Posted on 33 Comments

>$811K Will Be Spent to Rehabilitate Dam at Irene Habernickel Family Park

>During last Wednesday evening’s Village Council Work Session, Village Manager James M. Ten Hoeve advised Council members that rehabilitation expenses for a dam located at the Irene Habernickel Family Park would total $811K. $357K of these expenses will be paid out of a Bergen County Open Space Fund grant; the remaining $454 must be absorbed by Ridgewood’s taxpayers.

The Fly has always wondered whether purchasing Habernickel was the right thing to do. So far, it seems as though it’s just a big money pit. Wouldn’t taxpayers have been better off if the property were developed as one-acre, single family building lots?

Posted on 13 Comments

>Village Council Begrudgingly Approves Purchase of Two Replacement Police Vehicles

>Ridgewood Police Chief William M. Corcoran found himself on the hot seat during last week’s Village Council Work Session as Council members Jacques Harlow and Kim Ringler-Shagin persistently questioned him regarding his request to purchase two new Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptor vehicles. Corcoran firmly stood his ground, respectfully stating that he considered his request more than justified since there are currently no marked vehicles in his fleet with less than 40K miles.

Mayor David T. Pfund and Deputy Mayor Betty G. Wiest concurred with Chief Corcoran, but Councilman Harlow and Councilwoman Ringler-Shagin maintained their unified position that new vehicles should not be purchased at this time. In the absence of Councilman Patrick A. Mancuso, Mayor Pfund asked Village Manager James M. Ten Hoeve to offer an opinion. Mr. Ten Hoeve concurred with the Chief’s opinion; the vehicle purchase was subsequently approved.

Posted on 28 Comments

>Reader responds to The Ridgewood News article about Congressman Garrett’s bill which would allow states to opt out of NCLB

>
Board of Ed member, Shelia Brogan, disagrees with the Congressman and gives her support for the NCLB program.

Isn’t the NCLB just a race to the lowest common denominator forgive the pun?

NCLB requires states to move towards 100% reading and math proficiency by 2014. A noble idea, but with no national standardized tests, the state have found a workaround. States have made the tests easier in order to get more students to meet the proficient requirement, lowering their standards to be in compliance. In NJ, the state’s ASK tests requires only 50% of the questions to be answered correctly in order for a student to be “Proficient.” This is one of the reasons NCLB has been cited for “dumbing down” our schools.

Across America, teachers overwhelmingly complain that the law has narrowed the curriculum and promoted “teaching to the test.” Schools, told they must meet an unrealistic goal of continual progress toward all children being “proficient” by 2014 are being set up for failure.

Unfortunately, it is urban schools and kids of color that are most likely to be labeled as failing and to be subjected to punitive sanctions.
Under AYP (“Adequate Yearly Progress”), each school is judged by a matrix of 40 indicators tied to state test scores.

It outlines 10 student groups: total population, special education students, English language learners, white, African-American, Asian/Pacific Islander, Native American, Hispanic, other ethnicities and economically disadvantaged. In each category, there are two mandates: 95% of students in each group must take the state test, and each group must make its AYP target.

Any school that misses its target on either the reading or math test and in any subgroup is on the road to being labeled a failure. If it does not get off the failing list, it is subject to increasingly punitive sanctions, including turning the school over to a for-profit private management firm. So big business can start running our schools soon if NCLB is renewed.

In addition, the AYP system creates perverse incentives. It rewards schools that focus on kids on the edge of achieving grade-level proficiency. There’s no incentive for schools to do much of anything for the kids who are on grade level or above, which is one reason the law is unpopular in wealthier, high-achieving communities.
It is noble for Ms. Brogan to mention Newark and Paterson, but we live in Ridgewood. (Didn’t Mr. Vallerini say this once in a Board of Ed meeting?) Arguments can be made that NCLB hasn’t help those districts either.

So this reader asks what’s up with Sheila Brogan a known liberal agreeing with arch conservative Scott Garrett? . Brogan has always been known to be a liberal, but the this reader also wonders if she’d like to come to the next Ridgewood Republican club meeting? And this blogger asks once again why can’t we just opt out?

Posted on 15 Comments

Reader says, "All you "fiscally responsible" folks — artificial turf, like that at Maple, is the way to go"

>You are sadly misinformed. The flooding in Maple Field this spring left that field far better off than it would have been if it had still been natural grass. Where do you get your info, anyway? Didn’t mommy teach you not to listen to rumors? Get the facts, jack!

Let’s go back a few months, to a very informative post on April 19, 2007, on this blog:

“Last weekend NJ had the highest recorded rainfall over 48 hours in over 120 years…more than hurricane Floyd. The RFD has pumped out 180 basements and has 100 to go. Apparently there has only been one heavier rainfall in a 48 hour period since records have been kept on such things.The result was that every field in Ridgewood’s flood plain (Maple, Stevens, RHS, Stevens, Vets and Brookside) was heavily flooded. In some cases, like at Stevens, the newly deposited clay on the baseball diamonds was completely washed away. As happened in hurricane Floyd, large amounts of debris and a heavy layer of silt/mud was deposited on the fields, particularly Maple, Stevens and Vets. If not for the debris and silt, Maple was dry enough for play on Tuesday. Brookside may not be dry enough to play on for 2-3 weeks. Stevens, Vets and RHS will probably not be dry enough until sometime next week. The bigger problem is the silt that was deposited on the fields. After hurricane Floyd, the mud on the fields could not be removed and it killed the grass. In the case of Maple, the field was scraped down below the roots and resodded at the expense of approximately $25,000 (just for Maple). The field was then closed for several months to allow the sod to take root, thus eliminating a full season of play. Reportedly, this is exactly what is being considered for parts of Vets and Stevens. It would also have been considered at Maple, if the field was still grass.Fortunately, this time the mud can be removed from Maple because of the synthetic surface. The rubber and sand infill did not wash away in the storm. However, in the worst case scenario, a small amount of the infill may be removed with the mud and silt. If this is the happens, the infill is inexpensive and can easily be replaced in a day or two of grooming. Thus, while this storm was as bad as it could have been and will require some clean up, it did not result in any permanent damage to Maple Field. Nor was any of the landscaping around the park damaged. Maple field will be back in use weeks before the other fields affected.”

As another poster said on that day,
“…it is becoming more and more clear that we need more turf fields in town.” Hear hear. All you “fiscally responsible” folks — artificial turf, like that at Maple, is the way to go. What a success that field renovation has been!

Posted on 6 Comments

Invitation to Math Chat…

>Friends and neighbors please join us for a Math Chat on Thursday, August 9th at 7:30 P.M. at The Unitarian Society of Ridgewood. Over the past several months, parents have been expressing their concerns over the math programs in our village schools to educational administrators and the Board of Education. This issue is an old one for Travell School. Parents have been voicing their concerns since the inception of TERC Investigations more than 5 years ago. What is new is an organization of parents called VORMATH who are providing an opportunity for parents of school age children and concerned tax- payers to be involved in an open forum discussion. Did you know…
· The 6 elementary schools in Ridgewood use 3 different math programs.
· Four of the six schools use reform math- also known as fuzzy math, constructivist based math, or standards based math.
· These reform math programs have been abandoned by hundreds of school districts across the nation because they fail to prepare our children for math at the high school and college level
· Over 200 math professors, 4 Nobel Laureates and 2 Fields Medal winners signed a letter to the U.S. Secretary of Education back in 1999 asking the government to remove these reform math programs from their list of exemplary programs
· A Stanford mathematician stated that TERC Investigations is the “2nd most mathematically illiterate program” he has ever seen. TERC Investigations is the program currently used at Travell and Orchard Schools.
· The district just purchased the newest version of the Investigations program for both Travell and Orchard.
· Benjamin Franklin Middle School has averaged a rank of 21 out of over 200 middle schools in mathematics statewide for the past 7 years using traditional math.
· CMP2 (another reform math program for middle schools that is controversial) has been implemented for 6th graders last year and will follow them into 7th grade this September; why change a math program that has proven itself a success for the students?
There is substantial information available for concerned parents to read. How the math issue affects all taxpayers is simple. Sixty-six percent of every tax dollar feeds into Ridgewood’s $82,000,000 school budget. Are we getting a good return of our investment? Ridgewood’s reputation for excellent schools has kept the value of our homes high. There must be fiscal responsibility and sound choices made for educating all the children in our village. We love Ridgewood and want to keep it the wonderful community that it has been for many generations.
There will be a presentation followed by a Q & A period. Hope you can make it and take advantage of the opportunity to share your concerns and thoughts. TOGETHER WE ADD UP!

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Posted on 67 Comments

>the fly asks why not pay the kids?

>Last week The Ridgewood News featured a ‘thank you” to the Rec Dept for use of town fields for the recently completed PONY U17 softball qualifying tournament ,a job well done ,but it seems interesting to the fly that there was time to coordinate this boondoggle but no time to pay the kids who worked long hours umping the final month of the Rec season.

Posted on 78 Comments

>Extramarital relationships involving BOE and VOR employees

>Since the inception of this Blog, the Fly has periodically received anonymous reports of extramarital relationships involving employees of the BOE and VOR. Since off duty conduct is a private matter, and none of the allegations have been accompanied by substantiation, our Blog’s moderator has thus far chosen not to post any comments related to “immoral activities.”

However, the Fly understands that extramarital relationships between employees (or a administrator/teacher-parent, police officer-resident relationship) can create moral issues in the minds of other employees, as well as Ridgewood’s residents.

What do you think – Do BOE and VOR leadership teams have a responsibility to address reports of extramarital relationships involving their employees? Or is what goes on in private just that, a private matter? If the Fly receives substantiated reports of affairs with obvious conflict of interest issues (e.g., a manager-subordinate relationship), should they be posted?

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Posted on 34 Comments

>U.S. math woes add up to big trouble

>Concerned parent about math finds a poignant article

SUMS IT UP… pun intended

Apr 8, 2007
There is a war raging all around us, a war the United States cannot afford to lose. No one has died in this war, and no one is likely to. But there are casualties. The injuries are mental rather than physical, but the suffering is lifelong. I’m not referring to the global war on terror or the war on drugs. I’m talking about the mathematics war.
While the United States is the world’s only superpower militarily, mathematically we are a second-rate power, and losing ground every year. In the math war, the superpowers are Singapore, Korea, Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Belgium. In assessment after assessment, those countries prove that their weapons – fourth, eighth and 12th graders – are more accurate and advanced than our own. Their strategies are more focused. Their national resolve is stronger.
The debate in this country about mathematics education and curricula has been termed the math wars, but it is in reality a generally civil disagreement. There are two distinct sides in the debate, which for simplicity’s sake I’ll label “reformers” and “traditionalists.” Because I subscribe to the BLUF principle – Bottom Line Up Front – I’ll tell you now that I side with the traditionalists.
In this forum, I can’t possibly present all the relevant information necessary for you to make an informed decision on this issue. My goal is to pique your interest so that you will want to become better informed, will want to take a stand.
Why? Because the issue is critical to our nation’s ability to remain an economically advanced world power. Let’s face it: Math whizzes in Taiwan or Belgium will get good jobs in the global economy, but they are not going to grow up to become taxpaying supporters of the American baby-boomers’ social safety net. Only American math whizzes can be counted on to do that. We need to grow our own.
A bit of context is important. The reformers, representing the education establishment, believe learning “process” is more important than memorizing core knowledge. They see self-discovery as more important than getting the right answer. For them it’s the journey, not the destination.
Traditionalists, consisting mainly of parent groups and mathematicians, advocate teaching the traditional algorithms. They advocate clear, concrete standards based on actually solving math problems. The destination – getting the right answer – is important to traditionalists.
Fuzzy vs. clear
Two examples will help to make the difference clear.
One broad standard in an actual reformers’ curriculum states that students should “use computational tools and strategies fluently and estimate appropriately.” A similar statement in a traditional standards curriculum says: “The student will add and subtract with decimals through thousandths.”
Fuzzy standard on one side, clear and concise on the other.
One math project in a reformers’ program – the program used in many New Hampshire school districts – is called “My Special Number.” Sixth graders are told:
“Many people have a number they find interesting. Choose a whole number between 10 and 100 that you especially like. In your journal:
“Record your number.
“Explain why you chose that number.
“List three or four mathematical things about your number.
“List three or four connections you can make between your number and your world.
“At the end of the unit, your teacher will ask you to find an interesting way to report to the class about your special number.”
Sixth graders are given a month to complete this project.
To traditionalists, tools and context are important – in that order. Master the tools, put them in context. Reformers provide context, then attempt to guide students to discover the tools. This is cart-before-the-horse thinking.
The reformers’ approach is to have students devise their own methods for achieving a mathematical goal rather than have them learn the traditional algorithms. “By talking about problems in context, students can develop meaningful computational algorithms,” a reform standard states.
This is not true. If by “meaningful computational algorithms,” we mean simple, accurate and repeatable – things like the traditional addition algorithm, or long division, then the average student will never develop such an algorithm and should not have to try. Universal mathematical algorithms were developed ages ago by Archimedes, Euclid, Descartes and Pascal. There are not many budding Pascals in our school districts, but there are plenty of children capable of learning from the methods discovered by the great mathematicians in history.
Return to tradition
Traditional methods of teaching mathematics have proved their worth. While they could be tweaked, they should not be discarded.
Reformist curricula might make for an interesting doctoral dissertation, but they don’t hold up well when ivory tower meets bricks and mortar. In math education, America’s children once competed well with their foreign peers. But today our students’ mathematical performance earns them a place in the bottom quartile of industrialized countries. They are in the middle of the pack when less-developed nations are added.
What has changed during recent decades? The teaching philosophy. The reformers of the education establishment – Big Ed – took over. Billions of tax dollars have been spent on a social experiment in which the tried-and-true was discarded and the intellectually fashionable was foisted on schoolchildren.
This should spark outrage among both parents and taxpayers. It should trouble anyone counting on today’s students to get good jobs and pay taxes.
The best way to advance students’ conceptual thinking about mathematics is to have them learn and take advantage of the existing core of mathematical knowledge. This is the traditional approach: Students are taught, and made to master, the traditional algorithms.
With such tools, and with the guidance of good teachers, a student can, after 12 years of school, understand and apply mathematical principles that took scores of geniuses thousands of years to devise.
I urge you to learn more about the math wars, about how your school is teaching math, and to take a stand in favor of the traditional, proven methods.
(Ken Gorrell of Northfield works for a New Hampshire-based defense contractor.)
—— End of article
By KEN GORRELL

Posted on 3 Comments

>Public Access Channel 77 Available for Ridgewood Events

>Included in the Village’s franchise agreement with Cablevision for Ridgewood cable service, is the use of the Public Access Channel 77. The Channel is used by the Village to broadcast Village Council meetings and advertise Ridgewood non-profit events. The Board of Education also uses the channel to broadcast their public meetings as well as several other school related events.

The Village is looking for additional apropriate quality produced video programs to air. Do you have film of Ridgewood events – artistic performance, special interview or presentation of a topic of interest to fellow Ridgewood residents? Please contact the Village Manager’s office at 201/670-5500 ext.204 to check into this opportunity and to offer any suggestions for the volunteer use of the channel.

Posted on 43 Comments

>Update to Municipal Five Year Financial Forecast

>

An update to the municipal Five Year Financial Forecast was presented to
Village Council members by Ms. Dorothy Stikna, the Village’s Chief Financial
Officer, on July 11, 2007. Click on the link below to view Ms. Stikna’s
complete remarks.

https://www.ridgewoodnj.net/pdf/finance/07FFUJULY06.pdf

Posted on 107 Comments

Is it a list? Is it just about ‘passing’?

>

Visit www.vormath.info

VORMATH went straight to the horses mouth. They contacted The Star Ledger regarding the “RANK school performance” tool.

The Star Ledger did some minor tweaks to their tool. It is a rank. It is in list format. And it still shows Travell lagging the other elementary schools in the Ridgewood District.

Way to go math moms.

Posted on 11 Comments

>Village Council Stands Fast –Church Will Pay to Demolish Structures at 54 South Monroe Street

>The vacant house and garage on Village owned property at 54 South Monroe
Street will both be demolished within the next 2-3 weeks. This will permit
the long awaited expansion of Citizens Park.

Several years ago, Village Council members approved the purchase of 54 South
Monroe from the Bozo family. A strategy was formulated to promptly demolish
both structures, and subsequently expand the adjacent park. Because rather
immediate action was envisioned, no plans were made to lease the home
(unlike what is being done at Habernickel Park).

However, West Side Presbyterian Church parishioners successfully petitioned
Council members to purchase the main structure for $1.00. Church members
had hoped to move the structure to nearby South Hillside Avenue, and use it
as a rectory. Unfortunately, the Church ran into zoning issues and was
forced to withdraw its proposal.

The Fly has learned that a contractual agreement between the Village and
West Side Presbyterian mandated that the church assume all demolition costs
if the house was not moved within an agreed upon time period. In actuality,
Council members graciously stood by as the time period lapsed significantly.

Now however, since all options for relocating both structures have failed,
Council members are left with no choice other than to ask that terms of the
agreement be honored.

Estimated costs for the demolition project will exceed $20K. It is not
known whether the Church will be paying these charges from operating funds,
or if a donor has stepped forward.

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