Reformers want NY Education Dept. check of ‘lax’ NYC yeshiva probe

A yeshiva reform group demanded Wednesday that state education officials follow up on what it believes was a lax city investigation of whether sevenย ultra-Orthodox schools provide students with basic education in subjects like reading and math.

New York State Education Department rules require private and religious schools โ€” including yeshivas โ€” to offer basic instruction in some subjects that is at least substantially equivalent to what students get at public schools.

The yeshiva reform group, Young Advocates for Fair Education, alleged in a petition to the state education commissioner that seven yeshivas were determined to skirt a rigorous examination of their basic education programs in a highly anticipated city government probe.

In probes of two of the seven schools, Mayor Adamsโ€™ administration deferred to preliminary findings of investigations years ago.

The other five yeshivas were quickly approved under a policy that approves programs tied to a registered high school. Under state law, registered high schools meet standards that allow them to issue diplomas and administer Regents examinations.

โ€œEven as we are hopeful, we need to roll up our sleeves,โ€ said Beatrice Weber, executive director of Young Advocates for Fair Education. โ€œThere is real work still to be done.โ€

A complaint by yeshiva reform advocates in 2015 led to the city investigation of more than two dozen ultra-Orthodox schools.

In June, the city determinedย 18ย yeshivas were either found to fall short or were suspected of falling short of law requiring them to offer instruction in subjects such as reading and math comparable to what public school students receive.

Of the 11 schools found compliant, the advocates say seven didnโ€™t get a real investigation. Young Advocates for Fair Educationโ€™s petition filed Wednesday was about those seven schools.

โ€œWe will follow any additional guidance from the state based on any appeals,โ€ said city education spokesman Nathaniel Styer.

In the…

Read the full article here


Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *