Over two hours, the event’s organizers encouraged young people to share what they want to see in their schools and from the next superintendent, as Philadelphia’s Board of Education searches for the district’s new leader.
Superintendent William Hite plans to step down at the end of the school year after a decade-long tenure as superintendent. The school board has already held dozens of public listening sessions to seek community input on the next hire. Gym’s office is organizing separate events, like the student conversation.
Councilmembers Isiah Thomas and Kendra Brooks attended the event, along with school board member Lisa Salley. NoMo’s executive director Rickey Duncan rounded out the group, and COO Dawan Williams emceed the event.
Several key themes emerged. In addition to concerns over poorly-prepared lunch — “nothing about that is saying that you care about us,” one girl said of her school’s cafeteria food — students brought up a desire for more mental health support and a more engaging, relevant curriculum.
One student said he wanted teachers who don’t just give out work packets but stand up and teach the material. Another said he feels like some teachers, who aren’t from the “same familiar background,” are scared of their students.
Many also said they would like to see more resources directed at the safety of student commutes.
“There are no crossing guards, but we have metal detectors when we have to come in school,” Nyleema White-Bond, a junior at the U School, told Keystone Crossroads. “That doesn’t make sense to me. You don’t trust me to come in the building, but you trust me outside when there’s danger everywhere.”
Destiny Jackson graduated from Belmont Charter High School last year and is currently a freshman at Spelman College. She’s still plugged into Philly schools through social media, and says it’s been disconcerting to see the current level of violence near school buildings.
“There should be no way the first thing I see when I go on Instagram is a school being put on lockdown,” Jackson said.
She would like to see more trauma-informed services inside schools, something she thinks could have helped her during challenging years when she was dealing with trauma at home.
“A lot of my burdens that came from my home, that I carried on my shoulder when I went into school, had a very big impact on me,” Jackson said. “I wish a lot of my teachers were not so quick to say that I was being aggressive or that I had an attitude. I wish they would have tried to engage in conversation to see why. Let’s get down to the core instead of just judging what you see. Understand why things are happening instead of automatically just giving consequences.”