Posted on

>Reader Comments on BOE Race

>Laurie Goodman refers to the extremists. Guess what, that’s you, because you secretly read “that blog.”

Currently there are a few HSA Presidents who continue to speak about how Sheila is experienced and has done a great job. A few of them have held private little coffees for Ms. Brogan. HSA Presidents say those upstarts who are running are stupid, emotional and rude.

So before you vote, look at our BOE track record.

-They approved curriculum in our middle schools that eliminated a math textbook(CMP2).
-They did not use purchasing power when dealing with curriculum companies when they allowed each elementary school to purchase whatever materials they wanted.
-They did not require all schools that feed into the same middle school to use the a standard curricula.
-They eliminated the Gifted(Potentials) program, which shows their overall disregard for our brightest children.
-They instituted a policy to hire young inexperienced teachers to save money, thereby changing the balance of experienced to inexperienced teachers in the schools.
-They approved “authentic assessment” in our high school which allowed teachers to improvise midterms and finals and thereby eliminated content standards across classes.
-They implemented a sole communication method, eNews email, which only reaches 1/3 of parent population.

If Ms. Brogan and Ms. Goodman are elected, the following will be implemented.

-The policy of group work will continue and the constructivist method will still be the primary method used in our schools.
-Reform math will be brought into the high school so the 8th graders using CMP2 can continue learning from a constructivist based program.
-Authentic assessment will remain; standardized departmental tests will be eliminated.
-The average teacher age in the district will go down.
-Your taxes will rise when the BOE asks for the maximum 4% budget increase every year.
-The HSA will need to fund raise even more for the fields, sports teams and playgrounds because the school will not allocate money toward those areas.
-The number of kids going to private schools will increase, depleting the school system of some very talented kids.

You may think, I must vote for Sheila, I went to this coffee and they all said they were voting for Sheila and Laurie.

Remember, you can say you voted for Shelia and Laurie, but vote for Sarah Kate and Greg.

Match.com

Posted on

>Poll Finds Almost Half of New Jersey Adults Want to Move Out of State

>Poll Finds Almost Half of New Jersey Adults Want to Move Out of State
Thursday , October 18, 2007

By Sara Bonisteel

ADVERTISEMENT
Even New Jerseyans can’t stand living in New Jersey, according to a new poll that said nearly half of adults residing in the Garden State want to pull up stakes.

The Monmouth University/Gannett New Jersey Poll, released Wednesday, found 49 percent of those polled would rather live somewhere else.

New Jersey already is suffering from an image problem and bears the brunt of jokes because of its corruption and pollution problems. But 58 percent of those residents polled said the heavy financial burden of just living in the state is no laughing matter, and that’s why they want to leave.

Poll participants cited high property taxes (28 percent), the cost of living (19 percent), state taxes (5 percent) and housing costs (6 percent) as the main reasons they want out. The poll also found that 51 percent of those who expressed a desire to leave planned to do so, with adults under the age of 50 making between $50,000 and $100,000 the most likely to flee.

“If you have the ability to leave and you don’t see any possibility for change with the way the state is run — and that’s the No. 1 issue here — you have to vote with your feet,” said Patrick Murray, director of the Monmouth University Polling Institute.

The study did not surprise New Jersey’s politicians.

“The high cost of living in the Northeast is not news,” Brendan Gilfillan, a spokesman for Gov. Jon Corzine, said in an e-mail statement. “But it is one of the reasons Gov. Corzine has worked tirelessly to help poor and working-class residents of New Jersey by implementing the Earned Income Tax Credit, expanding S-CHIP and increasing — and sustaining — property tax relief.”

Gilfillan said Corzine also had cut costs by reducing the government workforce, though he noted people would continue to leave New Jersey as baby boomers retired.

“Demographics are only going to accentuate this trend, as the bulk of these folks have yet to leave the workforce,” Gilfillan said.

But Republican Assemblyman Richard Merkt said it was the fiscal policies of the governor and legislature that were to blame for the exodus.

“It’s no wonder that New Jersey is a national joke,” he said. “We’ve done it to ourselves with these just positively irresponsible policies.”

The Monmouth University poll, which was conducted over the telephone with 801 New Jersey adults from Sept. 27 to Sept. 30, did not predict a mass exodus, at least not yet. Of those residents polled, 44 percent would like to stay and 7 percent were not sure. The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percent.

But a Rutgers University report released last week found that New Jersey, with nearly 9 million people, is experiencing a population loss and said the number of residents who had left the state more than tripled from 2002 to 2006, with 231,565 people moving elsewhere.

The Rutgers Regional Report, which examined U.S. Census Bureau and Internal Revenue Service data, noted 72,547 people left in 2006, ranking New Jersey fourth — behind California, Louisiana and New York — among states with the highest population losses in the nation.

High prices aren’t the only thing driving people out. New Jersey ex-pats headed in droves to warmer climates, with 124,584 moving to Florida and 29,803 moving to North Carolina. Others (42,459) moved to neighboring Pennsylvania.

That migration depleted the state’s tax coffers of an estimated $10 billion in personal income and $680 million in sales tax, according to the Rutgers report.

“This really illustrates among a lot of other things that the public has thrown up their hands,” Murray said. “They don’t feel that there’s anything they can do that would change the situation.”

And unless there’s change, Merkt said, the flight will continue.

“One can only hope that the pendulum will stop swinging this way and start moving back the other way ’cause if it doesn’t, you’re going to see 9 million people suffer,” he said.

“Or you’re going to see the last person over the Delaware turn out the lights.”

Posted on

>The HSA moms at Orchard sat at the front door at a desk to make, to demand voters sign in when they came to the polls.

>The HSA moms at Orchard sat at the front door at a desk to make, no to demand voters sign in when they came to the polls. That day I lost all respect for them. How could they NOT know that it was illegal to do that?

Stupid things like this earn them the derisive title “bottle blonds.” So what if the principal requested it. Some one should have spoken up to say no can do. It’s illegal. But they all went along like sheep. How can we trust them when they are so compliant? What other parental rights do they sign over to administrators during the course of a school year?

Sadly, they denude us of our power as parents. This is most serious.

3balls Golf Giftsshow?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=55539

Posted on

>Ridgewood created the HSA to keep the powers of a PTA from interfering with the administration of the school system

>Ridgewood created the HSA to keep the powers of a PTA from interfering with the administration of the school system.The HSA’s can only be a fundraising entity. It can do nothing else for parents or children in the system.It has extended the art of being “non-confrontational” to being non-questioning. In other words, no pain, no gain.It’s motto is, “give me your money but keep your opinion to yourself.”
Talk about sycophants… Travell’s current HSA president hosted a coffee for Sheila Brogan recently. Does anybody else see the problem with this?

show?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=56753

Posted on

>Goodman Launches Mailbox Campaign

>0406081218a
An eagle-eyed citizen spotted a Laurie Goodman campaign flier tucked into the mailbox of a Village resident. This photo taken by cell phone captured the deed. The Fly wants to know why Mrs. Goodman doesn’t know that accessing a private mailbox without express permission from the owner is…well a federal impropriety? Mrs. Goodman, in addition to squashing dissent and removing our right to vote on school budgets, do you also wish to see our federal laws on this issue changed to suit your predilections?

1-800-FLOWERS.COMshow?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=100462

Posted on

Kids being rushed past childhood.

>Ready, Set, Relax! is one town’s effort to stop hyper-parenting, in this exclusive excerpt.

Apr 05, 2008 04:30 AM
Carl Honoré

Ridgewood is the sort of place that comes to mind when people talk about the American dream. Nestled in the woodlands of northern New Jersey, this quiet, verdant town of 25,000 souls breathes affluence and well-being. The locals work hard at high-powered jobs in Manhattan, but they enjoy the fruits of their labour. Large, handsome houses sit on spacious lots dotted with swing sets and trampolines. Luxury sedans and shiny SUVs glide along wide streets lined with oak, dogwood and maple trees.

Move in a little closer, though, and this happy portrait starts to fray round the edges. At the school gates, around the tables in the local diner, and in the supermarket parking lot, you hear the people of Ridgewood voicing the same complaint: we may live inside a 21st-century Garden of Eden, but we are too damn busy to enjoy it.

Many families here are scheduled up to the eyeballs. Caught between work and home, parents struggle to find time for friends, romance, or even a decent night’s sleep. Their children are in the same boat, filling the hours not already occupied by school work with organized extracurricular activities. Some 10-year-olds in Ridgewood are so busy they carry Palm Pilots to keep track of their appointments. Eating dinner or doing homework in the car while travelling to swimming or the riding club is common here. One local mother emails an updated family schedule to her husband and two sons every evening. Another keeps her timetable pinned to the front door and the underside of the sun visor in her people carrier. With so many schedules to mesh, with so much going on, even getting toddlers together for a playdate can be a logistical nightmare. One of my favorite New Yorker cartoons was penned with places like Ridgewood in mind. It depicts two little girls waiting for the school bus, each holding a personal planner. One tells the other, “Okay, I’ll move ballet back an hour, reschedule gymnastics, and cancel piano. … You shift your violin lessons to Thursday and skip soccer practice. … That gives us from 3:15 p.m. to 3:45 p.m. on Wednesday the 16th to play.”

Unlike other towns, though, Ridgewood has taken a stand against overstuffed schedules. What started with a few moms grumbling over coffee at the kitchen table has blossomed into a mini-movement. In 2002, Ridgewood pioneered an annual event called Ready, Set, Relax! The idea is that one day a year this alpha town takes a breather: teachers assign no homework, extracurricular activities are cancelled, and parents make a point of coming home early from the office. The aim is to cast off the tyranny of the timetable, to let children rest, play, or just daydream, and to give families time together that is not built around driving to the next volleyball practice or band rehearsal.

Hundreds of households put down their planners to take part in Ready, Set, Relax! and the event has inspired towns across North America, not all of them as well-heeled as Ridgewood, to follow suit. To help out frazzled families, the school board in Sidney, N.Y., a blue-collar hamlet 210 kilometres northwest of here, no longer schedules any extracurricular activities or meetings after 4:30 p.m. on Wednesdays. In 2007, Amos, a small forest and mining town in northwestern Quebec, held its first activity-free day based on the Ridgewood model. Marcia Marra, a mother of three who helped set up Ready, Set, Relax! in tandem with a local mental health agency, hopes the tide is turning. “People are starting to see that when their lives and their children’s lives are scheduled to the hilt, everyone suffers,” she says. “Structured activities can be great for kids, but things are just out of control now.”

This is not a new panic. Warnings about children being overscheduled, racing from one enriching activity to the next, first surfaced in the early 20th century. Dorothy Canfield Fisher, a popular novelist-cum-parenting guru, warned in 1914 that American parents were stripping childhood of its “blessed spontaneity” by placing “a constricting pressure upon the children to use even the chinks and fragments of their time to acquire accomplishments which seem to us profitable.” In 1931, Ruth Frankel, a pioneering cancer specialist in Canada, described how “the modern child, with his days set into a patterned program, goes docilely from one prescribed class to another, takes up art and music and French and dancing … until there is hardly a minute left.” Her fear was that overscheduled children would grow so jaded that they would turn “desperately to the corner movie in an effort to escape ennui.”

That same worry has reached fever pitch over the last generation. Books with titles like The Hurried Child and The Overscheduled Child have carved out shelf space in the library of modern parenting. Even the kids’ section has tackled the topic. In The Berenstain Bears and Too Much Pressure, the famous ursine family goes into stress meltdown because Sister and Brother Bear are enrolled in too many after-school activities.

Why are so many children so busy today? One reason is the rise of the working mother. When moms stayed home, it was easier just to let the kids play around the house. But as women entered the workplace and the extended family dissolved, someone else had to pick up the slack on the child-care front. Extracurricular activities fit the bill perfectly, promising not only supervision but also enrichment. Yet putting children on a tight schedule is not always a response to the child-care gap. Many stay-at-home moms also sign their children up for endless activities. Part of this is self-defence: when every other kid in the neighbourhood is booked solid, who is going to indulge in free play with your unscheduled child? In our atomized, bowling-alone society, organized activities are also a good way – sometimes the only way – to meet other parents. Nor does it help that many extracurricular activities are designed like a slippery slope: you sign up your 4-year-old daughter for a weekly dance lesson, and then, before you know it, she has a class every other night and is travelling across the country to compete. Rather than rock the boat, though, we persuade ourselves that lots of scheduled activities are just what children need and want, even when they tell us otherwise. The other day I watched a mother drag her 3-year-old daughter from a nursery school near our house. The child was weeping. “I don’t want to go to ballet,” she howled. “I want to go home and play.”

No one is saying that extracurricular activities are bad. On the contrary, they are an integral part of a rich and happy childhood. Many kids, particularly in lower-income families, would actually benefit from more structured activities. Plenty of children, especially teenagers, thrive on a busy schedule. But just as other trappings of modern childhood, from homework to technology, are subject to the law of diminishing returns, there is a danger of overscheduling the young. When it comes to extracurricular activities, many children are getting too much of a good thing.

Wayne Yankus, a pediatrician in Ridgewood since the early 1980s, reckons that 65 per cent of his patients are now victims of overscheduling. He says the symptoms include headaches, sleep disorders, gastric problems caused by stress or by eating too late at night, and fatigue. “Fifteen years ago it was unusual to see a tired 10-year-old,” says Yankus. “Now it’s common.” Recently he hired a therapist to spend one day a week in his office to talk to families about the need to prune their planners.

The extracurricular merry-go-round can also ensnare the family in a vicious cycle. Parents resent children for taking up so much time and costing so much money – Britons spend £12 billion a year on their children’s hobbies, half of which are abandoned within five weeks – while children resent their parents’ resentment. Activities overload also squeezes out time for the unscheduled, simple stuff that brings families together – relaxed conversation, cuddling, shared meals or just hanging out together in companionable silence. Yankus sees this disconnect in many Ridgewood households. “When the snow comes and the activities get cancelled, everyone is horrified because they’re suddenly stuck at home and have to deal with each other,” he says. “They don’t know how to get along without a schedule.”

Ridgewood does not shut down completely on Ready, Set, Relax! day. Some residents regard the event as silly or patronizing. Sporting matches arranged with neighbouring districts are not cancelled, and the homework ban is not always as strictly enforced as it could be, especially in high school. Yet the town does feel different on the big day. With fewer soccer moms running red lights, the traffic is less frantic. People are more likely to stop and chat than exchange a brief nod before pointing to their watch and rushing off to the next appointment. To many families, Ready, Set, Relax! has been an epiphany. More than a third of those who took part in 2006 trimmed their schedules afterward. Consider the Givens. The three children used to be enrolled in so many after-school activities that there was barely time to eat, sleep or talk. Even though she felt overwhelmed and often found herself jogging round the supermarket to save a few seconds, Jenny, the mother, somehow felt that it was her duty to keep the family maxed out on extracurricular pursuits. “Every activity that comes up you want your kids to try, and you fear that you are failing them if they are not busy every second,” she says. “You want the best for them, but always at the back of your mind, even if you don’t admit it, you have the fantasy that they might turn out to be brilliant at something, that by signing them up for an activity you might uncover some latent genius.”

In the Given household, that translated into an eye-watering barrage of art classes, Spanish lessons, soccer, lacrosse, softball, volleyball, basketball, baseball, tennis, scouts and book club. Every weekend, the parents would split up to ferry the children to their various activities. At home, time and tempers were short. Ready, Set, Relax! came as a wake-up call. On the first night, the Givens made Mexican food and chocolate chip cookies together. Then they got down Cadoo, a board game that had been sitting unopened on the shelf since Christmas. The evening rolled along in a riot of laughter and cuddles. “It was an amazing revelation for all of us,” says Jenny. “It was just such a relief not to be rushing off to the next thing on the to-do list.”

After the Ready, Set, Relax! night, the Givens cut back, keeping only activities the children are passionate about. Today Kathryn, 16, does an art class, Spanish lessons, and a book club. Chris, 14, plays on basketball and baseball teams while Rosie, 12, concentrates on soccer, tennis and lacrosse. The whole family is more relaxed, and the children are all doing better at school since the cutback. The spirit of Ready, Set, Relax! has rippled out into other initiatives in Ridgewood. Every Wednesday, weather permitting, about 80 children aged 4 to 7 are now let loose in the playground of the local primary school. This is Free Play Day and parents are confined to the sidelines. Left to their own devices, the children skip, play hide-and-seek and tag, make up stories, throw balls around, sing and wrestle. The noise is exhilarating, the child equivalent of a Wall of Sound. To many parents it is a revelation. “It never occurred to me to do this, to just let them play like this,” says one mother. “You always feel like you have to be organizing something for them, but actually you don’t.”

There is, of course, something absurd – even a little tragic – about having to schedule unscheduled time, yet given the world we live in, that is probably the first step for many families. And clearly the Ready, Set, Relax! movement reflects a wider rethink.

Harvard urges incoming freshmen to check their overscheduling ways at the door. Posted on the university website, an open letter by Harry Lewis, a former dean of the undergraduate school, warns students that they will get more out of college, and indeed life, if they do less and concentrate on the things that really fire their passion. Lewis also takes aim at the notion that everything young people do must have a measurable payoff or contribute toward crafting the perfect resumé. “You may balance your life better if you participate in some activities purely for fun, rather than to achieve a leadership role that you hope might be a distinctive credential for postgraduate employment. The human relationships you form in unstructured time with your roommates and friends may have a stronger influence on your later life than the content of some of the courses you are taking.”

Most families that ease the load end up spending more time eating together. In a hurry-up, hyper-scheduled culture, where dining al desko, in front of the TV or computer, in the street or in the car is commonplace, the family meal often falls by the wayside. One study found that a fifth of British families never eat together. The irony is that many of the benefits extracurricular activities, including homework, purport to deliver may actually by achieved through the simple act of breaking bread en famille. Studies in many countries show that children who have regular family meals are more likely to do well at school, enjoy good mental health, and eat nutritious food; they are also less likely to engage in underage sex or use drugs and alcohol.

A Harvard study concluded that family meals promote language development even more than does family story reading. Another survey found that the only common denominator among National Merit Scholars in the United States, regardless of race or social class, was having a regular family dinner. Of course, we’re talking here about meals where both parents and children ask questions, discuss ideas at length and tell anecdotes rather than just watch TV and grunt “pass the salt.”

Why does a proper family meal pay such handsome dividends? When it comes to diet, the answer is obvious. A 9-year-old boy is more likely to finish his greens, or to eat any vegetables at all, in front of his mom and dad than when he is dining alone at the computer in his bedroom. Sitting around the dinner table, taking part in conversation, also teaches children that they are loved and cherished for who they are, rather than for what they do. They learn to talk, listen, reason, and compromise – all those essential ingredients of a high EQ. Of course, no one is saying that family meals are always a bed of roses. Sometimes they are sheer hell. Gathering tired toddlers, sullen teenagers and stressed parents around the table can be a recipe for open warfare. But then, dealing with conflict is part of life, too.

Excerpted from Under Pressure: Rescuing Childhood from the Culture of Hyper-Parenting. Copyright 2008 Carl Honoré. Published by Knopf Canada. Reproduced by arrangement with the publisher. All rights reserved.

Posted on

>RIP Bill Zisa of Westside Barbershop

>Guglielmo Zisa

ZISA Guglielmo “Bill”, 77, of Ridgewood died on March 26, 2008. Born in Italy, he moved to America in 1962. Bill was the current owner of The Westside Barber Shop in Ridgewood for forty-five years. Survivors include his loving wife Nunziata (nee Nicastro) Zisa of Ridgewood, his three beloved sons Dino of Long Valley, Phil of Hendersonville, NC and David Zisa of Ridgewood. He is the grandfather of five adoring grandchildren. Funeral Services, Saturday at 9:30 AM at CC Van Emburgh Funeral Home, Ridgewood. Interment to follow at Valleau Cemetery, Ridgewood. Visiting, Friday, 2-4 and 7-9 PM. For driving directions and online condolences, please visit: (www.vanemburgh.com)

Published in The Record and Herald News on 3/27/2008.

Posted on

>Alleged Drug Dealer Arrested In Ridgewood

>Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office
PRESS RELEASE

TO: ALL NEWS MEDIA
FROM: PROSECUTOR JOHN L. MOLINELLI
DATE: APRIL 3, 2008

Bergen County Prosecutor John L. Molinelli announced the arrest of ERIC JIMENEZ (DOB: 2/29/1988) of 792 Norgate Drive, Ridgewood, New Jersey on Tuesday, April 2, 2008 on drug distribution charges. The arrest came about as a result of an investigation conducted by members of the Bergen County Narcotic Task Force, under the direction of Chief Joseph Macellaro, the Ridgewood Police Department, under the direction of Chief William Corcoran and the Allendale Police Department, under the direction of Chief Robert Herndon.

On February 20, 2008, ERIC JIMENEZ sold approximately three and one-half (3.5) grams of Cocaine to an undercover detective of the Bergen County Narcotic Task Force in Ridgewood, New Jersey. On February 25, 2008, ERIC JIMENEZ sold approximately ten (10) grams of Cocaine to an undercover detective of the Bergen County Narcotic Task Force in Paramus, New Jersey. On March 3, 2008, ERIC JIMENEZ sold approximately ten (10) grams of Cocaine to an undercover detective of the Bergen County Narcotic Task Force in Ridgewood, New Jersey. On March 18, 2008, ERIC JIMENEZ sold approximately ten (10) grams of Cocaine to an undercover detective of the Bergen County Narcotic Task Force in Ridgewood, New Jersey. On April 2, 2008, ERIC JIMENEZ sold approximately one (1) ounce of Cocaine and one (1) pound of Marijuana to an undercover detective of the Bergen County Narcotic Task Force in Ridgewood, New Jersey. Subsequent to this narcotic transaction, JIMENEZ was placed under arrest without incident. A subsequent search of JIMENEZ’s vehicle revealed an additional two (2) pounds of Marijuana.

ERIC JIMENEZ was charged with the following: One (1) count (inclusive of five (5) separate dates) of Distribution of a Controlled Dangerous Substance, namely Cocaine, in violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5a(1)/5b(2)-2nd degree crime; One (1) count (inclusive of three (3) separate dates) of Distribution of a Controlled Dangerous Substance, namely Cocaine, while within one-thousand (1000) feet of a School Zone in violation of N.J.S.A 2C:35-7-3rd degree crime; and one (1) count of Distribution of a Controlled Dangerous Substance, namely Marijuana over one (1) ounce, in violation of N.J.S.A 2C: 35-5a(1)/5b(11)-3rd degree crime. Additional charges for possession of cocaine and marijuana are to be levied against JIMENEZ when this case is presented to a Grand Jury for indictment consideration.

Bail was set at $75,000.00-no10% for ERIC JIMENEZ by Judge Louis Dinice, J.M.C., after which, he was remanded to the Bergen County Jail in lieu of bail.

Prosecutor Molinelli states that the defendant is presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt and would like to thank the Ridgewood and Allendale Police Departments for their assistance and cooperation in this investigation.

BERGEN COUNTY PROSECUTOR’S OFFICE
CHARGE INFORMATION FORM

DEFENDANT: ERIC JIMENEZ DOB: 02-29-1988
LAST KNOWN ADDRESS: 792 Norgate Drive, Ridgewood, New Jersey 07109

MARITAL STATUS: Single
PLACE OF EMPLOYMENT: Unemployed
LENGTH OF EMPLOYMENT: N/A
PRESENT POSITION: N/A/

ARREST INFORMATION

FUGITIVE: NON-FUGITIVE: XXXXX

DATE & TIME OF ARREST: 04/02/2008 @ 5:18 p.m.

PLACE OF ARREST/TOWN: Ridgewood, New Jersey

AGENCIES EFFECTING ARREST: Bergen County Narcotic Task Force, Ridgewood Police Department and Allendale Police Department

CHARGE AND STATUTE CITATIONS

Distribution of a Controlled Dangerous Substance, namely Cocaine, in violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5a(1)/5b(2); Distribution of a Controlled Dangerous Substance, namely Cocaine, while within one-thousand (1000) feet of a School Zone in violation of N.J.S.A 2C:35-7; and Distribution of a Controlled Dangerous Substance, namely Marijuana, in violation of N.J.S.A 2C: 35-5a(1)/5b(11).

ARRAIGNMENT INFORMATION

ARRAIGNMENT DATE: 04/03/08 @ 9:00 a.m.
JUDGE: Hon. Louis Dinice, J.M.C
BAIL AMOUNT & CONDITIONS: $ 75,000 with no ten percent (10%) option
PRESENT STATUS: Bergen County Jail
https://www.bcpo.net/bcpo/blog/index.php

https://www.bcpo.net/bcpo/blog/index.php

Posted on

>How did this all come to pass? A History Lesson

>Hi PJ,

My name is Richard . I grew up in Ridgewood, moved away, went to Georgetwon and Columbia B-School, found myself a wife and moved her back to Ridgewood with me in 2005.

Between your blog and other sources I have learned what a mess the BOE and the math curriculum are and I have just one question that I hope you can help me with: How did this all come to pass? I came back to Ridgewood late in the game and things had already been moving.

Where is the acting superintendent?
Why did the new guy who was hired disappear?
How did the elementary schools end up with 3 different math curricula?
Why did the BOE feel the need to change the old (traditional?) math system?

I guess, just like at my company, when people barge in my office with a problem I find it easier to make our way back to the light when I know how we got into the mess to start with.

If you don’t know all these answers maybe you can point me to someone else who may.
I trust your judgement based on all I have read on your blog and I appreciate that you keep the thing up at all!

Here’s my own contact info as well

Best regards PJ,

Richard

Posted on

>Campaign News

>Lois & Maskin Respond to Questions – Answers online

Both candidates answered a set of 13 questions forwarded by a group of concerned citizens. The responses of Ms. Maskin can be found here. Greg’s answers are here. The popular “Ridgewood Blog” has sent questions to Sarah-Kate and Greg – their responses will be published on the Ridgewood Blog.

Have a question for the candidates? Please come to the League of Women Voter’s forum scheduled for April 1st at the Ed Center (49 Cottage Place, 7PM). Questions from the floor will be answered. Or feel free to email the candidates: click here to email your questions.

This week’s “Sneak Peak” Press Release

Sheila Brogan has served on the Board’s ‘Legislative Committee’ since 2005. According to Board Candidate Greg Lois “Ms. Brogan has failed to bring the needs of Ridgewood to the attention of the Legislature and failed to obtain a fair return for our schools.”

According to Lois, “Ridgewood has an average per capita yearly income of $51,638 (pop. of 24,936) and the State is taxing that income (at a graduated rate) averaging 6.37% per earner – That is 6.37% on $1.3 Billion dollars or at least $82,054,765 in tax revenue that goes to the State of New Jersey.”

According to Lois, “The State returns approximately $3,146,911 (in 2007) in State aid to our school district – we are not getting our fair share” of State funds. Lois stated that it was Brogan’s responsibility to bring this shortage of State funding to the attention of our lawmakers and community. Lois said that Brogan had “failed to bring the funding disparity to the attention of our Assembly and Senate lawmakers and by that failing had cheated Ridgewood out of necessary funding. . . Brogan presented long ‘legislative recaps’ to the Board of Education but did nothing during her current tenure to advocate for the Village Schools or bring this matter to the forefront.”

Greg Lois is an attorney and candidate for the Board of Education. According to Lois, the Board member who serves as the Head of the Legislative committee should be expected to “do more than just report to the people of Ridgewood – he should be expected to advocate for the people of Ridgewood and bring more of our own tax dollars back to this District.”

Other Campaign News

Sarah-Kate and Greg met with Dr. Monica Brown, principal of Somerville Elementary School on Tuesday, March 11th. One of the issues discussed was the increase in the number of students at Somerville.

Sarah-Kate met with the Orchard Home School Association on March 12th, answering questions brought by attendees. Podcast available here: link.

Greg and Sarah-Kate met with Principal Margy Leninger of Travell School and Principal Anthony Orsini of Benjamin Franklin Middle School on Friday, March 14th.

Sarah-Kate and Greg will be meeting with Ridgewood High School Principal John Lorenz and Ridge Elementary Principal Jean S. Schoenlank on March 17th.

Next Actions
Lawn signs are available – please click here to request delivery (be sure to provide your address). Please contact us if you can volunteer – volunteers are needed for April 12th & 13th (Saturday & Sunday)(phone bank volunteers needed).

Thanks again for your support.

* * * *
This email sent by Maskin & Lois for School Board, P.O. Box 30, Ridgewood, NJ 07450. Paid for by Maskin & Lois for School Board, P.O. Box 30, Ridgewood, NJ 07450. To be removed from this email list, please click here.

1-800-FLOWERS.COMshow?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=100462

Posted on

>Mail Art Request ,Theme ,"it takes a Village"

>dog

In conjunction with the First International Mail Art Installation at the stable ArtChick would like to invite all to send her your Mail Art or Fun Mail to James Foytlin Attn ArtChick PO Box 213 Ridgewood NJ 07451 and the theme is you guessed it ,”it takes a village” *Mail Art received will be installed at the stable for the current show ! must be recieved by March 25! (ArtChick suggests post cards)


WHAT MAIL-ART IS ABOUT
Here is a brief way what the main things are that define Mail-Art. But, of course, there are more.
1) SENDING ARTFUL THINGS
It is the desire to make sending things something special. If you can send it you can make it Mail-Art.
2) CREATIVE COMMUNICATION
Communicating in a way that redefines sending messages. For some people it is the fun of “a little creativity every day”
3) MAKING PROJECTS AND SHOWS
Creating a forum for activities and projects free from the rules of the main-stream art-market. Give and receive artworks and make or join in on exhibitions and shows
4) GLOBAL CULTURE
Be a part of a large global community – share culture, lifestyle and interests with each other in a peaceful and creative way.
5)FREEDOM
Work for borderless liberty and human rights ALL over the world. Help people fight for freedom of the mind .
6) FUN AND HUMOR
Celebrating humor and fun for artful or nonsensical reasons. Have fun by doing Mail-Art with others.


History of a Village

History of Ridgewood’s Municipal Government

The Village of Ridgewood wasn’t organized as a separate municipality until 1876. By then, the settlement we call Ridgewood was almost two centuries old. The land that Ridgewood occupies was originally a hunting and fishing ground of the Lenni Lenape Indians that became a part of the Dutch colony of New Amsterdam founded in 1624. Forty years later, the British captured New Amsterdam and renamed it New York.

After New Amsterdam became British, King Charles 2nd gave New Jersey to Sir Carteret and Lord Berkeley, two of his most loyal supporters. In 1674, Lord Berkeley needed money to finish his mansion in London, and sold his half of the colony to two Quakers. New Jersey was then divided into the Province of East Jersey owned by Sir Carteret and the Quaker Province of West Jersey. In 1687, the East Jersey Proprietors granted several hundred acres in Bergen County to Isaac Kingsland. Johannes Van Emburgh bought some of this land in 1698. The area was then known as Hoachas (now Ho Ho Kus) and as Paramus by 1725.

After the Revolution, the settlement had grown to about 20 families and was known as Godwinville, after a war hero. However, Godwinville was never a separate municipality. The entire northwest corner of Bergen County was a large municipality known as Franklin Township formed in 1771 from a section of Saddle River Township. Within Franklin Township, there were numerous unincorporated settlements such as Godwinville.

In 1848, the Patterson and Ramapo Railroad was completed providing Godwinville with easy access to New York City. In 1853, Samuel Dayton bought the Van Emburgh estate and with the idea of establishing a suburb. Cornelia Dayton renamed Godwinville “Ridgewood” to attract buyers from the city. The population exploded from several hundred in 1850 to over 1,200 by the time of the centennial. Ridgewood built its own school but was still a part of Franklin Township. The population doubled again by the turn of the century.

On March 30, 1876, Ridgewood finally became a separate Township. Actually, Ridgewood was fifteen years ahead of the rest of the state. It wasn’t until the early 1890s that New Jersey adopted legislation requiring each municipality to establish a Board of Education and fund all public schools with a municipal-wide property tax. In just a few months in 1894, numerous settlements with schools incorporated as separate municipalities. Twenty-eight municipalities were incorporated in Bergen County alone. Part of Ridgewood Township went to the new Borough of Midland Park and another part went to the new Borough of Glen Rock. At the same time, Ridgewood changed its municipal form of government from a Township to a Village. However, to this day the school system is still officially known as the “Ridgewood Township Board of Education”.

Almost all of the 1894 municipalities were incorporated as Boroughs, the most common plan of municipal government in New Jersey. In a Borough, the governing body consists of six Council Members and a directly elected Mayor who acts as the chief executive.

Ridgewood was one of the few municipalities that incorporated as a “Village.” In this rare form of local government, the public elected five trustees who selected one of their members as Village President to preside over the meetings. There was no Mayor. The Village plan proved unsuccessful because it lacked clearly defined management responsibilities.

During this period, the Trustees organized the village departments and planned a civic center just west of the train station. However, the civic center was defeated in 1909 and the Village built a municipal building and firehouse at Hudson and Broad streets. This remained as the municipal complex until 1955 when the Village purchased the Elk lodge built in 1928 on North Maple Avenue and converted it into the current Village Hall.

In 1911, Ridgewood reorganized for a second time adopting the Commissioner plan of municipal government, but retaining the name “Village”. The municipality was divided into three departments – Public Safety, Finance and Public Works. The voters elected three Commissioners who each had full executive authority over one of the departments. The Commissioners also selected one of their members as Mayor to preside over the meetings, but the Mayor had no executive power other than as a Commissioner of one of the departments. At the time, the Commissioner form was considered as a reform, but today few municipalities retain this plan. Each department tends to become a fiefdom and is too dependent on the management skills of its Commissioner.

In 1970, Ridgewood recognized the need to professionalize municipal management and adopted the more modern Faulkner Act Council-Manager plan. Under this form, the public elects five Council Members who act as a Board of Directors. Their principle responsibility is to hire and oversee a professional Village Manager who has full executive power for all departments. The Council also selects one of its members as Mayor who presides over the meetings but has no executive authority.

Posted on

>Bob Hutton’s letter to the editor 2-22-08

>For those of you returning from vacation, perhaps you missed The Ridgewood News, February 22, 2008. A letter to the editor was submitted by our very own Board of Ed. member Bob Hutton.
FYI…

I sincerely hope all of you had the opportunity to review the School Report Cards issued in The Record last Friday, Feb. 15. After my personal review of all the data presented, I am proud of our public school system here in Ridgewood, I wish to thank all who are involved and contribute daily to the success of our student body.
Allow me to highlight some of the salient points that the School Report Cards showed for Ridgewood.
Ridgewood High School still has the largest student population in Bergen County. The high school’s mean SAT score in math of 605 was third in the county. We trailed only the Bergen Academies and Tenafly.
Our mean SAT score for verbal was second only behind the Bergen Academies. Our mean SAT score for essay was third only behind the Bergen Academies and Northern Valley Demarest.
It would be appropriate to remind everyone that students must apply and be accepted into Bergen Academies; not all comers are welcome.
In Bergen County and all schools in northern New Jersey that The Record reported on, Ridgewood High School was number one in the number of AP classes – 26.
RHS’ percentage of graduates going onto four-year colleges was 92.6 percent. We finished fourth in that category, following Bergen Academies, Tenafly and Northern Highlands. Only two other districts had four-year college rates in excess of 90 percent: Ramsey and Ramapo.
Results are one measurement. I have concluded that these results are very good. Again, this is a testament to the entire Ridgewood community and their support of public education.
At what price were these results achieved? From the same data source, Ridgewood is shown with a cost per pupil of $13,571. Bergen Academies show a cost per pupil in excess of $24,000. Tenafly has a cost per pupil of $14,857. Demarest has a per-pupil cost of $15,312. Northern Highlands has a cost per pupil of $16,039. In short, Ridgewood is optimizing every dollar.
I know some in our community will not like these results. They will spin these data facts somehow to a negative focus. From some sources, you would be lead to believe that our district does not have the ability to do anything right. That is the farthest from the truth. Some of those same folks cannot handle the truth. If any of you are movie buffs, you can probably guess where I am headed. Maybe “I’d prefer you just say thank you and went on your way.”
Year after year, due to hard work of many, our Ridgewood Public Schools produce excellent results. This year’s report card is no different.

Robert A. Hutton
Member
Ridgewood Board of Education

Posted on

>Anticipated Opening – ASSISTANT BUSINESS ADMINISTRATOR- Temporary Per Diem Position

>The Fly read this from the RPS district’s web site. Seems Mr. DeSimone needs some additional help. Anyone interested in applying? Wonder how much WE are paying per diem?

Anticipated Opening – ASSISTANT BUSINESS ADMINISTRATOR- Temporary Per Diem Position
Ridgewood Public Schools is seeking an experienced business administrator to assist with operations through the end of the 2007-08 school year. The successful candidate will have experience with reviewing capital items as related to a district’s budget as well as assist the Board with their analysis for a potential referendum. Certification as a School Business Administrator is required.

show?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=56753

Posted on

"Math program is ‘inherently flawed’"

>From the Ridgewood News

Friday, February 8, 2008

Reader Viewpoint

“Math program is ‘inherently flawed'”

BY LAWRENCE MASKIN

There seems to be a callous disregard for parental input regarding our district’s current math programs. Balanced approach is what we’re hearing time and time again. Our Assistant Superintendent of Curriculum and Instruction, Ms. Regina Botsford, stated last April that the math program at Travell was balanced. Then, this summer, Ms. Botsford stated that they had reset the balance. Currently, Ms. Botsford states that we have to find the balance. Why would the administration and BOE whole-sale adopt a program that needed a balance adjustment not just once, but three times! Yet, they still search for that balance.

To me, the program was inherently flawed from the start as evidenced by this need for constant reshuffling. They are taking an experimental program with no track record that is highly criticized and sprinkling in the tried and true traditional math with a proven past high record of success. As a former biologist, I can tell you this is analogous to a dilution. In this case a huge dilution of the very math that put Ridgewood on the map as an educational powerhouse of the past.

They keep repeating, “we need math for the 21st century.” What the heck does that mean? Have standard equations honed through the centuries changed somehow with the times? Doesn’t 2 plus 2 still equal 4? Supporters of diluted math say that parents simply don’t understand it because it looks different from what they had learned in the past.

They tell us to “have blind faith in the program.” Surely they must be joking. The program expects children to solve problems in multiple ways with little emphasis on obtaining the correct answer. Therefore, it is the journey, not the destination. Let me repeat that — GETTING THE CORRECT ANSWER IS NOT THE MOST IMPORTANT ASPECT OF MATH. Oh really? Since when? In this diluted math program’s methodology, the most important thing is explaining your thought process. Tell that to your pharmacist when he’s measuring your medication. Perhaps your accountant can “guesstimate” your taxes. Let’s hope he errs on your side.

They keep saying this math has “real world” problems. There have always been “real world” problems to solve in math. In fact, from the very beginning of elementary school education we have all had problems such as theses: There are 3 oranges in one basket and 2 oranges in another basket. What are the total number of oranges in both baskets?

They keep saying, “Deep understanding” of math. I see a convoluted methodology severely lacking content. They call practice, “Drill and Kill.” Are you kidding me? How does one become proficient at any endeavor without practice?

This math uses what’s called a “spiral approach.” This means you briefly visit a topic, move on to other topics, move on to get more topics and ultimately return to the first topic. The preliminary findings of President Bush’s current panel on math education recommend moving away from this approach. Yet this is the methodology our Board of Education is continuing to embrace.

According to the state test, NJASK, our students are doing very well. Sounds great, right? Well the fact is our state standards received poor marks from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. In addition an independent non-profit educational institute gave our state standards a “D” grade. Additionally our children are only required to pass 50% of the questions on the state test in order to be rated proficient. I thought 50% was failing. So, rather than soar well beyond those paltry standards, we just simply meet them.

Did you know there are 3 different math programs in our 6 elementary schools?

Did you know there are no math textbooks in the diluted math programs?

Did you know our kids are expected to discover answers on their own in groups, rather than teacher directed instruction? When students ask a question regarding a math problem, the teacher’s first response should be, well, what do you think”?

Did you know for the past 7 years Benjamin Franklin Middle School ranked in the top 1-2% in math (out of more than 1300 middle schools in New Jersey) utilizing traditional math. So what did the Board recently decide to do– replace it with this diluted math.

Did you know this math program is considerably more expensive to us taxpayers than traditional math?

Did you know this math has been highly criticized by the top 200 mathematicians in the United States?

Did you know this controversy continues in states around the country?

Did you know our Board used our tax dollars – more than $90000.00 to hire an expert to help us figure out this problem? Her conclusions were essentially that we need to partner with a local university to help us through this matter.

Did you know our teachers have to be totally “retrained” to teach math and that the training needs to be ongoing and long term? The list goes on and on…

Ultimately this long term erosion of our kids’ math education will affect their ability to compete in the global job market. You simply have to look at those nearby out of town districts that are continuing to educate their students with solid, time proven programs. There are also available programs that emulate the best international math curricula in the world. They are readily available and offer solid content and provide world class results. Why these are not even considered is baffling and frustrating. Because our school district’s reputation and our academic successes from years past are continuing to fall by the wayside our property values too will drop as a result. Ridgewood cannot afford to ride on its reputation. As the phrase goes, you can pay me now or pay me later. It appears here in Ridgewood we are doing both.