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Tag: bond issue

  • HISD Keeps Classroom Doors Open, Remains Mum on a 14-year-old’s Death and Builds the Teacher Force it Says it Wants

    HISD Keeps Classroom Doors Open, Remains Mum on a 14-year-old’s Death and Builds the Teacher Force it Says it Wants

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    If half of the 2,600 teachers who left Houston ISD in June and July were rated in the bottom two proficiency categories by the district is this a sign that they were bad teachers or that they just couldn’t get with Superintendent Mike Miles’ programs?

    Should parents breathe a sigh of relief or in some cases continue to question the policies of the new administration?

    And as to why the more highly rated teachers, including those judged to have turned in “exemplary” performances, quit their jobs with HISD, it’s not known. As explained by Jessica Neyman, HISD’s Chief Human Resources Officer at Thursday night’s school board meeting, the Miles administration is continuing the previous practice of leaving it up to the departing employees to ask for an exit interview.

    For his part, Miles pointed to his data showing 83 percent of the higher rated teachers staying with the district as evidence that HISD is building a more proficient teacher force. “The higher the instructional proficiency of the teachers, the higher the retention rate.”

    The departures were higher than historic numbers, 2,696 compared to 2,000, but he added that 1,400 of those teachers had been told they were being brought in for “file review” in the spring meaning they knew their continued job prospects weren’t stellar.  “Most of those teachers decided to resign,” Miles said, before going through that process.

    click to enlarge

    In a power-packed evening there was a bond protest as well.

    Photo by Margaret Downing

    It was another sometimes raucous and always lengthy board meeting complete with one group protesting the upcoming $4.4 billion bond election and another calling for answers in the aftermath of the August death of 14-year-old Landon Payton at Marshall Middle School while in gym class. Landon’s father Alexis Payton, was joined by state Rep. Christina Morales and FIEL Executive  Director Cesar Espinosa among others who stood during the meeting while holding a picture of Landon.

    Payton’s family has still not been told of his cause of death, only that he suffered “a medical emergency.” The AED equipment was reportedly not working in his location which has led to an HISD review of AEDs throughout the district and discovering 170 inoperable units that it has said will be repaired. The family still doesn’t know if a working defibrillator would have saved Landon. HISD has said that only medical officials can establish the cause of death.

    Later in the public speaking section of the evening, parent Anna Luzutiaga asked  everyone to stand to remember the teenager in a moment of silence. While audience members rose, the board members and superintendent did not – which caused an immediate outcry.

    Chanting Landon’s name, while continuing to stand, the audience could not be interrupted. One audience member cursed which sparked a reprimand from Board President Audrey Momanaee  who said children were watching the meeting from home.  When the chanting continued,  the board and Miles retreated to a back room right before 6 p.m. before returning at 6:07.

    “This board supports the Payton family,”  Momanaee said upon their return. She then explained the need for order in school board meetings and repeated that the use of swear words could not be allowed.

    An interesting note was struck when Miles discussed the district’s assessment of performance comparing non-certified teachers to certified ones. Data showed that a lower percentage of the non-certified – 42 percent — scored at the proficient and above level, while 66 percent of certified teachers were judged proficient or higher.

    In the past, Miles has maintained that teachers should be judged on the job they too, rather than whether they are certified or not. At board meetings there have been continuous complaints from parents, students and educators about the district’s increasing use of non-certified teachers, contending that many of them are ill-equipped to handle a classroom.

    Thursday, Miles acknowledged the important factors of experience and training in how effective teachers can be.

    He touted an expansion of HISD’s own in-house certification program which allows the uncertified to work toward certification while teaching. He also referred to a Texas Tribune story which reported that districts all over the state are using more uncertified teachers, trying to fill their teacher ranks, calling it the new reality.

    “This is a problem statewide and nationally,” Miles said.  For the forseeable future if we want to fill all of our positions, we will be hiring teachers who need a certification.”

    According to the Texas Education Agency, 40 percent of new hires across the state in 2023-24 were uncertified. At charter schools it was 60 percent. At the same time, Miles reported that there were 8,000 applicants at the district’s job fairs for about 1,000 openings.

    click to enlarge

    An analysis of the HISD retention patterns

    HISD chart

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    Margaret Downing

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  • HISD  Board Approves Sending Record $4.4 Billion Bond Proposal to Voters

    HISD Board Approves Sending Record $4.4 Billion Bond Proposal to Voters

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    To absolutely no one’s surprise, the Houston ISD Board of Managers Thursday night unanimously approved putting a $4.4 billion bond issue on the November 5 ballot, leaving it up to voters to decide which they dislike more: the sad shape of many of the district’s schools or Superintendent Mike Miles and his administration.

    The public speaking session before the vote was only distinctive because of the number of the people addressing the board who argued in favor of the bond. These included HISD principals, community leaders and members of the Citizens Advisory Committee who had worked on the bond proposal.

    Those arguing against the bond zeroed in on their continuing complaints: Miles’ removal of libraries from most of the HISD schools, replacement of wraparound specialists in the schools with Sunrise Centers that they say are difficult for people to get to, and a curriculum that whatever the improvement in the state’s standardized test scores is dominated by daily testing and work sheets.

    They point to the mass exodus of teachers in June — with more than 4,500 leaving during the entire school year — as more proof that something is seriously wrong with HISD. Miles, for his part, has always said that if teachers are unable or unwilling to adapt to his academic approach — dominated by the New Education System  — they should leave.

    “Libraries are gone. No more books. No more disability accommodations. A third of teachers are gone. Half of principals are gone. They are experimenting on our kids using untested curriculum,” said parent Jesse Dugan. “Now they want more money? I’m sorry, I’m not buying what any of you are selling.”

    Houston’s business community showed up with Bob Eury, a longtime business development leader and former president and CEO of Central Houston, who said HISD should have had a bond referendum every four to six years. Bob Harvey, former president of the Greater Houston Partnership called for bond issue support and endorsed the proposal to have four Career and Technical Education centers in the district.

    “So let’s invest in our students, support career and technical education and  build a brighter future for our community and not let adult politics stand in the way.”

    “HISD has to continue to invest constantly in its campuses. We have over 270 campuses. You can’t shut off the money to it to continue to make it work,” Eury said. 

    The district has not held a bond vote since 2012 and that was for high schools. This bond proposal, split into Proposition A for building renovation and Proposition B for $440 million in technology, would also involve the “co-locations” of some schools which critics have said is just another term for closing down schools.

    “Hiding a school closure in a bond vote is deceptive, cruel and divisive,” said parent Don Mccune.

    Miles’ statement that there are only 47 open teaching positions as they head into the start of the school year next Monday comes with the qualifier that there are 750 fewer teaching positions than last year. Miles has said this is a result of declining enrollment and they are adjusting the teacher population to match that. There will be 10,640 teaching positions this school year as compared to 11,388 last.

    The unmowed state of several HISD campuses was a topic of criticism as well. Speakers said parents at some schools had been asked to help tidy up before next Monday’s start date. In a press conference after the board meeting, Miles said he didn’t know about the calls tor aid but didn’t think there was anything wrong with them.

    After Hurricane Beryl and the several days of intense rain that followed, it shouldn’t surprise anyone that the normal mowing scheduled was interrupted, Miles said.

    Miles also presented an overview of his instructional overhaul of the district in the first year as well as the district’s preliminary accountability ratings.

    Dismissing opposition to Miles’ policy as “noise,” Board member Ric Campo spoke in favor of Miles’ extensive reform efforts in the first school year, calling Miles’ talking points a “perfect model for any business. Very simple, it’s all about quality, it’s all about training, it’s all about capacity, it’s all about leadership.

    “The challenge that urban school districts including ours have is it’s really hard to put this in place because of the adult politics,” Campo contended.

    So, to sum up, at Thursday night’s meeting on one side we heard  “No Trust, No Bond” and a smattering of “No Taxation Without Representation.” And from the other side we got “Noise” and “politics.”  Now it’s up to the voters to decide whose argument carries the most weight. 

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    Margaret Downing

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