Showing posts with label school. Show all posts
Showing posts with label school. Show all posts

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Brooklyn School Library opens – and closes – its doors

Principal Sandra D'avilar shows off P.S. 9's brand new library that she will promptly close, for lack of librarians. (Alex Alper/The Brooklyn Ink)

Principal Sandra D'avilar shows off P.S. 9's brand new library that she will promptly close, for lack of librarians. (Alex Alper/The Brooklyn Ink)

By Alex Alper

On November 12, P.S. 9 and M.S. 571 unveiled a revamped school library, which they promptly closed, because there was no librarian.

“Here we truly came together…with a common cause … and created this for our youngsters,” said Sandra D’Avilar, Principal of the elementary school that renovated the library, but whose tightened budget no longer had room for a librarian. “And it’s still not enough to make someone from the Board of Education call and say, ‘hey, we found some money. We‘re going to send someone you can interview, and we’re going to find you a librarian.’”

Out of 880 elementary schools in New York City, 519 had a library and no librarian last year. That’s more than a 300 percent increase in elementary school libraries without libraries over the previous year, after remaining relatively flat over the previous three years.

“Accountability trumps everything,” said a city education department insider who wanted to remain anonymous, because of the sensitivity of the issue. “There is no accountability for information skills, just for literacy and math; therefore, principals figure that libraries don’t make a difference in their bottom line of student test scores.”

The cuts follow a long trend: since 1998, the first year for which there is data available, New York City elementary school librarians have decreased by more than half.

“What is happening all around the country is that, as schools are faced with budget cuts and they have to decide what is going to go…they are eliminating the library because it is harder to rationalize cutting a teacher,” said Kiki Dennis, a parent at P.S. 9 and decorator who designed the library said.

Nationally, figures were not available especially for elementary schools, but the number of school librarians decreased by about 3 percent.

New York State law requires elementary schools to have libraries, but not librarians. Middle and high schools are required to have both.

Many legislative efforts have been made to extend the librarian requirement to elementary schools in New York but so far none have been successful.

In 1985, the Citizen’s Committee for Children and the Women’s City Club of New York, conducted a study of New York City elementary schools and recommended that the librarian mandate be extended to K-6. They were unsuccessful, just as a bill requiring the same thing was rejected in the state assembly in 1994.

In a three-part study, Ruth Schwartz, Director of School Media Program at Syracuse University found that elementary students in schools where there were well-trained, certified librarians, had significantly higher test scores on national achievement tests than elementary schools that did not have such personnel, even if they had a library. While the correlation existed for secondary students as well, it was much more significant at the elementary level.

“This was ammunition to make the case for certified librarians at the elementary level and we were making progress, and then this financial crisis hit and all our efforts flew out the door,” she said.

Arkansas, Hawaii, and South Carolina all have state laws requiring that every school have a school librarian, according to Nancy Everhart, President of the American Association of School librarians. Many states lack a librarian mandate at any level, she says.

But despite the almost unanimous support for extending the librarian mandate to elementary schools, the Commissioner’s regulation on librarian placement has not changed substantially since it was passed in 1928.

According to a State Education official who also declined to be named, the state’s push to ensure all school librarians are certified is also causing the decline. Finding certified librarians is sometimes a challenge.

The number of certified librarians in New York City elementary schools has increased almost three fold since 1998. In the same period, the number of uncertified librarians at the elementary level decreased by three quarters.

Another reason for school library neglect is the strength of the New York Public library system, the fourth largest in the country, without 87 branches.

P.S. 9 is five blocks from a public library and books line the shelves of most elementary school classrooms.

Still, the parents of P.S. 9 were adamant that the school have its own library, funded through grants from Brooklyn politicians.

“Our goal is to really have this be a fully staffed space that becomes an educational tool and resource, an additional support to the curriculum that is happening here,” said Dennis.

Parents are confident the school will get funding for a librarian.

“The numbers can get crunched. Something can get moved around. Somebody who might be on payroll might be moved off,” said Laura Jaffe, another P.S. 9 parent. “[D’Avilar] doesn’t just think outside the box. She throws away the box.”

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Thursday, December 16, 2010

Brooklyn School Library opens – and closes – its doors

Principal Sandra D'avilar shows off P.S. 9's brand new library that she will promptly close, for lack of librarians. (Alex Alper/The Brooklyn Ink)

Principal Sandra D'avilar shows off P.S. 9's brand new library that she will promptly close, for lack of librarians. (Alex Alper/The Brooklyn Ink)

By Alex Alper

On November 12, P.S. 9 and M.S. 571 unveiled a revamped school library, which they promptly closed, because there was no librarian.

“Here we truly came together…with a common cause … and created this for our youngsters,” said Sandra D’Avilar, Principal of the elementary school that renovated the library, but whose tightened budget no longer had room for a librarian. “And it’s still not enough to make someone from the Board of Education call and say, ‘hey, we found some money. We‘re going to send someone you can interview, and we’re going to find you a librarian.’”

Out of 880 elementary schools in New York City, 519 had a library and no librarian last year. That’s more than a 300 percent increase in elementary school libraries without libraries over the previous year, after remaining relatively flat over the previous three years.

“Accountability trumps everything,” said a city education department insider who wanted to remain anonymous, because of the sensitivity of the issue. “There is no accountability for information skills, just for literacy and math; therefore, principals figure that libraries don’t make a difference in their bottom line of student test scores.”

The cuts follow a long trend: since 1998, the first year for which there is data available, New York City elementary school librarians have decreased by more than half.

“What is happening all around the country is that, as schools are faced with budget cuts and they have to decide what is going to go…they are eliminating the library because it is harder to rationalize cutting a teacher,” said Kiki Dennis, a parent at P.S. 9 and decorator who designed the library said.

Nationally, figures were not available especially for elementary schools, but the number of school librarians decreased by about 3 percent.

New York State law requires elementary schools to have libraries, but not librarians. Middle and high schools are required to have both.

Many legislative efforts have been made to extend the librarian requirement to elementary schools in New York but so far none have been successful.

In 1985, the Citizen’s Committee for Children and the Women’s City Club of New York, conducted a study of New York City elementary schools and recommended that the librarian mandate be extended to K-6. They were unsuccessful, just as a bill requiring the same thing was rejected in the state assembly in 1994.

In a three-part study, Ruth Schwartz, Director of School Media Program at Syracuse University found that elementary students in schools where there were well-trained, certified librarians, had significantly higher test scores on national achievement tests than elementary schools that did not have such personnel, even if they had a library. While the correlation existed for secondary students as well, it was much more significant at the elementary level.

“This was ammunition to make the case for certified librarians at the elementary level and we were making progress, and then this financial crisis hit and all our efforts flew out the door,” she said.

Arkansas, Hawaii, and South Carolina all have state laws requiring that every school have a school librarian, according to Nancy Everhart, President of the American Association of School librarians. Many states lack a librarian mandate at any level, she says.

But despite the almost unanimous support for extending the librarian mandate to elementary schools, the Commissioner’s regulation on librarian placement has not changed substantially since it was passed in 1928.

According to a State Education official who also declined to be named, the state’s push to ensure all school librarians are certified is also causing the decline. Finding certified librarians is sometimes a challenge.

The number of certified librarians in New York City elementary schools has increased almost three fold since 1998. In the same period, the number of uncertified librarians at the elementary level decreased by three quarters.

Another reason for school library neglect is the strength of the New York Public library system, the fourth largest in the country, without 87 branches.

P.S. 9 is five blocks from a public library and books line the shelves of most elementary school classrooms.

Still, the parents of P.S. 9 were adamant that the school have its own library, funded through grants from Brooklyn politicians.

“Our goal is to really have this be a fully staffed space that becomes an educational tool and resource, an additional support to the curriculum that is happening here,” said Dennis.

Parents are confident the school will get funding for a librarian.

“The numbers can get crunched. Something can get moved around. Somebody who might be on payroll might be moved off,” said Laura Jaffe, another P.S. 9 parent. “[D’Avilar] doesn’t just think outside the box. She throws away the box.”

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Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Nine Children, One Adult Injured in Yellow School Bus Crash

Nine children were on a yellow school bus this morning when it? jumped a curb and crashed into a Capital One Bank? in Gravesend. One adult was severely injured and the children, students at Mark Twain Junior High School in Coney Island, suffered lesser injuries, according to CBS News. A fire department spokesperson the accident occurred at 7:43 a.m on West Sixth Street and Avenue U. The adult and children were taken to Coney Island Hospital, according to the New York Daily News.

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Sunday, November 21, 2010

Quaker School to host 31st Annual Holiday Extravaganza

A school will host their 31st Annual Holiday Extravaganza in two weeks, according to Brooklyn Heights Blog.? Brooklyn Friends School, an independent Quaker school in downtown Brooklyn, will host its winter festival on Saturday, Dec. 4 from 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.?

The festival will include?a holiday plant and wreath sale,?crafts activities by local artisans, a book fair, and a children’s carnival with rides and games.? Local children’s book authors will also be present to read to children.? Proceeds will benefit the Horizons at Brooklyn Friends School summer enrichment program, which serves public school children in downtown Brooklyn.

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Saturday, November 20, 2010

Quaker School to host 31st Annual Holiday Extravaganza

A school will host their 31st Annual Holiday Extravaganza in two weeks, according to Brooklyn Heights Blog.? Brooklyn Friends School, an independent Quaker school in downtown Brooklyn, will host its winter festival on Saturday, Dec. 4 from 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.?

The festival will include?a holiday plant and wreath sale,?crafts activities by local artisans, a book fair, and a children’s carnival with rides and games.? Local children’s book authors will also be present to read to children.? Proceeds will benefit the Horizons at Brooklyn Friends School summer enrichment program, which serves public school children in downtown Brooklyn.

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Monday, November 15, 2010

School Choice: The Coburn-Gillespie Family

This is the second profile in a series of interviews with parents about the schools they send their children to, by choice or by the randomness of the NYC school system. If you’d like to be profiled, please get in touch.

Family: Christine Gillespie, VP and Associate Publisher of Knopf and Pantheon?(pictured above left) and Melisa Coburn, writer, editor, and blogger, most recently for CafeMom. Together she and Chris write Shiny Brite, a local parenting blog.?Parents of Jasper, age 6, and Magnolia, 4.
Neighborhood: South Slope
Zoned School: P.S. 295, 330 18th St., between 6th and 7th Aves., 718-965-0390. (Insideschools.org review here>>)

BB Kids: So you were in the Center Slope and then you moved to the South Slope?

Melisa: We were zoned for 321 and were in a co-op there, but we bought a house in Park Slope South five years ago.

And at that time your boy Jasper was one?

Melisa: He turned one right around the time we moved into the house, and we hadn’t really checked out the school situation too much, certainly not in any formal way. We just felt like we couldn’t wrap our minds around that then. And also I knew several people who really moved mountains to be in 321 and then, for whatever reason, weren’t happy. So we decided to not make ourselves crazy with it.

Was that a factor in moving? The fact that people weren’t happy with 321?

Chris: We weren’t trying to get away from 321, we just felt like what we heard didn’t tell us that it was such an amazing school that we couldn’t dare leave it.

Melisa: It was more that it was an 800-square-foot apartment, and I know lots of people live in that amount of space and have a kid or even two kids, but it felt too confining for us. The biggest reason that we moved was that we wanted more space. We wanted a house, and we did not want to move to the suburbs.

The fact that you were moving to another part of Park Slope–did you feel confident that it would be a good school? I feel like in Park Slope you have a comfort level in knowing that you are going to be zoned for a good school no matter where you are.

Chris: We propbably did. And we’d been in Park Slope for a long time–we were on the north end of the neighborhood, we were in the center Slope, we were on 9th Street for a while. I don’t think I’m exaggerating, but we really didn’t pay attention to the school situation. We looked in other neighborhoods, we looked as far as Greenpoint, and we didn’t pay as much attention to the schools as we should have, because we certainly know people who moved into districts that were not that desirable.

Melisa: I think it was kind of an afterthought. We were thinking about house and space and what we could afford. And then once we decided on this place, we did say, ‘You know it is Park Slope, and we have been here for a while and we do feel comfortable.’ And we did know we were in District 15 and it’s a big district and there are options. So after we had decided to move here we sort of said, yeah there is a certain comfort level in knowing that it’s familiar Park Slope, it’s District 15, so at least there are options.

So tell me about the school–it seems like a fantastic school.

Melisa: Yes! So when it became time to start thinking about the school situation and what we were going to do, we looked around and saw that 295 was the school we were zoned for. We read a little bit about it, and we went on the tour and we were pretty much the only family there that was zoned for the school. Everybody else was zoned for another school but trying to get into P.S. 295, and we thought, ‘That’s interesting.’

It’s P.S. 295, The Studio School of Arts and Culture, so there’s a focus on the arts in addition to the regular curriculum.

Is this a charter school?

Melisa: It’s not a charter, but it is a magnet school. There’s a real commitment to the arts. Students take dance and movement, drama, art, and music.

From what age?

Melisa: Pre-K. Our younger girl is there in Pre-K, and she has dance and movement today. And currently the school has a partnership with the Brooklyn Conservatory of Music, so someone from the conservatory comes to teach music classes to various grades during the week.

And the school has a garden?

Melisa: The school has an edible garden that students and faculty and parent volunteers helped plant. It was funded by a grant from Slow Food NYC and the effort was really spearheaded by the school librarian, Susan Weseen, who is super committed to teaching the kids about green living, about where food comes from and having a connection to food. So this is a new thing, it was planted over the summer, and when the kids came back in the fall, there were all these wonderful fruits and veggies that they were able to harvest and eat.

Have you felt the influence of the school upon their development? Are they more artistic, or doing more creative things at home?

Chris: I would say they already were pretty artistic and creative but definitely I feel like the school has brought that out a little more. And also in terms of their development, the school has been great with our son (because he’s the one who’s been there two years, he’s now in first grade), in looking at his needs exactly and talking with us about what they feel he needs more of in the classroom. I feel like they’ve been very thoughtful about the way he learns and it’s felt very personalized there. And the nice thing about the dance and the drama is that it’s another way to direct their energy and focus in a really positive way outside of the playground. I feel like they really need that, and it helps them learn.

Melisa: It’s a small school, which is another thing that we’ve liked. I think the enrollment is around 400 for grades Pre-K through 5. And I feel that being at home, as the one who does a lot of the dropoffs and pickups, you feel that smallness, because everybody really does know everybody else and I think feels connected and vested in all of the kids succeeding and being happy. I remember going to a performance last year of Jasper’s, and one of the Kindergarten teachers–not his–she was arranging the kids and seemed to know every child’s name, in all three Kindergarten classes. I was really struck by that. It’s not just his teacher who knows him and who’s invested in him, it’s all the teachers across his grade. For being New York City it felt very small town and sweet.

Did you both grow up in cities?

Chris: I grew up all over the place. I moved probably every two years until I was 17, and I went to all different kinds of schools, I went to public, I went to private, single sex, co-ed. I lived in Houston and in Chicago, but not where I was in the inner city. It’s much more urban here.

Melisa: I’m from a small town in Texas. So I didn’t grow up in big-city schools either.

And based on your experience what’s different about sending them to a school in a more urban environment?

Melisa: School funding and budget cuts are an issue. As as parents we have to be participatory in terms of helping the school and teachers with materials and supplies and snacks. I don’t mind doing it at all, but I don’t think that was really the case for me growing up. I was in a somewhat affluent school situation and I think the schools were able to provide for themselves more than city schools are.

Chris: The thing that I love the most–and I know this isn’t the case for most parents–is the fact that we’re sending our kids to the school they’re zoned for. It’s two blocks from our house. We can walk them to school. Melisa is home, so if something comes up she can walk down the street. It really makes you feel like you’re part of a small community, like you’re in a little village in the middle of the city.

Published on 11.11.10. Interview by Nicole

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Five Schools in Brooklyn Receive Magnet School Grants

Five schools in Brooklyn received $3.3 million in magnet school grants from the U.S. Department of Education, The Greenpoint Gazette reports. One school, MS 126, will receive $1.5 million over three years and is looking to develop an environmental engineering program. The decision was made by a vote of students, faculty and parents of the school. MS 126 has a student population that is about 72 percent Hispanic.?“Right now, we’re in the planning stages. The first goal of a magnet school is to de-segregate the school.?The situation now causes them to learn in isolation, and we need to attract different kinds of students to the school,” Principal Rosemary Ochoa said. “We want to bring our students into the fold and encourage them to advocate for the environment in Greenpoint and find ways to improve it, and they can find that knowledge here in the school,” Ochoa added.

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Friday, November 12, 2010

School Choice: The Coburn-Gillespie Family

This is the second profile in a series of interviews with parents about the schools they send their children to, by choice or by the randomness of the NYC school system. If you’d like to be profiled, please get in touch.

Family: Christine Gillespie, VP and Associate Publisher of Knopf and Pantheon?(pictured above left) and Melisa Coburn, writer, editor, and blogger, most recently for CafeMom. Together she and Chris write Shiny Brite, a local parenting blog.?Parents of Jasper, age 6, and Magnolia, 4.
Neighborhood: South Slope
Zoned School: P.S. 295, 330 18th St., between 6th and 7th Aves., 718-965-0390. (Insideschools.org review here>>)

BB Kids: So you were in the Center Slope and then you moved to the South Slope?

Melisa: We were zoned for 321 and were in a co-op there, but we bought a house in Park Slope South five years ago.

And at that time your boy Jasper was one?

Melisa: He turned one right around the time we moved into the house, and we hadn’t really checked out the school situation too much, certainly not in any formal way. We just felt like we couldn’t wrap our minds around that then. And also I knew several people who really moved mountains to be in 321 and then, for whatever reason, weren’t happy. So we decided to not make ourselves crazy with it.

Was that a factor in moving? The fact that people weren’t happy with 321?

Chris: We weren’t trying to get away from 321, we just felt like what we heard didn’t tell us that it was such an amazing school that we couldn’t dare leave it.

Melisa: It was more that it was an 800-square-foot apartment, and I know lots of people live in that amount of space and have a kid or even two kids, but it felt too confining for us. The biggest reason that we moved was that we wanted more space. We wanted a house, and we did not want to move to the suburbs.

The fact that you were moving to another part of Park Slope–did you feel confident that it would be a good school? I feel like in Park Slope you have a comfort level in knowing that you are going to be zoned for a good school no matter where you are.

Chris: We propbably did. And we’d been in Park Slope for a long time–we were on the north end of the neighborhood, we were in the center Slope, we were on 9th Street for a while. I don’t think I’m exaggerating, but we really didn’t pay attention to the school situation. We looked in other neighborhoods, we looked as far as Greenpoint, and we didn’t pay as much attention to the schools as we should have, because we certainly know people who moved into districts that were not that desirable.

Melisa: I think it was kind of an afterthought. We were thinking about house and space and what we could afford. And then once we decided on this place, we did say, ‘You know it is Park Slope, and we have been here for a while and we do feel comfortable.’ And we did know we were in District 15 and it’s a big district and there are options. So after we had decided to move here we sort of said, yeah there is a certain comfort level in knowing that it’s familiar Park Slope, it’s District 15, so at least there are options.

So tell me about the school–it seems like a fantastic school.

Melisa: Yes! So when it became time to start thinking about the school situation and what we were going to do, we looked around and saw that 295 was the school we were zoned for. We read a little bit about it, and we went on the tour and we were pretty much the only family there that was zoned for the school. Everybody else was zoned for another school but trying to get into P.S. 295, and we thought, ‘That’s interesting.’

It’s P.S. 295, The Studio School of Arts and Culture, so there’s a focus on the arts in addition to the regular curriculum.

Is this a charter school?

Melisa: It’s not a charter, but it is a magnet school. There’s a real commitment to the arts. Students take dance and movement, drama, art, and music.

From what age?

Melisa: Pre-K. Our younger girl is there in Pre-K, and she has dance and movement today. And currently the school has a partnership with the Brooklyn Conservatory of Music, so someone from the conservatory comes to teach music classes to various grades during the week.

And the school has a garden?

Melisa: The school has an edible garden that students and faculty and parent volunteers helped plant. It was funded by a grant from Slow Food NYC and the effort was really spearheaded by the school librarian, Susan Weseen, who is super committed to teaching the kids about green living, about where food comes from and having a connection to food. So this is a new thing, it was planted over the summer, and when the kids came back in the fall, there were all these wonderful fruits and veggies that they were able to harvest and eat.

Have you felt the influence of the school upon their development? Are they more artistic, or doing more creative things at home?

Chris: I would say they already were pretty artistic and creative but definitely I feel like the school has brought that out a little more. And also in terms of their development, the school has been great with our son (because he’s the one who’s been there two years, he’s now in first grade), in looking at his needs exactly and talking with us about what they feel he needs more of in the classroom. I feel like they’ve been very thoughtful about the way he learns and it’s felt very personalized there. And the nice thing about the dance and the drama is that it’s another way to direct their energy and focus in a really positive way outside of the playground. I feel like they really need that, and it helps them learn.

Melisa: It’s a small school, which is another thing that we’ve liked. I think the enrollment is around 400 for grades Pre-K through 5. And I feel that being at home, as the one who does a lot of the dropoffs and pickups, you feel that smallness, because everybody really does know everybody else and I think feels connected and vested in all of the kids succeeding and being happy. I remember going to a performance last year of Jasper’s, and one of the Kindergarten teachers–not his–she was arranging the kids and seemed to know every child’s name, in all three Kindergarten classes. I was really struck by that. It’s not just his teacher who knows him and who’s invested in him, it’s all the teachers across his grade. For being New York City it felt very small town and sweet.

Did you both grow up in cities?

Chris: I grew up all over the place. I moved probably every two years until I was 17, and I went to all different kinds of schools, I went to public, I went to private, single sex, co-ed. I lived in Houston and in Chicago, but not where I was in the inner city. It’s much more urban here.

Melisa: I’m from a small town in Texas. So I didn’t grow up in big-city schools either.

And based on your experience what’s different about sending them to a school in a more urban environment?

Melisa: School funding and budget cuts are an issue. As as parents we have to be participatory in terms of helping the school and teachers with materials and supplies and snacks. I don’t mind doing it at all, but I don’t think that was really the case for me growing up. I was in a somewhat affluent school situation and I think the schools were able to provide for themselves more than city schools are.

Chris: The thing that I love the most–and I know this isn’t the case for most parents–is the fact that we’re sending our kids to the school they’re zoned for. It’s two blocks from our house. We can walk them to school. Melisa is home, so if something comes up she can walk down the street. It really makes you feel like you’re part of a small community, like you’re in a little village in the middle of the city.

Published on 11.11.10. Interview by Nicole

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Former Brooklyn High School Basketball Player Charged

Jayvaughn Pinkston, a former Brooklyn High School basketball standout is charged with two counts of simple assault and?harassment?after allegedly getting in a fight outside a fraternity house at Villanova University, New York Post reports. Pinkston became angered when he was locked inside a laundry room while having a romantic encounter with a girl, eyewitnesses say. Allegedly a fraternity brother propped a chair against the laundry-room door.?”He [Pinkston] was [mad], but nothing became of it at the time. He was just yelling,” an eyewitness said. Pinkston waited outside for a ride and two fraternity brothers came out to taunt him, witnesses say. Pinkston allegedly turned and punched the first fraternity brother. Someone else presumably punched the second fraternity brother. Pinkston is a 6-foot-7 forward for Villanova University and was a McDonald’s All-American at Bishop Loughlin. The team opens its season tonight and will be without Pinkston.


Read more:?http://www.nypost.com/p/sports/college/basketball/pinkston_charged_in_brawl_at_nova_9uMKVdqFcCV478jsSE3zYJ#ixzz154BjraG0

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Wednesday, October 20, 2010

After school program helps working parents

By Alejandro Lopes de Haro

A mother drops her son off at school. (Alejandro Lopez de Haro/The Brooklyn Ink)

A mother lays his son to school.(Alejandro Lopez de Haro/The Brooklyn Ink)

Sherry Rodriguez is a single mother working from two boys, ages 7-9, attending the in-school-time (OST) afterschool program P.S 282 Park Slope School. The OST programs provide students in neighborhoods across the city with a variety of academic, artistic, and recreational activities free of charge.

They last for three hours after school or for an entire day selected holidays.? RODRIGUEZ said that without this program would be forced to quit his job as an auditor at 14 H to take additional days off the coast during the school holidays and may accordingly be dismissed because his employer expects to work 9 to 5 h.

"For this program, I am 100 percent and able to work at my job,"says Rodriguez.""

A study conducted by NATO school, ? non-profit which assesses after school programs, found that Rodriguez experience is not unique. He reported last year that 74% of parents with children in programmes of the TSO considered easier to keep their jobs. A further 73% said that they missed less effort than before the inclusion of their children, while 71 percent reported that they were able to work more hours.

? "Jobs are very hard to find now.""If a parent loses his job I do now what they would do", was declared Bisi Ideraabdullah, Executive Director of the Imani House, a non-profit that helps low-income families and who administers the program OST-282 P.S.La House Imani estimated that approximately 80 percent of students in their program come from households with working parents. Working single parents strongly support on this program to keep their professional lives. "They are really now where to go. "When half day at school, they beg for help," said Idera-Abdullah.

During the different school holidays, Bo program may be useful. P.S 282 is open for the holidays from 20.

Hiring a babysitter or if enrol their children in a private program is not an option for the majority of these parents. "We know that the people we are serving are low income," says Idera-Abdullah.

P.S. 282 Park Slope has a total of 728 students from junior kindergarten to grade 5. According to a study by Fiscal Policy Institute, 46% of black males in Park slope and Red Hook are unemployed. Publicschoolreview.com, black represent 71% of the student population of 282 P.S..Web site and also shows that the total number of students, 44 per cent are eligible for free lunch and 12% are eligible for reduced lunch. Two numbers are slightly higher, then the New York state average.

The low-income population in the afterschool program is much higher.Imani House research has revealed that 80-90% of children who attend are accessible breakfast free.There were a total of 160 students enrolled in the program of the year dernière.Au breast of these, the first 130 attend free of charge and the remaining 30 are able to register in paying a fee below the market.

Sonia Bennett, accountant and the Park Slope resident has two daughters, aged six and eight who attend school after 282 P.S. program.It is one of the parents who pays a minimal fee to register them at school after program.Bennett did research to find another place for her children.Imani House charges between $185-$195 by mois.Bennett explains that other weekly fresh sites that were similar to the monthly payment that she brings to the House of Imani.

Financing the TSO programs awarded annually through a five-year grant is allocated at the discretion of the Ministry of youth and communautaire.La grant expires this year, and funding for OST program next year is not certain. ""When a program terminates, the city can wear for an additional year, but has no obligation," said Idera - Abdullah .Financement this year was almost removed due to budgetary restrictions throughout the city.

"No program is guaranteed funding more exercise, and if we had lost the fight for the restoration of this year, the fight for good next year could be more before it, said Adviser Lewis Fidler.Il is a supporter of these programs and currently chairs the Committee on youth services."

"I can't offer a babysitter, I can't afford not to have a job or one of the other after school programs," said Rodriguez, who is quite bored programme.Les parents financial issues include fundraising during the year where the worst arrive.Cependant, Rodriguez admits that it will be very difficile.Les parents lack of time and money.

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