Sunday, February 12

Doctor Groups Flex Muscle In Capitol: $2.3 Million in Campaign Cash to Influence Health-Care Reform

News The State Capitol has been abuzz the last couple of days because of a hot list (PDF) circulating in ... More

Feb 10, 2012 06:00 pm by NIGEL JAQUISS  | Comments 2
 

Nonsense Knows No State Boundary: Washington Legislators Get Bogus Job Claims on CRC

News Up north of here, Washington legislators in Olympia are debating whether or not they should authoriz... More

Feb 10, 2012 09:09 am  | Comments 1
 

Occupy Arrestees Win Their Right to Full Trials—Even Though They May Not Need It

News The estimated 160 people arrested during Occupy Portland protests in the past five months have won t... More

Feb 9, 2012 01:24 pm by HANNAH HOFFMAN  | Comments 2
 

Almost Live: Rockets at Blazers

News So I'm having a bit of trouble with the picture, which is coming from my phone (I drew it on my way ... More

Feb 8, 2012 07:09 pm by CASEY JARMAN  | Comments 0
 
 
 
Home · Articles · News · News · Academy Ignored
December 5th, 2007 BETH SLOVIC | News
 

Academy Ignored

Parents’ Progress Report on the Latest Effort to Attract Jeff Kids: We want out.

23 Comments
     
Tags:
Willie Holmes: The principal of the Young Men’s Academy faces unhappy parents and a lean budget.
IMAGE: Amy Ouellette

Ten months before Portland Public Schools opened the doors to its newest rejigger of Jefferson High School, then-principal Leon Dudley told district administrators and School Board members he already had concerns that math classes for some students would be inadequate.

Yet when the first bell rang in September at the John H. Johnson Leadership Academy for Young Men, a small school for boys housed at Jefferson, there was no certified math teacher. That’s still true today.

Due to a strict district staffing formula that gives schools a certain number of teachers based on how many students are enrolled, the Young Men’s Academy got just three teachers to cover everything from language arts to algebra—from the elementary- to the high-school level. That’s one more than the formula requires.

Today, about 55 boys in the sixth through ninth grades attend the North Portland school, which was supposed to offer a “rigorous college preparatory curriculum,” according to marketing material.

Now, parents of at least 10 percent of the students want out. They’re on the verge of transferring their boys—midway through the semester—because the school can’t offer adequate instruction in the basics, they say.

“It’s getting to the point where I’m ready to pull my sons out,” says Jerry Lincoln, who has two boys, in the sixth and seventh grades. “The School Board needs to support the school a lot more.”

But because the program’s future success depends on having more students at the school, administrators have already tried to block some parents from taking advantage of what’s known as a “hardship” transfer. One mother granted such a transfer for her son was then told the district preferred coming up with a plan to keep her son at Jeff.

“That has been the overall strategy,” says Cynthia Harris, the school’s top administrator. As of Monday, six students had petitioned to leave the school so far this year. Only one has been given permission.

That resistance has further angered some mothers and fathers.

“They can’t define a parents’ responsibility to make decisions for their children,” says one mother, who refused to be identified. “The Young Men’s Academy lacks everything.”

The unrest is discouraging because:

  • The district spent $30,000 in grant money from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to recruit students and plan a curriculum beginning in January.
  • Brochures promised classes in business and law that haven’t been put in place.
  • The district has made exceptions to its staffing formula to add extra teachers elsewhere, such as the Winterhaven K-8 magnet school last year, when it used the district’s general revenue money to pay one bonus teacher’s salary.
  • Parents and community leaders have been working back channels without success since September to make improvements for their children.

“The district has had enough time to address the staffing problem,” says Jeff Miller, president of the Portland Association of Teachers union.

Many problems, however, remain. A teacher certified in science is also teaching math, a class one eighth-grader called pure “craziness” because students throw markers and otherwise disrupt instruction nearly every day.

The teacher is well meaning and kind but seemingly unprepared, parents say. She has written numerous disciplinary referrals this year, according to the district.

The new academy’s principal, Willie Holmes, who must attend meetings off campus, frequently is unavailable to assist teachers with lunch duty or disciplinary problems, according to one teacher. There is no Saturday School, no law class and no emphasis on careers in the sports industry, as promised. The school has, however, found new lunchroom space for the academy so boys aren’t mixing with older students from the two other academies at Jeff, which include girls.

Holmes, who was recruited from Texas to lead the school, doesn’t blame parents for considering leaving. He understands what they’re facing. “We need more resources for a better program,” Holmes says. “What I have to do is use what I have.”

Some parents are holding out hope that change is imminent. But in a testament to how sensitive the issue has become, only one out of the five dissatisfied parents interviewed by WW was willing to be identified.

“It’s a new school and there are going to be some bumps in the road,” one father says. “People are doing the best that they can. I don’t want to be negative.”

Another father says he’s ready to abandon the experiment. “I don’t want my son at a school that’s going down,” he says.

Carole Smith, the new superintendent who’s often said the academies at Jeff will be “great,” now says administrators are doing what they can, but she avoids talking about “details.” Miller of the teachers’ union says the answer is obvious.

“The solution has to be in one shape or form to give the school more staff,” Miller says. “To expect one teacher to teach 14-year-old kids four or five subjects is completely unrealistic.”


FACT: If the Young Men’s Academy closed, the district would have to abandon its sister program, the Young Women’s Academy at Tubman Middle School, because of Title IX.
 
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
 
 
 

 

 
12.05.2007 at 10:00 Reply
PPS promises a lot and fails to deliver. What else is new?

Too bad Bill Gates isn't willing to allow his money to be used to restore a comprehensive program at Jeff. I know of nothing else that would bring families back to the school. Every new experiment that is tried drives more and more families away. Too bad there's no one at PPS who notices!

 

12.05.2007 at 10:29 Reply
Finally, a story that depicts the frustrations and genuine concerns of parents with students attending the so-called Jefferson? academies. Beth Slovic should be commended for her journalistic integrity and ability to connect with the folks who matter the most, parents and their children. Another, BRAVO for Beth Slovic. What would education reporting in Portland, Oregon be without her authentic voice?

 

12.05.2007 at 12:29 Reply
Seriously, if PPS wants to solve this problem, they need either multiple-certified teachers, or they need to share teachers with the other "academies" in the building.

For that matter, allocating FTE to each "academy" separately is a stupid idea in the first place. If all the students are counted together, then they can share their common needs, including basic academics, PE and arts classes.

Oh wait--that would be a comprehensive high school, and PPS has determined that low-income children can't perform well in those!

 

12.05.2007 at 02:23 Reply
The district doesn't want Jefferson to succeed. They want to close the school and sell the land to PCC to redevelop. And they're doing an excellent job of driving all the families away so they can justify closing the school.

 

12.05.2007 at 05:45 Reply
Quote of the Year!

"...a class one eighth-grader called pure “craziness” because students throw markers and otherwise disrupt instruction nearly every day."

An "authentic" reporter would have taken the time and had the professionalism to observe this math-science teacher's class, in person, more than once, and reported on what she saw with her own eyes.

But, heck, sleazy is easy! Just ask Fox News.

 

 
 

Web Design for magazines

Close
Close
Close