Ramos Says Get On The Train

Superintendent of Schools John Ramos makes his pitch about education improvements and the future of city schools in an opinion piece distributed to media outlets. From Ramos:

That sound you hear in the distance, rapidly moving closer, is the rumble of a freight train. That freight train is headed to the future, and in Bridgeport we face a critically important decision–we either pick up our school system and put it on that train barreling to the future, or we stand at the station and wave as it goes by.

I think the choice is clear. All aboard.

We’ve made progress in Bridgeport Public Schools, but let’s face it; the future opportunity and challenges for our children will be incredible. We must fundamentally transform the public schools of Bridgeport.

Let’s give credit where it’s due–to the hard-working teachers and administrators in our schools, our parents/guardians who get our children up and to school every day and work with them at night to make sure the homework and the class projects get done, and to the students themselves who do the hard work.

They’ve all been responsible for the progress; a 5 percentage point improvement in literacy, a 10 percentage point jump in math, an 8 percentage point increase in the graduation rate, among other measures. The progress is real, the hard work a constant.

But we know it’s not enough. Too many students still drop out before they graduate. Too many students are not demonstrating academic proficiency. Too many are not prepared for success in the workplace or college when they leave our public schools. The loud blast of the train whistle ought to be telling us that our ride to the future is going to pass us by unless we act–now.

Here’s the next step to getting on board: In the coming weeks we will ask Bridgeport families and community members to participate in a very important survey about the future of Bridgeport Public Schools. This survey will mark the first time the school district has reached out to the community with a real, transparent, aggressive effort to find out what you want to see in your public schools. We need the community on this ride with us if our schools are going to get there.

Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan, recently called on educators to embrace what he called the “new normal”–the challenge of doing more with less. What is probably less known is that Bridgeport Public Schools have been leading with this charge for many years now. We have coped successfully with serious decline in our budgets, but at the same time we have begun the transformation that must occur if our schools are going to adequately prepare our children for the future.

We need a collective community will to complete this transformation of our public schools. The mission statement of Bridgeport Public Schools and its supporting community is to graduate all students “college ready” and prepared to succeed in life. My first goal as the leader of this school district is to bring the entire community into this conversation, a critical dialogue on transforming our schools.

This transformation is essential because of where that train to the future is going. The skills that will be required of our children when they enter the workforce are radically different from just a few years ago. What worked in the past is not guaranteed to work in the future.

We’ve been chipping away at innovation and transformation, one innovative program at a time. For example, we are starting to offer online classes for our students as a means to provide the high-quality courses students deserve without a significant increase in expenditures. In addition, we have transformed Bassick High School into the state’s first CommPACT (Community, Parents, Administration, Children and Teachers) high school. An educational reform model developed at the University of Connecticut’s NAEG School of Education, CommPACT is designed to give teachers and staff more control over how the school is run while also offering the latest research on effective teaching and learning.

But we need this public discourse to help us to work together to make substantially more progress. Far too much energy is spent cursing the darkness. We need to light one candle.

The survey has been designed for the purposes of a dialogue. It gives me the opportunity to share some critical facts with you. I invite your feedback on these facts and some opportunities and challenges that are before us so we can be sure that every perspective is reflected at the table when we sit down to make those important decisions about the future of our schools.

I do hear from a handful of the members of this community, but I have a feeling that reflects only a narrow slice of the perspectives in the diverse city that is Bridgeport. The survey and the strategic engagement that will surround it will enrich us with more perspectives to feed into the process of decision-making.

It’s my hope that members of our community will take part in the survey. Let’s work together to transform our schools. Our children will repay us ten-fold when they graduate as confident, well-educated citizens ready to thrive in the future.

One day just over 150 years ago, another train from another era brought the future to Bridgeport. On March 10, 1860, a prairie lawyer from Illinois rolled into town. A standing-room-only crowd turned out at the corner of State and Broad Streets to hear the tall stranger talk about his vision for the future. Then he climbed back on the train and rolled off into what would be a long dark night before a new dawn in America. That man was Abraham Lincoln, and the people of Bridgeport, and indeed America, were with him that night as he headed toward the future.

Now it’s our turn. The train is here. I say we get on board.

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12 comments

  1. Superintendent Ramos,
    As a taxpayer, current mentor to a Bridgeport student, supporter of Read Aloud Days, BPEF, etc. and business person I have tried mightily to find out what goes on in your “kingdom” or at least your “area of duty and responsibility.” From one perspective I am still waiting, almost five years later. to understand what auditors can tell us about the way the schools actually operate and what they cost. That answer is not in yet. Or if it is, it has not been shared in any form I would have expected. Has this been a slow-moving freight train? When will it stop, unload and satisfy?

    Your essay introduces a community survey soon to be shared with the public. You use words like public discourse, dialogue, and conversation. Great words but not necessarily representative of what I have heard this past year when I have attended several BOE meetings.

    Happened to have a late lunch today and bumped into one of our City educators of high school students. Asked him how things were going and one issue that caught me was his statement we have too many “initiatives” in the City, funded by grants, that cannot be maintained when the grants terminate, and yet not everyone gets “trained.” So different people on your team feel left out one or more times as these trains have passed by. They are on a different page than associates and that does not make for “initiative” success! Where is the accountability in the process?

    I am familiar with “data driven” but why not post all of the results on a big scoreboard for all to see? Let the various publics indicate to you which scoreboard interests them in your survey, and have at least something for everyone posted on that scoreboard regularly. The education process is day by day, not just once a year. Treat your scoreboard results in similar fashion. The public will understand and learn.

    Hope that you are listening. It is the first component of discourse, dialogue and conversation as you well know.

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  2. This is more political grandstanding. You are a highly paid professional hired to utilize all of your skills and abilities to teach the children of Bpt.

    Yes, it would be great if all of our children were multilingual & were in the chess club and captain of the debate team. If they all could speak in Sign Language & regularly did volunteer work at local hospitals and homeless shelters. However we can’t attain all these lofty goals for BPT.

    Drastically reduce the dropout rates, and make sure they know all of the fundamentals, Readin’&Riten&Ritmatic. Yes, I did go to school in BPT.

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    1. Antitesto // May 12, 2011 at 6:26 pm
      to your posting

      AT,
      When the senior graduates from high school in Bridgeport, life is not so lofty for all.
      Although we know and we understand the shining few who do emerge from Bridgeport’s public schools headed towards higher levels of success, do so because of an ingrained will and willingness to reach beyond their limits (with parental, teacher and community support).
      We also know of the shameful number of students who are in the remaining demographic, who find themselves without (parental, teacher, community) support, and soon realize the societal and economic limits they face, having failed to secure the needed preparation.
      We also know someone truly dedicated to the process of educating the children of Bridgeport, and not to hearing themselves talk (and disparage the dedication of some community activists for better education) wouldn’t need “surveys” as a useful gimmick to cover up ineptitude.
      Yes to fundamentals, and yes to manual and physical skills training. This would make a measurable difference for the better. But perhaps Superintendent Ramos isn’t interested in a measurable difference for the better.

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  3. Ramos does believe in 2nd and 3rd chances for top execs who sexually harass other employees, give him that credit where it’s due.
    Also he believes in working your way up through the ranks by who you know and how you cover for his own incompetence.
    All in all I’d say he has done a great job for those few still loyal to him.
    Yes, I graduated from Bpt public schools, in the ’70s.

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  4. Another train pulled into Bridgeport a few months ago. It was the 5:33 from Grand Central to New Haven. When the commuters got off they had to step over the homeless who leave part of themselves in the stairways.

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    1. yahooy,
      You like it short and direct, from two recent blogs!

      Post a photograph of a turd, the baseline reference in your two messages today. Then we will know how you feel. Not necessarily what you are thinking, which may take a few more words. However, be very careful the stuff isn’t on your lenses. That might give you a distorted sense of the world.

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