News and commentary
Oregon Lottery's School funding "opportunity"
Tags:As if having to play the PPS lottery for a chance to send your child to a school with adequate course offerings isn't bad enough, you can now gamble for a few extra school funding dollars from the Oregon Lottery. Please read this "Scratch-it for Schools" article from the Oregon Center for Public Policy.
http://www.ocpp.org/cgi-bin/display.cgi?page=cp0801lottery
- N Breedlove's blog
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Bug Spray
Tags:I don't know if anyone else has noticed this at their school, but my daughters school requires pesticide application very frequently. The environment filthy, and rather than pay and staff to keep it clean, they would rather spray pesticides everywhere to control the ants.
- natashao's blog
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Jefferson Principal to Oregon Assembly for Black Affairs: "Black Kids are Different"
Tags:The following is a letter from Lynn Schore to Jefferson High School principal Cynthia Harris regarding their exchange at an Oregon Assembly for Black Affairs meeting Saturday.
September 17, 2007
Dear Dr. Harris:
I attended the public Oregon Assembly for Black Affairs (OABA) meeting on 9/15/07 at AME Zion Church. I have been an OABA member, as well as a Jefferson High School PTSA member and volunteer, for three years. The Saturday OABA meeting was described as a chance to get to hear the opinions of key PPS administrators on schools issues, and to ask questions.
The meeting was attended by PPS administrators Leslie Rennie-Hill, Willie Poinsette, Judy Elliott, Cynthia Harris, and Barbara Adams. Other people present included OABA president Calvin Henry, Ms. M. Henry, Ms. Lulu R. Stroud-Johnson, Mr. Sam Jackson, Ms. Loretta Smith, Mr. Robert Phillips, Ms. Nicole Breedlove, "in-house Oregonian reporter on contract at Jefferson High School" Kimberly Melton, myself and others. Arriving later were Sheila Warren and Colleen Davis.
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PPS and Open Transfers: Slaughtering the Sacred Cow
Tags:(This commentary originally appeared on my own blog yesterday.)
I'm struggling to figure out why it is, and when it became so, that open transfers are sacrosanct in Portland Public Schools. Even after Multnomah County Auditor Suzanne Flynn and Portland City Auditor Gary Blackmer condemned the PPS policy in June of 2006, noting that "the transfer policy competes with other Board policies such as strong neighborhood schools and investing in poor performing schools," Portland's school leaders are still loathe to even discuss curtailing the open transfer policy.
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- Steve's blog
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PPS Divestment by Neighborhood, Illustrated
Tags:I've written before about how Portland Public Schools' open transfer policy causes segregation and divestment of state tax revenue from poor neighborhoods and funnels it to wealthier neighborhoods. I've called for a New Deal for PPS that will and redirect state funding to reinvest in these neighborhoods.
My harping on these points has caused some confusion. After all, doesn't PPS actually spend more per student in the poorer schools? Yes, of course they do. But the point is that as families take advantage of PPS's open transfer policy, millions of dollars follow them out of poorer neighborhoods, landing in the wealthier, whiter neighborhoods. Left in their wake are segregated schools with fewer "specials", electives and extra-curricular activities, and under constant threat of closure, No Child Left Behind sanctions, and "reorganization" (read charter schools, alternative schools, and ill-advised grant-funded experiments).
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- Steve's blog
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School Segregation: Where are Portland's Civic Leaders?
Tags:Steve Brand's Op-Ed in the Oregonian last week (covered on my blog, on Terry Olson's blog and on Amanda Fritz' blog) spurred quite a bit of community discussion on the issue of segregation in our Portland Public Schools. But why aren't our civic leaders weighing in on this critical issue of Portland's future?
I explore this issue more in-dept
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- Steve's blog
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