Earlier this week NJ Education Report reported that, in contrast to Camden City Public Schools that just reopened for kindergarten-second graders, Jersey City Superintendent Franklin Walker announced that schools would remain closed for its 30,000 students until September.
However, yesterday Walker announced that on April 29th Pre-K-third graders will return for a half-day of in-person instruction while 4th-12th graders will return on May 12th.
Perhaps he didn’t count on the pushback.
Millions of dollars have been spent to upgrade facilities in the face of the pandemic. Teachers – whether they live in or outside of Hudson County – have been prioritized for vaccines in Jersey City. Many, many parents have told the district their children are not getting the education they deserve and need. And at least two studies have shown that ‘learning loss’ in New Jersey schools since the pandemic began has been very real and has especially affected students of color.
And sometimes timing is everything: Jersey City parents had planned a portest this morning at 9 am, timing that would overlap with a Board of Education meeting. The protest was organized by Jenn Sforza, a mom of three Jersey City students, and is backed by a Facebook group called ” “Open Jersey City Schools Now.” Sforza explained that, while she has “great respect” for district teachers, she felt “betrayed” by the news, announced on Walker’s robocall, that 500 teachers were refusing to come to school to set up their classrooms for reopening. “It felt like a betrayal between the parent and teacher confidence and relationship,” she said.
There has been some chatter that Mayor Fulop was actually rooting for Walker’s original plan to stay closed until September because he and City Council want to revert to a system where the mayor appoints school board members instead of having a public election and public disdain for the board would work in his favor. (Note to Fulop: that’s not working out so well in Montclair.)
Yet, in the end, allowing the public to choose its own representatives seems to be working for Jersey City. Board of Education President Mussab Ali tweeted last night,
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