Welcome to the NEW Caucus site!

Welcome to the site of the Newark Education Workers (NEW) Caucus of the Newark Teachers Union.  Our main goal is to build a social justice movement that will strengthen the power of the working class – smashing racism, sexism, imperialism, and exploitation as we build a new world based on human need and not profit.  We hope you use this site to learn more about us, join us, and take part in building this movement.

Advertisement
Posted in About | Leave a comment

NEW’s #NPSALLVIRTUAL Email Campaign Sways the NTU

NEW Caucus’s email campaign has reached just under 1500 sends in 48 hours!

Take a moment to sign and/or continue to share the link to the email campaign.

Newark Teachers Union urges district to delay in-person learning, adding to growing push for all-remote start

Patrick Wall, Chalkbeat Newark

The Newark Teachers Union is calling on the city school district to begin the year virtually, joining a rising tide of opposition to in-person learning just weeks before classes are slated to start.

The union’s demand that Newark Superintendent Roger León “hit pause” on reopening classrooms marks a significant reversal for the union, which has until now supported the district’s “hybrid” plan to offer both in-person and at-home learning when school starts Sept. 8. 

The about-face comes after the statewide teachers union recently urged Gov. Phil Murphy to order schools to open all-remotely; instead, Murphy gave districts the option to delay classroom instruction if they believe they cannot meet the state’s safety guidelines. It also reflects mounting pressure from Newark educators worried about the health risks of resuming in-person learning during the coronavirus pandemic. A recently posted online petition calling for Newark to begin the year virtually has garnered nearly 1,400 signatures.

“Given the new guidelines, we are strongly urging Supt. León to hit ‘pause’ on a September reopening and use the month to monitor and adjust to the new guidelines,” Newark Teachers Union President John Abeigon said in a message to members Friday. 

A district spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment Sunday.

In an interview with Chalkbeat, Abeigon said the union remains confident that Newark schools can safely reopen because the district has “done everything above and beyond” to prepare. However, he said it is not practical to resume in-person learning when so many Newark families and teachers are fearful of returning to classrooms.

“In the last three weeks, morale shot down to the basement and fear shot through the roof,” he said Sunday. “You can’t successfully reopen, no matter how well prepared you are, if the confidence and the trust factor isn’t there.”

Newark families and educators had until Friday to request to learn or teach remotely this school year. In his message, Abeigon urged union members to complete the survey, saying that any “changes to the district’s plan is going to be guided by these results.” Abeigon has repeatedly said he believes that most students will learn remotely this fall, but actual demand for virtual learning will not be clear until the district releases the survey results.

Some of New Jersey’s largest districts — including Camden, Elizabeth, Jersey City, and Paterson — have said they plan to start with all-remote learning, and the list has continued growing after Murphy issued the new guidance. It now includes some Essex County districts, including East Orange and Montclair, as well as Newark’s largest charter school networks. And Newark Mayor Ras Baraka has advised families not to send their children back into classrooms, though he stopped short of urging the district to only allow remote learning.

León has been adamant that any students and employees who choose to return to school will do so safely. The district’s reopening plan includes detailed safety measures, including virus testing for employees, daily temperature and symptom checks of students and staffers, and mandatory face coverings and physical distancing inside classrooms.

“The health and safety of students and staff have been our first priority, and will remain so,” León wrote in the introduction to the reopening plan.

But some parents and teachers have expressed concerns about the plan. Many worry that students will struggle to wear face masks and stay 6 feet apart during daily in-person classes.

Some teachers also were alarmed by comments León made during a recent question-and-answer session. He said teachers are partly responsible for cleaning and sanitizing their own classrooms, and that educators worried about poor ventilation in schools must be “very, very patient.”

Those doubts about the safety of in-person learning prompted the Newark Education Workers caucus to post the online petition last week calling for an all-remote start to the school year. The group, which includes teachers and other advocates focused on social justice, is also demanding that the district provide teachers with N95 masks, hire more custodians, and ensure that every school is equipped with working, high-quality air filtration systems.

“We are calling for immediate remote opening until it’s safe,” said Avram Rips, an early childhood educator in Newark and caucus member who said most of his colleagues share his apprehension about reopening classrooms. “The majority say they are not going to go and they’re really afraid.”

Abeigon, the union president, said teachers should be allowed to give virtual lessons from their classrooms next month while students remain at home. That way, teachers could make sure that the district is taking all the necessary precautions, such as cleaning classrooms and installing barriers on top of desks, before launching in-person learning.

“If teachers are allowed to go in and do virtual teaching, we’ll have hundreds of eye witnesses,” he said. “That goes a long way to building up morale and assuaging the fears of the community.”

Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educational change in public schools.

Posted in Covid-19, Newark Public Schools, Reopening, Take Action | Tagged | Leave a comment

TAKE ACTION: Urge Newark Public Schools to Implement ALL VIRTUAL Learning for the Start of the 2020-2021 School Year

We write to you today to ask for your continued support in our journey to protect the lives of all students, employees, and community members in the city of Newark. As you know, the District is set to reopen for in-person learning on September 8th.

This collective action is to email the Superintendent and Newark Board of Education members to express your concern and wish to have ALL VIRTUAL learning this September.

Please take a few minutes to let the Newark Board of Education and the superintendent know your thoughts about reopening the schools in person at this time of the continued pandemic.

https://actionnetwork.org/letters/urge-newark-public-schools-to-implement-all-virtual-learning-for-the-start-of-the-2020-2021-school-year

Posted in Covid-19, Newark Public Schools, Reopening, Take Action | Leave a comment

What if we did things differently to make schools safe in the age of COVID? | Opinion

NEW pens op-ed: What if we did things differently to make schools safe in the age of COVID? | Opinion

https://www.nj.com/opinion/2020/07/what-if-we-did-things-differently-to-make-schools-safe-in-the-age-of-covid-opinion.html

Posted in Covid-19, Newark Public Schools, Op-Ed | Tagged , | Leave a comment