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Wilson, UC High among 23 schools to close this year, Robeson spared

Posted on 08 March 2013 by Mike Lyons

By now you might have heard that the School Reform Commission (SRC) voted last night to close 23 schools around the city, including the neighborhood school Alexander Wilson Elementary and University City High School.

Schools closed also included the 100-year-old Germantown High School. Students from Germantown will be sent to Martin Luther King Jr. High School, a longtime rival.

Planning for the school closings will begin immediately and impacted students will start at their new school next fall. Opponents say the mass closures, which amount to about 12 percent of the city’s public schools, will destroy neighborhoods.

Here are some tweets from last night’s meeting.

Helen Gym, co-founder of Parents United for Public Education:

High school teacher Chris Angelini:


Councilwoman Blondelle Reynolds Brown from the meeting gallery:

Philadelphia Inquirer reporter Kristen Graham includes a photo of student protesters.

But in a meeting beset by rancor (there were 19 arrests, including the national president of the American Federation of Teachers) there was at least one scrap of good news for some students in West Philly. The Paul Robeson High School for Human Services (4125 Ludlow) was one of four schools saved from closure last night. Students there were supposed to be transferred to Sayre High School (5800 Walnut St.), a lower performing school. Robeson showed marked improvement in recent years. In a report released a few days ago, the school ranked among the top 10 high schools in the city with a graduation rate of 90 percent for freshmen who began in 2008. Sayre has a graduation rate of 53 percent.

Philadelphia has seen a drop in public school students – from about 200,000 in 2000 to about 150,000 this year – due largely to the increase in the number of privately run charter schools. District officials have maintained that the closures are necessary to save money. Superintendent William Hite, who recommended the closures to the SRC, was active on Twitter after last night’s meeting as well:

 
The closures impact about 16,000 students and 1,000 teachers overall.

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School closing vote scheduled for tonight

Posted on 07 March 2013 by Mike Lyons

The School Reform Commission is scheduled to vote tonight on the School District of Philadelphia’s downsizing plan that would close 27 schools across the city, including West Philly’s Alexander Wilson Elementary (46th and Woodland), Shaw Middle School (5400 Warrington Avenue) and University City High School (3601 Filbert St.).

The meeting begins at 5:30 p.m. and you can watch it at Comcast Channel 52, Verizon Fios Channel 20 or watch it livestreaming online.

District officials say the closures will “right-size” the public school footprint in the city by closing half-full and underperforming schools. Opponents of the plan say the closing of neighborhood schools (and increase in the number of privately run charter schools) will ruin neighborhoods.

Click here to see testimony from the SRC’s February meeting that addressed the pending closures. The Philadelphia Public School Notebook also has its extensive coverage of the school closure story collected here.

Mike Lyons

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District officials at Wilson school Wednesday for critical closure meeting

Posted on 11 February 2013 by Mike Lyons

school closuresSchool district officials, including superintendent William Hite, will be at the Alexander Wilson School (1300 S. 46th St., near the southern tip of Clark Park) on Wednesday to hear public input on the school’s proposed closure ahead of a vote scheduled for March 7 that would shutter three dozen schools across the city. The public hearing will be held from 4-5:30 p.m.

The district’s facilities master plan released in December calls for the closure of Wilson, a neighborhood K-6 school, and the relocation some of its students to Lea Elementary School (47th and Locust). Wilson is one of 23 elementary schools that would be closed under the plan.

The District expects the closings and subsequent sales of the schools to save the district some $30 million per year.

But district officials have said those plans could be changed before the School Reform Commission’s vote on March 7. A key factor in the district’s recommendations to the School Reform Commission will be the public backing of a school, so everyone in the neighborhood is encouraged to attend the meeting.

As enrollment at the Penn Alexander School tightens every year, nearby schools are going to continue to feel some enrollment pressures, at least in the lower grades. The closure of Wilson will ratchet up that pressure.

Also, the City Council is holding hearings on school closings on Tuesday beginning at 11 a.m. in room 400 of City Hall.  Hite and SRC members are expected to attend and testify. Council members are expected to negotiate a reduction in the number of school closures. For more on those meetings, go to The Notebook story here.

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West Philly school closure proposal to be discussed tonight at Facilities Master Plan Community Meeting

Posted on 23 January 2013 by WPL

The Philadelphia School District is hosting a community meeting tonight, from 6-8 p.m. at the University City High School (36th and Filbert). The purpose of the meeting is to provide parents and community members with an opportunity to learn more about the Facilities Master Plan recommendations in the District’s West Planning Area. According to the recommendations, the following schools in the area are slated for closure: University City HS, Robeson, Wilson, Leidy, and McMichael. If the School Reform Commission (SRC) approves the proposed recommendations, these and many other schools in the city will be closed this summer. The SRC will vote on the proposed closure list in March.

Community members are welcome to ask questions, and share their input on the recommendations at tonight’s meeting. Please visit this page for more information on the Facilities Master Plan.

If you are not attending the meeting, you can watch it online here.

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It’s public’s turn to weigh in on school closings

Posted on 14 December 2012 by Mike Lyons

closedThe School District of Philadelphia yesterday proposed the closure of 37 schools across the city, one sixth of the City’s public schools. Some 17,000 students would be affected. Now it’s time for members of the public to have their say.

A series of community forums is scheduled over the next couple of months “to help the public understand how we got here, the proposed recommendations, and where the District is headed,” the announcement on the District’s website reads. The School Reform Commission will vote on the proposed closure list, which includes Alexander Wilson Elementary at 46th and Woodland and University City High School, in March.

The full facilities master plan is available at the bottom of yesterday’s story, here. A full list of the community forums is available here. You can watch Superintendent William R. Hite Jr.’s announcement of the proposed closings here.

In West Philly, a forum will be held Monday, Dec. 17 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Sayre High School at 58th and Walnut.

The forums will continue after the holidays. Here are others scheduled for West Philly (all run from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.):

• Jan. 22, Overbrook High School, 5898 Lancaster Ave.
• Jan. 23, University City High School, 3601 Filbert St.
• Feb. 19, Overbrook High School
• Feb. 20, University City High School

Read more on the proposed closings here:

“Across Philadelphia, strong reactions to school closings plan,” Philadelphia Public School Notebook.
“For adults and children, shock over school closings,” Philly.com.

 

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Wilson, U.C. High among schools slated for closure next year

Posted on 13 December 2012 by Mike Lyons

school closuresSeveral schools in West Philadelphia, including Alexander Wilson Elementary and University City High School, will be recommended for closure next year, according to a School District of Philadelphia facilities plan expected to be released later today.

The plan, which The Philadelphia Public School Notebook reports was sent to district employees this morning, calls for the closure of Wilson, a K-6 neighborhood school at 46th and Woodland, and the transfer of students from there to Lea Elementary at 47th and Locust. The plan also calls for the closure of Shaw Middle School at 54th and Warrington, which includes grades 7-8. Students there will be offered spots at Tilden Middle School, Longstreth Elementary and other nearby elementary schools that include grades 7-8.

Wilson students and their parents rallied last fall to keep the school open during the first round of closures, which shuttered Drew Elementary at 38th and Powelton. Wilson stayed open, but it was clear that District officials were still trying to figure out how to reconfigure schools in the area.

The West Philly Coalition of Neighborhood Schools released a statement this morning that expressed concern about the closing of neighborhood schools.

“We believe that every child should be able to walk to school and that a neighborhood can be strengthened by its elementary school and an elementary school by its neighborhood,” the statement read.

WPCNS also called on the School Reform Commission to fulfill the requirement to hold community hearings on the closures.

“Transparency, community inclusion and the opportunity for school communities to make their cases in opposition to closure are of the utmost importance,” the statement continued.

Some 37 schools in all are on the list to be shuttered as the School District of Philadelphia looks for ways to consolidate resources and cut costs (see the full document below). If approved the schools on the list would close their doors for good at the end of this school year.

University City High School (36th and Filbert) is one of eight high schools across the city to be slated for closure. Students at the school, which includes grades 9-12, will be given the option to transfer to schools elsewhere in the city or transfer to neighborhood high schools, including West Philadelphia High School, High School of the Future, Sayre High School or Overbrook High School. Bok, Germantown and Strawberry Mansion high schools are also on the closure list.

The Philadelphia Inquirer is reporting that no teachers will lose their jobs as a result of the closures, but that other school personnel could.

Superintendent William Hite is expected to announce the full list of closures today at 2 p.m. You can watch the press conference live on PSTV Comcast Channel 52, Verizon Fios Channel 20, or online here.

The full list:
School Closures and Reconfigurations – 2013-2014

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