Wednesday, March 25, 2009

A MESSAGE FROM THE CCSS CALIFORNIA TEACHER OF THE YEAR

from Leticia (Martha) Infante

NATIONAL BOARD CERTIFIED TEACHER/GIFTED AND TALENTED EDUCATION COORDINATOR
CALIFORNIA COUNCIL FOR SOCIAL STUDIES TEACHER OF THE YEAR 2009
LOS ANGELES ACADEMY MIDDLE SCHOOL


Dear Superintendent Cortines and LAUSD Board Members,

In the next week, you will be voting on important budget decisions that I am sure have taken their toll on your personal and professional lives.  I have no doubt as to the integrity and thoroughness of your decision making process, but as leaders, I'm sure you will agree that the best decisions are made when the greatest amount of data are available to help you decide the most viable course of action.

As CCSS California Teacher of the Year 2009, I wish to share the data from my school, Los Angeles Academy Middle School, located in South Central Los Angeles.

Three years ago, the Jefferson family of schools was plagued by race-riots, student walkouts, and disturbingly low academic performance.  Our school experienced the impact of the turmoil in the local high school, but made significant efforts to distinguish ourselves as academic leaders in our community.  We targeted the issue of teacher turnover that peaked at a high of 35 teachers three years ago, and reduced it to less than 5 in the last academic year by instituting a comprehensive new teacher support program.  In a community where students had to suffer the consequences of a non-stable faculty, we reached a point where we could offer students the knowledge and security that their teachers would be there to support them in their three year journey at our school.  That is, until now.

L.A. Academy has developed a successful GATE/Advanced Studies Program that has doubled its participants to 580, almost 30% of the school population.  Over 150 students attend our school on an Advanced Studies permit.  These are students we might have otherwise lost to charter schools, but who made an educated decision to stay with LAUSD because of the quality of our program.  This program could not have reached this level of quality without the dedication, and countless volunteer hours of our 42 GATE teachers.  18 of these teachers received Reduction in Force Notices, with more at risk.  If these teachers are terminated, the quality of one of the few prosperous middle school GATE programs in South L.A. will be significantly diminished.

The talent and quality of our teachers can be seen in their biographies, located HERE.

One of our young and talented teachers, who is a positive role model for African-American boys, is at risk for being terminated.  Lamar Queen's instructional rap videos are a hit in the educational community and have made mathematics instruction much easier to grasp and enjoy for his students, thanks to his creative videos.

(Over 18,000 hits at YouTube)

 

(Over 1,200 hits at Teacher Tube)

As a school, and as a community, our teachers are overwhelmingly new.  As a result, 42 of our staff of 112 teachers received a RIF [Reduction in Force notice/the ‘pink slip’].  This is 37% of our faculty.  The actual number of terminated teachers might be higher, because provisional teachers are not sent RIF's.  Most schools in West L.A. and the Valley received RIF's in the single digits.  It is unconscionable that South L.A. is scheduled to bear the brunt of the proposed layoffs.

Because South Central has been disproportionately hit with 40% of the entire district's RIF's, our students will be left to wonder what they did to deserve this.  No amount of explaining will help erase the feeling that once again, they are the forgotten children, the ones whose dedicated and caring teachers will be entirely gone from their lives within three months.  As a point of consideration, most of these teachers choose to work in South L.A., as do I, and are not here because of demotions or forced service.

If you vote to pass the proposed reduction in force without any provisions to mitigate the destructive effect it will have on South Central Los Angeles, then let there be no doubt as to the wholesale devastation this will cause for our school, our community, and the academic and emotional well-being of all of our students. 

Please, do not forget South Central.


Leticia (Martha) Infante

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