This comment was posted today. I don’t usually disclose the names of writers unless they disclose it themselves. I googled the author and she is real.
Having worked for Eva from 2006 to 2012* I got to know Paul Fucalaro and saw him in action. I saw him belittle and undercut teachers, and browbeat students with merciless drill. Since Harlem Success was not open in 2002, his methods preceded Eva’s adoption of them. If the Queens School you mention was PS 65, its principal was also brought on board for HSA”s start. Mr. Fucalaro is a large man, not subtle or gentle in his methods, probably significantly scary to young children. Avuncular maybe, but a little sinister too. Early on, ( 2008, 9?) he and I were asked to evaluate a young teacher who was up for re hire. She was one of those young people who genuinely love children and interacted with them intuitively and effectively. She was also knowledgeable in science, the subject she was being hired to teach. We both walked out of our observation agreeing how impressed we were. The next thing I knew, she had been fired. The word in those days when people were let go was that they ” didn’t get the school culture.” We now know that means they wanted to treat children as human beings rather than “test taking machines,” or robots who cannot question, talk, play, laugh, or, God forbid, enjoy learning.
If tests were NOT used as a measure of success, or Success, it is doubtful Eva would have gotten this far. Not until schools, charter or otherwise, are judged by their success as places of learning, creativity and joy, and the scourge of test prep and drill is gone, will real teachers, not taskmasters like Mr. Fucalaro, feel welcome in them.
Annette Marcus
* I worked on setting up an inquiry based science curriculum for Success Academies. It was fairly free of test prep until 4th grade. When Eva extended HSA into MIddle school and wanted students to take high school regents exams in 6th and 8th grade, I quit.

A question that I have yet to see asked is how Success Academy and other groups (like Relay) are able to work with Common Core. We are consistently being trained as public school teachers to include discussion, debate, investigation, teamwork and problem solving in our classrooms and yet I see virtually none of that in this “clap, snap and march silently in order” school culture that is prevalent at Success Academy.
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If Eva or anyone else wants to open a private school and run it their way, that’s fine as long as the parents are on board. That said, public money must NOT be used to support these abusive academies. Hopefully, soon taxpayers will wake up and demand that public tax money stay with public schools. I know that some of these charter operators try to say they are public schools but I believe the courts have deemed them private.
Wouldn’t we all like to open a business and have it totally financed by the taxpayers? Now there’s an idea!
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It’s an idea as old as the hills, and it’s known as corporate welware.
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Some charters advertise that they are free of the Common Core and testing.
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While I never met Paul, I did know his brother who was a strict but loving public school teacher. At first I only heard great things about Eva, but things changed. If anything, it seems Paul was mirroring Eva because the term he used to describe her to his brother started with a B.
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Basket case?
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Bonkers?
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Bananas?
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Biloba-deficient?
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Then why is he still there? I know the money is great. Maybe he can retire before Eva finishes hanging him out to dry. She’s laying the groundwork on creating the reality that he’s responsible for the discipline model they use.
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I don’t know if Paul is still there. I lost contact with his brother years ago and sadly, he passed away.
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Belligerent would also be a good guess. The word rhymes with witch which is also a good description.
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@ Benton…Bingo. I thought her recent tirade in the rag was to hang Paul F out to dry. She doesn’t dismiss people who make errors – like the crying baby who purportedly/supposedly/allegedly took it into his own hands to create the “got to go” list – Eva says she keeps people who make mistakes — but it sounded to me that she was stating everything she learned about running her prisons came from a public school teacher, Paul F. F. What a funny name he has. Rhymes with Truck-aloro. How appropriate.
She may be trying to distance herself from her own overreaching and abusive tactics. It won’t work though. People are too smart to take her lock stock and barrel.
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I find it interesting that Paul Fucaloro’s LinkedIn page lists only his work with Succcess Academy, as if he didn’t exist prior to or separate from SA: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paul-fucaloro-3aa3aa76
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That’s because he’s a Colemanbot (a special version of “Reformbot” — also sometimes known as Dumbcanbot)
“The Colemanbot”
Designed in a lab at MIT
The Colemanbot for SAT
Unequaled for the standard test
Can beat Commander Data’s best
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From what I understood, he worked for the old NYC Bd of Ed. Interesting that’s left off his resume.
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This interview with Arne Duncan is amazing. He presents every ed reform slogan, one right after the other:
http://www.wsj.com/articles/arne-duncan-pinpoints-where-schools-fail-1448302773?tesla=y&alg=y
They may require an actual intervention in DC. A team of people to go in and deprogram them. They are completely convinced that the only thing wrong with the US economy is the US workforce.
The headline is a classic too- wraps up the Obama Administration ed policy:
“Arne Duncan Pinpoints Where Schools Fail”
Only schools fail. Ed reformers in DC never fail.
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The subtitle alone makes me feel patriotic ready to act: “students aren’t getting the education the U.S. economy needs them to have”.
“Hey, little Julie, our beloved economy needs you to perform rigorously on the test in kindergarten today.
Ah, mom. I love our economy soooo much! I’d do anything to make him grow bigger and powerfuller.”
Meanwhile in school:
“Dear God, give me the strength to perform college and career readiness-based teaching today in this kindergarten. Our sacred economy needs me in top form as I rigorously test the kids to make sure they are on their way to graduate from college.”
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I’m telling you, online learning for poor and middle income students in public schools is the next big ed reform marketing blitz:
“We’re beginning to find how blended learning can jump from the realm of credit and dropout recovery programs into the core curriculum more and more. There are spotlight schools doing this, but we need to think about how we spread this approach to different institutions.”
Ignore this at your peril. They are lobbying your state legislature to sell this new product as we speak:
“I think in the longer term, technology is going to get much better at teaching core knowledge, and teachers are really going to shift into facilitating learning in the higher levels of Bloom’s taxonomy, focusing much more on the application of knowledge, skill-building and things of that nature.”
http://blog.rsed.org/2015/11/16/qa-with-michael-horn/
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Thanks for this link. This guy sounds interesting, like so many speakers at in service who make you think you can put their idea into effect. Then you go home and see how it fits into your own life. Then you realize that you can do parts of it and cannot do others.
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Chiara, I meticulously measured the article’s scientific, statistical and economic values, and I am happy to report that it got very high marks: The article is buzzwords-based well over the required degree. Personally, I found it particularly delightful that the article contains 3 occurrences of the expression “competency-based” and 3 occurrences of the expression “tech-based”.
My expert opinion is a direct reflection of the above analysis: a normal, evolution-based brain will automatically expunge the crucial information contained in the article in less than a minute after reading its last sentence.
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Wow. Thank you Annette Marcus.
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Yes, thank you. This country is only now seeing what happens behind the curtain. When the outrage will occur? That’s another story.
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This is priceless. Thank you, Annette, for such a concisely written essay. Eloquently stated and so true.
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Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Education.
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I was really hoping for more details. So the young teacher was evaluated, both evaluators were impressed, but she got fired? Why? This article has lots of moralizing, but hardly any facts.
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