Letter to the Editor from Stuy Faculty
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Be sure to check out The Spectator Editorial Board’s response here.
By Annie Thoms, Stuyvesant English teacher with the support of 66 teachers and 4 non-pedagogical staff members, whose signatures can be found at the bottom of this letter.
To the Editors:
In “An Open Letter to Principal Yu,” you raise many important points about the way forward for the Stuyvesant community during this unprecedented time. In the section “Hold Teachers to a Higher Standard,” however, you mischaracterize and elide the experience of many Stuyvesant teachers during the emergency pandemic period last spring. The tone of this section is accusatory, and implies that many Stuyvesant teachers chose to check out, that our “effort slipped.” We encourage you to rethink your assessment of our efforts with a more empathetic lens.
Just as the student body had a widely varying set of home circumstances, so did your teachers. Many of us are caring for our own small children at home, and were trying to navigate their remote schooling schedules while fulfilling our own. Many of us were ill, or had family members who were ill. Many of us, like many of you, lost loved ones. Many of us, like many of you, live in apartments where it is not easy to find a space where we can teach uninterrupted. Many of us, like many of you, struggled and continue to struggle with anxiety over the constantly-changing guidelines and requirements that shape our lives in this new reality.
Many of your teachers never stopped working this summer. We researched online teaching platforms and set up and attended informal training sessions for each other during our vacation time. We attended union meetings and SLT meetings, drafted remote and blended learning plans, wrote and signed letters and petitions in our effort to make sure that the new school year would be as safe and as intellectually stimulating as possible. A group of us engaged in an allyship course, meeting regularly and strategizing how to help our Stuyvesant community become more anti-racist. You would not believe the number of full-faculty emails we sent, trying to figure out how to do our jobs and support and teach you to the best of our ability, trying to figure out how to keep ourselves and you and all of our families physically safe.
As we begin this new school year together, it is vital that we extend empathy to each other, and that we recognize that all of us—students, faculty, and staff—are on the same side. In order to make this school year work, we will need open, respectful communication between students, faculty, and staff, and an understanding that we are all coming out of a traumatic spring, and still living and working in the midst of trauma. We all need to do our best in showing up for each other in order to get through this. That begins with empathy.
Sincerely,
Annie Thoms, English Dept.
Marissa Maggio, Biology Dept.
Sophie Oberfield, English Dept.
Maria N. Nedwidek-Moore, Biology Department
Anna Montserrat, World Languages Department
Jessica Quenzer, Biology Department
Minkyu Kim, English Department
Lisa Greenwald, Social Studies Department
Susan Brockman, World Languages Department
Mary McGregor, Librarian
Eric Ferencz, English Department
Stan Kats, Math Department
Jim Cocoros, Math Department
Brenda García, Social Studies Department
Emily Moore, English Department
Shu Shi, World Languages Department
Deame Hua, Biology Department
David Mandler, English Department
Heather Huhn, English Department
Dawn Vollaro, Math Department
Chie Helinski, World Language Department
Eric Wisotsky, Social Studies Department
Devon Butler, Math Department
Ulugbek Akhmedov, Physics Department
Manny Simon, World Languages Department
Ashvin Jaishankar, Math Department
JonAlf Dyrland-Weaver, Computer Science Department
Frida Ambía, World Languages Department
Kim Manning, English Department
Rosa Silverio, World Languages Department
Rosa Mazzurco, English Department
Linda Weissman, Social Studies Department
Rebecca Gorla, Physics Department
Josina Dunkel, Social Studies Department
Undine Guthrie, School Counselor
Jeffrey Kivi, Chemistry Department
Jeffrey Horenstein, Biology Department
Dylan Gunder, World Languages Department
Manny Ramirez, World Languages Department
Emilio Nieves, English Department
Megan Weller, English Department
Glen Chew, Math Department
Vasken Choubaralian, Health & Phys. Ed. Department
Barbara Garber, Health & Phys Ed Department
Darren Vargo, World Languages Department
Gregg Walkes, School Counselor
Ellen Siegel, Social Studies Department
Carrie Chu, Math Department
Debbie Goldberg, Math Department
V. Daniel Tillman, Social Studies Department
Gabriel Ting, Chemistry Department
Ellen Schweitzer, Social Studies Department
Melissa Protass, Math Department
Joseph Stern, Math Department
Deena Avigdor, Math Department
Leslie Bernstein, Technology Department
Aimee Hill, Biology Department
Julie Sheinman, English Department
Karen Leo, Art Department
Anthony Del Latto, Math Department
Lisa Shuman, Social Studies Department
Shangaza Banfield, Biology Department
Allyson Compton, Social Studies Department
Sau Ling Chan, Biology Department
Lisa Weinwurm, Health and Physical Ed. Department
Michael Waxman, Social Studies Department
Rebecca Lindemulder, World Languages Department
Kristina Uy, School Counselor
Meng-Ping Tu, Biology Department
Lori-Ann Newman, Social Studies Department
Catharine Maitner, Math Department