Page 6 April 25, 2018 Staffing Plans Upend King c ontinued froM p aGe 3 a traditional neighborhood pro- gram, which is enrolled through boundary designations. The two strands are funded separately and have widely different enrollment figures. “Hidden in the averages, what you don’t see, is that our neigh- borhood strand looks to have very large classes, a single class for each grade,” said King PTA Vice President Megan newell-Ching. “The actual situation that we’re looking at next year for our Fourth and Fifth grades is going to be 30 students.” Next year the Mandarin only side is projected to have class siz- es ranging from 15-25, while the English only side will have class sizes from 23-33, school Prin- cipal Jill Sage told the Portland Observer. There are currently 125 students in the Mandarin program and 174 on the English only side and those figures are likely to be flipped next year, she added. Newell-Ching said the new formulation was supposed to sup- port the district’s equity goals, but instead they continue year after year policies that “have led up to the situation that we’re in now. I mean, that’s not equity.” Over the years the district has applied a number of “bandaid fixes” to the school which has struggled with low performance levels in the past, Newell-Ching said, like implementing King as a Turnaround Art school and then abandoning the program prema- turely. A Mandarin immersion language program within the B less A utos 3234 S.E. Powell Blvd, Portland, OR 97202 • No Credit OK • Bankruptsy OK • Bad Credit OK • Credit Rehab!! B. 503-433-3400 c. 503-358-3247 O. 503-232-2277 Buy Here, Pay Here www.blessautos.com school in which half the lessons are taught in English and half in Mandarin, from Kindergarten on, was started at the school in 2014. The school is also designated as an International Baccalaureate program, for all students. The district’s equity goals pro- vide for the maintenance of rea- sonable class sizes and baseline academic program offerings at every school. Staff re-allocation decisions should consider school stability “in schools that have been historically under-enrolled,” according to the policy. Precise allocations of staff won’t be locked down until next fall when enrollment figures will be known. The staff that gets cut from one school may very well end up hired at another school, like one of the two new middle schools opening next school year, Harriet Tubman and Roseway Heights, PPS media relations spe- cialist David Northfield told the Portland Observer. 80 students are projected to be leaving Martin Luther King Jr. School and moving to one of the middle schools next year, bring- ing the total enrollment to around 310. School administrators have said King will also likely lose at least three staff members of color due to the reallocation, accord- ing to the school’s PTA President Shei’Meka Owens. King Elementary has the small- est catchment area in the dis- trict—the geographic area from which enrollment is derived— and been under-enrolled for many years now. In fact, many parents who want their child to attend the school in the surrounding com- munity, sometimes just 3-5 blocks away from the school, have re- sorted to using a friends’ address within the catchment area to get in, Owens said. In the 2000-2001 school year, King had a robust enrollment of 733, a number that steadily went down through the years, according to a 2015 Portland Public Schools informational video, “Growing Great Schools.” By fall of 2017 their enrollment was only 390. Redrawing of schools’ bound- aries, which has been in talks district-wide since 2014, was sup- posed to help ameliorate MLK School’s under-enrollment issue and hence provide more staffing. The enrollment balancing ef- fort was formulated to accommo- date city-wide population growth across the district that is continu- ing to occur to this day. But the School Board has postponed such changes time and again in the face of periodic backlash with individ- ual school communities. “It’s a complete failure of lead- ership on the part of the district that they haven’t done the enroll- ment balancing. And frankly it’s because they’ve listened to the loudest voices, which are the par- ents from higher socio-economic status schools,” Newell-Ching said. Any enrollment balancing ef- forts the school district attempts now will likely occur after the staff cuts take place, Newell-Ching said. The parent leaders suggest a couple of ways the school district could help mitigate possible un- derstaffing at MLK School going forward, the first being dedicating unassigned staff, which the school district keeps a pool of on reserve, to the school and other small, un- der-enrolled schools like it. “And then the other thing is they could put legs on their con- tinued promise to address our boundary issue. We need to see action, we need to see them begin the process of doing what they need to do to change the bound- ary,” Newell-Ching said. “We’re asking to have not just a real conversation, but some real movement,” added Owens. 2018 SCHOLARSHIP APPLICATION PACKETS Are available to: High School Grads, College Students And Adults Cont. Educ. PACKETS CAN BE REQUESTED ON-LINE @ Patriciaanntrice@gmail.com Or by phone ~ 503 283-6312 For more information contact Elizabeth F. Richard or Patricia A. Trice at 503 284-0535 THE APPLICATION DEADLINE IS JUNE 3RD MIDNIGHT The Della Mae Johnson Scholarship Foundation 2216 NE Killingsworth Portland, OR 97211 (503) 284-0535