This Saturday the Ad Hoc committee for Teacher Diversity is sponsoring a meeting to address the issue.
If this were only happening in NYC we would be able to look at the local conditions alone. But this is going on nationwide in urban areas where ed deform has reared its ugly head. You know, those people claiming they are involved in the civil rights issue of our times while somehow reducing the numbers people of color who are teaching in the areas that need them the most. Today we saw Boston highlighted:
A decline in the number of black teachers in Boston public schools has put the city in violation of a federal court order, prompting officials to step up efforts to recruit and retain teachers of color.
Officials in Boston seeking black teachers More diversity is recruitmen
t goal; imbalance could bring litigation 
Stop and Reverse the Disappearing of Black and Latino Educators in NYC
Please come to this important event and distribute the flyer below: 
- Testimonials from those pushed out and shut out
 - An update on Gulino vs BOE (lawsuit against the NYS LAST exam)
 - What we can do now
 
Saturday, January 25, 2014
3-5 PM
The Church of St. Luke and St. Matthew’s Parish Hall
520 Clinton Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11238 (C train to Clinton/Washington)
A 42% decline in the number of new Black and Latino teachers hired  to teach in NYC public schools since 2002 is movement in the wrong  direction.
The DOE hires graduates from private universities over those from CUNY and SUNY.
A NYS teacher certification exam is not validated yet disproportionately excludes Black and Latino applicants.
Over 100 public schools have been closed in NYC’s Black and Latino communities.
Mayoral control over the DOE with its $25 billion yearly budget  shuts out the voices and accountability to parents – over 80% of whom  are Black, Latino and Asian.
Privately run charter schools are given a free ride to crowd existing public schools and to divide parents against parents.
The absence of DOE or mayoral oversight or direction to monitor and  promote diversity in the teaching staff provides a cover for growing  indifference and hostility to demands for equity.  “If you are not part  of the solution, you are part of the problem.”
The undermining of teacher tenure, seniority and due process  disproportionately impacts Black and Latino teachers, denigrates the  teaching profession, inhibits student advocacy and contributes to chaos  and demoralization in our public schools.
The disappearing of Black and Latino educators removes the most  consistent advocates for a historically accurate, culturally relevant  and inclusive curriculum.
Join with educators, parents and community leaders to stop and  reverse the disappearing of Black and Latino educators.  Let’s organize  for a real change at Tweed and City Hall.
Organized by the Ad Hoc committee for Teacher Diversity
Contact information: Peter Bronson (917) 453-3666, (718) 805-6341 Email:TeacherDiversity@gmail.com
Endorsers (list in formation) Black New Yorkers for Educational  Excellence, Coalition for Public Education, Movement of Rank and File  Educators, National Black Education Agenda, New York Collective of  Radical Educators, People Power, Progressive Action Caucus, Teacher’s  Unite.
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