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Central Falls High School Teachers Don't Show Up; Education Reform Stalls

Ri

ERIC TUCKER   01/ 6/11 09:19 AM ET   AP

CENTRAL FALLS, R.I. — The teachers at Central Falls High School struck a deal to get their jobs back last year after the entire staff was fired in a radical, last-ditch attempt to raise student performance. But if the administrators thought the teachers would be grateful for a second chance, they were wrong.

Many teachers aren't showing up for work, often calling out sick. Several abruptly quit within the first few weeks of the school year. Administrators have had to scramble to find qualified substitutes and have withheld hundreds of student grades because of the teacher absences.

The progress that the city's school board – and the Obama administration – had hoped for seems increasingly, and alarmingly, elusive.

The problems come despite a labor agreement that union leaders and administrators in this poor, heavily immigrant city trumpeted as a breakthrough at Central Falls High, a struggling school of roughly 840 students where just 7 percent of 11th-graders were proficient in math in 2009.

"I expected when everyone came to the school that there would be more of a shared focus on making sure that everything was successful," said state Education Commissioner Deborah Gist. "At this point, we're concerned about whether or not people are going to be able to let go of the past and work together toward moving forward."

Exactly what's causing all the problems is unclear, but both sides acknowledge lingering discontent over the firings and the changes that followed.

Richard Kinslow, an English teacher who has not been calling out sick, said a new management team that was put in place was inexperienced and failed to offer support for teachers or crack down on rampant discipline problems, including what he said were physical and verbal assaults on staff members by students.

"We don't have a sense of clarity from our leadership. We don't have a clear sense of their mission or their vision. Communication has been, again, awful," Kinslow said. "If I'm going to be thrown into the bus by my supposed leaders every day, where is my hope? Where is my sense of team? Why would I be working?"

But he said he was hopeful that a team of mediators coming into the school could encourage cooperation.

Central Falls High became Exhibit A in a national debate on education reform when the school board last February authorized the firing of all teachers. The school was identified as one of the state's worst, and after talks with the union broke down, the superintendent resorted to a new option, created by the Obama administration, that allows the dismissal of teachers at poorly performing schools.

President Barack Obama appeared to endorse the firings, saying drastic action may be warranted when schools show no signs of improvement.

The White House declined to comment this week.

Following months of negotiations, the teachers were rehired after agreeing to work a longer school day, undergo more rigorous evaluations and provide more after-school tutoring. At the time, Gist said the changes would result in "dramatic achievement."

That hasn't happened.

More than a dozen teachers – and sometimes over 20 – of the roughly 90-person staff were absent on an average day this fall, including six on long-term leave, said Central Falls School Superintendent Frances Gallo. Fifteen teachers have left since August, including six who quit after school started, though administrators said they have only one vacancy left to fill.

"It's extremely frustrating, but more than that, I believe it's extremely unprofessional," Gallo said. "Teaching is getting a black eye, and why? Because not every teacher is living up to their vocation."

Administrators withheld more than 450 first-quarter grades after deciding teacher attendance was too spotty to accurately measure student performance.

A student walkout disrupted classes last month, and the president of the American Federation of Teachers held a news conference to support the teachers.

Some students said they have grown weary of the negative attention, arguing teachers are being scapegoated for problems beyond their control. But some also said there are teachers and administrators who aren't equipped to deal with disciplinary and academic problems.

"If we don't do work, they don't redirect us. They just kick us out of the class. How are we going to learn from getting kicked out every day?" asked Frankie Dehoyos, 14, a freshman. But he added, "We should all get blamed – not just the teachers, the students."

Some parents are angry – some at the teachers, some at the administrators, some at both sides.

"The teachers have taken advantage of their sickness days. Almost every day they're absent, so students don't get a lot of education," said Jose Ortiz, as his daughter, Kyara, a Central Falls student, translated from Spanish. "The students don't pay attention in class because the teachers don't help them."

Gallo said the teachers' absences have detracted from the positive developments at Central Falls, including new Saturday school, a new math program – and the fact that roughly 20 teachers have not missed a day of work.

Heavily Hispanic Central Falls is Rhode Island's smallest and poorest city, with a population of nearly 19,000. One-quarter of families live in poverty and 65 percent speak a language other than English at home. The city is under the control of a state-appointed receiver, who says its problems are so dire that Central Falls should consider merging with neighboring Pawtucket.

"It wasn't easy to be fired based on failing test scores in English and math when they already know that the kids aren't at that level when they give them the tests," said JoAnn Boss, a Spanish teacher who was on long-term medical leave this fall.

Gist said the school can improve if it continues following its reform plan, which lays out goals for raising academic proficiency, increasing the graduation rate and improving student discipline.

But she and other officials acknowledged that other drastic measures, such as closing the school or again replacing the teachers, may need to be considered if things don't improve fast.

"There's good reason to hope that it can get better," said Robert Flanders, chairman of the state Board of Regents for Elementary and Secondary Education. "Because it can't get any worse."

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CENTRAL FALLS, R.I. — The teachers at Central Falls High School struck a deal to get their jobs back last year after the entire staff was fired in a radical, last-ditch attempt to raise student ...
CENTRAL FALLS, R.I. — The teachers at Central Falls High School struck a deal to get their jobs back last year after the entire staff was fired in a radical, last-ditch attempt to raise student ...
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GlennWatson
Two million fans
11:58 PM on 01/07/2011
I have about 200 days of sick leave built up. If I knew I was leaving soon anyway I might use them. You can't take them with you.
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poeticjustice4all
Past = Prologue
10:01 PM on 01/07/2011
“He had substitute teachers every day for a month, and they didn’t do anything,” Nancy Vacquez said, speaking of her son’s art class. “Angry? Of course I’m angry. They should hire better substitutes, or at least bring in parents.”

“As a parent, I’m very unhappy because the teachers are not showing up for work,” said Maria Betancur, whose son is in the 10th grade. “I’m worried about my son’s future. The teachers should be showing an example to the kids.”

Hugo Figueroa, whose daughter is in ninth grade said: “We have teachers out for three weeks, one month or more. They should be showing the kids what they said back then, that they loved them, but they’re not here.”
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SeeDaddy
09:48 PM on 01/07/2011
This is the result of failure of the school administration and school district to provide required leadership and working conditions in the school. This is not a union created issue. It is a management failure. The city, school board, school district have failed to fulfill their responsibilities to the teachers and students. Think of an army with no officers and no support staff. That's basically the situation.
06:19 PM on 01/07/2011
The beatings will continue until morale improves.
06:15 PM on 01/07/2011
'' Richard Kinslow, an English teacher who has not been calling out sick, said a new management team that was put in place was inexperienced and failed to offer support for teachers or crack down on rampant discipline problems, including what he said were physical and verbal assaults on staff members by students.''
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Anarchy is self-empowerment without structure or rules. It is chaotic and dangerous.

This school cannot revert to a modern rule-based compliance system unless you want to reduce teacher-student ratios to about one teacher to five students.

Regression to premodern subordination system is not feasible as it would entail measures now illegal.

That leaves moving to consent systems in which students are empowered in an organized way. This process is democratization. In order to proceed, school needs to bring in sociologists, psychologists and management consultants some with experience in group dynamics and conflict resolution.

Responsibilities in running the school should be negotiated and transferred to students. First of all the discipline system and personal conduct should be discussed.

The compliance system is breaking down across the lower-class areas of the West - not just the United States.

You think democratization is crazy? No. Expecting teachers to endure anarchy is crazy. No wonder they are calling in sick.

Violent students. Their anger needs to be channeled into constructive processes not repressed.

Democratize.
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poeticjustice4all
Past = Prologue
04:33 PM on 01/07/2011
The teachers at Central missed so many work days, 453 students did not receive a grade for the first quarter due to inadequate instruction during the first two months of school.
04:19 PM on 01/07/2011
It is too bad the teachers went back - we could have found out if replacing all these 'bad' teachers with 'good' teachers would have made a difference. The only way we are going to get to the bottom of this is the hard way.
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poeticjustice4all
Past = Prologue
04:23 PM on 01/07/2011
Very true. Of course while the teacher unions play games -- the students lose.

The next step is the courthouse.
05:31 PM on 01/07/2011
Where has all the court action in the past got us? We are still down in the muck. It is time for some sobering honesty on everyone's part if we are ever going to get this straightened out. I am tired of people in this thread blaming this on ELL, where I work we have many ELL kids and they are well behaved and ready to learn. Everyone is always looking for the easy 'sound bite' style answer and that is not going to do it.
06:22 PM on 01/07/2011
We could as easily say "While the administration and the school board play games, the kids lose." Or, for that matter, "While society plays games, keeping families in poverty that is much more the cause of low academic performance than teachers are, the kids lose." Both would be more true.

But we wouldn't do that if we had already made up our minds, against the available evidence, that teachers' unions were bad, and instead of having an intelligent discussion, we just waited for education to come up so that we could bleat our our "Unions BAD! Unions BAAAAD!" refrain.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SeeDaddy
09:50 PM on 01/07/2011
It's not bad teachers! It's bad administrators.
10:58 PM on 01/07/2011
Replacing all the teachers in that school would qualify your statement, no? When teachers don't show up for school, it is hard to not see them as a big part of the problem. As somebody else pointed out - they didn't have to go back there.
02:56 PM on 01/07/2011
There are a multitude of issues here:

A) Start from the ground up-- check K-5 education and she where they begin to veer off-track.

B) Look at their home lives-- most are ELL-- time to bring in the specialists and try to provide a classroom setting to educate in when you have this large of a group (as you see in Boston Public).

C) After school programs to keep them out of trouble-- if you've been to CF, you'd know how bad they need it.

D) Strict policies for students, provide alternative education and seminar after seminar for the teachers to help redevelop the program (as well as financial incentives to push the new programs forward).

This school district is a hot mess. Teachers are treated like animals, students are out of control, and the administration doesn't know how to handle the stress. There's no simple answer, but I can guarantee the steps above would be forward progress. The teachers want to teach, that's why they went to school for it-- give them the right environment & training, and they will be successful.
11:19 AM on 01/07/2011
I find this article offensive. You are vilifying these teachers without proper context. It is ridiculous for a school to fire an entire staff even if there were some bad teachers in the mix. I know that had my administrator fired all of my coworkers I would find myself feeling very betrayed and unappreciated. Failing schools are failing for a plethora of reasons. Do bad teachers contribute, of course, but to assume that the majority of teachers at that school weren't good people trying to do the best they could in system where all the cards are stacked against you is I think very false. Having taught in a "failing" school I can say that the majority of the staff worked their butts off tirelessly to help their students DESPITE no backup from their superiors. This article and headline is disingenuous without a lot more context. I expect better from H*ffp*st than this.
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poeticjustice4all
Past = Prologue
02:05 PM on 01/07/2011
I find these teachers offensive. If they're so unhappy -- they should leave.

There is no "proper context" for reprehensible behavior and misconduct.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Eric Mann
Do you want to be on the opposite side of Progress
02:28 PM on 01/07/2011
They ARE leaving, and then they get critisized for doing so...so what is your point? What exactly is reprehensible about taking sick days that you have earned? What misconduct is there in quitting a job where you do not want to work?

Your "blame the teachers and only the teachers" approach makes as much sense as a screen door on a submarine. In education, we talk about a student's succsess as having 3 legs-like a stool. One is the student, one is the teacher/school, and one is the family. Your insistence that there is only something wrong with one of those legs is absurd. In my decade of teaching, most students I have seen that have not succeeded there was a fair share of blame for all three.
03:46 PM on 01/07/2011
Why would you fire all of the teachers, hire them back, and then expect them to act "professionally?" I can't understand why those teachers were fired only to be hired back. It doesn't make sense and surely would destroy morale.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KMel
11:18 AM on 01/07/2011
Is the superintendent really that dense? Here is a reality check- people do not perform well when you treat them like crap. Especially well educated people who can find jobs elsewhere.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Eric Mann
Do you want to be on the opposite side of Progress
09:29 AM on 01/07/2011
The issue is trust. The administration broke that trust by firing every teacher regardless of their position, their performance, or their experience. The teachers are responding in a typical crisis mode response-and it is the fault of the administrators for putting them in it. The administration is simply reaping what it has sown.

As a teacher, one of the first things I learned is that it is a really bad method to punish the whole class for bad behavior of some of them. This is exactly what the administration did, and its ironic for them to use such a poor method.

The administration of this school district needs to work on rebuilding trust-in its old employees as well as any new ones.
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poeticjustice4all
Past = Prologue
02:10 PM on 01/07/2011
If these teachers are so abused and so put upon -- why don't they leave?

Go get a job at Wal-Mart. See how long the administration at Wal-Mart puts up with lousy performance and failure.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Eric Mann
Do you want to be on the opposite side of Progress
02:23 PM on 01/07/2011
Your ignorance on how education works is obvious. Let me be clear: At Wal-Mart, it is easy to evaluate if someone failed at a task. As a teacher, it is no where near as obvious. Here is a great example: I ran into a student from my first year teaching. I will admit I was a hot mess. She said what she remembered was that I really showed how much I care, and that was part of her inspiration to go to college. By the metrics you promote, I would have been rated a failure. So failures inspire kids to go to college?
You obviously are not a teacher, but an arm-chair quarterback. Let me ask you once again, what have YOU done to help education truely progress in this country?
08:55 AM on 01/07/2011
The school administrators should have stuck to their guns and understanding that the major issue with this school is the teachers themselves. It is obvious that the overwhelming majority of these teachers only care about themselves and don't give a second thought to what is best for the school and it's students. Every teacher should be put on notice that they will be terminated AGAIN on the last day of school and that EVERY DAY between now and then is an extended interview to decide if any of them will be offerred a chance to return.
This situation is the poster child of what can go wrong when ANYONE is basically assurred of emplyment regardless of results. At least one school district is trying to change that ridiculous situation. More power to the Central Falls, RI Board of Education. While I'm sure it is very difficult going through this you are setting the stage for true reform throughout the country - keep pushing!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Eric Mann
Do you want to be on the opposite side of Progress
09:08 AM on 01/07/2011
So, according to you, the idea is to say "the beatings will continue until morale improves!" eh?
This is not true reform-this is true deform. Yes, these teachers have not gotten into a mode of looking out for only themselves, because it seems that others won't. It is the better teachers that have left because they found jobs elsewhere-again, part of the free market philosophy you espouse. If teachers are under the "perform according to these sets of invalid measures, and you're on your own to do so" idea, then they are well within their rights to leave the situation when they feel it is right to do so.

The issue is trust. The administration broke that trust by firing every teacher regardless of their position, their performance, or their experience. The teachers are responding in a typical crisis mode response-and it is the fault of the administrators for putting them in it. The administration is simply reaping what it has sown.
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poeticjustice4all
Past = Prologue
02:11 PM on 01/07/2011
Yes! The beatings will continue. If you don't like it -- GET OUT.
09:15 AM on 01/07/2011
Would you work there? If your boss came to you and said, "From not until June, you're under the microscope every day." No mistakes. Getting hit by the students (as the article indicates), tough. Being verbally abused by the students (as the article indicates)? Tough.
Are the teachers being unprofessional? Probably. But if you're work environment was that emotionally and mentally toxic...wouldn't you be sick too?

There are problems on both sides here. Only the administration doesn't seem concerned with their half of the problems.
10:59 AM on 01/07/2011
You need to go back to the original issue. The teachers were not able to teach the children - union contracts made it next to impossible to remove teachers that were performing poorly - and the teachers themselves (and their union) REFUSED to accept proposals by the board to improve performance. The teachers were not performing, chose not to leave because they probably couldn't find anything else due to that lack of performance, and would not accept ideas to make things better.
THE TEACHERS OWN THIS LOCK, STOCK, AND BARREL. Yes, I'm sure the bulk of the good teachers have left because they couldn't stand the environment their "peers" forced upon them and they had options because news travels fast regarding who is and who isn't worth their salt. I'm sure the Board of Education could have done a better job along the way but at least they were trying to improve things - all the teachers did was say NO or WHAT's IN IT FOR ME!
06:52 AM on 01/07/2011
So, wait, the District fired EVERY teacher then rehired them and is now wondering why many of them are using sick time (provide by contract) and quitting.

***SPOILER ALERT***

They are using their sick time to interview for jobs and the ones quitting are the good ones who can get jobs. By firing them all, you told every one of them that they're effectively valueless to you and they have to assume it will happen again; of course they're looking for other jobs. Funny, you clearly love things like Capitalism when it works out for you, but when it means that teachers can a teacher might leave mid-year or apply for another job, suddenly you're against the concept altogether.

central Falls made a choice, a bad one, and now the teachers are all making choices based on it; did they really expect something different???
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poeticjustice4all
Past = Prologue
12:19 AM on 01/07/2011
The "rampan­t discipline problems" were with the teachers -- not the students.

At one point, the principal walked into a classroom and saw that someone had hung an Obama doll in effigy with an anti-Obama phrase scrawled across the bulletin board.

It turned out it was the classroom teacher who had hung the doll. Students later told parents it had been hanging upside down in the classroom for two weeks.
03:39 AM on 01/07/2011
I truly hope this teacher was fired!

Once again I must voice the opinion that our system is screwed up because it just allows people to become teachers, without teaching them how to teach. My son is in his second year of teaching, holding a degree in math. He has never taken one class on how to teach, he just took a certification test for math and was offered a position. Meanwhile he is doing his darndest to teach himself through books about teaching techniques.

For the education system to rely on people self teaching themselves the art of instruction is ridiculous.
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poeticjustice4all
Past = Prologue
04:28 AM on 01/07/2011
I do not know whether that particular teacher was ever re-hired. The whole situation is out of control and there have been many other shocking instances of teacher misconduct.

Of course there are always two sides to every story, but when the story involves children who are mandated by law to go to school and adults who are free to leave -- nobody wants to hear the side where teachers give excuses and justifications for reprehensible behavior. Just leave. Move on -- so the students can try and salvage what's left of their time in school.

The students' right to a decent education is far more important than failed union negotiations. Any teacher worthy of the title would agree.
06:55 AM on 01/07/2011
So, you use the agreed to, contractual discipline process that both sides signed and fire the bad teachers. It is nowhere near as hard as they make it out to be and I have sen cases where a union supported firings when the organization followed the process. Firing EVERY teacher is a ridiculous move that tells them all, good ones included, that they're valueless. If that is the case, why complain when they call in sick or quit to take another job?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ezzy666
12:01 AM on 01/07/2011
I remember my first year of teaching I took one sick day and got nothing in return for the 14 I didn't use. I wish I had taken advantage of them. If a teacher is at awful school, (due to students, administrators, other teachers, or whatever) they can get physically ill from the stress.