ReportWire

Tag: Landon Payton

  • 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


    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

    Margaret Downing

    Source link

  • Few Details Emerge in Case of 14-Year-Old HISD Student Who Died Last Week

    Few Details Emerge in Case of 14-Year-Old HISD Student Who Died Last Week

    Houston ISD has released a few more details, including the child’s name. of the 14-year-old Marshall Middle School student who became ill during gym class last week and died.

    Landon Payton was in P.E. when he became ill in front of his physical education teacher and special ed assistant teacher as well as the rest of his class last Wednesday. Citing privacy and accuracy concerns, Superintendent Mike Miles has been circumspect about releasing any information, although following other news reports, it released the student’s identity.

    “He received immediate medical assistance from the Marshall Middle School teachers, the HISD police and medical personal. He also received medical assistance from EMS and ws transferred to the hospital by the EMS team,” Miles said in a Friday statement.

    The cause of death is still unknown, Miles has said. Landon’s father, Alexis Payton, went to the school administration building Friday, and questioned whether the nurse knew how to do CPR or use the AED, automated external defibrillator. Others have questioned whether the AED was in working order.

    In the statement released this weekend, HISD said that the school district in its preliminary assessment believes “the staff and EMS responded quickly and appropriately.”

    Saturday’s HISD release:

    Update on the Death of a Marshall Middle School Student

    As we have shared, four days ago, HISD was rocked by the death of one of its students while in school. We continue to grieve with the family of Landon Payton and with the Marshall Middle School community. We will continue to do as much as we can to support the family as they go through this tremendously difficult period.

    We continue to gather as much information as possible for Landon’s family. Put in the same situation, any person would want to know immediately the reasons for such a tragedy. And we understand that others have an ardent desire to know more as well.

    We have been careful not to release partial information or speculation out of respect for the privacy of the student and his family, and also to ensure accuracy.

    State and federal law prohibits any district from revealing a student’s personal information. The details shared below reflect that limitation.

    Landon experienced a medical emergency in front of the P.E. teacher and special education assistant teacher in the gymnasium. Prior to this incident, teachers did not have any indications that the child was not feeling well. The teachers acted immediately, radioed for the school nurse, and called 911.

    The students in P.E. class had been engaged in light physical activity for most of the period and were in “free play” for the last part of the period when the medical emergency occurred. They were asked to sit down while the staff was caring for Landon and then shortly after released from the gymnasium.

    Medical officials have not provided the District with a cause of death. The District is not able to determine the cause of death, which can only be established by medical officials.

    The nurse who provided medical assistance to Landon is a registered nurse with an active license. Prior to starting with HISD in February 2024, she worked on staff at Harris Health System for 30 years, including service as a cardiac and pulmonary surgery nurse.

    The temperature reading in the gym immediately after the incident was 72 degrees. School administration did not raise temperature concerns for any part of the building during the day.

    The information above is preliminary and we await further information to fully understand what happened, specifically Landon’s cause of death as determined by a medical professional. From what we have been able to gather, we believe the staff and EMS responded quickly and appropriately. We believe they did everything they could and cared for Landon in a way that any parent would want his or her child cared for in an emergency.

    The District will share more information with the community as we are able. In the meantime, our deepest sympathies are with Landon’s family.

    Office of Public Affairs and Communications
    Houston Independent School District

    Margaret Downing

    Source link