Teachers called to a last-minute after school meeting at Chrysalis Middle School Friday afternoon were told to get with the New Education System program instituted by Houston ISD Superintendent Mike Miles or get gone. And that they had until 6 p.m. Sunday to let the district know whether they'd be...
Carr said when she asked again for an answer to her questions, Martinez walked toward her saying"You can leave. You can leave. You can leave."
"If you're one of those teachers who don't want to do the model, that is fine. But you will not be here," Martinez had told teachers assembled Friday. She gave them the weekend to think it over, but later that was shortened to 6 p.m. Sunday. The previous principal, Maria Castillo was the one who applied for NES-Aligned status without ever checking with parents and although many teachers didn't want to make the change, Lemus said. The irony was that at the start of the school year Castillo was replaced with Walter, who had worked with Miles before in Dallas.
For Carr, an added problem has been that subjects other than English and math are given only 60 minutes to their 90 which puts a further pressure on teachers and students to fit everything in.
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