The Travesty That Is the Minneapolis Public Schools Board of Education
Kim
Ellison’s ’s Tragi-Comically Silly Comment Regarding Alternative Schools as a
Model for the Minneapolis Public Schools >>>>> Time for Resignation of Another Member Who
Should Have Departed a Long time Ago
At the same
Tuesday, 22 October 2019, Committee of the Whole meeting of the Minneapolis
Public Schools (MPS) Board of Education at which District #1 member Jenny
Arneson made her astonishingly stupid comment regarding the sequence of United
States history courses in the district, At-Large member Kim Ellison chimed in
with a remark of her own that, when taken together with her nearly decade of
ineffective participation on the board, should induce her resignation and
departure with Arneson out the Davis Center door.
After
hearing Executive Director of Teaching and Learning Aimee Fearing and Chief of
Research, Evaluation, Assessment, and Accountability Eric Moore engage in
double talk and jargon-infested presentation of an academic plan that has no
hope of success, Ellison felt impelled to make a comment pertinent to Social
and Emotional Learning (SEL). Ellison
commented that Graff’s emphasis
on Social
and Emotional Learning resonated with her immediately because of her experience
as a teacher at an alternative school.
She did not mention the name of the school, but the school of reference
was known as Plymouth Christian Youth Center (PCYC) for a number of years, now
rendered as Plymouth Youth Center (PYC) Arts and Technology High School. Ellison said that at her school there was a
strong emphasis on teacher and staff relationships with students, with the
implication that this produced student success.
Ellison is
half-right but the half-wrong part reveals the abominable level of academic
substance delivered at such schools. The
City, Inc., and the Street Academy/Minneapolis Urban League High School were
schools at which relationship building was touted; those schools are now defunct. The Minneapolis Public Schools contracts with
seven privately run alternative schools to provide academic and other services
to students whom MPS failed to engage.
Those contract alternative schools are 800 West Broadway, Loring
Nicollet, Menlo Park, Merc, PYC Arts and Technology (Ellison’s school of
reference), Tatanka Academy, and Volunteers of America (VOA) High School. Academic performance for many years at these
schools has stagnated at levels witnessed in the following aggregate results
for academic year 2018-2019:
Percentage
of Students Proficient at MPS Contract Alternative Schools
(Minnesota
Comprehensive Assessment [MCA])
Mathematics 2%
(52
tested)
Reading
(32 tested) 22%
Science
(30 tested) 13%
Many more
than 52 students are enrolled at these alternative schools, so that even the
number (52) representing students taking the mathematics MCA fails to capture
the number of students enrolled. But
absences are high; on any given day, a
small percentage of enrolled students actually are in attendance. There was also some formal opting out, as
well as spontaneous refusal to take the tests.
Staff members at alternative schools do tend to build amicable relationships with students and to reach out to families with a persistence and compassion not prevailing in mainline MPS schools. In that sense, the overwrought term, Social and Emotional Learning, could resonate with Kim Ellison’s experience at PYC High School. That she would only mention this facet of the school, though, is telling.
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