image description
Gov. Deval Patrick met with children at Conte Community School.
image description
Math can be tricky so Gov. Deval Patrick offered his help to figure out the problem.
image description
Gov. Patrick doesn't just want to invest in education, he wants to win an Oscar.
image description
Principal Anna-Stina Wardlaw wanted a photo with the governor.
image description
The students were eager to meet Patrick after teachers taught lessons before hand about him.
image description
Hey! Eyes on your own paper Gov. Patrick.
image description
The governor being shown around the school.
image description
Gov. Deval Patrick showing students reading a book about Washington, D.C., where he used to work.

Patrick Visits Pittsfield School to Highlight Education Needs

By Andy McKeeveriBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story

Conte Community School is an open school so classrooms are divided by only small bookcases or shelves.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Pushing the need for investment in education, Gov. Deval Patrick toured on Thursday morning one of the elementary schools serving the city's poorest population.

Patrick met with pupils and faculty at Silvio O. Conte Community School during the hourlong tour of the facility.

The governor said he visits classrooms across the state weekly to understand the challenges educational professionals face.

"It's about understanding the different challenges and different solutions educators are bringing to our kids. One of our biggest challenges in this commonwealth, in fact this country, when it comes to quality education is poverty," Patrick said after the tour.

"It is important to have a really terrific teacher to be supportive in the classroom and to have the right materials, curriculum and so forth. But you also have to deal with the reality of poverty and that's an issue here at the Conte Community School."

Patrick has proposed a fiscal 2014 budget that calls for a $550 million increase in education spending ($1 billion over four years, including $131 million to focus on early education. The city has 671 children on waiting lists for early education programs and Conte Principal Anna-Stina Wardlaw said increased funding will allow the school to expand its preschool program.

The governor said the investment in early education will help in tackling issues ranging from nutrition to longer school days to the basic safety and curriculum issues educators are struggling with.

"Poverty may take different forms but it has a very similar impact from one community to the next. We have English as a second language issues, we have issues around nutrition, we have issues around basic safety and a sense of security kids have," he said. "There are gang and related issues even — if they do not come into the classroom they affect a child's concentration and readiness to learn."


Patrick's budget also calls for an increase in the state income tax, which is facing fierce opposition. The governor thinks investment in education is often opposed because of "nostalgia."

"People keep thinking they want their class to be like it was when they were in school and school should be the way they remember it to be. In fact, today we need schools to do a whole range of things that whole communities used to do and wrap around these children [the] time and services that meets their needs," Patrick said. "That is as true in Pittsfield as it is in downtown Boston."

The state is doing better than most of the country when it comes to standardized test scores but Patrick said that isn't good enough. His proposal invests more money in schools in so-called "Gateway Cities," like Pittsfield, to target the investments at students in poorer communities.

"We know, as well as we are doing in the commonwealth being No. 1 in the nation in student achievement, there is still some kids that we are leaving behind. And my budget on the education side in about investing in strategies that we know work," he said.

During the tour, Patrick acted in a play some pupils were putting on, sat down and did math problems in another classroom and showed children reading a book about Washington, D.C., in the library where he once worked. Conte is an "open school" in which multiple classes share large rooms. It was intended to increase collaboration among teachers but has since become more of a distraction.

"We're just so thankful that he took time out of his busy schedule to visit us," Wardlaw said, adding that Patrick is a role model to students and his visit reinforces the idea that those students are important.


Tags: Deval Patrick,   fiscal 2014,   governor,   pittsfield schools,   preschool,   state budget,   state officials,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Spring Jazz Ensemble Concert At Simon's Rock

GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass.— The annual Bard College at Simon's Rock Jazz Ensemble Spring Concert begins Friday, May 10 at 8:00 p.m. 
 
Conducted by Professor of Music, Electronic Arts, and Cultural Studies John Myers, the concert will include new arrangements of pieces by artists such as Thelonius Monk, Johnny Mandel, Antonio Carlos Jobim, and others, as well as the debut of John Myers' original composition "Lifeline." 
 
Along with student players, the concert will also include faculty guest artists Allan Dean on trumpet, Pete Toigo on bass, and the voice of emeritus faculty guest artist Bill Dunbar.
 
"My students are multi-talented, not just in music, but in other disciplines as well, including physics, linguistics, and mathematics. Our drummer, Yonah Sadeh, is already an award-winning filmmaker, and both of our guitarists are performing composers with online followers," said Myers.
 
Among those student performers are David Bronshvayg on violin, Damien Brown on trumpet, Tzedek Fishman on piano/keyboard, Megan Hackett on guitar and providing vocals, Zoia Levit on accordion, Paul Rose on piano, keyboard, and vocals, Maayan Rosenberg on clarinet, Yonah Sadeh on drums, Bohdan Lastochkin on guitar, and Ace Thompson on bass.
 
"One of the many special features of the Simon's Rock Jazz Ensemble is that I create my own original arrangements of all the music, shaped by the abilities and personalities of the players. Another feature is our unusual instrumentation, which this semester includes accordion and violin as well as the more traditional jazz instruments," said Myers.
 
On performing Myers' personal composition at the upcoming concert, he also said, "My composition "Lifeline" uses three levels of 7: 7/8, 7/4, and 7/2. The students enjoy the challenge of playing in these kinds of meters, and I supply one of my own pieces every semester."
 
View Full Story

More South Berkshire Stories