2010 Birmingham School Closings:
Another round of Birmingham school closings gears up this evening as the "new" Birmingham school board discuss closing more Birmingham schools. Past school closings have claimed to "save money."
Since 2003 Birmingham has closed more than a dozen schools but remain in financial distress. Decline in student enrollment does not account for the annual deficits Birmingham schools continue to roll up. Even state budget cuts do not explain Birmingham's budget deficits. State cuts in "teacher units" do not equal the budget deficits City schools now run up - While not firmly decided, historic Tuggle Middle school, located in a neglected neighborhood, may be saved from the wrecking ball and become a new K-8 elementary school. Plans to scrap Tuggle and merge it with Hill Elementary School on a new site seems ended, as of last night.
Birmingham has rushed head over heals the past two years to abolish middle schools for K-8 grade configurations, creating mega-sized elementary schools, thinking eroniously that the district will save money - Birmingham construction contractors love big schools. Simply, they make more money and leave us with huge operating costs in a money scrapped school district, never thinking a bout academic achievement?
"There's more development in the brain and body during ages 10 to 15 than at any time, except birth through age 3" From the Baltimore Sun 1/16/07 JOHNS HOPKINS STUDY RAISES DOUNTS ON K-8 SCHOOLS (ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE QUESTIONED)
JHU research finds no academic benefit over middle schools, undercuts city's push”
"Currently, there is no research that says what should be the most effective grade configuration" John Hopskins University Research Finds: http://www.kdp.org/teachingresources/pdf/McIver_K8research.pdf
Johns Hopkins research did not look just at test scores from one grade at a middle school compared with the same grade at a K-8 school, as most school systems do. The research went deeper, investigating how good a job middle schools did in educating the students over three years. The researchers looked at the growth students achieved in their three middle school-years. http://www.kdp.org/teachingresources/pdf/McIver_K8research.pdf
LESSONS FROM RURAL SCHOOLS - URBAN SCHOOLS CAN LEARN FROM: http://www.ericdigests.org/2003-2/rural.html BOE MEET IN COMMITTEE LAST NIGHT, FEBRUARY 2, 2010 AT 5:30PM, Birmingham school board panel to discuss closing 4 schools and building 2 new ones By Marie Leech -- The Birmingham News February 02, 2010, 11:37AM
BACKGROUND: STATE EDUCATION DEPARTMENT, MIMS WITHOLDING PUBLIC DOCUMENTS ON SCHOOL CLOSING DATA ** CLOSED DOOR SERIAL MEETING OF SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS WITH SUPEINTENDENT FORGES REDUCTION IN FORCE (RIF) PLAN ** Pouncey Nurses MIMS’ CLOSING LIST AT SCOOL BOARD MEETING : - Pouncey - Mims Strikes Deal On School Closings; Board Accepted Without Analysis, Public Hearing, Public Left in Dark, Authentic Public Engagement Shafted
Not Enough Public in Public Schools (Birmingham News Editorial)
http://www.al.com/birminghamnews/stories/index.ssf?/base/opinion/118336439722530.xml&coll In January, 2007 Alabama State Department of Education chief finance officer Craig Pouncey and Stan Mims sealed their “FAUSTIAN DEAL” to close Birmingham schools - in a closed door meeting in the office of the school district's attorneys to trim Birmingham City Schools by $18 million in expenses. In yet another closed door meeting, Birmingham school board members continued its pattern, practice, custom, and usage of meeting behind closed doors to conduct the public’s business. Over the years, Birmingham’s boards of education have lost Alabama Supreme Court cases involving withholding public information and violating Alabama’s old “Sun Shine Law” (replaced in 2005 by the “Open Meetings Act”). TO PROTECT YOUR RIGHTS - KNOW YOUR RIGHTS!Read Alabama's attorney general’s “Open Meetings Manual” http://www.ag.state.al.us/documents/open meeging.pdfAnd HERE'S A "HOW TO" power point presentation you can study to better understand Alabama's "Open Meetings" law: http://www.ago.state.al.us/seminar/sunshine_law_training.ppt. Remember, Alabama's State Motto is – “Audemus Jura Nostra Defendere”(We Dare Defend Our Rights!)Citizens for Better Schools has sent demand letters to both state school superintendent Joe Morton and Birmingham Superintendent Stan Mims further seeking disclosure of public information. We are doing everything reasonably possible to avoid costly litigation with the Alabama State Department of Education and the Birmingham Board of Education. On July 24, 2007 legal counsel for Mims (Birmingham superintendent) entered a legal settlement with CFBS in our public records lawsuit in Bessemer, Alabama Circuit Court (Jackson v. Mims). Mims will hand over all of the information originally requested of the district by Citizens for Better Schools last year. It is shameful that the public's school district has to pay legal fees and costs to produce public records due to be timely disclosed upon public request by public school officials such as Drs. Mims and Morton.