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Re: Jersey City schools superintendent settles on two candidates
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My point is that both candadates look disappointing. Probably not as bad as Dr. Epps (don't think that is possible). Neither one looks like a real revolutionary and neither one has a track record of making substantial improvements. I will wait and see like everyone else. My comment was that these 2 were the BEST they could do? There was no real gung ho reformer with some evidence of making change?

Posted on: 2012/6/2 1:29
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Re: Jersey City schools superintendent settles on two candidates
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I would be inclined to A) at least wait and see who the board has actually picked, and B) give the new superintendent a week in the new job before slinging arrows (after all, Epps was allowed to run riot for 11 years).

It is easy to hide anonymously behind a keyboard and be critical. Much more difficult to actually work towards a solution.

Have you read to a child lately or done anything to help fix the schools. If not, shut yer trap.

-M

Posted on: 2012/6/1 19:41
I cook with wine, sometimes I even add it to the food.
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Re: Jersey City schools superintendent settles on two candidates
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ICBOE, is this really the best you can do? Both come from failing districts, like failing right now.

Posted on: 2012/6/1 18:52
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Re: Jersey City schools superintendent settles on two candidates
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14 October 2009
Are You Dumber Than A First Grader?

Are you dumber than a first grader? This woman is

or, at least, she and her school board claim to be.

No, I'm sorry, after meeting Tuesday night the board and administration of Delaware's Christina School District decided that they were capable of considering the actions, motivations, and needs of five and six-year-old children - it is just anyone age seven-and-up that Dr. Marcia V. Lyles and crew can not figure out how to handle.

The Christina School District is the latest poster child for the need to wipe the entire idea of "Zero Tolerance" from our school vocabulary. They became this when they "zero tolerated" a first grader who had an awful lapse in judgment and brought an eating utensil to school to eat lunch with. Yes, zero tolerance policies make it easy on third-rate administrators like Lyles, and failed policy makers like the Christina board. They don't have to think, they don't have to consider, they don't have to make decisions or defend those decisions. Hell, with policies like this they don't even have to actually talk to children.

A Twitter friend wrote this morning, trying to consider why school board's adopt these kinds of policies, "We don't want to be discriminatory or irrational. Therefore, rules are enforced to promote equality." And while I understand the desire to not be discriminatory, or to be seen as discriminatory ("you only suspend black kids"), I struggle with the notion of promoting equality.

Does equal treatment really promote equality?

A few years ago, on TV-Land, I watched the pilot episode of The Andy Griffith Show. This was actually an episode of Danny Thomas's sitcom Make Room for Daddy, and in this "spinoff pilot" Danny and New York family are driving south to Florida when they are stopped for speeding in Mayberry (ah, life before interstates). Danny gets all huffy and doesn't want to pay the fine. He gets especially outraged when Andy fines him $100 after fining another motorist $5 for doing the same thing. "That's not fair!" Danny thunders.

And Andy tells him that $5 is a great deal of money to the man he fined $5. But $5 means nothing to Danny. And so it would not be fair if the fines were equal.

Just as today, one speeding ticket, with various state surcharges and the resulting rise in car insurance premiums can literally end up destroying a poor person's life (loss of ability to feed family that week, loss of ability to register car, thus loss of job), while the rich state legislators who determine these fines pay the charge without a care in the world.

Equal treatment resulting in gross inequality.

I'm sorry, if you can not see that. If you can not judge how best to apply the law - or the rules - you have no business being a police officer, a judge, a teacher, a principal/headmaster/headteacher, a school superintendent, or a school board member.

Consider "zero tolerance" in your world. Everyone who jaywalks is ticketed. You run into the street chasing your toddler - get a ticket. Everyone who ever exceeds the speed limit gets a ticket. You go 36 mph in a 35 mph zone on your way to the Emergency Room and you pay a $100 fine. Everyone who makes a mistake at work gets laid off for 45 days (the Christina Schools' policy re: students). Sorry you forgot to file that report correctly. You can't pay the mortgage this month. Never a mitigating circumstance. Never a consideration for humanity. Never room for an honest mistake. Seems like a very unpleasant world to live in.

But yes, it would make life easier for the likes of Dr. Lyles.

Well, I've been a police officer and I teach, and I have never had "zero tolerance" policies. Everyone you run across represents a different situation and a different set of human conditions. To treat all the same - in every situation - is both gross injustice and the height of inequality.

And we simply can not let people that lazy, or - to express my honest opinion - that stupid, be in charge of laws, school rules, school assignments, etc.

In my classes I will often get an email like this: "I'm sorry I didn't get the assignment in on time, I had a family emergency and had to drive to Ohio over the weekend and..." A "zero tolerance" person would give them an F for the assignment. I say instead, "I hope everything is all right. Please get it to me when you can." And then I add, because these students are now or will be teachers, "Please do the same for your own students."

Because we are humans. And humans are supposed to be tolerant.

- Ira Socol
Posted by Ira Socol at 10/14/2009 09:33:00 AM 5 comments Links to this post
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to TwitterShare to FacebookLabels: Christina School District, Marcia Lyles, school discipline, zero tolerance

Posted on: 2012/5/31 23:12
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Re: Jersey City schools superintendent settles on two candidates
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Some comments from the JJ piece?..

Quote:
(like other?s have stated..why would JCBOE consider giving $200K+ yearly contracts to one of these two people who oversaw FAILING school districts? Because they were teachers in NYC? BIG WOOP! I hope JC at least puts many checks and balances in the contract.. like if no improvement in 6 months YOU'RE FIRED! )

(why would she put her resignation papers in December 2011? From looking over the internet pieces it sounds like maybe she wasn?t going to get hired again. RED FLAG?????)

Christina School District Superintendent to Resign

Dec 14, 2011 8:24 AM EST


WILMINGTON, Del. (AP)- The superintendent of the Christina School District in Delaware has announced that she will resign and the end of June.

Marcia Lyles told the school board on Tuesday that she would not seek a renewal of her contract. She did not say why she is stepping down.

The school district has not yet announced what its plan will be for selecting a new leader.

Lyles was a high-ranking educator in the New York City school system before accepting the job with the Christina School District in 2009. The school district is the largest in the state.

http://www.wboc.com/story/16320998/su ... ting?clienttype=printable




Quote:
(PS..and it looks like Jersey City is ?sloppy seconds? for Brathwait, but at least she made the top 6 out of 47 in the Broward School District search which was conducted by an independent firm))( Runcie was the pick for them)

Broward School Boards picks 2 superintendent finalists

Sept. 2011

The Broward School District is inching closer to selecting its next superintendent. On Monday, the board selected its top two candidates to move on with the next round of interviews.

After interviewing five applicants for an hour each, the School Board narrowed their choices to Robert Runcie, chief of staff to the Chicago Board of Education, and Bernard Taylor, superintendent of Grand Rapids Public Schools in Michigan.

Not making the cut: James Browder, former superintendent of the Lee County school district; **Debra Brathwaite, the deputy superintendent of Richland County, S.C., **and Thomas Seigel, the superintendent of the Bethel, Wash., school district.

Parents and community leaders will have a chance to meet the finalists on Tuesday, during a community forum scheduled to start at 6 p.m. at Junior Achievement World, 1130 Coconut Creek Blvd., Coconut Creek.

The finalists will field questions from the community that were submitted to the district over the past three months. On Wednesday, they?ll come before the board for a last round of interviews before a final choice is made.
--LAURA FIGUEROA

http://miamiherald.typepad.com/nakedp ... alists.html#storylink=cpy





Hey JCBOE how about looking over this list ?.from the Broward search?or better yet find a hard working not connected JCBOE employee who lives in JC and who cares about the JC School kids?believe it or not they do exist.

http://post.grfl.us/applicants-for-broward-county-superintendent

Posted on: 2012/5/31 19:08
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Jersey City schools superintendent settles on two candidates
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The nationwide search to find a new Jersey City schools superintendent has settled on two finalists, both African-American women who have histories as high-ranking administrators in the New York City public school system, according to sources, The Jersey Journal reports.

School officials aren?t set to announce the names until tomorrow, but The Jersey Journal has learned that Debra A. Brathwaite, a deputy superintendent in South Carolina, and Marcia V. Lyles, superintendent of Delaware?s largest school district, are the leading contenders to become chief administrator for Jersey City?s 28,000-student district.

http://www.nj.com/hudson/index.ssf/20 ... ew_jersey_city_sch_1.html

Posted on: 2012/5/31 14:22
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