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Providence Public School District takeover goals delayed two years

Delay caused by COVID-19 pandemic, learning disruption

<p>Lou DiPalma, the chairman of the Senate Oversight Committee, said that many of the goals identified in the Turnaround Plan are not realistic, even with the two years of additional time. </p>

Lou DiPalma, the chairman of the Senate Oversight Committee, said that many of the goals identified in the Turnaround Plan are not realistic, even with the two years of additional time.聽

The anticipated completion date for goals set after the 2019 state takeover of the Providence Public School District, which include meeting specific test score thresholds and attendance levels in the district, has been pushed by two years until the 2026-27 school year, R.I. Education Commissioner Ang茅lica Infante-Green told the Senate Oversight Committee during a March 1 hearing.

The district initially planned to meet its stated goals, which were first laid out in the state鈥檚 2020 , in the 2024-25 school year, Infante-Green said at the hearing.聽

Academic disruption from the COVID-19 pandemic is what caused the timeline adjustment, Victor Morente, director of communications for the Rhode Island Department of Education, wrote in an email to The Herald.

Sen. Louis DiPalma MSc鈥89 P鈥08, a democrat who is the chairman of the Senate Oversight Committee, told The Herald that many of the goals identified in the turnaround plan are not realistic, even with the two years of additional time.聽

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For instance, the state aims for eighth-grade mathematics scores, which were in the fifth percentile nationally last year, to be in the 50th percentile by 2027, . DiPalma said that he does not believe this goal is attainable.

鈥淢y personal opinion is that (there are) too many goals,鈥 he said, adding that some are 鈥渆xtremely aspirational.鈥 If the district does not meet the goals set in the turnaround plan, DiPalma said he believes that the state would need a recovery plan to determine how to move forward.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not clear 鈥 what is the exit strategy of the state,鈥 DiPalma said. 鈥淓ven without the two-year change, it was unclear when the state was expecting to return the district back to city鈥 control.

DiPalma added that there has been limited discussion regarding when the state鈥檚 takeover would end. He said he remains skeptical of whether continued oversight from RIDE is beneficial for the district.

鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 meant to just go five years,鈥 Infante-Green told , referring to the state takeover. 鈥淚t was five years and then we would reevaluate. We want to make sure that everything we鈥檙e putting in place takes hold.鈥 The state currently has control of Providence schools until 2025.

The pandemic 鈥渉as had a serious impact on students鈥 learning across the country,鈥 Nicholas Domings, PPSD chief communications officer, wrote in an email to The Herald. 鈥淧PSD and RIDE have a new baseline and we must consider that in the Providence turnaround,鈥 he added.

DiPalma said that 鈥渢he jury is still out鈥 on whether the takeover has been successful so far. But he stressed that the takeover is not a partisan issue. A lack of education means slower economic growth for Providence and, more broadly, the state, he added. 鈥淎s Providence goes, so goes the rest of the state.鈥澛

鈥淲e鈥檝e let the students down for decades,鈥 DiPalma said. The Turnaround Action Plan is an opportunity to change the paradigm, he added.

Teachers are 鈥渢he front line to making progress,鈥 DiPalma said, adding that having a teacher in every classroom is 鈥減aramount鈥 as one of the turnaround plan鈥檚 goals. The continuing teacher shortage will hurt the district no matter what happens with the turnaround, he said.聽

One goal in the turnaround plan is for 95% of classrooms to have a permanent teacher, but DiPalma said 100% is needed to provide a suitable education for Providence youth.

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Domings previously told The Herald that because of an increase in teacher vacancies at PPSD this year, the district has increased retention and recruiting efforts, including earlier job postings, sign-on bonuses and loan forgiveness.

Continued oversight from the state has drawn mixed reactions from the teachers鈥 union.

Maribeth Calabro, president of the Providence Teachers鈥 Union, said the takeover has not been beneficial to teachers or students. 鈥淣ot much has changed,鈥 she said.

Domings wrote that the district has made notable progress in the two years since the takeover, such as 鈥渂eing one of the first major districts to return to in-classroom learning,鈥 adopting 鈥済old standard core K-12 curricula鈥 and making sure 鈥渟tudents are supported with the addition of school guidance counselors at every elementary school and new community specialists at every secondary school.鈥

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Other completed initiatives include ensuring every school has an assistant principal, adding math and literacy coaches at all high schools, adding four days of professional development for teachers and creating a dual-language middle school and career and technical education pathways, Domings said.

鈥淚t鈥檚 critical that we get this right. We cannot get this wrong, and we cannot do this fast enough,鈥 DiPalma said. 鈥淭he (22,000) students, their parents and the million people in Rhode Island are counting on (improvement in the district) to happen now.鈥



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