High School Schedules – http://michaelclara.com This space explores issues of education policy within the Salt Lake City School District and promotes a culture of high expectations for all students Sun, 21 Jul 2013 17:50:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v= Board Meeting 02/05/13 Audio (High School Schedule Discussion) http://michaelclara.com/board-meeting-020513-audio-high-school-schedule-discussion/ Sun, 17 Feb 2013 01:37:52 +0000 http://michaelclara.com/?p=516 Continue reading ]]> Board Meeting 02/05/13 Audio as it is posted on the web page. The High School Schedule issue begins at time index 36:16

High School Schedule Agenda Item starts at time index: 36:16

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Board Meeting: 02/05/13 (Audio of Edited Out Portion of the Meeting) Teachers Speaking to the Board http://michaelclara.com/board-meeting-020513-audio-of-edited-out-portion-of-the-meeting-teacher-speaking-to-the-board/ Sun, 17 Feb 2013 01:23:00 +0000 http://michaelclara.com/?p=512 Continue reading ]]> This is an audio of Mr. Michael Alvord & Ms. Elena Martinova speaking to the board. They both teach at East High.

Their presentations to the board was edited out of the meeting recording that is posted on the district web page:

020513BMHSST

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Board Meeting 02/05/2013 Agenda (2. High School Schedules, Flexibility, and Board Authority) http://michaelclara.com/board-meeting-02052013-agenda/ Sat, 16 Feb 2013 20:19:52 +0000 http://michaelclara.com/?p=506 Continue reading ]]> Notice of Public Meeting                                                                                                   Salt Lake City School District                                                                                             School Board Meeting For February 5, 2013

Agenda Item:

 2. High School Schedules, Flexibility, and Board Authority 

02/05/13 Agenda

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Board Meeting: 01/22/13 (Audio of Edited Out Portion of the Meeting) & Email to Board President: 01/25/13: High School Schedule As An Agenda Item http://michaelclara.com/email-to-board-president-012513-high-school-schedule-agenda/ Fri, 15 Feb 2013 20:55:02 +0000 http://michaelclara.com/?p=488 Continue reading ]]> supw

Board Meeting: 01/22/13 (Audio of Edited Out Portion of the Meeting) Superintendent Withers attempting to distort our request to have the High Schedule issue on the agenda: BoardMetting012213HSA   <This is about 9 minutes long. The first part of the clip and at the end is where we discuss the superintendent’s interpretation of our intent.

Below is a copy of the follow-up email to the president insisting that the agenda item not be worded in such a manner that it is dead on arrival. Which it would have been had we not challenged the superintendent’s framing of the issue.

 

High School Schedule
1 message

Michael Clára <donmiguelslc@gmail.com> Fri, Jan 25, 2013 at 12:42 PM
To: Kristi Swett <kristi.swett@slcschools.org>
Cc: rosemary emery <rosemary.emery2@gmail.com>, McKell Withers <mckell.withers@slcschools.org>
President Swett,I wanted to clarify the misunderstanding that has surfaced about the request to place the High School Schedule on the board agenda.In our January 22, 2013 study session during the superintendent’s report, Dr. Withers stated (in so many words) that a February agenda item would be: “whether the board will relinquish their authority to make the schedule.As you may or may not recall, I disagreed with that language and interpretation of what we wanted on the agenda. I have since reviewed the unofficial minutes and my notes of the January 8, 2013 business meeting of the board.The draft minutes sate, “Rosemary Emery raised the issue of high school schedules. Michael Clara and Tiffany Sandberg joined her in asking that the issue be discussed in a later meeting. The board will add this topic to the agenda of a future meeting”According to my recollection and my notes, the discussion was initially on multiple levels. There were times where you and the vice president made statements such as “so to clarify….” And “to be clear…” etc in an effort to better understand Rosemary’s points.At the very end of the discussion Rosemary said words to the effect “what’s best for kids, I think what is best is that they have a choice and that the schools have a choice, that is the discussion I would like to see…pro child, pro education and we don’t have that right now”.Then Dr. Nelson said words to the effect, “How many people on the board would like to have that discussion?” Rosemary, Tiffany, Martine and I, agreed.Dr. Nelson then asked, “does that meet the criteria to put on the board agenda for discussion?” Someone replied in the affirmative and he said “then we should put it on the agenda for discussion”.To that end, I agreed to have this item placed on the agenda within the context of the principles of shared governance which state: “Shared governance is the Salt Lake City School District’s collaborative process for making decisions at school sites and in district departments. Shared governance requires each of us to work together with respect, trust, good faith effort, and purpose in pursuit of our mission: Student Learning. The board retains overall legal responsibility for governing the district but may delegate decisions, subject to periodic review and appropriate accountability.” (see Salt Lake City School District – Shared Governance Guide, page 2).I never understood our request to be one of the board “relinquishing its authority” which would be contrary to state law, board policy, written agreement and principles of shared governance.Rather, I understood our request to be one of respecting and implementing the process of shared governance and allowing the high schools to make a site based decision through their SIC and SCC. Which decision would eventually come to the board of education for approval.

 
Un abrazo,

 

Michael Clára

Board Member, District 2

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Board Meeting: 01/08/13 (Audio of Edited Out Portion of the Meeting) High School Schedules As An Agenda Item http://michaelclara.com/board-meeting-010813-audio-of-edited-out-portion-high-school-schedules/ Fri, 15 Feb 2013 20:32:34 +0000 http://michaelclara.com/?p=475 Continue reading ]]> Board Meeting:01/08/13 High School Discussion

This part of the meeting was edited out of the recording that is posted on the district’s web page.

Board Member Rosemary Emery stated that she had been trying for two years to get the high school schedule issue on the agenda (Trib Article). The board president and vice president refused to place it on the agenda.

In this audio Board Members Rosemary Emery, Michael Clara, and Tiffany Sandberg request that the High School Schedule issue be placed on the agenda.

Michael-Tiffany-Rosemary

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Board President Responds To My “Board Agenda Process” Letter (Emails) http://michaelclara.com/board-president-responds-to-my-board-agenda-process-letter/ Fri, 15 Feb 2013 19:59:55 +0000 http://michaelclara.com/?p=473 Continue reading ]]>
BPVP

Heather Bennett & Kristi Swett

Vice President Bennett referred to this email in the 01/08/2013 board meeting and several people have asked me about. I am posting it here, as well as the original letter (see Board Agenda Process Letter post) that solicited the response:

Response to your letter

Heather Bennett <heatherbennett@xmission.com>
12/31/12

 

to me, Kristi, Mckell
Michael,
I hope your holiday was a happy one. Please forgive the delay in sending this response. Apparently, I miscommunicated and thought it had already gone out. 
 
Cheers!
 
HB

December 2012

Dear Mr. Clára,

Thank you for sending the email and follow-up letter outlining your lingering concerns after our school board orientation meeting. We have tried to address them below, repeating the subheads that organized your letter.

We share your expressed respect for the history of local school boards and the important democratic functions they perform. Please know that we approach our legal duties as elected officials and our moral obligations to the students in our schools with great seriousness and care.

OATH OF OFFICE

You have clearly communicated your dissatisfaction with Sherrie Swensen. Please understand that four board members were elected in November. All four may have personal preferences about how they would like to affirm the oath of office. Long-standing practice in our school district has been to include a low-key, short swearing-in ceremony at the beginning of the first meeting in January. This has been the traditional choice, not dictated by law or policy. In the recent past, we have always invited the county clerk to administer the oath.

You are the first newly elected board member in collective memory to have requested a variance—and we want you to understand that your request does affect three other members of the board. Nevertheless, we have confirmed that Judge Andrew Valdez will be at our January 8 board meeting to administer the oath of office collectively to you, Ms. Sandberg, and the two of us.

We would request that you join us just before the board meeting to sign the written oath in the presence of a district employee who is also a Notary Public. This will meet the legal standard in case Judge Valdez’s schedule changes. (Utah Code 20A-14-202(2)(c): “A member of a local board of education is ‘qualified’ when the member takes or signs the constitutional oath of office.”)

BOARD MEETINGS

We agree that board members have the right to raise any relevant issues in public board meetings. Board members must also focus on the duties they were elected to perform. Occasionally the right to raise an issue can come into conflict with the responsibility to perform statutory duties.

We do not believe we have ever acted to “stifle the free flow of ideas.” Moving forward, we would ask that you help us be inclusive without allowing our board meetings to run out of control and off the published agenda. We appreciate your attendance at some of our recent board meetings and your obvious diligence in researching issues central to your role as a member of the board.  Please keep an open mind about the motives and conduct of board members, recognizing that you may not, at this point, have all the information you might later acquire though experience.

Please know that we have considered and will continue to consider the needs and preferences of teachers as we make decisions. We absolutely agree that teachers are the heart and soul of our district and, next to parents and guardians, the greatest influence on student success. Teachers are not monolithic in their desires, however, and it is not always possible to please every individual or interest group with every decision.

BOARD POLICY

Board policy guides the action of the board and district. This does not mean that every piece of good advice about school governance is contained in board policy. We’ve tried to collect and provide resources we think might be helpful as you acclimate to your new role. We apologize for any confusion created by this deluge of information.

Ms. Emery has often voiced opposition to the current high school schedule, which is a four-class-per-day, alternating-day block with the flexibility to offer classes on a daily basis. The schedule is common to all three comprehensive high schools. Her opposition is multi-faceted and goes back more than ten years, though it certainly intensified when the board voted to require all three schools to adopt common starting and ending times. We would be happy to discuss the history with you, and provide documentation of the discussion over time, if you are interested.

At our board meeting of October 2, Mrs. Emery asked that “changing schedules at the high schools” be placed on an upcoming agenda. In making this request, she cited the report we had just heard that included disappointing 2011 high school graduation rates, which she attributed to the schedule. This was not the first time she had made such a request, although it should be noted that she did not criticize the schedule during the September 18 meeting in which the high school principals reported on their progress toward greater flexibility and personalization for students.

From page 6 of the minutes for October 2:

“Board member Emery said she would like the board to have a discussion about changing schedules at the high schools. Vice President Bennett noted her request and said if any board member would like to join Ms. Emery in her request they should contact her or President Swett. She noted per board policy, if three members request an item be added to the agenda the request will be accommodated.”

On October 9, Amanda Thorderson made a highly nuanced request to discuss the schedules again. On October 15, Alama Ulu’ave sent an email with a similar but not identical request. Board leadership discussed these emails in detail, comparing them to Ms. Emery’s request of October 2. It was clear that the reasons cited for bringing the issue forward for discussion and the hoped-for substance of the discussion were not the same for each of the three requests. Complicating our course of action was the fact that Superintendent McKell Withers was briefly hospitalized and certain to miss the next board meeting on October 16.

Nevertheless, we did bring the issue forward for discussion at that meeting, as the minutes record:

“President Swett reported she had received emails from board members about additional study session topics. She noted each request was a little different and asked for clarification on what board members would like to talk about and what additional information they would like to have in preparation.
“Board members referenced the new way of calculating graduation rates as presented in the High School Priorities and Progress discussion with the high school principals at the September 18, 2012, Study Session. After a brief discussion, board members said they would like the following information: is there any way to compare the rates based on new calculations to the rates from prior years, how the new calculation will impact the district, attendance and how it impacts graduation rates, and how to keep students on campus and in class. It was suggested that two study sessions would be helpful, one to receive the additional information and one to talk about where to go from there.
“Board members briefly discussed questions and issues regarding high school schedules. Issues raised include: adding flexibility into the schedule, schools were asked to look at options within the block schedule that would meet the needs of their students, are there barriers for schools that are not allowing flexibility, and what can the board do to support the schools in finding flexibility to meet student needs.”

At the next study session (November 20), the superintendent did, in fact, distribute additional information about graduation rate calculations. Board leadership and board member Thorderson clearly wanted to decouple this issue from the call to “change” schedules. All seven board members, including Ms. Emery, had expressed interest in composing a letter addressed to the principals and the school community councils, urging them to use flexibility built into the current schedule more aggressively—as Highland has already done.

At no time was Ms. Emery’s request “denied.” The challenge has been how to frame the discussion in a productive way that encompasses the perspectives of all board members. We will provide background information about student achievement and schedules at the small group meetings in January and will certainly continue to discuss the topic, as promised, in future study sessions. We welcome your assistance in keeping the conversation student-centered and respectful.

PUBLIC POLICY

John Florez is on the side of the angels. To our knowledge none of the current or newly elected board members disagrees with either his conclusions, as quoted, or your own statements about the value of free speech, transparency, and accountability.

CONCLUSION

We agree that all elected board members deserve to be treated with dignity, but continued respect and increased influence must be earned through respectful behavior, due diligence, and thoughtful discussion. May we all strive to deserve the respect of our constituents, our fellow board members, and especially, the students in Salt Lake City public schools.

Cordially,

Kristi Swett, President

Heather Bennett, Vice President

Salt Lake City School District Board of Education

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