School overcrowding class size citywide and in District

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School overcrowding & class size citywide and in District 1 schools Leonie Haimson and

School overcrowding & class size citywide and in District 1 schools Leonie Haimson and Sebastian Spitz Class Size Matters January 2018 info@classsizematters. org

In District 1, K-3 class sizes fell by. 6 students per class last year

In District 1, K-3 class sizes fell by. 6 students per class last year yet still above CE 4 goals D 1 K-3 Class size trend 25 24 23, 9 23 24, 9 24, 7 24, 6 21, 4 21, 5 19, 9 24, 2 22, 9 22 21 24, 5 21 20 19 20, 7 18, 7 21, 4 22, 1 20, 5 20, 3 19, 2 19, 3 20, 1 19, 6 21, 1 21 19, 9 20, 9 19, 9 18 17 17, 2 16 Baseline 2007 -8 2008 -9 2009 -10 2010 -11 C 4 E Goals 2011 -12 2012 -13 Citywide actual 2013 -14 D 1 2014 -15 2015 -16 2016 -17

Average class size grades 4 -8 fell significantly by 2. 3 students per class;

Average class size grades 4 -8 fell significantly by 2. 3 students per class; now below C 4 E goals. D 1 4 -8 th Class size trend 27 26 25 25, 6 24 25, 1 24, 8 25, 3 24, 6 26, 3 25, 8 23, 3 23 22 21 21, 0 20 20, 4 20, 2 26, 6 23, 0 22, 9 26, 8 26, 7 24, 3 23, 2 22, 9 22, 7 22, 9 26, 7 26, 6 24, 7 22, 9 22, 4 20, 6 20, 1 19 Baseline 2007 -8 2008 -9 2009 -10 2010 -11 C 4 E Goals 2011 -12 2012 -13 Citywide actual 2013 -14 D 1 2014 -15 2015 -16 2016 -17

Citywide average HS class sizes stayed the same per class; and remain far above

Citywide average HS class sizes stayed the same per class; and remain far above C 4 E goals Citywide HS class size average Compared to C 4 E goals Up 1. 5% since 2007 28 Average Class Size 27, 5 27 26, 5 26 26, 1 26, 2 26 25, 7 25, 5 26, 7 26, 4 26, 3 24, 5 26, 8 26, 7 26, 5 Citywide Actual C 4 E Target 25, 2 25 24, 8 24, 5 26, 5 24, 5 24 2007 -08 2008 -09 2009 -10 2010 -11 2011 -12 2012 -13 2013 -14 School Year 2014 -15 2015 -16 2016 -17 2017 -18

DOE promised State Ed in 2014 to focus on reducing class size at Renewal

DOE promised State Ed in 2014 to focus on reducing class size at Renewal schools • Yet 42% of Renewal schools did NOT reduce average class sizes from 2014 -2015 to 2017 -2018 • 73% continue to have maximum class sizes of 30 or more in November 2017. • NO renewal schools have capped class sizes at C 4 E levels • Source: Preliminary NYC Class Size Reports, November 2014 and November 2017

2 Renewal Schools in District 1 • Both PS 15 and Orchard Collegiate Academy

2 Renewal Schools in District 1 • Both PS 15 and Orchard Collegiate Academy (formerly Henry St. School for International Studies) reduced class size to low levels, and neither has any classes of 30 or more • PS 15 lowered class size to 15. 7 and Orchard Collegiate to 17. 2 • Both schools have seen gains; NYT called PS 15 “the best performer among Renewal Schools” despite 45% of students homeless • At Orchard Collegiate, graduation rates increased from 43% to 66% from 2014 – 2017, just below DOE goal of 67% • Source: Preliminary NYC Class Size Reports, November 2014 and November 2017

Scope of school overcrowding enormous • 43% NYC schools were overcrowded last year according

Scope of school overcrowding enormous • 43% NYC schools were overcrowded last year according to DOE data • About 575, 000 students (56% of total) were enrolled in overcrowded schools • About 350, 000 (68% of total) elementary students enrolled in overcrowded schools • About 50, 000 (33% of total) middle school students enrolled in overcrowded schools • About 175, 000 (49% of total ) HS students enrolled in overcrowded schools Data source: Schools at or above 100% according to SCA “Blue Book” 2016 -2017

Why are our schools so overcrowded? • Bloomberg claimed to have created 100, 000

Why are our schools so overcrowded? • Bloomberg claimed to have created 100, 000 new seats between 2004 and 2013 • Yet only 45, 000 new NET seats created if seat loss taken into account • About 55, 000 seats were lost due to lapsed leases, and elimination of TCUS, annexes and mini- buildings • Also, enrollment grew fast especially at the elementary school level • The following charts are from our recent Seat Loss report, available online at www. classsizematters. org

Enrollment grew faster than new seats in NYC elementary schools

Enrollment grew faster than new seats in NYC elementary schools

Elementary increased by 1, 252, faster than the increase in capacity of 679

Elementary increased by 1, 252, faster than the increase in capacity of 679

While 45, 000 net seats were gained citywide, nearly all were filled by the

While 45, 000 net seats were gained citywide, nearly all were filled by the increased number of charter school students

November 2017 DOE five-year capital plan still very underfunded • Funds fewer than 45,

November 2017 DOE five-year capital plan still very underfunded • Funds fewer than 45, 000 seats citywide – about half (54%) necessary to alleviate current overcrowding and accommodate enrollment growth, according to DOE estimates. • Only 37% of seats compared to DOE’s analysis of need have sites and are in process of scope and design. • There is a huge variation across districts in the number and percent of seats funded compared to DOE’s estimate of need. • Bronx is the most underfunded borough according to the percent of unmet need for seats; Queens in terms of total number of unfunded seats. • There are NO new seats for District 1 in the capital plan.

DOE Identified need for 83, 056 K-8 seats citywide No need for seats in

DOE Identified need for 83, 056 K-8 seats citywide No need for seats in District 1 Nov. 2017 capital plan Districts not included below have NO need for new seats according to DOE 12000 10322 9403 10000 7546 Qu 30 28 27 26 400 25 24 3348 2504 1736 2436 1300 22 20 1000 19 15 1563 14 13 12 2492 1484 11 10 9 8 7 5 3 1028 692 2451028 572 0 3638 3417 4000 3232 2000 5123 21 6000 5975 District 6880 ee 31 ns HS SI HS 5692 2 Total Need 8000

54% K-8 seats funded citywide compared to DOE estimate of need Again, DOE says

54% K-8 seats funded citywide compared to DOE estimate of need Again, DOE says no need for seats in D 1 Data: Nov. 2017 capital plan Percent of Seat Need funded in the Capital Plan 100, 0% 97, 5% 100, 0% 86, 3% 75, 9% 61, 5% 74, 6% 63, 4% 52, 0% 51, 8% 44, 4% 50, 0% 47, 2% 37, 9% 32, 0% 33, 5% 56, 0% 52, 8% 51, 9% 52, 3% 40, 3% 36, 9% 22, 0% District HS SI 31 Qu ee ns HS 30 28 27 26 25 24 22 21 20 19 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 5 3 2 0, 0%

District 1 Overcrowding (includes Charters in district buildings) • We think there is need

District 1 Overcrowding (includes Charters in district buildings) • We think there is need in District 1 • 33% (8) of K-8 schools in District 1 are overcrowded • 34% or 2, 537 K-8 D 1 students are in these overcrowded schools • 53 cluster rooms are missing from District 1 schools according to DOE’s utilization formula • Data source: 2016 -2017 Blue Book.

11 Districts between 99% - 80% Utilization, including D 1 at 80% Data Source:

11 Districts between 99% - 80% Utilization, including D 1 at 80% Data Source: 2016 -2017 Blue Book 99% D 30 95% D 8 95% D 2 94% D 12 94% D 9 90% D 6 90% D 29 89% D 3 88% 87% D 7 D 4 80% D 1

8 Schools in District 1 at or over 100% 2 of them are Co-located

8 Schools in District 1 at or over 100% 2 of them are Co-located charters Data Source: 2016 -2017 Blue Book 141% P. S. 364 138% GIRLS PREP CHARTER SCHOOL 137% P. S. 361 133% MANHATTAN CHARTER 132% P. S. 315 106% 101% 100% P. S. 363 P. S. 110 I. S. 378

Problems with the housing starts & CEQR formula used to project enrollment • CEQR

Problems with the housing starts & CEQR formula used to project enrollment • CEQR (City Environmental Quality Review) formula based on census data 20 years old & hasn’t been updated since UPK implemented & pre. K expanded in DOE schools • In 20 of 32 school districts, NO difference between housing start data for 5 yr and 10 yr projections; predicts fewer than 2, 000 new units to be built citywide 2019 -2024, and not one in Brooklyn. • Five-year housing start data estimates 2, 982 new housing units built in D 1 between 2015 -2019, but just 26 in the following five years Data source: NYC SCA, Projected new Housing starts used in 2016 -2024 Enrollment projections, 2016 -2029 capital plan, March 2017

Problems with school planning process • Thresholds in city planning process very high •

Problems with school planning process • Thresholds in city planning process very high • A new residential project has to be projected to increase school overcrowding by at least 5% to even consider need for new school -even where schools are already overcrowded • Planning process does not take into account cumulative residential development – only considers each proposed project separately.

More reasons not to trust DOE’s need estimates • The DOE estimates also rely

More reasons not to trust DOE’s need estimates • The DOE estimates also rely upon unreliable enrollment projections from consulting companies • The methodology DOE uses to incorporate all these unreliable components is non-transparent • DOE says they “overlay” projections from housing starts over consultant enrollment projections but unclear what this means Result: we can’t replicate their projections using their own figures

Other problems with DOE seat needs assessments • They don’t account for rapidly expanding

Other problems with DOE seat needs assessments • They don’t account for rapidly expanding charter school population though most of these students attend schools in public school buildings • Claim to be neighborhood-based but define neighborhoods with extremely large areas • Don’t differentiate between the need for elementary and middle school seats • Are infrequently updated; for example, Feb. 2017 capital plan included DOE needs assessment from Jan. 2016

We need a new planning process for schools • Given rapid pace of development

We need a new planning process for schools • Given rapid pace of development throughout the city, school overcrowding will become even worse • We need reforms so that schools are built along with new housing and not lagging years later & based on realistic 10 -yr not 5 yr projections • In most large states and districts, developers have to pay an “impact fee” to help fund new infrastructure including schools, but not in NYC

DOE Capacity formula underestimates overcrowding by assuming overly large class sizes • Relies on

DOE Capacity formula underestimates overcrowding by assuming overly large class sizes • Relies on school capacity formula that assumes class sizes larger than current averages grades 4 -12 (28 students in 4 -8 th grades; 30 in HS) • Thus the formula would tend to force class sizes even higher • DOE Blue Book working group urged school capacity be aligned with smaller classes • Mayor’s office rejected their recommendation in July 2015

I FOILed the decision memo from City Hall • In April 2016 I requested

I FOILed the decision memo from City Hall • In April 2016 I requested memo to see why the Mayor rejected proposal to align the school capacity formula with smaller classes • More than 1 year later, I received the memo almost totally blacked out; here are pgs 1 -3

We have also filed a class size complaint vs DOE • The Contracts for

We have also filed a class size complaint vs DOE • The Contracts for Excellence law passed in 2007 required NYC to lower class sizes in all grades – instead class sizes have increased citywide • We filed a legal complaint in July with the NY State Ed Department against DOE refusal to reduce class size with Public Advocate Tish James & 9 NYC public school parents • The Commissioner ruled against us so we plan to appeal her decision in court

What else is being done about this? • Last year, Speaker Mark-Viverito announced that

What else is being done about this? • Last year, Speaker Mark-Viverito announced that Council would form an internal working group to come up with proposals to reform the school planning process. • They are supposed to be releasing their proposals soon. • We will have to be vigilant to ensure that these proposals are strengthened and passed into law.

How can you help? • Join our mailing list at www. classsizematters. org or

How can you help? • Join our mailing list at www. classsizematters. org or https: //www. classsizematters. org/sign-up-for-our-newsletter/ • For more info or to sign up, go to https: //www. eventbrite. com/e/parent-action-conference-2018 -anaction-agenda-for-public-schools-tickets-41260953623 • Any questions? You can ask us at info@classsizematters. org