School board standing
firm on vote against Common Core
With
Cobb Board of Education members standing firm on their votes, it’s unlikely the
vote against purchasing math textbooks affiliated with Common Core State
Standards will change.
That
doesn’t prohibit the board from discussing other options for this coming school
year during its Wednesday morning work session, along with concerns about
emails from district staff that Board Chairman Randy Scamihorn said contain
“misinformation” about the recent decision to nix the purchase of $7.5 million
in math textbooks.Scamihorn said he was open to reconsidering the textbook issue if any board members had notified him that they had changed their minds — but that hasn’t been the case.
“Nobody to my knowledge has changed their position, so I don’t want to have that debate again,” Scamihorn said. “Why waste the time? We had a spirited discussion on this but once a decision is made, I expect the staff to carry out the board’s decision.”
However,
recent emails written by Cobb School District staff have surfaced that
Scamihorn says undermine the board’s 4-3 vote in April to reject the textbook
purchase. He said a couple of board members have expressed concerns to him that
certain staff members have been “subverting the decision of the board” not to
purchase the books.
The
emails, obtained by MDJ, appeared to be sent to parents and teachers in an
effort to pressure the School Board into holding another vote on the purchase
of the controversial Common Core textbooks.“If the intention of the emails is to subvert the board’s decision, then I’m disappointed,” Scamihorn said. “And from the emails I’ve seen, they contain misinformation.”
Superintendent says he didn’t authorize emails
Superintendent
Michael Hinojosa said neither he nor his staff encouraged nor authorized the
emails to be sent out although he was in favor of the textbook purchase.“This is not a political issue, but people need to use better judgment about those kinds of things,” Hinojosa said.
Specifically, one email seemed to set forth an erroneous timeframe that if the books weren’t purchased now, the school district would be forced to go without them for another six years.
“If
we can’t get to the bottom of it, at the very least it’s going to stop,”
Scamihorn said of the email campaign. “Six years? My question back to them is,
where’s the law saying we can’t buy textbooks in December? You can’t teach
without textbooks? Oh really? What did we do last year? We taught without
them.”
Hinojosa
said he will have discussions with staff members to separate truth from
fiction.
“The
board could reconsider this (textbook purchase) at any time over the next six
years should board opinion change or should the board change,” he said. “It’s
not accurate that nothing could ever happen. I will try to help communicate
that with staff.”
Alternative math resources for teachers
Scamihorn
said the school district made do without textbooks last year and he has placed
an item on Wednesday’s agenda that will address the need for alternative math
resources for teachers.
“We
are going to talk about math resources, not textbooks,” Scamihorn said. “We’ll
explore alternatives to support our math teachers, such as online resources, or
other resources that might be available.”
Amy
Krause, chief academic officer, said she has a strong belief teachers will do “whatever
it takes” to manage without the new textbooks.
“They
have been managing, even though it’s difficult, to pull together resources to
teach,” Krause said.
Krause
said her department is in the process of assessing other options that could be
presented to the board, including possibly reducing the scope of the original
recommendation.
Scamihorn
said he has asked staff to look into what other school districts are doing,
including considering the possibility of using state resources as suggested by
State Superintendent John Barge.
“(Barge)
says there’s plenty of material on state websites,” he said. “A few — not a lot
— of teachers, have said that it’s not well organized. I’d like to get a little
more of a definitive answer to that.”
Class sizes could increase
In
other business, the board will also consider approving a resolution to waive
state class size allotment ratios for 2013-14 school year to meet financial and
staff constraints. For all student groups and grade levels, the waiver could
allow for a minimum of one and a maximum of eight additional students per
classroom.
Other
agenda items- A $590,303 contract with Hamby
& Aloisio Inc. of Atlanta for property and casualty insurance and
crime/electronic data insurance from July 1 through June 30, 2014.
- A right-of-way change and
$10,738 contract to be reimbursed by Cobb DOT for fencing in front of Mt.
Bethel Elementary School. Cobb DOT is requesting to create an access route
to access its equipment as well as improve the traffic signal and school
flashing equipment on Johnson Ferry Road.
- The closeout of capital outlay
projects at Walton and Pebblebrook high schools and Mableton Elementary
School, which district officials say will garner an anticipated
reimbursement of $807,292.80 from the Georgia Department of Education.
- The appointment of a new
principal for Murdock Elementary School and resignations of Robert Shaw,
principal of Hillgrove High School, who moved to Riverwood High School in
Fulton County, and Wanda Shue, Nicholson Elementary School’s principal.
- Authorize the temporary use of the Fitzhugh Lee facility, which was scheduled to close in December. In 2012, the board approved moving Fitzhugh Lee students to Brown Elementary. That will be delayed by two years because the SPLOST 4 Teasley Elementary School construction initiative requires housing Teasley kindergarten and first-grade students at Brown.
Source: Marietta Daily Journal, June 10, 2013 School
board standing firm on vote against Common Core by Megan Thornton
Comments:
The
track record on Federal Government imposed education programs is abysmal. Why wouldn’t School Boards vote out the
latest version.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
No comments:
Post a Comment