WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. September 22, 2008: The City School District and Deborah Raizes of Hazard, Young and Attia, will hold the third of community input sessions tonight designed to determine an ideal profile of the kind of executive White Plains parents and citizens want in considering whom to select for the 2009-2010 Superintendent of Schools. (Present Superintendent Timothy Connors is retiring in June 2009, after seven years.) The community session will be held at White Plains High School at 7:30 P.M. in building B-1.

Superintendent Profiling Taking Place at Bethel Baptist Church last week. Session three is at the High School this evening. All welcome.

The first two sessions so far were held at St. Bernard’s Church (after church), and at Bethel Baptist Church, conducted by Deborah Raizes, above, shown Monday evening at Bethel Baptist, who spearheaded the last search in 2002 which brought Mr. Connors to the district. In the first session, the St. Bernard’s crown indicated they wanted more advanced classes for Hispanics and minorities, which was echoed by the 35 African-American attendents at the Bethel Baptist meeting.
The Bethel Baptist meeting held last Monday, was more critical of the White Plains teachers’ collective abilities to get the most out of minority students, Hispanic and African-American, saying preconceived notions existed, though the group agreed the district teachers were on the whole very good – though help was not as easy to get if students were minorities. Hispanic parents were happy with the district, and insisted their children wanted to learn English and thought that was important, Ms. Raizes told WPCNR
So far the commentary from both meetings, though praising Mr. Connors’ ability to reach out to the communities, called for a new Superintendent who had experienced with minorities-dominated district like White Plains, with a track record of closing the achievement gap. A majority of African-American parents said a new Suprintendent had to concentrate on doing more at closing the performance gap of their youth.
Individuals painted cases, naming Ridgeway School, in particular as a place where if you were an underperforming minority you were “labeled” and did not receive the attention needed to upgrade performance, while if you were performing well as a minority student, you were encouraged. More ability to single out and make more of an effort , a handful of speakers said, has to be made with underperforming minority youths in the elementary schools.
Only one parent brought up the need for a new Superintendent to be more sensitive to the growth of the school budget.
The session begins this evening at 7:30 P.M in B-1 at White Plains High School