"Survey results from more than 885,000 teachers, parents, and students in grades 6-12 offer a glimpse of what the 2024-25 school year was like, revealing teachers of the city's youngest students were the happiest professionally, almost 80% of students reported feeling bored in classrooms, and while not all teachers gave the chancellor glowing reviews, more educators have been happier with her performance than her predecessor's."
"More New York City teachers reported feeling satisfied with Aviles-Ramos than David Banks, who abruptly retired about a year ago as federal inquiries swirled around the Adams administration, touching Banks and his brothers. (Banks has not been charged with any wrongdoing.) Over two-thirds of teachers who responded to the survey said the current chancellor was an effective manager, in comparison to last year, where only 57% thought Banks ran public schools efficiently."
More than 885,000 teachers, parents, and students in grades 6-12 responded to surveys about the 2024-25 school year. Teachers of the city's youngest students reported the highest professional satisfaction. Almost 80% of students said they felt bored in classrooms. More than a third of teacher respondents said they did not trust the chancellor at her word, while over 90% of school leaders who responded said they trusted the chancellor. Over two-thirds of teacher respondents called Chancellor Melissa Aviles-Ramos an effective manager, up from 57% who thought David Banks ran schools efficiently last year. Aviles-Ramos continued major curriculum overhauls and pushed parental and student engagement on absenteeism, vaping, and bullying.
Read at Chalkbeat
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