcolm X ES
Mamie D. Lee (consolidating school)
Payne ES
Peabody ES/Watkins ES
Powell ES
Roosevelt SHS
Sharpe Health (consolidating school)
Shepherd ES
Simon ES
Smothers ES
Thomas ES
Takoma Education Center
Washington Metropolitan HS
West EC
Wilson SHS
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Exactly ^ I left a high poverty school because I was told I would never be scored fairly because the ME's would not be able to justify any high scores. Since I have been at my new school, I have been highly effective with no problems.
This happens to A LOT of DC teachers a teacher's IMPACT will read as if she's a bumbling illiterate who drools and has a tick.
The next year she'll be a highly effective hero at a high performing school.
This is an issue Henderson and Kamras need to look at honestly as the issue is OBVIOUS and the evaluation system needs to be tweaked so that it's fair and doesn't send teachers running for the hills.
DO you really think Henderson and Kamras -- and many others in DCPS administration and city government --- don't already know this? Of course they know it -- how could they not? The question is why do they perpetuate this system? Are they in some kind of weird denial? Is there something in it for them to perpetuate a system that is turning out -- under their watch -- just as all the critics and nay-sayers said it would? If so, What? why do they remain on staff in the midst of this debacle?
Great questions! Of course they know this.
What's interesting is that the independent study that was released recently noted that 'the highly effective teachers are in the schools with lower poverty which results in higher student achievement for those kids. DC needs highly effective teachers in every school-not concentrated in the wealthier areas' (paraphrase) It was laughable to me on the one hand; understandable that an outsider didn't get it on the other.
My question is will they FINALLY be transparent and fix the issue or simply allow for a manipulation of data.
I may be an optimist or a fool, but I've been very impressed with DCPS' willingness to be real about the work that needs to be done, willingness to listen and to actually make changes based on what they hear. (This is one of the reasons I'm surprised they haven't addressed the IMPACT teacher effectiveness flaw). They strike me as an earnest bunch who really mean well and want to get this right for the children of DC. It's such a HUGE job filled with so many pitfall. They've got a way to go but have made some inroads. IMPACT is such a low hanging fruit I can't understand why they're playing blind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Exactly ^ I left a high poverty school because I was told I would never be scored fairly because the ME's would not be able to justify any high scores. Since I have been at my new school, I have been highly effective with no problems.
This happens to A LOT of DC teachers a teacher's IMPACT will read as if she's a bumbling illiterate who drools and has a tick.
The next year she'll be a highly effective hero at a high performing school.
This is an issue Henderson and Kamras need to look at honestly as the issue is OBVIOUS and the evaluation system needs to be tweaked so that it's fair and doesn't send teachers running for the hills.
DO you really think Henderson and Kamras -- and many others in DCPS administration and city government --- don't already know this? Of course they know it -- how could they not? The question is why do they perpetuate this system? Are they in some kind of weird denial? Is there something in it for them to perpetuate a system that is turning out -- under their watch -- just as all the critics and nay-sayers said it would? If so, What? why do they remain on staff in the midst of this debacle?