Archdiocese joins Great Schools Compact
by Dale Mezzacappa on Apr 23 2012 Posted in Latest news
The Archdiocese of Philadelphia has officially joined the Great Schools Compact, with Mayor Nutter calling it a "historic" move toward cooperation by two once-rival systems – both of which face shrinking enrollment, excess buildings, dwindling resources, and questions of quality.
Instead of considering themselves competitors, the two systems will cooperate in an effort to increase the number of “high quality” seats in neighborhood schools, Nutter said, and give parents more choices. For instance, they will try to learn from each other in areas of academics and safety and will consult on neighborhood changes, building use, and other matters.
“This is about keeping the middle class in the city,” said Nutter, who graduated from St. Joseph’s Prep.
Both of the systems have lost students to charter schools. Leaders of charter school umbrella groups have also signed on to the compact.
The compact has received a planning grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and is seeking a much larger implementation grant.
Mark Gleason, the executive director of the Philadelphia School Partnership, said that as far as he knows, Philadelphia is the only city competing for Gates money that has its Catholic schools on board.
“We think this makes us unique compared to other cities,” he said.
As part of the agreement, the archdiocese has agreed to release school-by-school test scores, which it had stopped doing a number of years ago.
Mary Rochford, superintendent of the archdiocesan system, said that the Catholic schools, which educate 20,000 students within the city, are now looking for ways to compare results on the Terra Nova, which it administers, and the PSSA, taken by District and charter school students.
Those results will be available on a website comparing city schools that the Philadelphia School Partnership is scheduled to launch in September.
Beyond that, she said, the archdiocese has signed on to the Common Core Standards. Assessments related to those standards, which look to raise the academic bar in all states to international benchmarks. That will begin in the spring of 2014. The District is also preparing to implement the standards in its academic overhaul.
Speaking at the press conference, held at St. Peter the Apostle Church, Fifth Street and Girard Avenue, were Nutter, city Chief Education Advisor Lori Shorr, and Archbishop Charles Chaput. St. John Neumann, whose body is in a shrine at St. Peter the Apostle Church, started what was once a massive Catholic school system in the Philadelphia archdiocese and is considered a driving force behind the development of Catholic education in America.
Shorr pointed out that students move back and forth among Catholic, charter, and District schools regularly. One-third of charter students come from archdiocesan schools, she said, while 30 percent of students who start District schools each September went to a different school the year before.
Parish schools, which in their heyday were free to registered parishioners, now charge tuition, limiting them as choices for many families.








Comments (10)
Submitted by anonymous. (not verified) on Mon, 04/23/2012 - 17:34.
A gigantic farce in the making. Catholic Schools LIKE charters, pick whom they want and discard whom they want. Anybody see the M.O. here from Nutter?? The Catholic Church is an even bigger fraud than charters if that's possible.
Submitted by CuriousPhilly (not verified) on Mon, 04/23/2012 - 19:52.
So true. Catholic schools, like charters, are 'safe' because they can afford to counsel out any student who isn't seen as a good fit. And why support schools connected to a church associated with the kind of child abuse and criminal activity that is on trial right now? Will they invite Muslim & Jewish schools into the 'compact,' which is nothing more than a vehicle to privatize public education, not improve it. There is no one in the 'compact' who is pro-public education - not even the bozos at the school district, who came from the charter/emo sector. A farce? That's putting it mildly! Say good-bye to neighborhood public schools. Say good-bye to professional educators. Philadelphia is ground zero for blowing up the whole public education system and replacing it with right-wing ideology, graft & corruption. It's never about the kids.
Submitted by anonymous. (not verified) on Mon, 04/23/2012 - 20:50.
Well, OK, here it is---Where's Jerry Jordan in all this ? Smart money says he's in league with Randi Weingarten. We all better hope that goofy nazi Walker in Wisconsin is sent packing or we're dead meat and soon. Having said that, how can ANY woman in Wisconsin vote for him after he slammed shut the equal pay law. WHY would any woman with any dignity vote for him? How could Corbett get away with his bigoted budget aimed at our kids in this time and place? The forces of evil have us surrounded and we better start fighting back.
Submitted by anonymous. (not verified) on Mon, 04/23/2012 - 21:36.
KIds, what kids?? You mean the mostly poor, mostly of color kids whose families don't vote anyway. Those Kids?? They're being groomed for prison, my friend and folks like Corbett and Nutter, are more than willing to send them there. There is more than "right winged," it is segregation 101 right in our face and we're taking it so far. We need to stop it and it would be appropriate for the "Whispering One, " Jerry Foghorn, Leghorn Jordan to act like a leader and grow a pair. It stopped raining, Jerry !!
By the way, I agree--there is no financial crisis. Is anybody out there left who really believed there was??
Submitted by Ardy (not verified) on Thu, 05/03/2012 - 15:14.
West Catholic has more non-Catholic students (including Muslims) than Catholic students. They hardly discriminte based on religion.
Submitted by tom-104 on Mon, 04/23/2012 - 19:54.
"This is about keeping the middle class in the city., said Nutter." Can there be any clearer statement that a school system segregated by class is being created?
How about keeping people in the city by providing quality public schools and jobs for all!
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 04/23/2012 - 20:07.
Good point. I'm curious how Nutter defines "middle class..." Isn't the contract with the FOP and Firefighters no longer requiring them to live in Philadelphia? With Nutter's huge property tax increase maybe he is afraid of city worker flight?
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 04/23/2012 - 20:15.
The Nixon/Nutter/Shore/Ramos plan is a four tiered school district for high schools: magnet/special admit, charter, vocational (close neighborhood schools), and discipline/"alternative." Apparently, they assume charters will take whoever doesn't get in special admit except the "difficult" students who will either go to vocational programs or "alternative" schools. "Education and jobs" for all is apparently too "socialist" for Nixon/Nutter/Shore/Ramos.
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 04/24/2012 - 22:14.
Will the children of gay and lesbian parents be able to attend these Catholic schools, or will they be kicked out, like in Chaput's LAST school district (Denver)? This is not a partnership for ALL Philadelphians.
Submitted by Gloria E. (not verified) on Wed, 04/25/2012 - 01:08.
The good archbishop is treading very dangerously close to the falls here. He wants his parochial system to survive by piggybacking on the public system (or using vouchers if they ever get passed).
I notice that the parochial schools take only the Terra Nova tests and with no sanctions attached. Once they get involved with public money, they will be forced to take the PSSA's and then the trouble really starts.
I warned Chaput in an email that this might happen. The closer the two systems become and the more involved with tax money, the more they lose their independent and religious identity.
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