Largest School District in Texas Eliminates Libraries, Converts Them to Disciplinary Centers

Cicada 5

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The largest public school district in the state of Texas is converting libraries in 28 schools into disciplinary centers and eliminating school librarian positions, local news outlets reported on Thursday. The alarming change comes as part of a sweeping reform program led by the Houston Independent School District’s (HISD) new superintendent Mike Miles, who oversees 85 schools. Of the remaining 57 schools with libraries, the district said each will be assessed on a case-by-case basis, indicating more libraries could be closed.


Under Miles’ New Education System (NES) program, libraries in the 28 schools will become “Team Centers,” where “kids with behavioral issues will be sent,” per the Houston-based NBC affiliate, KRPC. The district has said librarians at these schools “will have the opportunity to transition to other roles within the district.” Miles was notably appointed by the Texas Education Agency despite fierce opposition from local leaders; he’s previously led Dallas’ school district and oversaw a controversial program that tied teachers’ pay to standardized test scores, which saw long-time teachers depart due to pay disparities.

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Miles has acknowledged that students in his district are behind on their reading levels, raising questions about how the elimination of libraries could worsen this. “Our less fortunate students are the ones that suffer the most; primarily because many of them live in situations that are reading deserts,” another former HISD librarian said. “They don’t have access to the reading materials. They don’t have a choice in the reading materials that they are given to read.”


The move has also been condemned by Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner: “You don’t close libraries in some of the schools in your most underserved communities, and you’re keeping libraries open in other schools,” the mayor said at a city council meeting on Wednesday evening. “What the hell are you doing?”
 

Hawki

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Never thought that would be on the books. :(
 

tstorm823

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This is literally the Breakfast Club. Using school libraries as multi-purpose study halls is not new. Using study halls to hold the kids who cause trouble is equally not new. Changing the librarian position if you're going to need a different role to staff these "team centers" present at all times anyway makes sense.


28 campuses will lose their librarians. The district said they will have the opportunity to transition to other roles within the district.

...the libraries will not be closed...

The libraries will now be available to students who are dropped off at school before classes begin or after school before they go home.
So no, libraries are not being eliminated, they are not being converted to specific disciplinary centers, the news media is once again insanely stupid.
 

XsjadoBlayde

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Oh hey a "big gubberment" state communist takeover of schools conservatives are now mysteriously defensive of. How strange! 🤔

Mike miles is also a plain habitual liar.


In the packed cafeteria of Pugh Elementary School Tuesday evening, Houston Independent School District (HISD) Superintendent Mike Miles worked hard to sell his wholesale campus reform program, called the New Education System (NES), to a resistant crowd, some holding signs that read “Our Children, Our Schools.” Miles boasted that 57 campuses had voluntarily opted into the program.

“They love this,” Miles said. “That’s why teachers at 57 schools volunteered.”

As part of the state’s takeover of HISD—which ousted an elected school board and replaced its leadership with a board of managers and a superintendent handpicked by State Education Commissioner Mike Morath—Miles has previously said that 150 HISD schools would be under the NES by 2025. In March, the Texas Education Agency seized control of HISD, citing past failures to meet state standards at one high school. In addition to the schools that opted in, another 28 were required to participate because the schools are elementary and middle schools with students who “feed into” three high schools with lower accountability ratings.

NES originates from the Third Future Schools, a charter school network Miles founded. It requires teachers to teach from a scripted curriculum. The district will decide campus schedules, staffing, and budgets. Students who are considered disruptive are pulled out of the classroom to attend via Zoom. In addition, Miles has promised teachers support for grading, making copies, small-group instruction, and a stipend of $10,000. Salary schedules for teachers at what he calls “NES-aligned schools,” or those that opted in, will remain the same while teachers at NES-mandated schools receive a salary bump and have to reapply for their jobs. As part of the sweeping changes, last Friday Miles eliminated up to 600 administrative positions from the central office.

Since the Texas Education Agency appointed Miles to lead the school district, he has faced community protests by citizens opposed to the state agency’s takeover. But he has maintained that schools are embracing his changes.

But interviews, email correspondence, and audio recordings of campus meetings that the Texas Observer obtained contradict Miles’ public relations message that there is widespread teacher support for his program. Teachers, parents, and community members from nine of the 57 schools we spoke to said they had no opportunity to weigh in; teachers were threatened with losing their jobs if their campus did not join the program.

“Our hours will change. Our schedules will change. Our curriculum will change. But we have no input in it,” said Michelle Collins, a teacher at DeZavala Elementary School. “Neither do parents.”

According to the state education law, a Shared Decision Making Committee (SDMC) composed of parents, community representatives, teachers, other campus personnel, and a business representative is required to be “involved in decisions in the areas of planning, budgeting, curriculum, staffing patterns, staff development, and school organization.”

While Miles has publicly asked principals to obtain school input, SDMC committee members from five schools in the program confirmed with the Observer that they never met to discuss the issue. SDMC members and teachers from other schools reported that even when they did meet, they did not have a vote in the decision. One teacher said their staff voted not to opt in, but then later saw their school’s name included in the list of 57 schools in the news.

In an audio recording of Wainwright Elementary School’s SDMC meeting held July 10 and shared with the Observer, Principal Michelle Lewis told committee members, “If you’re not willing to dive in and do this with us, then this is not the campus for you.” No teacher representatives attended the meeting.



Revere Middle School Principal Gerardo Medina did not consult with the school’s SDMC committee or with teachers. In lieu of discussion, he sent out an email on June 29 to campus employees informing them of his decision to join Miles’ NES-aligned program.

“If you decide this is not something you want to commit to, you will be allowed to transfer,” Medina wrote.

This gave teachers only a few days before this Friday to decide if they want to continue to work within the district. To avoid losing their state teaching certification, they have up to 45 days before the first day of school to withdraw from their contract. Miles, however, has said teachers can continue to transfer within the district after the deadline.



HISD sidestepped parents and teachers’ complaint that they were not included in the decision making, and responded to the Observer via email, saying, “Principals at the 57 NESA schools were asked to consult with their teachers, faculty, and staff prior to opting in and after doing so, were ready to take bold action to improve outcomes for all students and eradicate the persistent achievement and opportunity gaps in the district.”

During campus meetings about Miles’ NES program, teachers raised common concerns: staffing shortages, staffing, and program cuts, longer work hours, and the loss of autonomy to tailor their curriculum to diverse students.

Miles has promised teachers they could focus all their time on instruction. But parents and teachers the Observer spoke to questioned if there were enough teachers, particularly certified teachers who are trained and have accreditation, to fill those positions when the district has struggled to fill vacancies.

“I cannot see how any of that is actually going to come to fruition when you can’t find classroom teachers in a regular situation,” Collins said.

Ellen, a teacher at M.C. Williams Middle School, who requested we use her middle name for fear of retaliation, said her school recently lost five teachers to other NES-mandated schools offering higher salaries. They still have uncertified teachers filling vacant positions.

Elective teachers also expressed concerns about losing their jobs. While Miles has promised that existing magnet and elective programs will not be supplanted by NES’ “dyad program” of uncertified, independent contractors teaching music and art, a school staffing model Miles provided principals shows that the number of elective teacher positions are limited according to the school population. For example, campuses with 450 to 600 students will only have six elective teachers, including P.E. teachers.

Additionally, teachers expressed misgivings about working longer hours—at least 5 hours more per week are required under the program—even with the promise of a $10,000 stipend. Juan Carlos Suarez said his principal at Bonner Elementary did not tell the staff about the longer workday.

“They only gave us the schedules for the kids, which is shorter,” Suarez said. He added that teachers were told students were not to have any downtime. “To not give kids any downtime, for them to be productive every single second, or have any breathing room, it’s like we’re training them to be prisoners.”



Teachers reported feeling pressured by potential job loss to get on board. Echoing what Miles told school principals at a meeting last Thursday, teachers shared that they were told that if any school in their elementary to high school feeder pattern did not meet the state’s standards, then all schools would have to be reconstituted. Like the 28 schools mandated to join Miles’ NES program, campus employees would have to reapply for their jobs the following school year.

“The threat was if you’re not opted in, and your school becomes NES mandated, your faculty has to go through the whole rehiring and interview process all over again,” Collins said.

Wainwright Principal Michelle Lewis said in the audio recording, “We have been promised we do not have to reconstitute. … You gotta buy into what we’re doing to keep the job.”

Parents and teachers we spoke to expressed that, with all the required changes, they felt ill-informed and ill-prepared for the next school year, which begins in six weeks.

“How are we trying to roll this out in August when we can’t answer any questions related to the day-to-day functioning of a building,” Collins said.

Ellen reiterated Collin’s concern: “We have no idea what we’re walking into when those doors open.”
Sounds totally healthy and not at all further creeping fascism in the ideological race to gut public education as messily as possible.

“They only gave us the schedules for the kids, which is shorter,” Suarez said. He added that teachers were told students were not to have any downtime. “To not give kids any downtime, for them to be productive every single second, or have any breathing room, it’s like we’re training them to be prisoners.”




After significant layoffs at Houston ISD headquarters, dozens of human resources employees are being asked to work extra hours, including weekends, and to forgo making vacation plans, according to an email shared with the Chronicle, as the pressure mounts to resume classes next month with minimal open teaching jobs.

“As exempt employees, you are expected to work extended hours before and after your assigned work schedule, as needed, to complete all work-related tasks, assigned duties, and projects,” Wally de Covarrubia, an executive director in the HISD Office of Talent, wrote in an email sent at 9 p.m. Sunday to several dozen employees. “All team members are expected to be available to assist in work across HR departments, and therefore must be flexible and able to pivot to new assignments at a moment’s notice.”

In the email, Covarrubia said he appreciated patience and flexibility from employees during a “period of urgency” that is expected to last into September. Students return to classes Aug. 28, and teachers report to work two weeks earlier.

“It is critical that the HR department works to meet the Superintendent’s directive of having zero teacher vacancies on NES campuses, and only 50 teacher vacancies total for non-NES campuses by the start of the school year,” he wrote.

The tone and content of the email felt threatening, according to one employee in the HR department who asked to remain anonymous. The employee said the work environment has changed drastically since the new administration took charge, noting that in the past, supervisors would ask employees to volunteer for extra tasks and express gratitude for the hard work.

“The morale and the environment is just extremely toxic right now,” said the employee, whose identity has been verified by the Chronicle. “People are very cautious and afraid that they’re going to lose their job right now because their jobs are being threatened.”

The administration has slashed central office staff by roughly 25 percent, announcing last week that it will eliminate 1,675 vacant positions and 672 filled jobs. The human resources department was cut down from 235 to 153 positions, according to HISD.

Covarrubia, the executive director, told staff that they are expected to check in with their supervisor around 5 p.m. each day to confirm whether they can be released from work or “whether you are needed to assist in other projects,” the email said.

BACKGROUND: HISD to cut more than 2,300 positions as part of Mike Miles' central office reorganization

Covarrubia also banned supervisors from approving any leave requests without asking him first, according to the email, and seemed to discourage people from taking time off.

“Team members are reminded that it is highly recommended that you do not make any travel plans … before receiving approval from your assigned supervisor via OneSource,” the executive director wrote in the email.

Employees, too, were asked to work from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, marking the third change this summer in scheduled hours for the department, according to the anonymous HR employee. Central office employees typically worked four days a week during the summer break, but at the outset of his tenure, Miles asked the central office staff to clock in on Fridays.

The HR employee said the workload has increased as the school year approaches and morale has dropped in the wake of layoffs.

“There’s a sense of panic about getting these teachers in place,” the employee said.

Michelle Williams, president of the Houston Education Association and an HISD teacher, said she was “mortified” when she saw a screen-shot of the email circulating on social media.

While it is typical for staff to work overtime in preparation for the upcoming school year, Williams said the message seemed disrespectful.

“These people have not done anything wrong,” she said. “Mike Miles created this problem and now he wants the remaining employees to clean up his mess.”

PRINCIPALS: HISD’s Miles appoints Yates alumna, former teacher as new principal of the Third Ward school

The district as of last Tuesday had hired more than 800 teachers — 655 internal candidates and 190 external hires — to fill the NES schools, leaving only 65 vacancies. Miles has said that the hiring process typically begins in the spring, but his administration got a late start since he was appointed as superintendent in June.

“We have six weeks, so we got to work hard, but we’re going to fill those 65 positions,” Miles said at a community meeting last week. “So the NES schools are looking pretty good right now.”

The district has not released districtwide teacher vacancy information, but announced Wednesday that 73 schools are fully staffed with teachers.

Williams questioned how the district will manage to fill all but 50 teaching positions in roughly a month. HISD started the school year last August with approximately 95 percent of the roles filled, leaving roughly 700 certified teacher vacancies.

“It’s unreasonable. We are in a nationwide shortage,” Williams said. “I don’t know where he thinks he’s going to get these magical teachers from — these other districts are not going to let teachers out of their contracts.”

The district is hosting hiring events and job fairs at HISD headquarters and at schools across the district, with events scheduled for Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday this week. HISD is now offering a $300 referral bonus for teachers.
 
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BrawlMan

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Of course one of the largest states that is always on about "survival of the fittest" would do shit like this. Looking really like Nazi Germany right now. Hope it's worth it, you fuck nuts. Oh wait, it's not!