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New York City
October 2003

Move Over Assistant Principals?
by Jill Levy

Saturday, Sept. 6, was a remarkable day. The Council of School Supervisors and Administrators (CSA) made a spectacular showing in the Labor Day Parade as more than 200 members along with family, friends, children and grandchildren marched up Fifth Avenue.

We were also joined by our new AFSA President, Baxter Atkinson and retirees with the RSSA.

I was so honored to represent every single CSA member and so thankful to every person who offered their time and effort in support of our profession and our union.

If Saturday afternoon uplifted my spirits, Sunday morning brought me right back to reality, and the challenges and struggles that lie ahead.

Hidden among the folds of my Sunday New York Times was “A Guide for Parents and Families,” published by the Board of Education.

As I read I was initially impressed with the content. But, oops! How strange! Whoever put together Page 5 either didn’t know how schools are organized or had deliberately omitted key personnel from the neat little diagram, because nowhere to be found on this organizational chart were the words “Assistant Principal”.

Now, had the Chancellor’s staff been at all “collaborative” (to use the Chancellor’s own word), we would have immediately noticed the absence of this key strategic instructional person. Paraprofessionals were also left out of this non-collaborative project.

Well, perhaps it was an oversight, I thought, giving Mayor Bloomberg and Schools Chancellor Joel Klein the benefit of the doubt. After all, they have deemed useless anything that existed at the Board of Education prior to their takeover. Perhaps in their zeal to highlight their complete reorganization of the school system and in their inimitable, narcissistic style, they simply didn’t remember that Assistant Principals play an extraordinarily powerful role in the schools.

On the other hand, several Assistant Principals from the Bronx recently told me a disheartening story. They reported that a Learning Instructional Superintendent told them math and literacy coaches were now a school’s instructional experts; Assistant Principals would no longer fill that long-held role. Not only is that a colossal waste of expertise, I thought, but contractually, coaches are not permitted to do CSA members’ work. As if that wasn’t bad enough, my Bronx Assistant Principals then told me this same LIS made disparaging comments about CSA.

Now, we all know this kind of talk so far down on the management food chain must have been picked up from someone up above. In this way, it becomes “permissible” to talk in a certain manner about unions, and about membership in those unions.

If this report is accurate, such attempts to apply psychological fear will not go un-rewarded. Our contract is very clear about harassment and we have never lost a harassment charge. Just try us.

In successful schools, parents know the significant role Assistant Principals play in the lives of their children in terms of instruction and safety. A California Institute of Technology study clearly showed their impact: The only factor consistent in successful schools was the higher ratio of Assistant Principals to students. It really was a case of the more Assistant Principals, the better for the students.

So, Assistant Principals, strut your stuff with dignity, pride and professionalism. If Bloomberg, Klein & Co. think you’re dispensable, rest assured: Your Principals, faculties, parents and children don’t.#

Jill Levy is the President, Council of School Supervisors and Administrators.

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Education Update, Inc., P.O. Box 1588, New York, NY 10159.
Tel: (212) 477-5600. Fax: (212) 477-5893. Email: ednews1@aol.com.
All material is copyrighted and may not be printed without express consent of the publisher. © 2003.


 

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