Sunday, October 27, 2013



Dear Friends of MECPS,

 
Believe it or not, Medgar Evers College Preparatory School is under attack again. In what appears to be a well-coordinated effort by the NYC Department of Education to undermine the level of excellence that is being cultivated at MECPS, decisions are continuously being implemented by the NYC DoE that threaten and undermine the existence of our school. We strongly feel that decisions being made at DoE headquarters without the input of the MECPS community are not the way to forge strong community partnerships.
 
The issue at hand is that after nearly 10 years of proven success, the DoE has informed MECPS that it has changed our admission policy. Additionally it has removed our school from city-wide access to just district-wide status, denying New York City parents and children a choice in their education.
 
What can you do? As a Friend of MECPS, we ask you to contact 311* and demand that the DoE reverse this decision immediately and allow MECPS to use its successful admission policy, one which has allowed for a diverse pool of applicants across various economic and geographic areas of New York City. Additionally, we have invited DoE officials to a Parent Town Hall to explain their decision to parents and the community face to face. We need your support.
 
PLEASE JOIN US ON WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30th AT 6:30 PM at MECPS 1186 Carroll Street, Brooklyn, NY to voice your concerns and help us right this wrong!
 
Sincerely,
 
MECPS PTA
 
*"I am Supporter/Parent/Friend of MECPS and I am outraged by the recent decision enacted by the NYC DoE to change the admission policy of of our school. Why mess with Success? You are taking away parents choices and rights and doing so without community input. Please reverse this decision now!"

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Yes!!!


Students (l. to r.) Macaisa Guerrero, 13, Madison Miller, Madison Miller, and Imani Muhammad, 12, work on a problem in their 8th grade physics class at Medgar Evers College Prep.

Aaron Showalter/New York Daily News

Students (l. to r.) Macaisa Guerrero, 13, Madison Miller, Madison Miller, and Imani Muhammad, 12, work on a problem in their 8th grade physics class at Medgar Evers College Prep.



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/education/stem/whiz-kids-8th-grade-jump-tough-physics-courses-article-1.1472121#ixzz2hACc3gaH

This article in last week's NY Daily News features not only our school, MECPS, but our very own Physics teacher, Mr. Jason Klein and his physics class of awesome kids!

Saturday, October 5, 2013

The Blueprint

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A conversation with Dr. Rudy Crew - Recap!
This past Thursday, the entire MEPS community had an opportunity to meet and hear from the new president of Medgar Evers College. Dr. Rudolph ‘Rudy’ Crew, former Chancellor of the Department of Education, took over the helm at the college back on August 1st.

With his down home folksiness and ease of manner, Dr. Crew quickly charmed the entire room and laid out his vision for the future of MEC and its collaboration with our school. Dr. Crew overall mission is to reshape the College as not just a center of excellence in higher education but one which is a key and vital component of Brooklyn.

President Crew is going to focus on the recruitment our MECPS students and to ensure that they consider MEC as a viable choice. The College in turn is focusing on having  strong guidance programs, scholarships and mentoring, and investment in faculty and leadership.

Dr. Crew laid out what four years at MEC should look like. The first year is to have students increase their awareness of Medgar Evers, his social activism and an awareness of other ‘Medgar Evers’ around the world and their impact on their communities. The second year will be a specialization and focus of what future career goals are and laying the groundwork on how to achieve them. The third year is a focus on globalization which brings back the first year and an understanding the link between the micro and macro issues. By the fourth year, internships should be garnered and there should be a strong sense of a path upon matriculation.
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Dr. Crew also spoke about creating a School of Education so that the efforts and success of MECPS could be replicated throughout other communities. He also said that having a law school is something that is being contemplated as an avenue to train students to pursue careers in social justice.

All in all is was a very inspiring evening. As a school that shares a name with the college, it was a bold and strategic move to have the entire leadership come to our school to meet the parents and the community and to officially lay out a place the table. Well done Dr. Rudy Crew – the MECPS community welcomes you and looks forward to working with you!
Photos Courtesy of Simone Serrao

is there such a thing as too much homework?

I was always in the camp of parents that answered a loud 'No' to that question above (especially since I don't have to do homework anymore, one of the perks of being a grownup). But theatlantic.com writer  makes a strong argument about whether such an overload makes sense and its effect on children enjoying their childhood in this article titled 'My Daughter’s Homework Is Killing Me'.

How much homework is too much? Do teachers coordinate with each other so that there is a reasonable load for students to manage - if you have two finals this week, should you really prioritize a craft project? What are thoughts on this and the article above?

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

The Champ is Here!!

On behalf of the entire MECPS PTA and PTAs across Brooklyn in general, we congratulate Ms. Letitia James on her successful campaign for NYC Public Advocate!!!



As a Council Member for the past 10 years, Ms. James has been a staunch supporter of students and parental rights as we navigate the policies and whims of the NYC DoE.

Congrats Champ!!!

A Conversation With President Crew

'They came for my neighbor and I said nothing'

While Medgar Evers College Preparatory School is a beacon of excellence in this corner of Brooklyn and beyond, we are not the only academic institution in the area. One school which once held so much promise and potential before falling to the hands of 'Charter School Creator' is PS 161 on Crown Street.

Below is a brief summary of what PS 161 is facing and how you can help. The PTA President of that school, Mr. Fred Baptiste is also MECPS parent and needs our support. Remember, what happens to one school is not coincidental, PS 161 was a school with bright and ambitious students until it was systematically defunded.

Dear PS 161 Parents, Family, and Friends, The New York City Department of Education (DOE) is proposing the re-siting and co-location of Success Academy – Crown Heights to building K161 currently occupied by PS 161- The Crown School. The Executive Committee of the Parent Teacher Association of PS 161 stands in opposition of the proposal.

We believe that in choosing to place an elementary charter school in the space that has been deemed as under-utilized, the DOE itself is undermining the viability of the community school. In the proposal, the DOE’s projected enrollment figures show that this co-location will be detrimental to the community school in terms of a projected lower enrollment which corresponds to smaller space allocation and decreased funding. Previous DOE actions, including the truncation of the middle school grades and the recent removal of the Gifted & Talented program have already had adverse effects on PS 161 including declining enrollment and morale in the school community and this proposal will compound those issues. PS 161 have made significant improvements in the last few years and the addition of what is essentially a competing elementary school threatens those gains.

While the DOE asserts in its Educational Impact Statement that it “strives to ensure that all students in New York City have access to a diverse range of high –quality schools at every stage of their education”, we must also insist that in trying to promote that diversity it does not come at the expense of our community schools. And in this instance - it does. The recommendation of PS 161 PTA Executive Committee is that with regards to space utilization at building K161, it would be more appropriate and in the best community interest to site a middle school at the current site to replace the previously truncated middle school grades. Placing an elementary school at building K161 creates unnecessary and detrimental competition and threatens to undermine the viability of PS 161 as well as other nearby community elementary schools. We are calling on the DOE to postpone the Panel for Educational Policy vote scheduled for October 15th and open a dialogue with all affected parties including the PS 161 leadership, Community Education Council 17, Community Board 9, and PARENTS to work together on educational options that are in harmony and in the best interest of the community.


WHAT YOU CAN DO……. The Schools Chancellor, Dennis Walcott, needs to know in no uncertain terms that OUR community is opposed to this co-location. We are asking you to STAND UP for PS 161 and LET YOUR VOICES BE HEARD!

How you can reach Chancellor Walcott: Send him a message through the DOE website:
http://schools.nyc.gov/ContactDOE/ChancellorMessage.htm

Send him an email : DMWalcott@schools.nyc.gov

Write him a letter: Chancellor Dennis M. Walcott New York City Department of Education Tweed Courthouse 52 Chambers Street New York, NY 10007

Sign our Petitions!!!! http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/stop-the-pep-vote-on-october-15/
AND https://www.change.org/petitions/the-chancellor-of-nyc-schools-dennis-walcott-stop-the-pep-vote-on-october-15th-at-p-s-161

Whatever option you choose, time is of the essence! Please forward to all of your friends and networks as well and ask them to join us!