Time for the School District to Clean Up Its Act! Students Wash Windows in a Call for Transparency
by
Philadelphia Student Union | 04.22.2008
Time and Location: 4 pm, Thursday, April 24, 440 N. Broad St.
Stand with Philadelphia Student Union, parents and community members to demand that the School District be more transparent and accountable. Students will be washing the School District's windows and calling for full public disclosure and more input on the School District's budget, outside contracts, and Educational Management Organization (EMO) negotiations and evaluations.
Come out, get your hands wet, and join the fight for a cleaner school district!
Audio Call To Action, produced by Dan Jones & Candace Carter: Here
Read the story by a Tamieka Tomlinson, student at King High School on future of Philly schools: Here

Philadelphia Student Union blocks traffic during a "No Privatization" demonstration.
How can you put a price on education? Why should the quality of my education be determined by funds which are based on local property taxes rather than the needs of the students?
At Martin Luther King High School, students deal with issues associated with a lack of funding. Year after year, we suffer from a lack of experienced teachers, school books and materials, and the horrible physical condition of old school buildings. Currently, we are being run by Foundations Inc. which is a non-profit company in partnership with the school district. Since its initiation in 2001, M.L.K. has remained in Corrective Action II.
CA II schools make up 25% of the district. Yet, 44% of all teacher vacancies in Philadelphia (57 of 131 vacancies) are in CA II Schools. Nearly half of the schools that employ first year teachers are managed by Education Management Organizations (EMOs). Qualified teachers must be evenly distributed through out the district. It is becoming an issue for students. The faculty to student ratio is more than the staff can handle. Students are often pushed aside and treated as if we are just a number. It is essential that teachers make an effort to reach out to parents and try to understand what each student needs to succeed.
The school district should do more for us. Teachers are underpaid and that affects the way they teach. Teachers are not given adequate funds to conduct their lessons. Although King is a comprehensive high school, my Health related Technology course, which acts as a vocational class, is not as interactive as it should be. We need more wheelchairs, beds and basic equipment that are used in hospitals. Without these materials, our lessons are dragged.
This corrupts the curriculum, which should be challenging. We are not offered a wide variety of courses to choose from. School has become uninteresting. If the quality of my education does not mean anything to the School District then I do not know what does. If the EMO running my school cannot provide the students of Martin Luther King High School with fully qualified, experienced teachers and equipped classrooms, then they should not be in control. When students struggle to barely meet the states standards on standardized test, and about 50% of my graduating class drops out before their senior year, there has to be more than a ‘reform’ to once again improve our schools, and not to set us up to fail again.
I have faith in this idea of reformation but only when the community is given an opportunity to speak out about their students’ education. I was always told to be all that I can be. Foundations Inc. has yet to recognize my fellow peers and I as hopefuls of tomorrow.
Comments
PSU all the way
Submitted by Daniel Jackson (not verified) on Thu, 04/24/2008 - 12:11pmPSU all the way
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