Snow Storm Days The CPS weather hotline and press office say that CPS schools are open, but WBEZ says that "Several schools and institutions are closed this morning as a major winter storm is moving through the Chicago area (Snow Storm Closes Schools, Institutions)."
What about you -- do you like or loathe classroom days like today? Anyone closed where you are? Are the buses on time? Anyone showing up at school?
Everyone but us is closed why?
Today was the perfect day to close schools, half the parents stayed home today, therefore less child care issues. I really don't know why CPS insists on making students, parents, staff, etc. risk injury by coming to school on a seemingly meaningless day.
Most of the problems since late November have come from the Mayor's office (including Tuesday's mess) and that crazy ban on overtime for the people who drive the plows and salt trucks. The side streets have been dangerous for two weeks, thanks to our city's "miracle manager." The most dangerous among them have been those adjacent to the schools for a simple reason: the highest building creates shade, so black ice remains -- massively unsafe -- unless it's been salted.
And those are the streets on which children swarm after school is out.
I watched a sanitation truck spend fifteen minutes deftly pulling out from Portage Park school two weeks ago, at each try skidding almost across Hutchinson into three parked car. The driver was good enough to get that massive vehicle out of there without a catastrophe. But that ice made it impossible to walk across that street (on the shady side of the building) for two days -- without any snow.
When I called the alderman's office, I was told that if they dared send out crews (which would have been glad to do the work), they would have been suspended for violating an imperial edict. That was going on in every ward in Chicago before the Daleyidiots created the Tuesday mess and today's dangers.
The only reason these things aren't greater scandals is because there are no TV cameras to photograph the kids getting off the school buses and landing on their rears, or dodging cars on unsalted side streets. The rot is at the top, and this week the stupidity of the rot was evident both at City Hall and at the top of Clark St.
Arne has a driver and a city car--not a small one compared to what teachers tend to drive. He also picks his hours-he is never tardy, probably never absent and has a full compliment of vacation days--he will leave with much money, but also with the ire of most because he count sa day like today against us all.
How many people actually had access to the CPS elementary school catalogue in time to read through it and make an informed "choice" (a word Arne uses all the time like a religious mantra)? CPS didn't even have enough copies of the elementary catalogue in the lobby last week, running out every day. And to find one elsewhere (or on line) was simply impossible.
If there were "accountability" in all this, the CEO would be going to IDES, not the Ed Dept in DC. Much of what they will be getting away with (and have) depends on the constriction of media in Chicago, the replacement of reporting (and especially critical reporting) with PR fluffery and flummery, and the fear in many people as divide-and-conquer (rather than supportive civil society) continues to be developed by Daley, Duncan, and their corporate ilk.
It was the usual stuff. Most interesting?
Two points, one inside the building, the other outside.
Inside, Margaret Spellings talked at some length about how great Arne Duncan was, virtually declaring him a soulmate in "education reform." Anyone who thinks that the narrative can place Aren in opposition to Bush and NCLB ought to pay closer attention.
Outside, the streets immediately around Wescott (at 80th and Vincennes) had been cleared and completely salted.
Unlike the streets everywhere else in that ward, and all the way across the city to the 38th and 45th wards on the far northwest side. Somehow, an exception to the "Do Not Salt!" edict was made for the national media event which turned out to be foreplay for the Obama appointment of Duncan. It's like that in totalitarian places.
Keep your cheating money--I go to school, allways, for the students--AND my paycheck was even goofed up most of this year--I get no bonus.
Shame on you 'teacher' from westcott for your comments above. If your school would not have done this program, you would have been on probation, closed or had a charter opening near you--so please do not be so high and mighty.
Remember this--There will be better teachers now trying to get in your school who can really get the students to score even higher--then, your principal will get you out for the better teachers so that she and the new teachers can get more $.
Where will you be with your old bonus?--unemployed or working for a charter, for much less money, security and longer hours. (Although you will have selected students for looks, poise and intellect.)
Do you really think it was the $ that improved westcott scores? Then how do teachers at other schools with similar students, who do not get a bonus, improve the scores? They teach - NOT cheat.!


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