Bronx principal Brett Schneider, who preaches ‘love and respect,’ squares off against student: video

The Bobster

Senior News Editor since 2004

Bronx principal Brett Schneider, who preaches ‘love and respect,’ squares off against student: video​



By
Georgia Worrell,

Susan Edelman and

Melissa Klein


January 14, 2023 9:48am
Updated





DeWitt Clinton Campus
The principal of Bronx Collaborative High School got physical with a student. J.C.Rice






So much for “principles.”
A woke high school principal who preaches love, respect and “creative responses” to conflict was caught on video shoving a student outside his Bronx Collaborative HS – and putting his dukes up to brawl.
Brett Schneider was seen on the video posted to social media during an Oct. 24 fracas outside the Bedford Park school, pushing the teen and then raising his fists in a fighting stance. A school safety agent was standing nearby, but Schneider took matters into his own hands.
The NYPD confirmed that school safety agents called 911 about a fight that day and said no arrests were made.
Students told The Post that the incident followed a fight a day or two earlier between a boy and girl that resulted in the girl getting milk dumped on her. They said a relative of the girl’s came to the school to confront the boy and sucker-punched him.
Brett SchneiderBronx Collaborative High School principal Brett Schneider was captured on video confronting a student.
“And then the principal squared up,” one junior said. “He looked like he was a boxer. I was like ‘Wow, this is unbelievable.'”
Other students said it seemed as if Schneider was trying to defend the adult who hit the teen.
“That’s a grown man. So, as a grown man, why are you helping another grown man fight a kid?” one gobsmacked senior said.
Students leave schoolBronx Collaborative High School opened in 2013.J.C.Rice
Parents were also stunned.
“You’re talking about the principal, the leader of the school, a grown man, who is supposed to be trained in de-escalating situations actually out in the street fighting and making it worse,” said Tom Sheppard, a parent representative on the Department of Education’s Panel for Educational Policy, who posted the shocking video on Twitter.
Schneider’s pugilistic behavior was a far cry from his online statements about how to run his school, which is located on the DeWitt Clinton Campus and has about 550 students.
Bronx Collaborative High School has about 550 students.Bronx Collaborative High School has about 550 students.J.C.Rice
He was quoted on the website of the Morningside Center for Teaching Social Responsibility in Manhattan saying, “We’ve created a whole different atmosphere – one of love and respect. Kids are less likely to get into fights. When there is a fight, they know that they won’t be demonized … Finding creative responses to conflict can be life-changing.”
Elsewhere on the center’s website he boasts about the effectiveness of restorative practices in reducing fights.

What do you think? Post a comment.

“We noticed that we hadn’t had a single fight, physical or verbal, in 12 weeks. It’s because we’ve been building trust. We’ve created a climate of civility and respect,” he says in the undated post.

We’ve created a climate of civility and respect, Schneider previously said.“We’ve created a climate of civility and respect,” Schneider previously said.J.C.Rice
Schneider, 49, worked at Manhattan’s Institute for Collaborative Education, a progressive DOE school, before becoming the founding principal of Bronx Collaborative HS in 2013. The school’s website says, “We prize individuality, diversity, and authenticity — working together to address issues of social justice and to create positive change in the world.”


“Teachers work with students on social justice issues through community circles each week and resolve conflicts creatively through restorative circles, conversations, and conferencing,” the website says.


As a principal, Schneider is no knockout, students told The Post.

Schneider also gets harsh criticism on the website of UFT Solidarity, a progressive caucus of the teachers' union, where he is on a list of administrators in need of improvement.Schneider also gets harsh criticism on the website of UFT Solidarity, a progressive caucus of the teachers’ union, where he is on a list of “administrators in need of improvement.”J.C.Rice
“I don’t like him, nobody likes him,” said one freshman, who described how he recently argued with her music teacher about the day’s lesson during class. “He just thinks he’s always right. He never gives anybody else a chance to talk. He has an attitude.”


A staffer told The Post that Schneider “has been caught yelling aggressively at parents and school safety agents if he doesn’t get his way.”


Schneider also gets harsh criticism on the website of UFT Solidarity, a progressive caucus of the teachers’ union, where he is on a list of “administrators in need of improvement.”


He was called “misogynistic” and described as “constantly” pivoting and talking too much. Schneider was paid $223,861 in 2022.


“He repeatedly says he wants to build community but only ever implements his ideas. The joke is that at Bronx Collaborative, there is nothing collaborative about the place,” one anonymous former staff member wrote.


Schneider referred to the DOE for comment and a spokesman did not immediately respond.
 

NYC principal Brett Schneider could be probed over student fight​



By
Georgia Worrell and

Melissa Klein


January 21, 2023 11:18am
Updated












The caught-on-video fight involving a reputed peace-loving Bronx principal and a student has been referred to the Department of Education for a potential probe, The Post has learned.
The Special Commissioner of Investigation for New York City schools made the referral, the office said this week, but a spokesperson declined to comment further.
The statement came after The Post reported that Brett Schneider, the woke educator helming Bronx Collaborative High School — who preaches about love and respect — was seen pushing a student outside the school and then putting his fists up as if ready to take him on.
The video of the skirmish posted to social media shocked parents and students.
The student whom Schneider targeted told The Post this week that Schneider also verbally threatened him.
“He pushes me and you can see it in the video. And I go flying. And then he tells me he’s going to knock me out just after,” Janel Adon said. “So I just don’t feel safe at this school with that principal because that’s crazy and he’s a horrible principal.”
[IMG alt="Janel Adon
"]https://nypost.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2023/01/janel-adon-featured.jpg?w=1024[/IMG]
Janel Adon was seen in a video being pushed by his principal, Brett Schneider.J.C.Rice
The sophomore said he hadn’t talked to Schneider since the Oct. 24 incident and had avoided going to the literature class taught by the principal.
The after-school fracas happened when an adult relative of a girl at the school came to cause trouble after the student had milk dumped on her by a male classmate, students have said.
A sophomore told The Post that he was punched by the adult.
Adon admitted he hit the adult to defend his friend and said that’s when Schneider got involved.
He said a school administrator told his mother about that — but not that Schneider shoved or threatened him.


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Brett Schneider
Bronx Collaborative HS principal Brett Schneider.

DeWitt Clinton campus
The student whom Schneider targeted told The Post that Schneider also verbally threatened him. J.C.Rice





His mother, Clara Adon, was to meet with school officials Friday.


“Putting him in that school was the worst decision I’ve ever made in my life,” Adon said.


Schneider has been principal of Bronx Collaborative since it opened on the DeWitt Clinton Campus in 2013. The school has about 550 students.


Schneider boasted online that the school had worked to create an atmosphere “of love and respect. Kids are less likely to get into fights. When there is a fight, they know that they won’t be demonized … Finding creative responses to conflict can be life-changing.”


Schneider and the DOE did not immediately return requests for comment.
 
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