
School
Strife
Eastside
parents 'beat up' their teachers over merger
BY
ALAN PITTMAN
Teachers at Eastside alternative elementary
may no longer want to work at the school after the school's parents
verbally abused them for discussing a merger with the poorer and
browner Harris neighborhood elementary, according to 4J Superintendent
George Russell.
"I worry now how Eastside can be Eastside if half
or more of the teachers are deciding they don't want to be Eastside,"
Russell said at a School Board meeting March 8.
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| Feb.
20 School Board meeting |
"It's not right for the teachers to get beat up
by parents," Russell said of the Eastside teachers who have supported
talking with Harris teachers about a merger or some other collaborative
hybrid. Harris is 67 percent free and reduced lunch (FRL) and 25
percent Latino, while Eastside is 5 percent FRL and 1 percent Latino.
Russell said given the opposition of Eastside parents
to a merger with Harris, he may want to close both schools. "Probably
the way I feel now, I'd make a recommendation to close them both."
Several School Board members shared Russell's dismay
at the parents at Eastside, one of the whitest and wealthiest schools
in the entire state. "I was disheartened by what I heard from the
parents of Eastside," said board member Alicia Hays. "I don't think
Eastside is viable because I don't think they are going to be able
to diversify."
"To the extent there is an exodus of teachers, that
suggests to me a viability question," said board member Craig Smith.
The merger/collaboration offered Eastside parents the opportunity
to show their "good faith" commitment to diversify, Smith said.
"What we're hearing is they don't want to do that."
Some board members said they would like Russell
to meet with the teachers to see if the merger still has any chance
of success. Board member Yvette Webber-Davis said, "I think there
is at least some sentiment on the board for trying to give Eastside
and Harris a chance."
But board members expressed concern that the apparent
threat to close Harris but not Eastside if the merger failed would
make merger negotiations between the two schools unequal.
Board member Charles Martinez said it is "untenable"
if the board is saying that if Eastside parents won't agree to the
merger, "Harris, you're closed and Eastside, this is your building."
Board member Smith shared the concern. "The net
effect is they [Eastside parents] can do what they want. That outcome
is bothersome to me."
"I am concerned here that one side has more power,"
board member Jim Torrey said. As it stands now a small group of
Eastside parents can say, "'It doesn't work, it doesn't work, it
doesn't work,' and they win." Torrey said. "That doesn't feel good
to me."
But board member Eric Forrest said he'd already
made up his mind. "I think the right thing to do is to close Harris."
Forrest argued that the south Eugene area has too many school buildings
for the number of students. He suggested that the board close the
Harris building and move Eastside and Fox Hollow to the old Willard
building, displacing 400 charter school students.
Torrey suggested moving Eastside to the old Bailey
Hill school building in west Eugene. He said moving the alternative
school to that location would do more to diversify it than the Harris
site in South Eugene. "I don't sense we're going to get the diversity
there."
Russell questioned if Eastside could be viable as
a stand-alone school with only 145 students. He noted that Parker
parents and staff had complained about friction in co-locating with
the school, and Fox Hollow representatives had said they feared
the same result if they were forced to co-locate with Eastside.
The board spent most of the three-hour meeting on
March 8 discussing the Harris-Eastside quandary. On other "Schools
of the Future" recommendations to keep Coburg elementary open and
deny most school transfers to South Eugene High School and Roosevelt
Middle School, the board appeared largely in agreement.
Two board members, however, suggested that Adams
neighborhood Elementary may need to be closed, something Russell
did not recommend.
Smith noted that Adams, at 186 students, does not
meet the district's enrollment target of 300. "Does Adams continue
to be a viable school?" he asked.
Torrey said the district should tell the school
it is at jeopardy if proposals to increase enrollment fail. "If
this doesn't work, you are potentially on the block."
Forrest said that kind of talk could hurt efforts
to attract more parents to the school. "We need to be careful of
the language we use."
Martinez said there is no agenda to close the school,
which is 59 percent FRL. "I wouldn't want the Adams community to
fear that."
The school district has a history of targeting schools
with higher percentages of FRL, a common measure of poverty, for
closure. The closure choice, however, may be indirect.
State data and widely accepted educational research
indicate that schools with higher FRL tend to have lower test scores
due to the frequent challenges of teaching kids in poverty. In turn,
the higher-income parents who tend to shop for schools in Eugene's
choice system often choose schools with higher test scores on state
published report cards. That leaves the schools with more poor students
with declining enrollment and subject to closure.
Alternative school parents have pointed to test
scores and enrollment as measures of their school's success and
lack of success at some neighborhood schools. But the scores and
subsequent enrollment shifts may be more a factor of demographics
than bad teaching or curriculum, according to Steve Slater, a testing
analyst with the Oregon Dept. of Education.
Slater said a given school's test scores can often
be largely predicted by the FRL and other demographic factors such
as student mobility, English language learners and attendance. "They
tend to be predictors that are significant," Slater said. "It's
fairly accurate. The ranks are stable from one year to the next."
"I would hope there would be other factors besides
the test scores," Slater said of what's going on in Eugene with
choice and school closures. "It's kind of a sad situation."
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