Anonymous wrote:Oh please PP this is a free public forum and we all have the right to post and give opinions. Its your right not to listen. There is not a prerequisite that one must have a kid in a particular school or class in order to speak about it. I still maintain that 8 kids having to sit on the floor each day is crazy. I don't care about the class size being that is seems like it's working alright. I would hope that the admin would adequately accommodate the students with a desk and chair.
Anonymous wrote:
Just - WOW! So this "solution" is to accommodate an ADULT who has hearing (sensory) issues. Gee, I wonder if any of the FIFTY children being shoved into this mega-classroom might have any sensory issues as well?
Who cares, right? They don't have a union rep.
Anonymous wrote:As someone who has a child in the 50-student classroom being discussed:
No one is arguing that these are not experienced teachers with great reputations. But that has no bearing as to whether grouping 50 children in a single classroom space intended for 25 is a good idea, or whether the teachers or the principal have been responsive to parent concerns (they haven't been).
On back to school night, the teachers didn't address their 50-student plan at all until parents asked about it, 25 minutes into a 30-minute session. Their only explanation was that because of changes in classroom allocation, the teachers would otherwise have had to have classrooms right next to each other, and the potential noise created by this might have bothered one of the teachers, who said she is noise-sensitive.
(Note that all the other classroom spaces in the school are configured this way, so it's not like this "problem" of adjacent classrooms would have been unique to the 3rd grade; it's just how the Lafayette space is set up inside.) If there was a better instructional reason for combining the classes, the teachers didn't share it.
Also, no partitions were removed or moved to create this classroom configuration. All 50 kids are really, truly, in square footage intended for 25.
As the posts above illustrate, some parents are supportive of these teachers no matter what. But others of us are terribly concerned and trying to figure out what to do next.
We have already talked to the teachers, who seem set on pursing this model. We have spoken to the principal several times, who alternates between misstating the reality of the situation and telling us that we just need to trust her and the teachers.
Can anyone recommend a good education lawyer?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child is in this class & there is no barrier removed to make it one large room. It is a room set up originally to house 25 children, now containing 50 kids, eight of whom have to sit on the floor everyday.
A half wall separating classrooms with square footage sufficient to accommodate the class size is hugely different than the situation these children are in.
Were you ever in this area last year? If so, you'd know that the space was indeed TWO classrooms, with dividers between them. The one in the middle was actually not being used as a classroom, I believe it was used for special lessons and activities. However, it most certainly was two separate "rooms." The space now has been joined, doubling the original room size that was on the end.
As the posts above illustrate, some parents are supportive of these teachers no matter what. But others of us are terribly concerned and trying to figure out what to do next.
We have already talked to the teachers, who seem set on pursing this model. We have spoken to the principal several times, who alternates between misstating the reality of the situation and telling us that we just need to trust her and the teachers.
Can anyone recommend a good education lawyer?
Anonymous wrote:My child is in this class & there is no barrier removed to make it one large room. It is a room set up originally to house 25 children, now containing 50 kids, eight of whom have to sit on the floor everyday.
A half wall separating classrooms with square footage sufficient to accommodate the class size is hugely different than the situation these children are in.