As I have often written on this blog before, I am of the opinion that unless you are at retirement in age and years (25-55), unless you plan to move out of state and/or marry a millionaire (or are one yourself - congratulations!), and unless you are comfortable living with the charges in your profile forever - (you are on the problem code), you should NOT resign or settle.
Why? (remember, this is not "legal" advice, as I am not an attorney - but arbitration proceedings are not legal proceedings in a Court with a judge, either).
Because the 3020-a due process allows you to put everything that happened in your school into a record: the transcript. That's what the NYC DOE and NYSUT don't want. They do not want documentation of how your principal, assistant principal, or anyone in the school violated the law, rights of children, or rights of anyone. In that sense, if they - the DOE and NYSUT - believe that you may "spill the beans" on school personnel or UFT negligence, they will try their very best to get you to resign or settle, so a record is not made. The UFT, NYSUT, and the NYC DOE are protecting each other from the liability connected with your claims against them. I think anyone charged or harassed should immediately file a Notice of Claim.
The new teacher evaluation system which mandates Measures of Student Learning (MOSL), ADVANCE, was a long time in the making.
Advance, New York City’s new system of teacher evaluation and development, was designed to provide the City’s teachers with accurate feedback on their performance and the support necessary to improve their practice, with the goal of improved student outcomes to ensure all students graduate college and career ready.
Though Advance was formally established on June 1, 2013 in alignment with the New York State Education Department's education law 3012-c on teacher and school leader performance reviews, its design was informed by three years of pilot work in New York City’s schools. Advance uses multiple measures – including observations of classroom practice, review of teachers’ artifacts, student outcome data, and student feedback – to provide teachers, school leaders, and families with a more accurate understanding of teacher effectiveness than ever before.
For an overview of the major components of Advance, click the boxes below.
All teachers receive:
§ Assessment of their practice using Charlotte Danielson’s 2013 Framework for Teaching, including a greater emphasis on components of teaching related to their classroom environment and instruction.
§ Multiple classroom observations by their principal or other administrator, with teachers having a choice between two options for length and frequency of observations.
§ Review of up to eight artifacts (or documents) demonstrating their efforts to plan and prepare instruction and participate in their professional community.
§ Feedback on all observations and artifacts of teacher practice.
§ Student Feedback via the Tripod Student Survey (for teachers in grades 3-12 only; will not count towards annual rating in 2013-14 school year).
40 percent: State and Local Measures of Student Learning (MOSL)
40 percent: State and Local Measures of Student Learning (MOSL)
Every teacher will have two measures of student learning, each worth 20 percent of the overall rating:
- State Measure – Selected by the principal, this measure is based on student growth on state assessments (whenever available) or results on other assessments with comparable rigor taken by their students.
- Local Measure – Recommended by a school committee appointed by the principal and UFT Chapter Chair and approved by the principal*, each teacher’s local measure will be based on student growth on assessments and growth measures selected from a menu of approved options for each grade and subject.
For more detailed information please watch the webinar or view New York City’s approved APPR plan on the New York State Education Department website.
Event Details
Welcome to the registration page for Information Session on the New System of Teacher Evaluation and Development
For your convenience, Superintendents are offering information sessions on the Teacher Evaluation and Development System. Please be aware that sessions will begin promptly at 4:00 p.m. and end at 6:00 p.m.
Please follow the instructions below carefully in order to register for this event:
1. To select a date, please view the following table to determine when your District is hosting a session.
2. To register, have ready the following required information:
a. First and Last Name
b. E-mail address (DOE email address preferred)
c. Job Title/Job Function
d. District
e. Your School DBN
f. Meeting Location Name (listed in table above)
a. First and Last Name
b. E-mail address (DOE email address preferred)
c. Job Title/Job Function
d. District
e. Your School DBN
f. Meeting Location Name (listed in table above)
3. Once you have decided on the date and meeting location, go to the dropdown menu on the upper right, and please select a date to attend.
4. Select QUANTITY.
5. Click on the GREEN REGISTER button.
District 64 schools are not subject to ED Law 3012-C and therefore these sessions have been prioritized for teachers affected by the law. Additional supports for District 64 will be offered in the fall.
Due to limited seating availability, you must attend on the date that you have selected. If your availability changes or you have any questions, please contact TEPD@schools.nyc.gov.
Due to limited seating availability, you must attend on the date that you have selected. If your availability changes or you have any questions, please contact TEPD@schools.nyc.gov.
Meeting Date | Superintendent / Co-Leader | Location Name | Address | City |
6/10/2013 | Buffie Simmons / Karen Watts (District 17) | The High School for Global Citizenship | 883 Classon Avenue | Brooklyn |
6/10/2013 | Rhonda D. Farkas (District 22) | Andries Hudde | 2500 Nostrand Avenue | Brooklyn |
6/11/2013 | Barbara Freeman / Karen Watts (District 13) | Brooklyn Technical High School | 29 Ft. Greene Place | Brooklyn |
6/11/2013 | Beverly Ffolkes-Bryant (District 28) | Metropolitan Expeditionary Learning School | 91-30 Metropolitan Avenue | Queens |
6/11/2013 | Elizabeth A. White / Carron Staple (District 11) | Harry S Truman High School | 750 Baychester Avenue | Bronx |
6/11/2013 | Erminia Claudio / Aimee Horowitz (District 31) | The Michael J Petrides School | 715 Ocean Terrace | Staten Island |
6/11/2013 | Madelene Chan / Juan Mendez (District 24) | I.S. 061 Leonardo Da Vinci | 98-50 50 Avenue | Queens |
6/12/2013 | Beverly Ffolkes-Bryant / Juan Mendez (District 28) | Metropolitan Expeditionary Learning School | 91-30 Metropolitan Avenue | Queens |
6/13/2013 | Joyce Stallings-Harte / Karen Watts (District 19) | Brooklyn Lab School | 999 Jamaica Avenue | Brooklyn |
6/13/2013 | Michelle Lloyd-Bey / Tamika Matheson (District 27) | John Adams High School | 101-01 Rockaway Boulevard | Queens |
6/13/2013 | Philip Composto (District 30) | I.S. 145 Joseph Pulitzer | 33-34 80 Street | Queens |
6/17/2013 | Donald Conyers / Anthony Lodico (District 4) | Manhattan Center for Science and Mathematics | 260 Pleasant Avenue | Manhattan |
6/17/2013 | Elsa Nunez (District 6) | I.S.218 Salome Urena | 4600 Broadway | Manhattan |
6/17/2013 | Rhonda D. Farkas (District 22) | J.H.S. 014 Shell Bank | 2424 Batchelder Street | Brooklyn |
6/17/2013 | Yolanda Torres / Elaine Lindsey (District 7) | University Heights Secondary School | 701 St. Anns Avenue | Bronx |
6/18/2013 | Ainslie Cumberbatch (District 23) | The Waverly School | 104 Sutter Avenue | Brooklyn |
6/18/2013 | Alicja Winnicki / Aimee Horowitz / Tamika Matheson (District 14) | The High School for Enterprise, Business, & Technology | 850 Grand Street | Brooklyn |
6/18/2013 | Anita Saunders / Juan Mendez (District 26) | Francis Lewis High School | 58-20 Utopia Parkway | Queens |
6/18/2013 | Anita Skop (District 15) | Sunset Park High School | 153 35th Street | Brooklyn |
6/18/2013 | Daniella Phillips (District 1) | P.S. 020 Anna Silver | 166 Essex Street | Manhattan |
6/18/2013 | Danielle DiMango (District 25) | I.S. 025 Adrien Block | 34-65 192 Street | Queens |
6/18/2013 | Gale Reeves (District 5) | Frederick Douglass Academy | 2581 7th Avenue | Manhattan |
6/18/2013 | Ilene Altschul (District 3) | M.S. 256 Academic & Athletic Excellence | 154 West 93 Street | Manhattan |
6/18/2013 | Karina Constantino (District 20) | New Utrecht High School | 1601 80 Street | Brooklyn |
6/18/2013 | Lillian Druck (District 32) | J.H.S. 383 Philippa Schuyler | 1300 Greene Avenue | Brooklyn |
6/18/2013 | Mariano Guzman (District 2) | Norman Thomas High School | 111 East 33rd Street | Manhattan |
6/18/2013 | Melodie Mashel / Elaine Lindsey (District 10) | West Bronx Academy for the Future | 500 East Fordham Road | Bronx |
6/18/2013 | Timothy Behr / Carron Staple (District 8) | Herbert H Lehman High School | 3000 East Tremont Avenue | Bronx |
6/19/2013 | Ainslee Cumberbatch / Tamika Matheson (District 23) | The Waverly School | 104 Sutter Avenue | Brooklyn |
6/19/2013 | Beverly Wilkins (District 18) | High School for Innovation in Advertising & Media | 1600 Rockaway Parkway | Brooklyn |
6/19/2013 | Evelyn Santiago / Karen Watts (District 16) | Boys and Girls High School | 1700 Fulton Street | Brooklyn |
6/19/2013 | Isabel DiMola (District 21) | I.S. 228 David A. Boody | 228 Avenue S | Brooklyn |
6/19/2013 | Lenon Murray / Juan Mendez (District 29) | Humanities & Arts Magnet High School | 207-01 116th Avenue | Queens |
6/24/2013 | Danielle DiMango / Juan Mendez (District 25) | I.S. 025 Adrien Block | 34-65 192 Street | Queens |
6/24/2013 | Dolores Esposito / Carron Staple (District 9) | Jonathan Levin High School for Media & Communications | 240 East 172 Street | Bronx |
6/24/2013 | Myrna Rodriguez (District 12) | P.S. X811 | 1434 Longfellow Avenue | Bronx |
6/25/2013 | Anthony Lodico / Marisol Bradbury (MAN HS) | Frank McCourt High School | 145 West 84 Street | Manhattan |
6/25/2013 | Elaine Lindsey (BX HS) | Bronx Regional High School | 1010 Rev J.A. Polite Avenue | Bronx |
6/25/2013 | Myrna Rodriguez (District 12) | P.S. X811 | 1434 Longfellow Avenue | Bronx |
Have questions about Information Session on the New System of Teacher Evaluation and Development? Contact NYC Department of Education - Office of Teacher Effectiveness
This process I cited above about NYSUT and the NYC DOE wanting you to settle or resign was made very clear when married teacher Natalya Sokolson was sexually harassed by OSI Investigator Lawrence Scott in her school PS 329 in Coney Island.
Natalya Sokolson (with Special Commissioner Richard Condon, inset) |
She reported Scott to OSI and was charged with all sorts of misconduct, inside her school building and outside, after she was re-assigned.
NYSUT Attorney Mitch Rubenstein |
Really?? What if the principal called in Lawrence Scott and had him meet alone with Natalya in a room without lights, to see if she could be given the "treatment" for butting heads with administration? How do the actions of Scott have nothing to do with the charges?
I met her in the waiting room at 49-51 Chambers Street, 6th floor, where the 3020-a hearings take place, the day she was to sign her resignation papers, after she fired Mr. Rubenstein who had tried very hard to get Natalya to resign.
NYSUT Attorney Mitch Rubenstein |
Arbitrator Berg had to make this decision to save whatever remnant of respectability OSI could salvage after this case was exposed in the NY POST (which Natalya was also charged with, making the DOE look bad). They should have charged me with that, not Natalya.
In conclusion, I believe that NYSUT and the NYC DOE have ulterior motives when proceeding through 3020-a, and I suggest that you not rely on their interpretation of your charges. Bring your tools of the trade as you know them, including the records, SOHO reports, grades, test scores, portfolios and any and all other records of your students and submit these into the record. Fight for your due process rights. You probably will win your battle.
Betsy Combier
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