I don't usually post this kind of thing anywhere, but I'm feeling really conflicted about a situation at school and would like to ask for some of your collective wisdom.
I'm now teaching 6th grade at a new (to me) school. This has been an elementary school, but over the next 3 years will become a K-8 school, with 6th-8th grade being phased in over the next 3 years. There isn't another school like it in our district, so we're kind of pioneering this concept. There have been the requisite new program hiccups, but essentially everything is going along well. The kids are really enjoying it, and by the turnout at our Back-to-School Night last week, the parents are impressed too. But one hiccup is hard for me to ignore ...
Planning for this transition has been in the works since last year. Our Principal has worked tirelessly to guarantee that everything in her power was planned for and prepared. The one thing she's had no control over were books and student desks/chairs. Not wanting to be a whiner, we received cast-off furniture from the middle schools, with some of the desks opening from the top. I haven't seen those since I was in third grade, but now have 8 in my classroom.
The bigger issue is textbooks. We still don't have enough for every child. We received a delivery of most of what we need on Friday, but we're still short. The woman from the warehouse flat-out said that the middle schools waited to send us their leftovers until they saw if they had enough -- which is TWO books per child -- one for school and one for home. And yet we still don't even have one per kid. Another thing she said was that the Assistant Superintendent said to only give us enough for the number of kids we currently have -- no extras. EVERY other class in the District has a class set, which is 35. We currently have 26 & 27 kids in our classes, so we have plenty of room for accepting new students.
On top of this, last Friday the Principal was called into the Superintendent's office and yelled at for not signing a yearly affidavit stating that we had all of our books. Essentially the Superintendent wanted her to lie in order to satisfy some report going to the Board.
Here's my dilemma: I have access to two Board of Education members. I don't want to jeopardize my Principal's job by telling them about her experience with the Superintendent, but I wouldn't be putting anyone's job on the line if I said something about still not having enough textbooks (we won't even discuss not having the accompanying teacher's texts). Is it worth a conversation with these Board members to let them know about the inequity between schools? I'm willing to go toe-to-toe with the District administration. They don't scare me. I just don't know if this is as big an issue as it feels to me.
Any thoughts/suggestions would be appreciated. Thanks!
Laura