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NYC class sizes increase for 6 th year in row in District 10 by Leonie Haimson Executive Director, Class Size Matters January 2014 www.classsizematters.org

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Page 1: NYC class sizes increase for 6 th year in row in District 10 by Leonie Haimson Executive Director, Class Size Matters January 2014

NYC class sizes increase for 6th year in row in District 10

by Leonie HaimsonExecutive Director, Class Size Matters

January 2014www.classsizematters.org

Page 2: NYC class sizes increase for 6 th year in row in District 10 by Leonie Haimson Executive Director, Class Size Matters January 2014

Contracts for Excellence• In 2003, NYS Court of Appeals held that NYC class sizes too large to

provide students with constitutional right to a sound basic education.

• April 2007, NY State settled the Campaign for Fiscal lawsuit by passing the Contracts for Excellence (C4E) law. Legislature agreed to send billions in additional aid to NYC & other high needs school districts to be spent in six approved areas, including class size reduction.

• In addition, NYC had to submit a plan to reduce class size in all grades.

• In fall of 2007, NYSED approved DOE’s plan to reduce class sizes to an average of no more than 20 students per class in K-3; 23 in grades 4-8 and 25 in core HS classes over five yeas.

• In return, NYS has sent more than $3 billion in C4E funds cumulatively to NYC since 2007, though funding has never reached its promised full level.

Page 3: NYC class sizes increase for 6 th year in row in District 10 by Leonie Haimson Executive Director, Class Size Matters January 2014

C4E regulations• iv) beginning in the 2008-2009 school year and continuing through the 2011-

2012 school year, the city school district of the city of New York shall:

• (A) establish annual class size reduction goals for each grade level targeted that will reduce class size toward the prekindergarten through grade 12 targets as prescribed by the commissioner after his/her consideration of the recommendation of an expert panel appointed by the commissioner to conduct a review of existing class size research;

• (B) make measurable progress in each such school years toward achieving such targets; and

• (C) not exceed such targets by the end of the 2011-2012 school year;

http://www.p12.nysed.gov/part100/pages/10013.html

Page 4: NYC class sizes increase for 6 th year in row in District 10 by Leonie Haimson Executive Director, Class Size Matters January 2014

Yet class sizes have increased sharply in grades K-3 by 9.7% since 2006 and are far above C4E goals

Baselin

e

2007-8

2008-9

2009-10

2010-11

2011-12

2012-13

2013-1418.0

19.0

20.0

21.0

22.0

23.0

24.0

25.0

22.6

22.2

22.9

23.5 23.5

24.4

24.8

21 20.9

21.4

22.1

22.9

23.9

24.5

24.86

2120.7

20.520.3

20.119.9 19.9 19.9

D 10

citywide actual

C4E target

No.

of s

tude

nts

Page 5: NYC class sizes increase for 6 th year in row in District 10 by Leonie Haimson Executive Director, Class Size Matters January 2014

Class sizes in 4-8 have also increased by 8% since 2007 and are far above the C4E goals

Baselin

e

2007-8

2008-9

2009-10

2010-11

2011-12

2012-13

2013-1422.0

23.0

24.0

25.0

26.0

27.0

28.0

29.0

25.826.1 26.0

26.226.5

26.8 26.7

27.9

25.6

25.125.3

25.8

26.326.6 26.7 26.8

25.6

24.824.6

23.8

23.322.9 22.9 22.9

D 10

citywide actual

C4E target

No.

stud

ents

Page 6: NYC class sizes increase for 6 th year in row in District 10 by Leonie Haimson Executive Director, Class Size Matters January 2014

Class sizes city-wide have increased in core HS classes as well, by 4% since 2006, though the DOE data is unreliable*

2006-7 2007-8 2008-9 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-1423

23.5

24

24.5

25

25.5

26

26.5

27

25.626 25.7

25.2

24.824.5

25.6

26.1 26.2

26.6 26.5 26.4 26.3

26.7

(Gened & CCT fr/DOE calculations)

C4E targetActual

*DOE’s class size data is unreliable & their methodology for calculating HS averages have changed year to year

Page 7: NYC class sizes increase for 6 th year in row in District 10 by Leonie Haimson Executive Director, Class Size Matters January 2014

1998/99 1999/00 2000/01 2001/02 2002/03 2003/04 2004/05 2005/06 2006/07 2007/08 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 2013/14

24.90

23.25

22.3822.1021.6821.5521.2821.1221.0020.90

21.4022.10

22.90

23.8924.46

24.86

Class sizes in grades K-3 are now the largest since 1998

General ed, CTT and gifted: data from IBO 1998-2005; DOE 2006-2013

Page 8: NYC class sizes increase for 6 th year in row in District 10 by Leonie Haimson Executive Director, Class Size Matters January 2014

1998/99 1999/00 2000/01 2001/02 2002/03 2003/04 2004/05 2005/06 2006/07 2007/08 2008/09 2009/10 2010-11 2011/12 2012/13 2013/14

28.1

27.527.2 27.4

27.0

26.726.4

25.925.6

25.125.3

25.8

26.326.6 26.7 26.8

Class sizes in grades 4th-8th largest since 2002

Gened, CTT and gifted: data from IBO 1998-2005; DOE 2006-2013

Page 9: NYC class sizes increase for 6 th year in row in District 10 by Leonie Haimson Executive Director, Class Size Matters January 2014

FY08 FY09 FY10 FY11 FY12 FY 13

79,109 79,021

76,795

74,958

72,787

73,844

Total no. of teachers dropped by 5,000 since 2007-8

data source: Mayor's Management Report

Page 10: NYC class sizes increase for 6 th year in row in District 10 by Leonie Haimson Executive Director, Class Size Matters January 2014

Loss of teachers while DOE had other priorities

• Number of pedagogues (mostly teachers) has been cut by more than 5,000 since 2007, despite rising enrollment. *

• Smallest #pedagogues in 2011 employed by DOE since 2003.

• Largest # non-pedagogues in 2011 employed since at least 1980.

• Highest % of non-pedagogues to pedagogues since 1993.

• Spending on testing, contracts, consultants, and more bureaucrats have all risen sharply.

(*Data source: Office of Management Budget headcounts, through IBO)

Page 11: NYC class sizes increase for 6 th year in row in District 10 by Leonie Haimson Executive Director, Class Size Matters January 2014

WHY despite C4E law have class sizes increased?

• DOE has never spent any C4E funds in their district-wide or targeted programs for class size reduction; though this was their primary legal obligation .

• In 2009, DOE estimated that it would cost $358 million per year to achieve average C4E class size goals across the city;

• DOE estimated it would cost $448 million per year in staffing to achieve class size goals in ALL schools; plus more in capital costs for school construction.

• Each year, NYC receives more than $530 million in C4E funds.

Page 12: NYC class sizes increase for 6 th year in row in District 10 by Leonie Haimson Executive Director, Class Size Matters January 2014

Ways in which DOE policies have directly caused class size INCREASES

• Since 2007, DOE has cut school budgets 14%– contradicting C4E prohibition against supplanting

• In 2010, DOE eliminated Early grade class size funding for grades K-3– despite promise to state in C4E plan to maintain it

• In 2011, DOE decided no longer to cap class sizes in 1st-3rd grades at 28, leading to tripling of number of classes with 30 or more students in these grades.

Page 13: NYC class sizes increase for 6 th year in row in District 10 by Leonie Haimson Executive Director, Class Size Matters January 2014

Other ways DOE has worked to increase class size

• In 2012, DOE told principals to accommodate special needs students up to contractual class size maximum in gen ed & inclusion classes – 32 students per class in grades 1-5, 31 in 6-8 and 34 in HS.

• DOE has never aligned its capital plan to goals in class size plan, despite this being required by C4E regs – making it impossible to reduce class size in overcrowded schools.

• DOE’s removed any mention of class size standards in 2009 from instructional footprint which determine where new schools will be co-located.

• Many MS and HS Principals say that when they use discretionary funds to reduce class size, DOE simply sends their school more students., undermining their efforts.

Page 14: NYC class sizes increase for 6 th year in row in District 10 by Leonie Haimson Executive Director, Class Size Matters January 2014

C4E regs demand alignment with capital plan but this has been ignored

• 100.13 Contract for excellence

• B.1.vi “in the city school district of the City of New York, include a plan that meets the requirements of clause (c)(2)(i)(a) of this section, to reduce average class sizes within five years for the following grade ranges: – prekindergarten through grade three;– grades four through eight; and– grades nine through twelve.

• Such plan shall be aligned with the capital plan of the city school district of the City of New York and include continuous class size reduction for low performing and overcrowded schools beginning in the 2007-2008 school year and thereafter…”

http://www.p12.nysed.gov/part100/pages/10013.html

Page 15: NYC class sizes increase for 6 th year in row in District 10 by Leonie Haimson Executive Director, Class Size Matters January 2014

CFE funding also flat-lined; but even when increased; city’s class sizes grew!

2006

-07

2007

-08

2008

-09

2009

-10

2010

-11

2011

-12

2012

-13

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

19

20

21

22

23

24

25

$0

$258

$645 $645

$531 $531

21 20.9

21.4

22.1

22.9

23.9

24.5

21

20.720.5

20.320.1

19.9 19.9

C4E spend-ing (in mil-lions)

K-3 av-erage class sizes

C4E class size goals

do

llars

(in

mill

ion

s)

Cla

ss

Siz

e A

vg

s.

Page 16: NYC class sizes increase for 6 th year in row in District 10 by Leonie Haimson Executive Director, Class Size Matters January 2014

Continuing violations of law re C4E public process

• Despite C4E law requiring borough hearings each year, DOE has refused to hold them; CFE sued, won in State Supreme Court but city has appealed.

• NYSED has been sued by CFE for setting timeline for public input in fall and winter, long after C4E funds have been allocated making accountability provisions in the law meaningless.

• SED approved the city’s C4E plan for 2011-2012 in July 2013, after all the money has been spent, making audits irrelevant.

• This year SED “pre-approved” DOE’s 2013-2014 class size plan before ANY public hearings occurred – also contrary to law.

Page 17: NYC class sizes increase for 6 th year in row in District 10 by Leonie Haimson Executive Director, Class Size Matters January 2014

Inadequacies of new “pre-approved” CSR plan for 2013-2014

• City is supposed to show an overall decrease in class size or an increase of less than 0.5 students per class from the 2012-13 school year.

• Limiting class size increases in 75 out of 1500 public schools is NOT a class size reduction plan & will NOT lead to measurably smaller classes as C4E law requires.

• We took a closer look at the list of 75 schools specified by DOE for special efforts to control class size.

Page 18: NYC class sizes increase for 6 th year in row in District 10 by Leonie Haimson Executive Director, Class Size Matters January 2014

75 NYC schools pre-approved by SED for class size reduction

• In 30 of the elementary and middle schools, class sizes increased, and in 22 schools, class sizes increased by more than 0.5 students.

• In 35 of the schools, class sizes decreased.

• For the eight schools in D10, four schools (IS 206, PS 20, PS X037, IS 254) decreased in class size while two increased by less than 0.5 students (PS 095, MS 45) and two increased by more than 0.5 students (PS 94, Creston Academy).

• In high schools, student teacher ratios increased in 2 schools, decreased in 5 schools, and stayed same in 1 school.

Page 19: NYC class sizes increase for 6 th year in row in District 10 by Leonie Haimson Executive Director, Class Size Matters January 2014

Other problems with 75 schools in DOE’s “pre-approved” list

• 20 schools on list have not allocated any C4E funds on class size reduction, according to DOE spreadsheet.

• 41 schools, or more than half are spending less than $100K on class size, unable to pay for even one extra teacher.

• One school (IS 23, D29) not listed on DOE’s C4E spreadsheet.

• 3 schools on list are phasing out (Jonathan Levin HS, JHS 302 Rafael Cordero, Business Computer Applications HS) & another is phasing out its middle school (PS 56 Laurelton)

• Some principals of schools on list have never been told they are supposed to be reducing class size & have had their budgets cut.

• Nearly half (31 out of 74) are schools in good standing, rather than focus or priority schools.