NYC Public Faculties Chancellor Kamar Samuels visited the Theodore Roosevelt Academic Campus in Fordham this week as part of ‘Our Schools. Our Future’ tour.
Photograph courtesy of NYCPS.
NYC Public Faculties Chancellor Kamar Samuels visited the Theodore Roosevelt Academic Campus in Fordham this week. Round 150 folks packed the gymnasium of the campus.
The campus homes six faculties: Fordham Excessive College for the Arts, West Bronx Academy for the Future, Theodore Roosevelt Excessive College, Kappa Worldwide Excessive College, Fordham Management Academy and Belmont Preparatory Excessive College.
College students from every faculty attended the occasion together with mother and father who got here to voice their desires and considerations about NYC public faculties.
The occasion commenced with a recital of the pledge of allegiance, adopted by a Whitney Houston-themed ballet efficiency from senior dance majors from Fordham Excessive College.
Chancellor Samuels defined that scholar voices are helpful in public faculty conversations primarily based on his 20 years working for the Division of Schooling (DOE).
“What I’ve learned is that the number one thing we need to make sure that happens in our schools is that our students are safe,” Samuels mentioned. “And when our students are safe, it’s not just physically safe. They have to feel like their voices are heard, and they have to be a part of the decision-making process. That’s how you know there’s strong safety in school”
He additionally emphasised the significance of accelerating variety that displays the range of the town.
Chancellor Kamar Samuels visited Theodore Roosevelt Academic Campus in Fordham the place college students and oldsters got here to voice their desires and considerations about NYC public faculties. Photograph courtesy of NYCPS.
“We want schools that are integrated so that our young people can learn to commit to vast differences. When they leave here, they’re leaving into a polarized world and that won’t change unless they have the ability to connect with people that are different from them,” Samuels mentioned.
Throughout 15 tables, mother and father, college students, educators and DOE representatives gathered to mirror on the present state of colleges and share their ideas on how NYC Public Faculties can enhance.
The tables have been offered 35 minutes for his or her dialog and every desk had a notetaker and a timekeeper. After they have been accomplished, college students from every desk shared what their group mentioned for Chancellor Samuels and his staff.
College students from the six excessive faculties and from the newly launched Bronx STEAM Middle shared what their tables mentioned about tradition, inclusion, integrity, security, making communication simpler between mother and father and faculties, educational rigor, and connecting Bronx college students with alternatives that expose them to experiences past the borough.
A scholar from the Bronx STEAM Middle defined that she desires to see a creation of extra pathways past the present three – medical assistant, nursing assistant and cybersecurity – in order that future college students received’t really feel restricted and could have extra choices to discover.
Selina Frimpong, 18, a highschool senior who attends the Belmont Preparatory Excessive College spoke on behalf of desk 4 in the course of the share-out portion of the occasion. She desires there to be higher security laws and higher attitudes from the safety when greeting college students, particularly because it homes six totally different faculties.
Frimpong additionally shared that she desires to see extra cultures carried out into the varsity tradition.
“Because majority of the students aren’t native Americans, they come from all different backgrounds like African, European, Asian, Hispanic and more,” she mentioned. “It’s important that we normalize that it’s okay for students to express who they are and where they’re from culturally, and not assimilate to the Western [culture].”
Frimpong shared that the mother and father at her desk desired certainty of their kids’s security at faculties.
“Having that assurance that [their children] have a trusted adult is not always the case, but if parents know that there is an adult or adults that they know their child knows as well as they do and if anything is wrong, then [the adults] can communicate that with the parent.”
“What I’ve learned is that the number one thing we need to make sure that happens in our schools is that our students are safe,” NYC Faculties Chancellor Kamar Samuels mentioned. “They have to feel like their voices are heard, and they have to be a part of the decision-making process.” Photograph courtesy of NYCPS.
A recurring theme from the dialog was security.
Elizabeth Byrd has a daughter within the twelfth grade who attends Fordham Excessive College for the Arts. She’s additionally the co-president of the Mum or dad Trainer Affiliation at her daughter’s faculty.
“When you’re hearing from parents that I dropped my child off at 7:30 a.m., but the line is around the corner, it’s kind of worrisome because what is going on? ‘Oh, a machine broke,’” Byrd mentioned.
“So, it’s an issue that the building has been having. I want to say the whole building is having problems getting kids into school at a decent time. Everybody wants to start school at a certain time, but they can’t because of safety reasons.”
Byrd mentioned that she is hopeful that the Chancellor and his cupboard will implement the suggestions from the viewers.
“I was observing him while students, parents, whoever was speaking to see if they were listening to us. I was recording him while he was speaking. He was listening, because I want to say majority had the same type of issues that everybody is going through. I’m glad all the schools came out and they’re voicing their opinions of whatever is happening,” she mentioned.







