The Somerset Elementary School fundraising to buy plastic grass for the elementary school playground has released the names of their top donors. The top donor for the plastic grass fund is the Somerset Elementary School PTA, raising $80,000 toward the cost of the plastic field.
In the $25,000 and above category, we see the Mayor of Somerset. How much "above" $25,000 is not shown.
Remember, the cost of maintenance and replacement of this plastic grass field on a stone/concrete base will be on the citizens of Montgomery County. Get ready to kick in your share of the cost in the coming years. This is what we call "equity" in Montgomery County.
Dedicated to improving responsiveness and performance of Montgomery County Public Schools
Showing posts with label Morris Panner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Morris Panner. Show all posts
Tuesday, January 19, 2016
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Saturday, October 13, 2012
BOE Candidate Morris Panner Responds
[Board of Education candidate Morris Panner responds to Frederick Stitchnoth's commentary. Do any sitting BOE members ever respond to parents?]
Hi Fred,
Hi Fred,
Thank you for your thoughtful email.
I am sorry I missed the event. I attended a forum the next night at the People's Community Baptist Church in Silver Spring where these issues were also at stake.
My position is that we need to push more responsibility to the principals and teachers who are closest to the community. We are getting lost in the bureaucracy of a large system and losing the flexibility to respond to the concerns and needs of each community.
We face a tough budget. (I have spoken on the need to correct the structural imbalances that the County Office of Management and Budget has diagnosed.) Without pushing responsibility closer to the schools, it will be very difficult, if not impossible, for educators to come up with the incremental innovation that will allow us to maintain high standards for everyone.
We can't push a one-size fits all solution from a central command and control authority and hope to manage and respond to the challenges posed by our increasingly diverse community. The success stories from the Race to the Top challenge have shown how innovative educators, even facing the challenges of disadvantaged student populations have improved learning dramatically.
Our goals are clear. Each student should be able to read, write, master basic math skills and be able to think critically and learn so they can succeed in a rapidly changing world.
If we hire excellent teachers, give them the latitude to innovate and hold them accountable, we will make our great schools, even greater.
None of this is easy, but our current path of a centrally planned and insular bureaucracy is not going to work.
Thank you for being so dedicated to these issues.
Best regards, Morris
Friday, October 12, 2012
Missing Morris
[Morris Panner is a candidate for the at large seat in the November Board of Education election.]
Dear Morris:
David Esquith is very bright, polished and well-spoken; during the debate I sometimes found myself wishing I could vote for him. Finally, though, I realized that he was just reading from the Harvard Business Review--all process and management, no traction with the real life of education in Silver Spring. It was a clever way to project the Morris mirage.
I wondered, what would the real Morris actually say, think, do? Would he say "I'm going to think out of the box?" or would he apply out-of-the-box thinking to grapple, in word and deed, with the real life of education in Silver Spring?
I thought that, when you when you pushed aside Aryeh Shudofsky (my guy) in the primary, you were making a commitment to the general election (and ultimately to the huge time commitment entailed by actual service).
Thanks for your actual contribution to Jen Bondeson's interesting piece "Segregation comment draws criticism at school board candidate forum (http://www.gazette.net/ article/20121011/NEWS/ 710119797/1022/segregation- comment-draws-criticism-at- school-board-candidate-forum& template=gazette)." Honestly I heard the Barclay/Esquith dust-up, but really didn't get what Chris's beef was.
Your friend David certainly was not saying that desegregation was a mistake (as I understand from the article that Chris was asserting). He was making a wonky, interesting Poli Sci 301 point about institutional capacity and responsibility. I sorta followed this at the time. I guess Chris didn't. But, David was not "taken out of context" as you say in the article (you shoulda been there to see it for yourself). David's thesis was presented so quickly, and it was so out-of-context (school board debate, not seminar): maybe we can excuse Chris's blow up.
I agree with Fred Evans: "You can't just say that schools could have done it." Desegregation, given the historical and social context at the time, seems to have been wholly dependent on the Court. I guess your point is that the school system should act this time to correct disproportionate minority suspension, not default as it did in the prior instances. OK, MCPS should act. But create a little traction between this institutional responsibility and real life education in Silver Spring: how should it act? what should it do?
I was reassured to see you say that you "couldn't be more adamant about ensuring social equalities for our kids." Great goal, but what should MCPS do? I've urged desegregation. (Any grappling with the real life data will show terrible segregation, east and west. Separate is not equal, right?) One of the main reasons you didn't get my vote in the primary was your March 17 response to a question about growth and boundary studies; you said that "it would be nice to keep the boundaries fixed, given people's investment in housing and their settled expectations." I get what you mean: no desegregation. In that case, would you support a separate-but-equal budget -- i.e., more money for schools where MCPS keeps great masses of kids who really need the boost? It wouldn't be nearly as effective as actual desegregation, but it would go some way to "ensuring social equalities for our kids." Or, do you have some other "out-of-the-box" proposal?
Sorry to pick you out. The candidates who actually appeared offered no more substance than David.
Thing is, I'd probably vote for you if you'd show up and get real.
Frederick Stitchnoth
Summary of BOE Candidates Forum - Oct. 10th - Silver Spring
BOARD OF EDUCATION CANDIDATES’ FORUM, OCTOBER 10, 2012
Frederick Stichnoth, fred.stichnoth AT yahoo.com
October 11, 2012
A
ninety-minute BOE candidates’ Forum on Public Safety was conducted October 10th in Silver Spring , sponsored by Safe Silver
Spring, Prezco (President’s Council of Silver Spring Civic Associations),
MCCPTA and Montgomery County Civic Federation.
The
audience consisted of about 25 people (apparently largely from local,
down-county environs). The following notables were noted: Lynne Harris, MCCPTA
Vice President of Education Issues; Shebra Evans, MCCPTA Vice President of
Programs; Larry Edmunds, MCCPTA Vice President of Legislation; Jen Bondeson, Gazette reporter.
Questions
were asked by Tony Hausner (Safe Silver Spring) and Evan Glass (Prezco), and
two members of the audience. Some questions were derived from Safe Silver
Spring’s September 13, 2012 “School Board Questionnaire,” which some of the
candidates had answered. http://www.safesilverspring.com/docs/School_Board_Candidates_Questionnaire_Responses_on_Public_Safety_Issues_091312.doc
This
summary presents Candidates’ Responses and My Reflections.
Candidates’ Responses
Question 1: school resource officers.
Chris Barclay. “Safety and security are
paramount.” The issues with the program are budget and management. If MCPS
contributes to program funding, it must be able to manage the officers.
David Esquith/Morris
Panner . Mr. Panner would “think out of the box,” on this
question and generally. He would examine what the research shows. In this case,
the research shows that the program does not have a positive effect: schools
are no safer, their climate is degraded, and minority students find SRO’s
difficult. Mr. Panner would change the background.
Question 2: truancy court program.
David Esquith/Morris Panner .
Mr. Panner would review research to determine whether the program was cost
effective. We must distinguish an education program from a criminal program.
Chris Barclay. Mr. Barclay would ask why
students are truant and what’s going on at home. MCPS may need to “partner”
(apparently a funding reference) with the Department of Health and Human
Services and with Mental Health Association. We must ask what MCPS needs to do
to get students engaged.
Question 3: fostering parent involvement
(with reference to neighborhood schools with high FARMS rates).
Chris Barclay. Mr. Barclay cited past Board outreach strategies: Parent Academies
and PTA single-cluster meetings. These are not enough. Not everyone is involved
in PTA. The Board must push its message out, getting out into the community,
and not just at election time. He understands the concerns.
David Esquith/Morris
Panner . Mr. Panner would examine things from the other
end of the telescope. Parents have a very small window into the school. Board
members must accommodate parents, asking what the parents want.
Question 4: vocational education expansion.
Chris Barclay. Mr. Barclay said that
career and technical education (CTE) should be available for students who want
to learn. MCPS students need more options. Edison
is a wonderful school. MCPS must have “vision forward,” including CTE and
distance learning. To succeed, all students need baseline skills.
David Esquith/Morris
Panner . Mr. Panner does not want his special education
child to be a victim of low expectations, shunted into vocational education.
Mr. Panner would ask how effective the program is, reviewing outcomes,
consulting research. Vocational education should prepare students for future
jobs, not the jobs of 10-15 years ago.
Question 5: disproportionate minority
suspensions.
Chris Barclay. Mr. Barclay said that
MCPS has black male disproportionality problems with discipline and special
education. Staff must engage and get to know kids. Black males, whose bodies
are growing and hormones raging in middle school, are disciplined for dubious
infractions like “insubordination.” Suspension more than one time per year
predicts school failure. MCPS must get to the root issue: put race on the
table.
David Esquith/Morris
Panner . Mr. Panner was a prosecutor: he understands
crime. There is an “epidemic of expulsion.” The education system dropped the
ball in this case, as it did in civil rights, special education, and female
extracurricular activity; then the judicial system had to take over. He noted a
conflict between supporting SRO’s and banning expulsion. We must find an
evidence-based solution.
Barclay/Esquith exchange. Following Mr.
Esquith’s response, Mr. Barclay erupted with frustration. He asked what Mr.
Esquith meant: schools triumphed in these instances; they did not “drop the
ball.” Mr. Barclay said that “folks are throwing out platitudes; we’re dealing
with real kids’ lives.”
Mr. Esquith
calmly explained that in the instances he mentioned, either the courts or Congress
were required to intervene because the schools did not sufficiently address
these equity issues themselves.
Audience Question 6: guidance counselors.
Chris Barclay. Supportive counselors and
professional development in class management support kids in understanding
their lives. The Board weighs one need against another. A lot is done by
formula. It is a struggle to balance, especially when money is short.
David Esquity/Morris
Panner . Mr. Esquith referred to several behavior
modification programs. Four percent of students require intensive mental health
intervention. We must examine this issue at the systemic level, not position by
position.
Audience Question 7: Styrofoam trays. A
very bright, articulate, self-possessed student from Piney Branch
Elementary School
forcefully renewed the question of whether MCPS would support a pilot
dishwasher program to replace these “neuro-toxic” trays.
David Esquith/Morris
Panner . Mr. Panner would support this pilot program.
Chris Barclay. Piney Branch has done a
great job in forwarding this proposal. Mr. Barclay sponsored a resolution to
reduce MCPS’ “carbon footprint.” MCPS already has taken certain steps:
apparently eliminating trays from high schools. However, the Board’s job is
policy and finance, not operations; that’s why the Board hires a
Superintendent.
My Reflections
Candidates’ perspectives. Observing
a span uncluttered with substance (“folks are throwing out platitudes here,”
Mr. Barclay unselfconsciously noticed), characteristic candidate perspectives
are easy to discern.
I like
in-school experience, on-the-job know-how and analysis, each with a caveat.
It is not
yet clear, despite our experience with Mike Durso, that in-school experience
does not limit the ability to see long-standing problems and to bring disruptive
change. This concern is exacerbated, in Mr. Evans’s case, because he is
embraced by MCEA—the teachers’ union (as are incumbents Barclay and Kauffman).
MCEA power is wielded where it does not belong.
In the same
way as in-school experience, on-the-job know-how facilitates operations, except
when it becomes hide-bound organizational passivity. Mr. Kauffman’s tired
responses suggest he learned too well from strong-willed Superintendents Weast
and Starr, from MABE training and Broad seminars. It sure looks like the
current Board is being lead by the nose.
Study delay. Analysis, “outside the
box,” and the “other end of the telescope,” sound pretty atypical for the Board.
(I distinguish simple focus and forthrightness that seem to be disqualifying
characteristics, as Ms. Berthiaume’s fate suggests.) Mr. Morris (channeled by
Mr. Esquith) seemed to display some homework analysis when he advised that
SRO’s do not work. Most other times, repetition of his main qualification
covered over a failure to have substantive answers to the questions.
Of course,
this was only a variation of the tack taken by other candidates: Ms. Seckinger
thought that we must examine why we need SRO’s. Incumbent Kauffman wanted to
determine why Edison is undersubscribed.
Despite his experience, Mr. Evans still needs to “analyze why” disproportionate
minority suspension occurs; incumbent Kauffman needs to “look at the data.” Ms.
Smondrowski would determine why students aren’t engaged.
New studies
come every day, and I hope MCPS, the Board and parents will continue to review
and debate them. On the other hand, some problems have been with us for
decades. A claim for more study time does not excuse inaction.
Money delay. Our know-how guys, Barclay
and Kauffman, defend inaction on the basis of budget constriction generally and
a game with the Council of budget blackmail in particular. This seems to
reflect our pathetic national melodrama.
Lightness of dis-placement. Unlike any
other forum I’ve seen, this one was thrown by a particular neighborhood and the
questions particularly reflected that neighborhood’s concerns. Our candidates
missed this, in their intense preoccupation with the generic.
It is no
accident that questions regarding SRO’s, truant officers, vocational education
and disproportionate minority suspension were not emanating from Bethesda .
So, to
return to the previous comment, our candidates were unaware that the hostages
in their money game are the Silver Spring
people looking for public safety. And Chris “Safety and security are
paramount…we’re dealing with real kids’ lives” Barclay represents the
Downcounty Consortium!
While the
budget may not meet hopes, or even needs, the Board must spend the budget WHERE
the need is greatest.
There were
a couple of good, if grossly understated, exceptions. Ms. Smondrowski stated
the MCPS should evaluate schools’ needs “based on sheer whatever” (I think she
was searching for “educational load” or degree of concentrated poverty). Ms.
Seckinger knows that a gang-free MoCo is just not true.
Constricted Board function. The Board
displays profound decorum in deferring to the Superintendent on the neuro-toxic
tray issue. And its learned formulaic responses protect it from acknowledging
need in the red zone. Despite Board policy and regulation (on educational load,
for example) and Board resolution (on choice parameters, for example), the
Board does not act.
The Board
has power and a paramount political function. What is it doing?
Final miscellany. I salute Mr. Barclay
for trying to keep race on the table; I hope he’ll also locate it on the map.
MCCPTA has
been MCPS’ partner, and PTA’s have been MCPS’ primary vehicle of parent
engagement. Insiders Barclay and Kauffman, apparently following the
Superintendent’s lead, want to supplant PTA’s. If I were MCCPTA, I’d feel
dissed. (On the other hand, MCCPTA is outsourcing its function—to the Parent
Leadership Group, for example—so maybe it’s in on the game.) Myself—I’ve seen
the best of times and the worst of times with MCCPTA. I hope the best will
resume. I’m concerned about MCCPTA’s demotion, and potential replacement by isolated
and powerless small groups propped up by MCPS itself.
Tuesday, October 9, 2012
Questions for Board of Education Candidates in November 2012 Election
The Parents' Coalition bloggers have assembled a list of 8 questions that we have sent to the Montgomery County Board of Education 2012 Candidates. We welcome candidates' responses to any or all of the questions that we have posed. Responses from candidates are at the bottom of this blog posting.
Responses:
Looking for answers to these questions from the other candidates? We have asked them for responses 4 times over the last 7 months. We will post their responses if we ever receive them.
1. Do you support an online checkbook for MCPS such as is used in a number of other public school systems including Miami-Dade County Public Schools?
2. MCPS has minority contracting goals—we want more business to flow to people of color. Currently, do you believe the practice of awarding non-bid contracts supports these goals? What would you do to make MCPS always use a fair and open bidding process?
3. Do you suppport a U turn away from a one-size-fits-all education and restoring and improving wider choice of education opportunities for our children, including restoring learning centers for special education students, restoring honors classes, and restoring non-IT vocational education?
4. Do you support requiring new initiatives and new curriculum be required to undergo a legitimate pilot study that meets the minimum standards from the U.S. Department of Education for reasonable evidence before deploying to the whole county? Do you support assessing all new initiatives against the minimum U.S. Department of Education standard of "what works"?
5. If elected to the Board of Education, will you support or oppose MCPS' practice of permitting principals to assess students fees to attend public school classes?
6. Do you support a U turn from current policy of paying attorneys for advice on how to skirt the Maryland Open Meetings Act to a policy of full compliance with the Act and spirit of the law of open meetings, and even going beyond the legal requirements of the Act?
7. Do you support returning the preparation of the MCPS budget to the public Board of Education table?
8. Do you believe that the MCPS Educational Foundation should be transparent in its sources of funds and its expenditures?
Responses:
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Candidate Annita Seckinger responds to Parents' Coalition Questions
Annita Seckinger is running for the Board of Education seat in District 4.
1. Do you support an online checkbook for MCPS such as is used in a number of
other public school systems including Miami-Dade County Public Schools?
Yes, I do. An online check register allows taxpayers to see how the Districts spend
their money for products and services. It will also encourage the open bidding
process, and thereby assure money is being spent wisely.
2. MCPS has minority contracting goals—we want more business to flow to people of
color. Currently, do you believe the practice of awarding non-bid contracts supports
these goals? What would you do to make MCPS always use a fair and open bidding
process?
I am completely in support of an open bidding process. One way to do this might be
to use a similar method as the checkbook or check register. The BOE needs to be
accountable for its spending since it is spending tax payers’ money hopefully in the
best interest of the tax payers’ children. After a bid is accepted, it should be posted
on line along the other bids that were considered but rejected.
3. Do you support a U turn away from a one-size-fits-all education and restoring
and improving wider choice of education opportunities for our children, including
restoring learning centers for special education students, restoring honors classes,
and restoring non-IT vocational education?
I more than support it. I intend to actively promote a wider choice of education
opportunities, including vocational education. I was one of those children who would
have benefited greatly from such programs. As someone who grew up with (at the
time undiagnosed) severe dyslexia, my school years were difficult to say the least.
Not all children are cut out to be academics, nor do they need to be. We need to
encourage and help our children develop their particular talents and potentials. It
is time we understood that what we keep referring to as learning disabilities are
actually different ways of seeing the world and different learning styles. We need to
respect, celebrate, and help promote them.
4. Do you support requiring new initiatives and new curriculum be required to
undergo a legitimate pilot study that meets the minimum standards from the U.S.
Department of Education for reasonable evidence before deploying to the whole
county? Do you support assessing all new initiatives against the minimum U.S.
Department of Education standard of "what works"?
I am definitely in favor of legitimate pilot studies, but need to learn more about the
US Department of Education standards, before committing to using this as a bench
mark.
5. If elected to the Board of Education, will you support or oppose MCPS' practice of
permitting principals to assess students fees to attend public school classes?
I oppose student fees to participate in public school classes. Public school is
supported by taxpayer dollars and any additional fees for classes are, both illegal,
completely unethical. The practice needs to stop. It is not benefiting our children at
all. We are here to do all possible to help out children, not hinder them.
6. Do you support a U turn from current policy of paying attorneys for advice on
how to skirt the Maryland Open Meetings Act to a policy of full compliance with
the Act and spirit of the law of open meetings, and even going beyond the legal
requirements of the Act?
Spending money on attorneys to defend an illegal action is an unscrupulous act,
and should not be support by anyone. These funds would be of better use to the
community if used in the schools, as would the complying with the Act in the first
place.
7. Do you support returning the preparation of the MCPS budget to the public Board
of Education table?
I believe it should be transparent and public no matter where it is or who is involved.
Frankly, with the current Board’s lack of transparency I wonder if it would make a
difference. We need to solve the transparency issue of the Board as a first priority
before we assign them more things to hide.
8. Do you believe that the MCPS Educational Foundation should be transparent in its
sources of funds and its expenditures?
Believe? Absolutely. I am a firm supporter in transparency on any and all levels.
Labels:
Annita Seckinger,
Election,
Morris Panner
Friday, September 21, 2012
[BOE Election] Patch: Chicago Nightmares for Montgomery County
...The MCEA (the Apple Ballot's authors) are increasingly no longer representing the interests of most teachers or students.
For teachers, the MCEA is fighting a rear-guard action to hang on to a benefits structure that will benefit few, if any of the younger teachers. There simply is not enough money to support the promises that have been made. Instead of facing up to facts, the MCEA is using scare tactics to hold onto a benefit for the few without looking out for the future of the many.
For students, it is worse. The Apple Ballot no longer is a document that represents the interests of the students. To hang on to the last few years of an unsustainable system, MCPS has had to make staff cuts and increase class size. The impact on today’s students is terrible...
http://chevychase.patch.com/blog_posts/chicago-nightmares-for-montgomery-county
Sunday, April 1, 2012
Sartucci Picks: Susan Byrne and Morris Panner
For the first time the Parents' Coalition compiled a list of questions for the Board of Education candidates. We sent the questions to all of the candidates in the primary election. We told the candidates we would appreciate answers to any or all of the questions. Most of the questions could be answered with one word or one sentence. We wanted to get a feel for the candidates beyond what has been presented on websites and in presentations. And since there has been no media coverage of this election, voters don't have much to go on in evaluating the candidates.
Only 2 of the candidates responded to our questions so far, Susan Byrne (District 2) and Morris Panner (At-large).
And each of those candidates said something that no current Board of Education member or elected official in the state of Maryland has ever said! They both said that they would oppose the MCPS practice of charging students fees to attend public school classes.
Susan Byrne and Morris Panner showed a willingness to be responsive to citizens, and spoke out against charging students' fees to attend public school classes. Two things that immediately distinguish them from the current members of the Board of Education. They would be welcome additions to the current Board of Education clique.
Only 2 of the candidates responded to our questions so far, Susan Byrne (District 2) and Morris Panner (At-large).
And each of those candidates said something that no current Board of Education member or elected official in the state of Maryland has ever said! They both said that they would oppose the MCPS practice of charging students fees to attend public school classes.
Susan Byrne and Morris Panner showed a willingness to be responsive to citizens, and spoke out against charging students' fees to attend public school classes. Two things that immediately distinguish them from the current members of the Board of Education. They would be welcome additions to the current Board of Education clique.
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