The
LISD magnet school for the performing arts:
the view from Houston Street
By
María Eugenia Guerra
A
few months ago I read through a five-page confidential
memo to then-interim LISD Superintendent Dr. Jerry
Barber from his administrative assistant for academics
Veronica Martinez. The November 12, 2002 memo regarded
concerns about the district's downtown performing
arts magnet school which is housed, along with other
LISD administrative offices, in some of the most beautiful
buildings of the St. Peter's Historical District.
How, you might ask, was I able to read a confidential
memo? I cannot tell you exactly except to say it was,
as other documents about other issues have been, left
at the door to my office.
As I read through this memo that was so charged with
incendiary hearsay and allegations of private and
professional misconduct of some members of the magnet
school staff, I had to keep reminding myself that
it was authored by a very well paid school district
administrator of great responsibility, the superintendent's
administrative assistant for academics.
Ms. Martinez' references in writing about magnet school
personnel are presented as findings of an investigation
that some magnet school staff and faculty members
recall was not unlike an inquisition. Though some
effort was made by Ms. Martinez to present academic
and campus physical plant issues that need to be addressed
at the school, she took enormous license to condemn
by insinuation. Below are just a few of the references
Ms. Martinez makes to people who work there: "the
supposed girlfriend" of another staff member;
a custodian who "takes excessive breaks and holds
personal conversations with the VMT staff" and
"takes the left over food from the cafeteria;"
"favoritism among staff members" in the
form of the size of class loads, who gets parking
spaces, who gets "free food being given to some
employees," who got a computer and a printer
and the one employee who did not, and in the principal
allowing "certain students to use his office
computer."
Ms. Martinez further alleges that the dance instructor
"uses the Dance Facility for private business,"
and that a magnet school teacher is the school's caterer
of choice.
She alleges sexual harassment by one individual and
she names the principals in an "ongoing affair"
between two magnet school teachers who actually are
single, consenting adults who date.
She alleges "unresolved conflicts" between
two guitar instructors and two dance instructors.
The author of the memo cites problems with the lack
of a cafeteria at the magnet school campus, the lack
of procedure for hiring, the lack of maintenance,
the lack of procedure for student recruitment and
dismissal, that lesson plans are only checked at the
end of the year, the lack of adherence to the by-laws
of the site-based decision-making plan.
It is the personal allegations that trouble me, especially
those about having affairs on the school nickel or
being a sexual harasser. What I found to be so disgusting
is that Ms. Martinez presented her points and issues
not as allegations, but as findings of fact.
Where did she get her information and where did she
get that kind of power to malign and violate in writing
on LISD letterhead?
I believe she was sent on an errand to document all
she could that was wrong with the magnet school, and
that the purpose of the errand was to begin profiling
the school and its administrator as negatively as
possible so that some slice and dice changes could
be made at the downtown campus, changes that in the
end might yield a couple of buildings that the district's
superintendent needs to accommodate his new hires
from his old school district and others.
Over its eight-year history, the LISD performing arts
magnet school has come up for review from time to
time, and much has been done to tighten its operation.
That is especially evident when you compare today's
operation with the school's earliest days, days that
some of us in journalism remember as days of spending
splendor for renovation and landscaping, trendy paint
schemes, expensive banners, and education with a swagger.
The school is under scrutiny once again, though not
for the same reasons. Ms. Martinez's memo portends
the school's future. Buildings students have used
for nearly eight years under three prior superintendents
are now being called "unsafe." There are
references now to the efficient use of space at the
magnet school and to how much more it costs to educate
per capita at the magnet school versus at any of the
other campuses. There's also the subtext of a trustee
with an axe to grind for all things that bear the
name of the administrator who founded the school,
and the larger subtext of "I need this space
to put my people in offices." The district has
usurped the Leyendecker Home on Houston Street, which
was once the magnet school's library and before that
the student center. It will become the offices of
the Department of Human Resources and is currently
undergoing repair from the fire. The old Mabel Cogley
Wall home at the corner of Houston and Main, which
has been used for classrooms, will likely become administrative
offices for some of the new hires or for relocating
administrators who have been moved to make room for
the new hires.
Ernesto Guajardo has served as the magnet school's
acting principal for three years. In the decade that
we have been neighbors with the magnet school downtown,
I will tell you that he is the first magnet school
administrator that is in the trenches with the students
and the faculty. Compared to his arrogant predecessors,
he has a genuine rapport with magnet school students.
Here's Ernesto Guajardo's reward for service: When
he spoke out about what was happening to the building
that had been the magnet school library, when he spoke
out after being given lip service for why administrators
were showing up to measure classrooms that were going
to be reconfigured into offices for the new hires,
Mr. Guajardo was summarily demoted and put under the
supervision of a principal from another school. He
was asked to tear up his business cards that called
him the principal of the magnet school.
These are my best guesses for what will happen at
the LISD performing arts magnet school:
a) Mr. Guajardo is going to be exiled to a portable
building in the hinterlands in a measure to let him
know that authority is not to be questioned;
b) the $50,000 worth of new library books, $23,000
in shelving and tables, and $20,000 insurance replacement
for the library's fire damaged collection will never
make it into a magnet school library;
c) LISD administration will by the beginning of the
next school year strip away the magnet school's academic
curriculum (English, Spanish, Math, Geography) and
send it and the teachers of those subjects back to
the other campuses.
The district has yet to be up-front about the taking
of magnet school buildings for other uses, but why
call attention to the single-minded trajectory of
this superintendent and his very willing board to
stack a top-heavy structure with new hires from the
superintendent's former school districts?
When I called the school district's public information
office for clarity about what is happening at the
magnet school, it was administrative assistant for
academics Veronica Martinez, the author of the nasty
memo, who returned my call and assured me no plans
were underfoot to radically change the operation of
the school.
I would like to know what Ms. Martinez' instructions
were from Superintendent Barber when she launched
on this witch hunt disguised as an official query.
What kind of tone has he set for information gathering
in the school district? Ms. Martinez lost all credibility
in the document she generated when she veered from
real issues about the operation of the magnet school
to speculation on the private and professional lives
she impugned, maligned, and violated in her memo.
Here are two things Ms. Martinez failed to mention
in her memo about the LISD performing arts magnet
school -- the overall student to teacher ratio is
23 students to one teacher. Ninety-seven percent of
the magnet school's graduates go from its conservatory
and studio style instruction to college.