Transcript: Mayor de Blasio Delivers Remarks After Touring Improving ""Renewal School"" in Richmond Hill

March 19, 2015Mayor  Bill de Blasio:  Good job – excellent, excellent.  Well, Prince, congratulations. It is not  easy to get up and speak before members of the press and a crowd like this. It  proves that your experience at Richmond Hill has been a very good one. And I  appreciate you for all you’re doing to further yourself. And I also appreciate  you for thanking a teacher that you care about. And we have to always take time  to thank teachers for all they do. So, thank you and congratulations to you as  well. [Laughter] Great  job – I’m glad, Prince, that you are experiencing some of the changes, some of  the improvements and it’s helping you, and it’s helping your classmates. So, it  is a pleasure to be here at Richmond Hill High School and, as Prince said, home  of the Lions. And the lion imagery is going figure into my remarks again later  – it’s important in this school. This  is one of 94 renewal schools across the city. It’s part of a $150 million  dollar initiative that we’ve undertaken to help schools that need help, to turn  them around, to make them strong again. We announced this back in November, and  we’ve been implementing this initiative very, very aggressively. And with each  succeeding month, you will see more, and more, and more action in these 94  schools.Today,  I visited two classrooms, talked to students and teachers, and we saw education  moving forward. We saw kids engaged in learning and teachers who are committed,  and that is what we need to invest in. And that’s what we will invest in. When  we see the educational process working, we invest more deeply – that’s our  commitment. I  want to say at the outset, I’m very, very appreciative of the efforts of our  principal, Neil Ganesh. I had a great talk with him about the approach he’s  taking to turning around this school. Now, there are many great school leaders  in this city, but there’s a characteristic I particularly love in a school  leader – it’s when that school leader comes from the community they serve. Born  and raised in Richmond Hill, correct? Born and raised in Richmond Hill, now  serving his community, took over the school in October of 2013, has done a  great job at increasing attendance at this school and adding to the ability of  each student to gain the credits they need for graduation. This is a big part  of the renewal schools effort – to do much better at connecting students to the  credits they need for graduation. We talked about this back at Boys and Girls  High School in Brooklyn – how a lot of kids were not getting the support and  the guidance they needed to actually take the right classes for graduation.  That’s how hands-off the situation had become. Now, at Boys and Girls – a very  focused effort, student by student, to make sure they get what they need for  graduation. I  know that the principal here is very devoted. In fact, as we walked in, he  showed me the charts – and to all my friends in the media, if you haven’t seen  them, you should look at them. You walk through the hallway, there’s a chart of  literally every student. Instead of their name, there’s a code number,  indicating to them who they are but not to anyone else, and it literally shows  how they’re doing on the pathway to graduation. That is true for ninth, 10th,  11th, 12th grade students. So any student in this school can see, at any given  moment, if they’re on track for graduation or not. Any teacher, any  administrator can see how each student is doing. It’s literally in front of  your faces. It’s like the War Room that Aimee has started, which we’ll talk  about in a moment, but it’s being done at the school level, literally, student  by student. So,  I want to emphasize, when we talk about renewal schools, this is very personal.  We are literally going and reaching out to each and every student in a renewal  school to make sure they’re on the right track. We’re going to win this student  by student. Just as Aimee is keeping track of all 94 renewal schools and  helping them with the efforts they need to turn around, principals like Neil  Ganesh are monitoring each and every student, and helping them to get what they  need, and pushing them to go farther, and I think that is the key to victory. I  want to thank everyone at the DOE who is a part of this effort. Obviously,  Chancellor Fariña considers this a crucial element of our work and our mission.  Aimee Horowitz – everyone is starting to get to know a great veteran teacher  who became an administrator. She was a great success as a teacher. She was a  great success as an administrator – turning around schools, starting new  programs that worked. She is here as the executive superintendent for renewal  schools because she’s walked the walk, because she has figured out in her own  work how to make schools work. And now we’re asking her to lead the effort on  this much larger level. She is the general of the army. She is the one who’s  going to marshal the forces to turn these 94 schools around. And she will have  my full support in that effort.Let’s  talk about the history, and I think it’s important acknowledge there was a  different policy before we came here. It was a policy that focused on the  closing of schools. A lot of parents didn’t like that. A lot of communities  didn’t like that, for good reason because in many cases – I want to welcome  Assemblyman David Weprin. How are you doing? Welcome. The reason there was such  frustration over the closing of schools was that, in many cases, the schools  were closed before any coherent effort to turn them around was mounted. Once  upon a time, we had the chancellor’s district, which was a serious effort to concentrate  resources on schools that needed help, but that effort was never sustained. And  so, schools that were struggling – instead of having an action plan – were left  to get worse in many cases. And then there was, I think, often a rush to close  them to, in theory, go to other options that might be better. But as we saw in  many cases, sometimes the options were good, sometimes they weren’t. We also  saw a lot of kids in that process of closure were left in the lurch. A lot of  kids were in the phase-out years, and those phase-out years were not good  educational experiences for the children. We  came along with a different philosophy. We said, if we’ve only scratched the  surface of actually trying to turn around a school, let’s show you what it  would look like if you concentrated all of your resources on the schools that  needed them the most. In some schools, as I’ve said, there will be a new  principle and other new leaders. Where that’s needed, we will not hesitate to  replace principals and bring in new leaders. In some schools, we will need  master teachers and model teachers – the new categories that we achieved in the  contract with the teachers union that elevates those teachers who are most  effective to a higher status, where they get more pay to take their skills and  their ability to coach, and coach other teachers to get better. So  in some schools, we will send in a SWAT team, as it were, of a new principal, a  new assistant principal, new teachers. Depending on what mix we need, we will  mobilize the best talent we have and send them where the need is greatest. We  will add instructional time in each and every one of these 94 schools. Every  one of them for every child will have an additional period of instruction in  the school day. We’re adding afterschool to every single of them. Every  single one of them will be a community school, meaning they’ll have additional  physical and mental health capacity. They’ll have additional parental  involvement, additional involvement, tutoring programs, etcetera. All of these  pieces are going to be brought to bear simultaneously. A lot of those pieces  are being moved right this minute in these schools. We’ll keep adding and  adding as we build out the renewal schools program.So  a renewal school will have more investment of more different kinds than we’ve  ever attempted with our schools that needed the most help. We believe this will  be transcendent. We believe it will be transcendent very quickly. And we’re  going to hold ourselves to account in a transparent manner. We know who is  personally accountable, and she is accountable to the chancellor and me. And  we’re going to literally go school by school and report constantly on the  progress we are making. The  problem of the past is it suggested that we should surrender rather than fight.  But we believe in fighting to turn around schools. Now, I said when I announced  this plan in November, if you take every conceivable resource and apply it to  the situation, you need to see results quickly. And I said the outer limit I  will give is three years during this term. If I do not see a school turn around  significantly in three years, I will close it down and I will be accountable  for that decision. But I believe, with the kind resources we are putting into  play and the kind of leadership, that you’re going to see these schools move  and move quickly. That is the vision. We want to send a message to the people  who do the work – to the teachers, and all the other people in the school  community – that we value them and we’re investing in them. We especially want  to send a message to students like Prince, that we’re not giving up on them and  their school. In fact, we’re bringing more in to help them succeed. I think our  students deserve that support and that commitment. This  is going to be across the city – 94 schools. It’s going to be concentrated.  It’s going to be energetic. We want these schools to reach their full  potential. Let’s talk about the experience in this school, where we see such  promising signs already. Principal – I’ve already bragged on you and what  you’ve done in your leadership. Also, as part of this effort, a leadership  coach has been assigned – Stephen Duch – retired principal who turned around  previously, another troubled school. So we bring in – we have a great young  principal who’s making things happen – we’re bringing in coaching and support  for him to learn some of the specific strategies that have worked to turn  around schools previously. We’re adding here – already they’ve added  afterschool and Saturday sessions. So depending on the student, whatever  additional instruction and support they need, they can get it in afterschool or  they can get it on Saturdays. That is happening right now. The arts program in  this school was saved from being cut because that’s kind of effort that helps  elevate the students and their love of learning. So a school that needs extra  energy and extra motivation for success – don’t take away the kind of program  that actually moves students the most. So that’s why we saved the arts program  here.There’s  a new training program for ninth grade teachers to help them focus on the need  to teach kids how to write better. So part of what we said system-wide is,  we’re going to focus on teacher training. That’s a core part of the contract  deal – more time into training. But the training effort – as Aimee can describe  – is particularly important where the need is greatest. So there’s an incessant  ability for a principal to say, okay, I’ve got these committed teachers but  they need coaching. In certain areas, we’re going to give them that additional  training. We know writing is one of the biggest challenges, by the way, in our  whole society. We are going to help these teachers learn better how to write. I  just want to make an analogy, given the season we’re in – is spring training.  And we, I think, don’t talk about teaching properly because if you look at  Major League Baseball – these wonderful professionals – they take batting  practice every single day. They talk to their hitting coach every single day,  or their pitching coach, and we think that’s normal. They make millions and  millions of dollars. They’re the best there is in the world, and they get  coached every single day. Why should it be any different for our teachers? We  have the best and most motivated teachers, but they still need constant help  and support from the principal and assistant principal. They need constant  training. They need to improve at all times. By the way, the vast majority of  our teachers want to improve. They are professionals. They’re committed to  their craft. They want to get better all the time. A lot of them want to become  master teachers. A lot of them want to become assistant principals and  principals. We’ve made that pathway more available to them. So, there’s a lot  of reasons for teachers to really work hard at becoming the best professionals  they can be, and that’s something we’re going to particularly emphasize here in  a renewal school. So  here at Richmond Hill, the expert resources, the new programming, the support,  the training is already having an impact. In terms of students on track to  graduate, we see a seven percent increase across all grade levels of students  now on track to graduate. Again, you can see it on the charts in the hallways.  83 more kids in the 11th grade alone are now on track to graduate compared to  last year – that’s a 20 percent improvement. The enrollment in after-school  programs has almost tripled from 143 students to 413. Again, if a kid is in an  after-school program, they are learning, they’re getting more motivation,  they’re getting more time on task. Another important indicator of a school  community that’s getting stronger and more orderly – serious or violent  incidents are down from this time this year compared to last time – this time  last year. An important decrease in serious and violent instances – an  important decrease in suspensions – so the school is becoming more orderly, more  committed. Well,  I mentioned about the hallways and the posters you see – it’s got a very simple  concept to it – the slogan is, Are You Green? If you look on these  charts – again, every single student visible – if you have green all across  your chart, it means you are totally on track to graduate. If you have yellow  in certain areas, it means there’s work to be done. If you have red, it means  there’s a more serious problem that has to be addressed. So the question being  asked of everyone is, are you green? Are you on track? Are you up to date? Is  everything moving? And that sends a powerful message of accountability up and  down the line. And it also gives the students ability to see with their own  eyes where they stand. It makes them accountable in a good way as well.All  of this is about helping the school succeed and the students succeed. We’re  seeing it here, and we’re seeing it at renewal schools around the city. Boys  and Girls – a lot of you were there – you heard the story of increased  attendance, more kids on track to graduate, more spirit in the school that  things were turning around, great new leadership by a principal who also had a  history of turning around school – all of those pieces adding up.Now,  if you say, what do we need to go farther? What we need to go farther is to get  that which we should have gotten years and years ago from Albany, which is the  money that the New York State Court of Appeals said the city of New York  deserves for our schools. If there are controversies over this question, I  remind everyone of a simple concept – I didn’t make up this number, Aimee  Horowitz didn’t make up this number, Carmen Fariña didn’t make up this number.  The New York State Court of Appeals dictated in 2007 what New York City should  get. Where are we compared to where we should be – I’m sorry, 2006 – 2006.  Where are we compared to where we should be? Well, this year alone, if the law  of this state was being followed – if the Court of Appeals decision was being  honored, we would get $2.6 billion dollars more for our schools, which would  have an absolutely transcendent effect on our ability to rise up all our kids  and have a school system that is strong across the board – $2.6 billion  dollars. In the past, the folks in Albany used to say, because of the economic  crises and other challenges that they were in deficit. This year, the state of  New York has an almost $8 billion dollar surplus. It’s a matter of public  record. It’s time for New York City to get its fair share. And what that would  do at Richmond Hill and so many of these schools would be transcendent. What it  would do for 171,000 special ed kids, what it would do for kids who right now  need guidance so they can move forward in their lives into college – I think  you’ve heard that we have one guidance counselor for every – I think it’s 392  kids in our high schools. There are so many fundamental changes we could make  if we had the resources.To  conclude – before turning to Neil and Aimee – this school, you can feel that  something good is happening here. And they have a powerful slogan to drive  themselves forward. The slogan is Transform Yourself. That’s a statement  to everyone in the school community, and it’s a statement to the individual  students. There is a poster that you see around here and it’s a poster of a cat  looking into a mirror, and in the mirror, the cat sees a lion. I foreshadowed  that. For those of you who teach English, that was foreshadowing. The cat sees  a lion, sees the unleashing of his inner potential. That’s what we want to see  for every student here. That’s what we want to see for every renewal school,  and we will not stop fighting until that is done. En Español –[Mayor  de Blasio speaks in Spanish]So,  we are committed to these schools. We know we can turn them around. And I want  you to hear from the principal of this school. I want you to hear his story of  what he has done already and how he is committed to the community he grew  up in, because I think it’s a great example of where we’re going as a city –  Principal Neil Ganesh. […]Mayor: Alright, we  are going to take on-topic questions.Question: I’m wondering  if Superintendent Horowitz first can discuss her meeting at the NYPD? Who she  met with? How long she was there? What she’s learned? And second, if you could talk  about what will actually happen at these CompStat-like meetings. Who will be  here? Will all 94 principals be there? Who will grill them? What are the  metrics you’ll be looking at, etcetera?Mayor: I want to just  start and then I’ll pass it – again, the superintendent has been given a very  big job and she’s acclimating to it very quickly, but not every detail is  resolved yet. I want to say at the outset, I’m going to be seeing Chief O’Neill  later today, who runs the CompStat sessions with our deputy commissioner for  operations, Dermot Shea, and I’m going to ask both of them to put some personal  time into supporting the superintendent in terms of understanding what has been  effective in a CompStat system. So, today was a chance for her to acclimate to  the system, but there will be follow-up meetings in terms of how to actually  use it in a new context. Second, in terms of all of the metrics for each of the  schools, that’s being assembled now. But the point is, we’re going to use a  very rigorous system where every school is going to have to be accountable to  the superintendent on a regular basis. Do you want to add?Aimee  Horowitz, Executive Superintendent for Renewal Schools: So, today was  a chance to observe the CompStat process and to have brief conversations with  some of the people that run the meeting along with two other people from the  DOE, so that we can continue to put together our War Room. We had our first War  Room meeting yesterday and superintendents presented to the DOE education –  senior level – people from all departments, including Youth Development – Mark  Rampersant was there, Dorita Gibson was there, people from Teaching and  Learning, [inaudible] was there – to do a case – kind of conference, where they  presented what’s going on in their schools and a problem of [inaudible] so  that we could question and offer possible solutions. And we had various  superintendents there – this is the first time that we had done it. We had five  superintendents there. Moving forward, we will have fewer superintendents so  that we can have more in-depth analysis and more time for question and answers.  So we’ve already reflected on that process, and then went to CompStat today to  learn more about what we can learn from that very successful process to move  forward and to see people ask the difficult questions. And I’m not afraid to  ask the difficult questions.Mayor: Let me just  add an additional piece – this is that exact process. You know, what’s so  powerful in CompStat is you take a set of statistics from the precinct that  then immediately go into a conversation about individual cases, individual  circumstances. And what the leadership does – in this case Chief O’Neill and  Deputy Commissioner Shea – is they drill down into the individual situation.  There was a pattern of robberies – what did you do or how did you investigate?  How many people did you apply to it? What did you find? Did you pursue this  lead? Did you coordinate with this other part of the equation? And they put the  leadership of the precinct through their paces. And they’re looking for, in  each case, who’s on the ball? Who’s got the right plan? Who’s following through  fully, or are there things where there’s areas of weakness that have to be  addressed or new practices that need to be brought to bear? That’s exactly what  Aimee already instinctively was starting to do with the superintendents and  with the principals, but we’re going to systematize that even further and, just  like in CompStat, rotate each school through to explain what they’re doing and  have to present their success, and their practice, and be critiqued. And then  they have to come back and show that they’ve taken the critique and put it into  action. Question: Whose idea was  this?Aimee  Horowitz:  So this idea was actually conceived by myself and a couple of members of my  team. My team is amazing. They’re really strong, smart, educated people that  care about schools, that have sat in the seat of principals, and are in schools  every day. And so we look at that, and look at what helps us grow as educators,  and what we can do moving forward.Question: The governor  has said that [inaudible]Mayor: I think we  have a very rigorous plan to turn these schools around. It was published in  November. It is now being acted, as you can see, with great energy and with a  lot of resources, and more to come. We have mayoral control of education, which  means the buck stops right here, and I am absolutely and totally personally  accountable. And as I said in my budget testimony in Albany, I have a contract  – it comes up for renewal in November 2017. If I don’t produce, the people can  replace me. That’s the beauty of mayoral control of education. So, to me, when  you have a mayoral control system with absolute clear authority, and we have  produced a clear plan for turning around the 94 schools with resources attached  and leadership that’s actually done the work. What’s important then is to let  us do our work. I’m not going to comment on other school systems with other  approaches, but where mayoral control of education exists, and you have an  absolutely clear chain of command, and absolutely clear accountability, the state  should simply let us get our job done.Question: [Inaudible]Mayor: I’m going to  ask Aimee to, you know, begin to outline that, but let me just start by saying,  this is a program that we announced in November that we are very energetically  applying through 94 schools. Now, 94 school, one of which, here – 2,000  students? Yeah, 94 schools, some of which have this number of students, would  be the size of an entire schools system of a major American city. So I just  want people to understand how fast and intense this effort is, but also how big  a playing field we’re working on here. But you’re going to see pieces of this  program in place across the board through this school year. September in  particular, you’re going to see a whole new reality in a lot of these schools  as we apply the elements of the program intensely. But why don’t you speak to  how many are at what point of development?Aimee  Horowitz:  So I am going to say that there are various stages of development, but every  school has been visited and has gotten feedback at least from their  superintendent. And many of the superintendents have visited their schools and  provided feedback more than once during walk-throughs with the principal and  assistant principal, looking at the classroom instruction. They’ve been visited  by talent coaches to work on instruction, and looking at implementation of  Danielson with fidelity, and also looking how to provide teachers with  actionable feedback. In addition, there is a renewal team that has visited  schools. Senior leadership from the Department of Education, including the  deputy chancellors, have each adopted a school and the vast majority of them  have visited their schools and are engaging in those visits today. I know  Dorita Gibson is at a school today and I know Deputy Chancellor Phil Weinberg  will be visiting very many of the high schools. I’ve been in 14 of the high  schools extensively, along with members of my team. And while not every school  has a coach embedded in the school, it takes time also to find the right  people. So just this week, two new – two additional high schools in Queens got  principal leadership coaches because we found the right person. It can’t just  be any retired principal, it has to be someone that can do the job. Question: [Inaudible]Aimee  Horowitz:  So in September, every renewal school will be a community school. The schools  right now are engaging in the process of interviewing community-based  organizations to be their chief partners. Those people will be sitting at the  table with the school. The school, in conjunction with their school leadership  team and other school constituents, have the option of choosing a  community-based organization that was vetted through a very rigorous process to  interview and to be the chief partner in that school so that they can provide  wrap-around services to students. What’s different about this than just having  a community-based organization in the school – as many of our schools do – is  that there will now be a community coordinator. And so those community-based  education – those community-based organizations will be embedded in the culture  of the school, will sit at the table with educators. So, it won’t just be an  after-school arts program, but they will discuss with educators what the  students need and how we can all coordinate the services so that student’s  needs are met.Mayor: Let me quickly  jump in and then we’ll get a second – let me come in on this and then I want to  also go over how the extra instructional time will be added in afterschool,  etcetera. This point is very important – I want you to go back to what we  talked about the charts on the wall of this school. This is a different  approach. I need everyone to understand this is not yesterday’s approach. This  is a different approach. This is student by student. So everything – Aimee is  an expert in education – uses some of the terms that may be less accessible to  those of us who are not teaching professionals, so I want to put it into a  little plainer English. All of this is about how you literally track every  student in your school and help them to achievement. It is about improving the  work of the teachers. It is about improving what the leadership can do – in  some cases, meaning new leadership; in some cases, meaning supporting the leadership  we have; in some cases, new teachers or teachers who have reached master or  model teacher level; in some cases, supporting the teachers we have or any  combination thereof. But it really comes down to incessant focus on each  student. So when we talk about community schools, that sounds a little abstract  at first, but here’s what it means. If a student has a health care need – they  have a physical health care need, if they have a mental health care need, it  will be dealt with in school. If a student needs tutoring, there will be  volunteers from the community to tutor them. If a student needs more  coordination between their parents and their teacher, the parent will be called  into the school because now we""ve given teachers a lot more time to focus on parent  engagement and getting on the same page strategically. Sometimes the  breakthrough for a kid will be if the parent is really on top of them about  doing their homework – if the parent’s reading with them. Whatever it may be,  teachers need that partner at home to maximize the educational strategy. So,  it’s a very different approach. It’s much more urgent. It’s much more hands-on.  It’s much more student by student. The history of this city is not a pretty  one. Many students were left without the support they deserve. Many parents  were left disengaged. Schools were written off. I’ve said it many times – the  status quo that we have received is unacceptable. We won’t stand for it. When  you really rework the process, it is, you know, the educational equivalent of  house-to-house combat. You’re literally working with every student and every  family to turn around what it ultimately a system of 1.2 million kids. I know  this as a public school parent. I know this from my days on the school board in  Community 15 – at Community School District 15 in Brooklyn – where you  literally understand from educators, what they needed to succeed. You’d hear  from teachers what they wished they could do to better their efforts on behalf  of their own children. We’re trying to put all those pieces together with  urgency. But you’re going to see the kind of approach that Neil Ganesh has done  here, where you literally can chart the progress of every single kid. That’s  totally CompStat, if you think about. That is taking the concept – CompStat –  CompStat concept and applying it very, very energetically right down to the  micro level of how are we doing with each child. Why don’t you talk about what  else happens in September, in terms of the school day, afterschool, etcetera?Aimee  Horowitz:  So by September, every school will have an added hour of extra learning time  for every student in the school. Currently, 54 of our schools have built that  into their schedule and that can be done through teacher flex-time, it can be  done through procession – there are various ways that schools can choose to do  that –Mayor: [Inaudible]Aimee  Horowitz:  Okay. It can be done by paying teachers at an hourly rate to stay. There are  various ways to do that, but in the renewal program, we are committed to every  school having an extra hour of instruction a day for every student so that our  students can spend more time learning. Whether they’re a struggling student  that needs an intervention, or a student in an advanced level class that can  benefit from enrichment – but we know that all of our students do better and  succeed at a higher levels with more time on-task. So what’s different about  this is the comprehensive approach. It’s not just we’re providing teachers with  coaching, or providing principals with coaching, or we’re turning the school  into a community school – it takes all of that into consideration so that we’re  attacking the problem and the issues from every single angle. Mayor: I just want to  make one other point – 54 of the 94 have that extra period of instruction right  now – the rest by September. Again, in September, every school gets  after-school programs, as well, for any student who needs it. So this is a lot  of layering here.Question: [Inaudible]  because you’re talking about how you won’t shy away from replacing a principal  or a teacher, if necessary. So, last month you told Albany that you have moved  out 300 teachers –Mayor: 291 at that  date – yes.Question: Okay. 97 of  those left because of severance [inaudible]. Of the remaining 200 or so, was a  single one of them removed because of disciplinary proceedings?Mayor: I’ll get you  the breakout. But I said there in Albany very clearly – we use disciplinary  proceedings, we used coaching people out of the profession who shouldn’t be in  it – some choose to resign, some take severance. The issue here is what’s going  to get it done. Now, we believe fundamentally that we need a better, faster  approach to discipline and we’re moving a lot of those pieces as well, but that  is one of the tools. Whatever gets someone who does not belong in the  profession out as quickly as possible, we’re going to use that tool. 291  between April and that point – it was February – is an example of the pace  we’re now starting to sustain in making the moves we have to make very quickly. Question: But anybody –Mayor: Again, I’ll  get you the breakout. I’m not familiar with how it breaks out.Question: – most of them  left because of retirement and maybe that’s a good approach too. I mean, what  if –Mayor: This is – no,  that group of folks are the folks, again, who we had purposefully believed  needed to move along. Retirement happens all the time in this system. This is  about the 291 folks specifically, for one reason or another, were helped out of  the profession.Question: [inaudible]  the retired.Mayor: Again, they  may have retired because we helped them out of the profession. The chancellor  has been very clear about counseling some people who do not belong in the  profession or are not performing any longer – that it’s time to seek another  path. I really think this is important, and you know a lot of education but I  wish we could demystify this a little bit. There is, as in any other line of  work, the possibility of a formal termination proceeding. It’s different,  depending on the line of work, depending on whether people are unionized of  not. We, again, are committed to making that a faster and better process. That  is one tool. A lot of times, the better tool, and the commissioner – excuse me  – the chancellor’s been really clear about this based on her long history as an  educator and as an administrator. You can counsel someone out – voluntarily skip  all that process. You don’t belong here anymore. You’re a good human being but  you don’t belong here anymore. You’re not into it. You’re burnt out. You can’t  do what we need you to do in this day and age. Whatever it is, if that person  goes along willingly, that is actually the most efficient way to resolve the  problem. Some people come to that conclusion themselves and resign or retire.  Some people say, well, if I’m going to take a severance opportunity, that at  least makes it easier for me to accept that reality. And that’s why we added  severance into the teacher contracts. About a third of those teachers did take  severance, which proved how helpful a tool it was. And we’ve just gotten  started having the ability to use these tools. So, we’re going to use all of  the above. And yes, sometimes there’s no choice but to pursue the termination  process aggressively and energetically. We want to improve it. We want it to be  faster and clearer. But I actually am happier when someone leaves before that  process has to be undertaken, if they need to be out of the system.Question: What would be  the benchmark or the metrics for this high school here to graduate from the  renewal program [inaudible]?Mayor: I’m going to  turn to Aimee – just a couple of points – excellent question. First of all, one  of the things we’re developing is our set of accountability measures for  everything we’re doing. So we’ll have more to say and we’ll keep publishing  those as we go along. And again, we intend to give you a lot of updates on how  the schools are going. And you’re going to see, I hope, a lot of schools making  a lot of progress, and you’re going to see some possibly that are not making  the progress we want. And I’m going to be very, very clear – if I don’t see  progress, I have the option to move to move to closure at any point in the next  three years. I said that three years was the time frame for a final decision,  but I’m not ruling out a faster action if I don’t see progress. So we’re going  to develop what we think is the progress within the renewal schools contact.  The question, I think, takes us over the horizon. When is a school so strong  again that it’s no longer in the program? That obviously, in part, has to do  with state standards. But that is exactly the aspiration – to get them to a  point where they stand alone and strong. Can you explain the state background?Aimee  Horowitz:  So, one of the things that we are in the process of engaging in right now,  recognizing that each of these 94 schools is – although they’re all renewal  schools, they’re all in a different place in their journey towards renewing and  being sufficient to be taken out of this initiative. So one of the things that  we’re doing is looking at each school individually based on where they are and  developing individual metrics. Also, the state has metrics that they apply. So,  for example, in high school, they look at graduation rate – four-year  graduation rate, six-year graduation rate – and they look at performance of  various subgroups and progress of various subgroups. And in elementary and  middle schools, they look at growth on state tests – ELA and math tests and in  some cases, science tests. So there are kind of two sets of metrics and we are  putting benchmarks into place for schools – both long and short-term  benchmarks. Graduation rate, which you mentioned, is a lagging indicator, so  we’ll be looking first, at leading indicators. For example, in high school,  ninth grade credit accumulation is one of the leading indicators because all of  the research shows that when students earn ten or more credits in ninth grade,  they’re much more likely to stay in high school and to graduate high school.  So, we are figuring all of that – those individual metrics out right  now. But they will be developed individually by school, based on where the  school is. And the schools will be aware of those targets.Mayor: Ok, now  wait a minute. I – we need to move to off topic soon but we do have an usually  high level of interest. So, let’s – we appreciate, so let’s take a little bit  longer.Question: [Inaudible]Mayor: This is still  on topic for everyone. So, I want to gauge on-topic interest after your  question. Go ahead.Question: Just to  continue on what you were saying, in the past, there has been criticisms on too  much emphasis on school test and [inaudible]. Do you see that as being – really  weighing into your equation [inaudible] which schools to [inaudible] or close  in the future?Mayor: I will  turn to Amy and just say this, at the outset, we as an administration – I know  the chancellor feels this very strongly – we believe in multiple measures. We  do not believe in over emphasizing high-stake testing, and we certainly do not  want to see an increase of the use of state testing in the way we evaluate. We  think there’s a much better, clearer way to understand what’s really happening  by looking at multiple measures. And that’s certainly – with everything that we  control that is fully the purview of the city of New York, we will use multiple  measures.Aimee  Horowitz: So, as the mayor said, we believe more in a holistic approach, and looking  at multiple measures. So while there is a role for tests, we also know that  there is attendance. We know that there’s credit accumulation. We know that  there’s effective leadership, effective teacher practice. Is the teacher  practice improving? Is the leadership practicing improving? So, those are all  things that we can look at – we can speak to students. We can speak to parents.  You walk into a school and you feel the climate of the school. If you walk into  a school on the day that the mayor is not coming, and you walk in, you feel the  climate of the school, right? And you know – you can – you know if that’s a  place where you would want to send your child. Or – you know – you know if you  feel welcomed. And we’re working with schools on that as well. That’s also very  important. So, those are all of the things that we look at and speak to – speak  to many different constituents and that’s how my team started this work as well.Mayor: Let me  add one point on that. The CompStat parallel – again, CompStat works not – this  is something I think is also underestimated – not just on the numbers. The practice  issue is crucial. I have had the honor, over this last 15 months, to get deep  in the conversation with Commissioner Bratton, and Chief O’Neill, and Deputy  Commissioner Shea, and listen to them talk about their trade and how they are  trying teach their commanders to think very critically about the work their  doing and then teach those under them to do it – always in a better and more  innovative way. The same is going to be true with teaching. So, the numbers  tell you a lot but you’re constantly working on the practice. If you see a  leader – a principal in this case, who needs to approach something differently,  you could help them think about the problem differently and approach how they  orient there teachers, how they train their teachers. Not all of that shows up  immediately in a metric, but that might be the gateway to fundamentally turning  around that school. So, it’s both, its working on the metrics always but it’s  also working on the quality of the practice.Question: [Inaudible]  the Daily News had its education series. Just wondering if you’ve seen it and  what do you think of it?Mayor: I think  there’s a lot of very important material being covered in the Daily News  series, and I appreciate it. And I appreciate that also both Chancellor Fariña  and I were offered an opportunity to provide our views. I also, you know, a lot  of times I’ve said I’d like the discussion on education to deepen, to get into  some of the really profound issues we face like the challenge of teacher  retention. Literally, nothing is more important to the future of schools then  attracting the best teachers, training the effectively, and keeping them. One  of our biggest problems is we’re losing great teachers all the time. It’s true  in school systems around the country. That doesn’t get addressed but the  teachers who don’t belong in the profession get looked at incisively. I think  the Daily News did a service by trying to take a bigger look at the situation.  I appreciate how much newspaper real estate was devoted to it as well. Wait,  who hasn’t – anyone who hasn’t gone yet. On topic – hasn’t gone. We’re going to  come to the student journalist? There’s a student journalist? Student  journalist we’re coming to you at the end, hold on. Bob?  Question: [Inaudible]Principal  Neil Ganesh, Richmond Hill High School: Okay, in terms of measuring parent  engagement, there are multiple metrics that we use. As you mentioned, open  school night, our PTA – we have for the first time, a very active PTA. We have  a wonderful PTA co-president. And we measure the amount of parents that are  involved in that aspect. In addition, about 20 percent of our population are  English language learners, meaning they speak another language at home. What we  have done is we have hired a community associate aligned to the language to  increase communication in that aspect. So, that’s why we’re seeing a greater  involvement of parents. We’re seeing more parents involved in the school  setting, in the school meetings, in parent-teacher conferences. So, that’s how  we would measure that – that aspect of it.Question: [Inaudible]Principal  Neil Ganesh:  Title I is about 75 percent.Mayor: Okay,  we’re going to finish on this side with – I got one left, okay.Question: [Inaudible]Mayor: I’ve certainly  offered the speaker my view and I think what’s clear is that a lot of the  Assembly members think receivership is counter-productive, in the context of a  mayoral control system. It just doesn’t make sense. We – look, we fought a  battle in this town to achieve a different approach to education. This is an  area where I agreed with Mayor Bloomberg. I supported mayoral control of  education. I always said it has to be applied in a way that was respectful to  communities and to the real dialogue over education. And sometimes I don’t know  the previous administration did that well enough, but the concept of mayoral  control and the mayoral control law was absolutely, positively right. It must  be continued unless we want our school system to go back to what was. We used  to have 32 individual district school boards, and we had a central board of  education appointed by a number of different people. It was known for bickering  and fighting and division, and paralysis. Kind of common – or similar to what  law we see in Washington D.C. right now. The 32 school boards – I was blessed  to be on a school board we were very proud of – that had a very good history.  Sadly, there were school boards that were rife with corruption. And I have to  say, you know, obviously everyone knows that I’ve had my agreements and  disagreements with Mayor Bloomberg, but on this one he was totally right. We  had a system that was rife with corruption. The local school boards were often  ineffective. The central board was often paralyzed. We can’t go back to that.  And so, if we know mayoral control of education is the right tool for a real  reform of our schools, and we see this all over the country, then the question  is, how do you actually allow mayoral control of education to work? If schools  are put under state control – well, I‘m sorry with all due respect to Albany, I  believe we know a lot more about what we need to do for our children than bureaucrats in Albany do. I think the notion of a  group of bureaucrats 150 miles away trying  to determine the fate of our children sounds like a formula for disaster. So,  let’s take the tools we have and apply them. What everyone in Albany had an  obligation and a right to say to the city of New York is, show us a plan with  real resources attached. We did that in November. And we are illustrating to  you today just how urgently we are applying that plan. We mean business.  Student journalist – hold on, let me just go these guys.Question: [Inaudible]Mayor: We are  very focused on investing in our schools. We obviously believe that – as the  assemblyman said, and he’ll jump in in a minute – that we deserve what the  highest court in New York State said we deserve in terms of education funding,  and that would have a transcendent impact on our schools. But even with the  resources we have, we continue to make additional investments. You’re also  about to see a capital budget come out, where we’re going to make extraordinary  new investments in education. Last year, we went to Albany and got specific  funding for pre-k. And starting in September, we’re going to have absolutely  universal pre-k. We’re going to keep ensuring we get that funding. So, it’s  partly what we are doing with our own resources. It’s partly what we’re getting  from Albany through our efforts and the support of the people of this city. And  it’s partly what we should get if the CFE decision were actually honored.Assemblyman  David Weprin: Just on the comment about a couple of Assembly Democrats voting against it.  It’s not just a couple of Assembly Democrats – it’s almost unanimity in the  Democratic conference against the receivership. As I said, unfortunately there  is a Senate and a governor, you know, and there’s always compromise but if it  was up to the Assembly Democrats, you know, I don’t think any of the governor’s  proposals on education would go through – but certainly not the receivership.Mayor: Do we  have one other student journalist? Yes? Go ahead.Question: [inaudible]Mayor: Well,  thank you for asking, because I think teacher retention – again, I’m going to  talking a lot about this in the coming months and years. Teacher retention  really is one of the most central questions in the education debate. And yet,  it’s not talked about. It’s – educators know about it. You know, you can look  far and wide in our mainstream media and try to find a serious discussion on  teacher retention and you will be looking for quite a while. So, we’re going to  push this issue very, very hard. I think it is truest, perhaps, in the schools  that are having the most trouble. But I think it’s actually transcendent across  the system. Meaning, I think the challenge of teacher retention is system-wide.  It’s very tough work – here’s the essence of the problem – it’s very tough  work. People who do it, do it because they’re true believers – the vast  majority. Again, are there some bad apples, are there some people who shouldn’t  be in the profession? Yes, and we’re going to move them out. But the vast  majority who do it believe in the work, but it’s still grueling work. It’s very  challenging work. You’re talking about, obviously, a lot of kids who come from  very disadvantaged circumstances – a lot of kids whose first language is not  English, and 171,000 kids who happen to have special needs. A lot of those  special needs make it tougher to support and educate those kids. You know, into  that – into that fight go the teachers trying to make a difference. You have to  be very, very strong to want to do that year-in and year-out and also you need  a lot of support. Until very recently in this city, teachers were being  attacked on a regular basis by the leadership of the school system and the  city. We’ve changed that. We support our teachers and they know it. Until  recently, teachers were not getting the kind of support for teacher training.  And again, if you’re a professional you want to keep getting better – that  training makes a world of difference – we’ve double down on teacher training.  Also, until recently, teachers have gone years and years without even having a  contract, which is not a great way to keep professionals in any profession.  Now, they have a contract going years ahead. So I think we’re seriously  addressing teacher retention by trying to build the foundation for a rewarding  work dynamic. But there’s a lot more we’re going to have to do beyond that.  Okay, we’re going off topic. Off topic –Question: I was  wondering if you could weigh in on the results of the Israeli election and also  on the comments that Prime Minister Netanyahu made about Arabs coming out to  the polls in droves. Obviously, it’s gotten some criticism –Mayor: I haven’t seen  that particular comment. Any Israeli citizen can and should vote, so I don’t  know why there would be a criticism of people exercising their right to vote in  a democratic society. But on the question of Palestinian statehood, I think  there’s many of us deeply, deeply disappointed. I am profoundly disappointed  that a consensus view held for years – did we let them go? Good – a consensus  view held for years by so many leaders in Israel and around the world, and  certainly by the government of the United States of America – if anything  actually had some bipartisan agreement, it was that there had to be a two-state  solution in that region of the world. For an Israeli Prime Minister to say,  literally overnight, we’re not going to pursue a two-state solution anymore is  seismic, and it’s a huge step backwards for peace in the region. And it’s not  good for the relationship between Israel and the United States. I think it was  a huge mistake and a very regrettable one. But, you know, I guess that’s what  he believes.Question: The Staten  Island deer population has exploded –Mayor: This is just a  little switch there – a little switch. Okay, camera two – okay go. [Laughter]Question: Staten  Island’s deer population has increased about –Mayor: Can we put  Aimee Horowitz in charge of the deer problem too? [Laughter]Question: [Inaudible]  population has increased about 3,000 percent in six years, and as a result,  poaching has become a problem on the island as recently as –Mayor: Poaching? In  what sense?Question: Like, in the  Fall, a man was arrested in what is the first – believed to be the first  deer-poaching arrest in New York City history – stalking a deer with a bow and  arrow in a New York City playground. And islanders also reported that they –  hearing about heads without antlers, presumably being taken as trophies  [inaudible]. I was wondering if you could comment on the deer population  [inaudible] –Mayor: Yes. Yeah,  deer non-retention – yes –Question: Have you ever  hunted animals?Mayor: I have not hunted  animals. I’m not familiar with the details, but I can certainly give you the  ground rules here. Anything that might endanger our fellow New Yorkers, such as  someone hunting with a bow and arrow in the proximity of a school or any other  habitation, we’re obviously going to enforce on that very, very rigorously. And  that will be the job of the NYPD, and we’ll work with the state on that. In  terms of the larger problem and how we’re going to regulate it and address it,  I’m going to have to get back to you with more. But in the safety issue it  creates for people nearby wooded areas, we take that very seriously and we’ll  certainly do enforcement on that. Bob?Question: [Inaudible] Mayor: Have I gone  into a new dimension where all the questions are on fish and wildlife? Question: [Inaudible] Mayor: Let’s get to  the punchline.[Laughter]Question: [Inaudible]Mayor: No, I’m  absolutely concerned. First of all, I’m concerned because if a company – in  this case, Exxon – has created damage to the environment and public health,  they have to compensate for it. They have to make it right. We saw that with  the BP oil spill in the Gulf. We’ve seen that many times with the Exxon Valdez  in Alaska. There’s supposed to be a rigorous process for ensuring that the  environment is restored. I don’t know the details of this settlement, but if  the dollar figure is so low that work can’t be done, I’m very uncomfortable  with what that means for the people of New York. And we’ll certainly look into  it further and decide what course of action we want to take. Question: Could you  provide us with an update into the case of the young woman who was killed by  the flying plywood in the West Village?Mayor: It’s a very,  very sad situation. I’m sure everyone has seen that she was soon to be married  and had just gotten to the city in the last year. It’s just tragic. What we do  know is the site has been closed down, in terms of any work there, by the  Department of Buildings. An investigation is underway. There have been some  violations offered, but we still don’t have a full picture of why the plywood  came loose and why it could cause so much damage to this poor woman. So, we’ll  have more on it soon, but certainly no work will happen at that site until  these issues are more deeply resolved. Right there –Question: Mr. Mayor, I  want to thank you for allowing [inaudible] Mayor: I have to  interrupt you though. I appreciate it – do you have a question?Question: I just wanted  to thank you for everything [inaudible]Mayor: Thank you –  very much appreciated. We’re going to come to you last. Very much appreciate  it. Go.Question: [Inaudible]Mayor: We’re going to  do two and we’ll go there. Okay.Question: So the jobs  report today, showing that New York City accounts for a higher percentage of  the state’s jobs, I believe, than ever before – went up from about 43 percent  in 2004 to about 47 percent now. I’m just wondering if something like that  might actually give you some kind of leverage in Albany as [inaudible] point to  the fact that city is [inaudible]. And I’m also wondering what – how much  credit you think your predecessor, Mayor Bloomberg, deserves for that.Mayor: So, a couple  of things – one, I think it’s quite clear we make a huge economic contribution  to the state of New York. And the strength of New York City does so much for  the whole state, and the fact that we are growing economically is good for the  state of New York. It’s good for all the people in the state of New York. So  that constant progress will uplift the whole state. And yes, it’s also the  rationale for why our needs deserve to be addressed, particularly if they’re  based on a judicial decision from years ago. On the question on the economy, I  think I would say it like this – I think Mayor Bloomberg did some important  things to foster economic growth, particularly, for example, with the  technology sector. I think all of us should be humble, when we’re local  officials, about the impact we have on economic growth. We’re part of the  equation. International and national economic trends are huge factors in  decisions of individuals companies that often have nothing to do with public  policy – are a huge factor. But I think local officials can make the situation  that much better or that much worse by their actions. So, I certainly credit  Mayor Bloomberg with having fostered some of the growth that we see – and  again, particularly in the technology sector. We believe our policies will build  upon that and deepen in. But I think any local official should always recognize  that they are just one part of a much bigger economic growth equation. You had  one more – was it Sally?Question: [Inaudible]Mayor: Why, Sally,  you know we don’t talk about the capital plan before it comes out. Thank you  for asking. The capital plan will come out in April, and we will address that  issue at the time. We’re certainly, you know, concerned about the future of the  MTA. So I said, I think Albany, which will go ahead of us, needs to take the  situation much more seriously. Their commitment so far at the MTA is far less  than is needed. And Albany controls the MTA, but we will address what we  believe we can do as well in the capital plan in April. Last call for you, go.Question: [Inaudible]Mayor: To the cost –Question: [Inaudible] Mayor: To own – well, we’re not generally doing home  ownership. First of all, we’re generally doing rental. That’s the much more  cost efficient. That’s where we’re putting the vast majority of our energy. We  can get you the plan, but I think the simple way to say it is that it’s an  affordable housing plan for people of a variety of income levels that need  affordable housing. A swath of the plan is devoted to the people who make $20,000  or less – another set to $40,000 or less, and so on, and so on. So the idea is  to create truly affordable rents because, for so many people in this city,  their current rents are a third of – yeah, too high – but a third of their  total income – even in many cases, more than half their net income. So, the  plan will produce 200,000 units over ten years – all affordable. For those who  say or allege we’re going to fast, I would say there’s no time to wait. We have  so many people who cannot afford to live here. We’ve got to protect the  economic diversity of our city and create opportunity. But we have added into  our plan protections for local residents to keep their affordable housing in  place. And we believe that if the city comes in and manages the development  process, rather than just letting the private market forces manage it, that we  can guarantee affordability and guarantee that people have opportunity. The  alternative of doing nothing is much, much worse because it means – as we’ve  seen in many communities – that development and gentrification will displace  many people. Our approach is a specific response to that history and will allow  us to make sure that people can remain in their neighborhoods.  Thank you  very much, everyone.

日期:2022/01/26点击:25