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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhy Philadelphia schools will close their doors forever
(Digital Journal) Philadelphia - The School District of Philadelphia, the eighth largest school district in the United States, nestled in the countrys fifth largest city, will make history when it permanently closes it doors within the next two years.
While Philadelphia is one of the largest school districts in the country, it is also one of the most bankrupt. The district will start the 2013-2014 school on September 9 but stares at a $304 million deficit. If it werent for the city borrowing $50 million on behalf of the school district, none of the 218 public schools would be opening next week. The slight infusion of money allows Superintendent William Hite to open schools on time but its far from meeting the needs of the district that had to lay off 20 percent of its total staff over the summer. It was the second consecutive year of thinning out staff that saw 3,800 teacher and staff positions eliminated, 100 school nurses, 90 school resource officers, and 43 bilingual counselors.
Although the school district continues to have financial and academic trouble year after year, the finger pointing halts at the State of Pennsylvania. After taking control of the district in 2001, the state has not fixed any of the problems in Philadelphia; allowing the current situation to spread like a virus. Jerusah O. Conner is an education professor at Villanova University and is an expert on the Philadelphia school district. In a recent interview, Professor Conner said that the state shoulders much of the blame for the districts problems. Pennsylvania ranks 8th lowest in the country, spending only 35.8 percent on education. Were it not for the deliberate underinvestment and disinvestment in Philadelphia schools by the state, the district could easily be enjoying a multibillion dollar surplus instead of a deficit.
Many in the education field say that Pennsylvania Governor Tom Corbett is to blame for the crisis in Philadelphia. Corbett should have allocated more money for Philadelphia after taking office but instead, he made massive budget cuts in 2011, including cutting $1 billion from education statewide. The results of Corbetts axe wielding left the district with a $629 million shortfall that year and the momentum of the crisis continued to grow. The city of Philadelphia attempted to generate money by raising property taxes 3.85 percent last year to generate an estimated $53 million for the district but that, just like this years gift of $50 million, is just a band aid on a severed artery. Some lawmakers in the Pennsylvania acknowledge the crisis and put together a state rescue package for Philadelphia. The $141 million aid, along with an additional $45 million from the state previously allocated to the district, is awaiting Governor Corbetts signature. The money is being withheld by the state while Superintendent Hite and Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter negotiate with the teachers union about taking enormous salary cuts and rolling back certain benefits. Since there has been no agreement with the union, funding from the state is being held and will only be released once negotiations are complete. .................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/357577#ixzz2e39Eg9ID
xchrom
(108,903 posts)PCIntern
(25,704 posts)back in 1976...the seeds were planted at that time and it is even worse than the article mentions. If you only knew...REPREHENSIBLE AND DELIBERATE!!!
Bay Boy
(1,689 posts)Or the Philly school board?
PCIntern
(25,704 posts)right across the street from the Franklin Institute...
I have stories upon stories...and, as I said, that was 1976
Blue_Tires
(55,445 posts)The schools in Kansas City (which were once held up as a model for the nation) were also allowed to systematically descend into a tangled web of shit...
noiretextatique
(27,275 posts)we had great schools here...until Proposition 13.
ryan_cats
(2,061 posts)I remember those days.
Back then community college classes were free as was parking, you only needed to buy books. Then they instituted a parking fee, then they started charging per unit on top of the parking fee. I don't know what it costs these days but I can see what a threat free education was to the PTB.
Most people think community colleges are like high schools but in California in the 70s and 80s, they had some of the best ranked programs like an AA or AS in electronics, auto and aircraft mechanic plus you could do your undergraduate two years for free and then transfer to the state or UC system. It really was an awesome setup. I don't know what other states had but I hope they were just as good.
noiretextatique
(27,275 posts)plus all the fees for parking, labs, etc. it is a real shame what happened here, and elsewhere.
Isoldeblue
(1,135 posts)to dumb down the population, so that the Kock brother's 1%, be the ruling class. Leaving the rest of us in the dirt.
life long demo
(1,113 posts)Those kids have a right to expect a good education.
exboyfil
(17,871 posts)My one experience with K12 was very positive. I paid for my daughter to do Spanish II with them over the summer. She was covering material that my older daughter covered in Spanish III. She is more prepared than the other Spanish III students this year and doing very well. Our home school district whined a little bit and was going to require her to take a test (which never happened) to enter Spanish III.
I found that the North Dakota Center for Distance Education Life Science and Biology was also more rigorous than the comparable courses at the High School (and the Biology course was an Honor's course).
In its place Virtual classes can be more efficient in delivering content than comparable brick and mortar classes. It should be noted that my daughters attend a pretty good High School in the state.
We now have a Virtual Academy through K12 in the state, but, since you cannot do it and be in extracurriculars like band we decided not to pursue it this year (except for some select classes this will be my 10th grade daughter's last year taking core classes from the High School - she will be moving on to community college classes).
Jefferson23
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