
Last yearโs several public hearings on the schools budget, including an unprecedented session for teachers, brought an overarching, overwhelming plea for โmore hearts and handsโ in the classroom.
Based on this seasonโs first public budget hearing, held Jan. 23 at City Hall, the message soundsย similar this year. Of 27 parents (one also a Cambridge teacher), most asked for more help in supporting diverse classrooms in terms of ability, race, income and needs, including classes that have been shaken by social-emotional behavior issues.
Among other potential solutions were more recess and play-based learning,ย andย less testing. But everyone referred to persistent gaps in achievement and access, and everyone strongly supported โinclusion,โ meaning finding ways to educate all children in the same classrooms.
โItโs very different to be in the schools as a parent and seeing where we need to do more,โ said state Rep. Marjorie Decker, a former city councillor. Decker, who graduated from Cambridge public schools in the 1980s, has a junior kindergartner and a first grader at the King Open School.
Making the connection to the cityโs plans to โpump really significant resources into early education,โ Decker asked for more resources for the early years of elementary school. Noting the โbig changeโ in the transition from kindergarten to the early elementary grades, โincluding a lot of social-emotional learning, learning around how to self-regulate,โshe suggested the system doesnโt sufficiently support the transition:
โTo expect one teacher in a community that is diverse and high-needs โฆ to have the skills and expertise to manage the classroom as well as be an expert in student learning โ we are setting our students and our teachers up for a difficult year. Many of the kids are thriving, but many of the kids are experiencing unnecessary stress. We are not providing the teachers or the parents or the students what they need to succeed.โ
โSystemic behavioral issuesโ
Several parents joined her in trying to connect dots between classrooms with difficult classroom environments and what they see as understaffed schools. Three parents from a first-grade Haggerty School classroom separately reported significant behavioral issues, including evacuation of the room up to six times this year โto ensure the childrenโs safetyโ โ reminiscent of testimony at committee meetings last year. The Haggerty parents said this is an ongoing problem and that, despite an โextremely skillful teacherโ and supportive principal, the school has insufficient resources to handle the social-emotional problems of a handful of students that affect the entire class.
โWe are concerned about all the childrenโs safety and access to curriculum,โ said Haggerty parent of three Natasha Warikoo, a Harvard Education School professor who studies race, ethnicity and education. There are 23 children in the classroom, she reported, โwhich is too large under the circumstances,โ andย the principal isnโt givenย the discretion to act on it.
While embracing inclusion, its โdemands need to be met with more resources,โ Warikoo said. (Parent Ruth Economou advocated for funds for a โMindful Schoolsโ program that teaches methods for mitigating โtoxic stress.โ)
Theresa Brown, a Haggerty parent and teacher at Kennedy-Longfellow, sees a broader problem. โThere is systemic behavioral issues in our kindergarten, first- and possibly second-grade classrooms,โ she said, attributing it to โincreased testing, developmentally inappropriate practices, lack of recess time, lack of lunchtime and more direct instruction with less hands-on, developmentally appropriate education practices.โ
Inclusive classrooms

Representatives from the Cambridge Advanced Learning Association said unidentified advanced-learner students are often among those with behavioral problems in classrooms. The current system identifying advanced learners is too parent-driven, โbiased toward highly engaged, highly drivenโ families, they said, urging proactive, teacher-driven, early identification of โunderrepresented subgroupsโ through improved testing โ and then inclusion, while Brown encouraged full inclusion of special education and general education populations.
Ensuring active, age-appropriate learning for all โrequires a co-teaching model, making sure that there are highly qualified, educated special educators in every classroom,โ Brown said. Even if there are no โspecial educationโ students in the classes, she said, โI think we are seeing an increase of behavioral issues. If we are going to have full inclusion, we must have special educators in the classroom.โ
Three representatives of the Cambridge Parent Advisory Council on Special Education echoed some of these concerns, saying inclusion requires professional development for all teachers about working with all populations. Karen Dobak said that โreal inclusion is still lacking in this city.โ
โMany kids are shortchanged by this lack of inclusion,โ Pamela Blau said. English-language learners, for example, are โoften of superior intelligence but have trouble accessing curriculum.โ Julie Viens talked about the โwide understanding โ from secretaries to janitors โ about these kidsโ that outplaced students find in their other schools what is missing in Cambridge Public Schools. She wants to see that โmindset changeโ here because, she said, families would much prefer to avoid outplacement.
Parent Lisa Downing bemoaned the โvery, very slowโ improvement in the achievement gap for special-needs students that, she said, โis just not good enough.โ She reported that last springโs Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System scores for Cambridge special-needs students found that between 63 percent to 82 percent scored below proficient for English-language arts, math or science. โChanging the culture of low expectations for our special-needs students is a major district need. One way we can make steps toward this is by listening to our teachers who have asked for more help in the classroom.โ
Recess and stress

Pia Cisternino, former candidate for the School Committee, represented the new Cambridge Recess Working Group she founded in asking for an additional 15 to 20 minutes of recess in K-5 schools. โIf it needs more money, ask for it in the budget,โ she requested.
โThe push to spend time on assessments and shortened recess [has] not really made a dent in the achievement gap,โ Cisternino said, noting that play was important in โmeeting basic needsโ in addressing social emotional issues at a time of โmarked increase of intensity of childrenโs emotional needs.โ
These parents were given an assist by Cambridgeport third-grader Ari Lavine, who said at his schoolโs โtinyโ playground (temporarily replacing its regular one, which is not that large itself) at recess, โthings get pretty crazy. We sit inside all day, so we get a little crazy. The teachers do their best. Things are pretty challenging for the teachers too. The kids and the teachers need help. Thank you.โ
Graham & Parks third-grader Margot Kelsey also pleaded for less testing. โTests cause more stress than they should,โ she said. โSometimes just before a test I donโt even want to wake up in the morning. A lot of stress would be saved if there were no tests. If there werenโt tests I wouldnโt be able to find anything to dread about school.โ
CRLS tracking and upper schools
Parents also spoke about what they see as de facto racial and income segregation in the high school, with honors and advanced placement classes on one side and so-called โcollege prepโ classes on the other. โI see so many students of color have given up,โ said Sharon Dunn, a longtime Cambridge schoolsโ parent and now grandparent. โMy memory of the time in the โ70s and the โ80s was tremendous in terms of multicultural commitment and education. For that reason, many of my friends and family moved to Cambridge and became involved.โ
The district has slipped back, she said.
Just three years ago, the district was congratulating itself for its level of integration in school choice compared with much of the rest of the nation, but now committee members also find cause to worry.
Dunnโs daughter, Rhea Dunn, reiterated her interest in dramatically increasing recruitment and retention of teachers of color. โThere is a priority to address the issue head on,โ she said. โIt costs more to be sued than to address the issue.โ
Parent Kathy Dalton expanded CRLS tracking concerns to the upper schools, and raised the specter of the legality of creating ability streams marked by race differences. She asked for more funds in elementary and upper school to improve the ability to teach โmixed abilityโ classes. Referring to the โaccelerated math programโ in the upper schools that begins in sixth grade, she paraphrased her middle-school daughter:
โAll us brown people are in the grade-level math. We get almost no homework. [The accelerated-math kids] complain about hours of homework. Of course they are getting ahead of us.โ
Saying her daughter and her friends are โquite awareโ of the โseparate racial and class backgroundโ of the two math tracks, and that the โgrade-level kids are unlikely to ever catch up,โ Dalton suggested the tracking may violate Title 6 of the Civil Rights Act, prohibiting ability tracking that ultimately separates by race. โWe have talked about this [segregation] for years, yet we are systematically doing things that exacerbate it,โ she said.
Two other parents asked for family liaisons, a subject that has come up consistently in public comment since the establishment of the upper schools in 2012 to help reach families who have less access to the schools.
Many referred to the first speaker of the morning, Leslie Brunetta, who asked for another budget approach entirely, without which she could not see how any of the gaps โ achievement, access, support โ would be achieved:
โThe narrative for the budget season is usually: Act I, we have a budget gap. Act II, we debate what we are going to add and subtract so we can close the gap. And Act III, resolution, the gap is closed often accompanied by the moral, โSee, it was possible to overcome the challenge without asking for more money.โ I know that you all want the best for all kids. But โฆ we are not going to get there with this narrative. Why donโt we start with a different Act I, where we ask, from scratch, what would we need to do to make sure thatโฆ every kid gets what he or she needs to leave here well-educated? … We know we can close the budget gap, because we do it year after year. Itโs the other gaps we are not closing. We need to rethink our whole approach to get there.โ
Next in the budget process is a 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. Feb. 9 educator hearing. The next public budget hearing is 6 p.m. March 22.
This post was updated Jan. 30, 2016, becauseย some part-time workers were added to the school department in last yearโs budget process. It was also corrected to say Haggerty parents were talkingย about a first-grade classroom;ย another grade wasย mentionedย initially.

