
The School District of Philadelphia may not want to budge on its facilities plan, but that doesn’t mean Dr. Tony Watlington Sr. isn’t willing to keep lines of communication open. From having frank conversations with students at schools set for closure to hearing concerns from City Council members, the superintendent understands there are pockets of people still upset with his vision. He addresses this topic with KYW Newsradio Education Reporter Mike DeNardo, as well as the district topping the charts of a recently-released study assessing post-pandemic academic performance in big American cities. They also discuss a bell-to-bell cell phone ban bill making its way through the Pennsylvania state legislature. 00:00 Would Watlington return to the negotiating table for district facilities master plan? 00:43 Reflections on recent visit to Lankenau High School, set to close as part of facilities plan 02:36 Reaction to district ranking no. 1 among big American cities in recent Harvard / Stanford study of post-pandemic academic performance 06:42 How would district implement a statewide bell-to-bell cell phone ban? Have a question for Dr. Watlington? Email us at afterschool@kywnewsradio.com and listen for a response on future episodes of "After School!” Catch the show on the air every Wednesday at 3:45 PM ET on KYW Newsradio 103.9 FM
Podzilla Summary coming soon
Sign up to get notified when the full AI-powered summary is ready.
Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.

Mayor Parker’s proposed Airbnb tax, Philadelphia school budget cuts, and local players in the World Cup | The Week in Philly

“Fierce” urgency needed to address reading performance | After School with Dr. Tony Watlington Sr.

Philly’s primary progressive win, screen time in school, and a historic church lost to a fire | The Week in Philly

Does the teachers union facilities proposal move the needle? | After School with Dr. Tony Watlington Sr.
Free AI-powered recaps of The Week in Philly from KYW Newsradio and your other favorite podcasts, delivered to your inbox.
Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.