High School Students Answer Trivia Questions
What happens when you teach students by multiple choice tests?
What happens when you teach students by multiple choice tests?
This infographic is okay. Interesting though in the numbers when you think about Norwalk Public Schools. The infographic comes from Masters In Teaching.

I like plans. I think parents and staff and taxpayers like plans. And, especially when making large financial decisions of a personal nature or as an acting Norwalk Board of Ed (BOE) member, I like plans. The Norwalk BOE reconciled the 2011/12 Operating Budget on June 14th by making $4.1 million of reductions and we did so without a plan. We didn’t use Superintendent Marks reconciled Budget as a guide even though it was an articulated plan containing thoughtful and meticulous suggestions based on 6 months of stakeholder discussion of how best to make $4.6 million dollars of painful cuts. We didn’t use Superintendent Marks reconciled Budget as a guide even though, because of union concessions and internal adjustments made since her original May 2011 reconciliation, $723,000 could be put back at the get-go and even though she had provided prioritized suggestions for position reinstatement.
Instead, BOE Finance Chair Mr. Colarassi orchestrated a presentation whereby we used as a template the budget recommendations of two committees: his 3-member BOE Finance Committee and that of the Budget Committee with its strong Union voice. Neither of these two committees had reconciled their Budgets, nor had made all the necessary painful decisions, so both were short over $1 Million dollars. Both of these two committees violated elements of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) by their lack of recorded votes, a Connecticut act that is in large part about transparency of government. Neither of these two committees presented anyone an articulated plan that this Board member is aware of. Additionally, we as a full 9-member Board did not meet prior to June 14th to fully review either the BOE Finance or the Budget Committee plans. We as a 9-member Board did not have our own plan either.
So, on June 14th the Norwalk BOE had to make over $4.1 million in cuts. The dire economy and the core mission of educating our youth demanded that we make fiscally conservative and highly targeted, goal-centered decisions. We didn’t do that. We winged it. We went down the list as suggested by the BOE Finance Chair, keeping some and throwing other positions and functions off the bus, each decision based on our own agendas, opinions, and emotions; data and due diligence be hanged.
This is clearly not the way to protect our children’s educational needs, instill confidence with the city taxpayers or run a $154 million dollar business. The sole purpose of public schools is to educate all our children well. We hired a Superintendent with the expertise and track record to do this and it requires change and new ways of thinking. This is making some people very uncomfortable. It is time for the political and personal agendas of the adults in this City to get out of the way; our children our waiting.
Sue Haynie
Republican Board of Ed Member
from the Norwalk PTO:
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Norwalk continues leading the way for prosecuting children:
I think we all know the story of Grease, right? A classic story of he said, she said, high school posturing, and beauty school drops outs. For some reason, it seems there are plenty of peeps who still think Norwalk City Hall is Rydell High. Which is why I’m posting this stop motion tribute, because we all know how its going to end.
Andy Garfunkel, who is the declared democratic candidate for mayor of Norwalk, has recently made unfortunate public comments accusing the incumbent Mayor of misusing his office in the Tanya McDowell fraudulent enrollment case. He’s not been very specific about his allegations, but I deduce from his comments that Mr. Garfunkel, among other things, is blaming the Mayor for prosecuting Ms. McDowell and for removing Ms. McDowell’s child from the Brookside School .
Mr. Garfunkel’s implied allegations are fallacious and false. Mr. Garfunkel should know that the Mayor has no such powers. It would behoove Mr. Garfunkel to brush-up on the City Charter if he is to competently occupy of the Office of Mayor. He should also be more aware of the facts: that it was the Norwalk Housing Authority that was the driving force behind the criminal charges and that Ms. McDowell, herself, removed her son from Brookside by choice, after her Roodner Court baby-sitter and fraudulently named guardian, Ana Marquez, was evicted for submitting the counterfeit paperwork to Norwalk schools claiming that Ms McDowell’s child was living in the City.
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Politics of Decency
By: Marc Bradley
Norwalk Democratic Town Committee, Chairman
The recent arrest and ensuing felony larceny charges filed against Tanya McDowell – the single, homeless mother of a five-year-old Norwalk student – should challenge all of us to consider exactly what our government is in place to do.
Although the circumstances leading up to the child’s departure from Brookside Elementary School remain unclear, the decisions made thus far by Mayor Moccia and the State’s Attorney leave plenty of reason for outrage.
In the history of Norwalk, there is not a single instance where a parent has been charged with a criminal offense for erroneously enrolling a child in the Norwalk Public School system. Not one. In pushing precedence aside, the Mayor and the State’s Attorneys Office have called for Ms. McDowell to be punished to the furthest extent of the law – to set an example for future wrongdoers.
What Mayor Moccia has callously overlooked is that a five-year-old child has been caught up in the middle of his political grandstanding.
May 1, 2011
To: Norwalk Town Political Committee Heads: Mr. Bradley and Mr. Scialabba
Mayoral Candidates: Mayor Moccia and Mr. Garfunkel
Board of Education: Current Members and Prospective Candidates
Common Council: Current Members and Prospective Candidates
I am writing to all of you as an independent citizen (like a good many of us in Norwalk) who are frustrated by the political parties’ inability or unwillingness to seriously step up to the plate with regards to education reform in our City of Norwalk. Over the past several months, the local papers and blogs have highlighted everything from A-Z about the issues surrounding the state of our education, but I have not seen any genuine willingness by the political leaders to go beyond traditional party rhetoric, or personal attacks of opponents, on what is surely a very complicated issue.
Please consider the following issues backed up with data on the following pages: