Jamaal Bowman wrote a powerful and important letter to Governor Andrew Cuomo. Bowman is a Néw York City middle school principal.
Please read and share. Help it go viral. It is an incisive critique of corporate reform. When did it become “liberal” to attack unions, career teachers, and public education? This used to be the agenda of the far rightwing of the Republican Party.
He writes:
“I hope this letter finds you and your family in good health and good spirits. I write not only to you, but also to those who share your view of public education….
“I also want to personally thank you for allowing me to provide testimony to the common core commission at the College of New Rochelle…..The work of the commission, along with your hiring of Jere Hochman as Deputy Secretary of Education, has me very excited about the direction in which we are moving.
“My excitement turned to devastation however as I watched your November 17th interview with David Gergen at the Harvard Kennedy School of Public Leadership [link to video is in Bowman’s post]. As an education practitioner for sixteen years, it was both frustrating and disheartening to watch the two of you pontificate about public education in what I consider to be a dangerous and irresponsible manner.
“Your discussion was wide ranging; covering topics from police reform to the new construction at LaGuardia Airport. As the conversation shifted to education, you told the audience that you are in constant conflict with the teacher union. You shared that your “unabashed” support for charter schools, to which you refer to as “laboratories of invention,” as well as your teacher evaluation mandate, are two of the causes of this conflict. You also went on to share your excitement around the possibilities of technology as a means to help circumvent the “machine” of the teacher union bureaucracy.
“Mr. Gergen, to whom you refer to as one of the experts and craftsman of his generation, recklessly framed the conversation in a way that greatly mis-categorizes the public education narrative. Mr. Gergen stated that teacher unions don’t want “young smart” people from Teach for America entering the profession. He then went on to praise charter schools as places that provide “24/7 support to children and families,” and “really work with the children themselves.” While Mr. Gergen made these comments, you nodded your head enthusiastically in agreement.
“There are two things that are incredibly careless about this conversation. First, it lacks a valid and reliable research base. Second, the two of you have a platform to really shape public discourse. As such, you must take extra special care to avoid facilitating misinformation regarding public education or any other topic. If you don’t, the perpetuation of child suffering will continue in schools throughout the state — as it does in schools all over the country.
“What does the data tell us about these widely discussed topics? First, public schools as a whole “outperform” charter schools. I place the word outperform in quotes because of our narrow view of what it means to perform in public schools today. The few charter schools that are celebrated for closing the alleged “achievement gap” have faced extreme criticism and scrutiny for their draconian test prep and recruitment practices, and boast incredibly high student and staff attrition rates. Some may argue these practices are the price to pay for achievement, but consider these questions:
“Are we ready to accept the instability and emotional trauma that comes with schools designed around draconian test prep practices?
“Does high performance on standardized assessments truly equate to what we all mean by achievement?
Research shows otherwise: In 2003, the “gold standard” of charter schools, KIPP, had a graduating class that ranked fifth in New York City on the math standardized tests. Six years after entering college, only 21% of that cohort had earned a college degree.
“In the landmark book, ‘Crossing The Finish Line: Completing College at America’s Public Universities,’ former college presidents William G. Bowen and Michael S. McPherson found that student high school G.P.A. was more predictive of college success than S.A.T. scores.
“As you can see Mr. Governor, high performance on standardized tests alone do not equate to a quality education. What research identifies as a determinate of quality schools, lies in a well rounded curriculum inclusive of both academic and adaptive skills, where students get to solve problems creatively, work with their peers, and experience both teacher and student centered pedagogy.
“As to your comments regarding charter schools serving as “labs of invention,” allow me to remind you that some of the most innovative schools in the country are public schools right here in your state. From the NYC iSchool, to Westside Collaborative, to Brooklyn New School, to Quest to Learn, there is amazing work happening in unionized public schools that we all can learn from. Charter schools that promote silent breakfast, silent lunch, silent hallway transitions, and have teachers walking around with clipboards to give demerits to students who misbehave, do not sound like labs of invention to me — they sound like labs of oppression.
“Your statement related to wanting teacher evaluations because “right now we have none” is categorically false. Teachers have been evaluated throughout my entire career. With regard to the new evaluation system, the issue isn’t that teachers are averse to evaluations, they just want evaluations that are fair and just. An evaluation that is 50% aligned to invalid and unreliable tests, created by a 3rd party for-profit company, aligned to new standards and curriculum with minimal teacher input, is both unfair and unjust. What makes matters worse is by continuing to turn a deaf ear to the research on child and brain development, we continue to have an achievement gap that will never be closed by an evaluation system tied to test scores.
“Furthermore, why are charter schools exempt from your teacher evaluation plan? That also doesn’t seem fair or just.
“Regarding Mr. Gergen’s comments, teacher unions aren’t afraid of “young smart” teachers entering the profession. On the contrary, that is what they want! Teacher unions oppose Teach for America (TFA) because the majority of TFA recruits leave the classroom within three years, with most leaving the profession entirely. This obviously creates a continued vacuum in our most vulnerable communities and has indirectly undermined the recruitment and stability of teachers via traditional pathways. Further, Teach for America has been around for 25 years and our so called “achievement gap” has grown. Their impact has been a net zero at best for the profession.
“Mr. Gergen also seems to think only charter schools support students and families 24/7. To this I say check my phone records, and the phone records of educators throughout the country. We all love our students as our own children and we are constantly in touch with families into the evenings and on weekends to support them with whatever they need. Mr. Gergen disrespects and undermines the profession with these nonsensical statements.
“Lastly, regarding your excitement for technology, technology is simply a tool to help us get things done more efficiently and effectively. It will not in and of itself “revolutionize public education” as you say. The education revolution begins with a paradigm shift driven by the needs and brilliance of the children we serve.
“If we really want to transform public education, Mr. Governor, we have to stop investing in purchasing, administering, and scoring annual assessments from grades 3-8. We know 3rd grade reading scores predict future outcomes, so let’s invest heavily in early childhood education, teacher training, and school support. Lets focus on birth to age eight programs, implement a strong literacy and Montessori curriculum, and institute portfolio based assessments and apprenticeships in grades 6-12. If we do this, you will have a model education system for the world to aspire to.
“Mr. Governor, you, like many of your elected colleagues, are lawyers, not educators. I am an educator. I have been throughout my professional life. I do not know the law, and would never try to speak with any conviction about what should happen in a courtroom. What’s most dangerous about the public education discourse is the fact that finance, tech, government, and the “elite” are all driving the conversation without educators included. They have the audacity, to make life-altering decisions for other people’s children, while sending their children to independent schools.
“The masses of people, which are our most vulnerable, continue to be handled without empathy or care. Empathy requires that we walk in the shoes of others; something that charter reformers, common core advocates, and Teach for America has never done.
“In closing, I want to turn your attention back to your announcement of the Common Core commission. Do you realize that in that speech you mentioned the word “standards” ten times, and the word “tests” fifteen times, while only mentioning the word “learning” one time? Standards and tests are meaningless if they aren’t grounded in learning. Learning is innate, natural, and driven by the needs of children. This is why we must change the conversation from standards and testing to teaching and learning. This fundamental flaw in ideology continues to lead our education system down a destructive path.
“Further, although you and Mr. Gergen discussed innovation as essential to moving the education agenda forward, during your Common Core commission announcement the words creativity, collaboration, and communication, which many experts believe are pillars of innovation, received a total of zero mentions. Innovation is not just about using a computer, tablet, or smartphone; innovation is a way of thinking, doing, and being.
“Thank you Mr. Governor for all that you do for our state. In the future please be mindful to handle the topic of public education with extreme care. Be weary of your pro charter school advisors. The charter school money train and gentrification plans are well documented. Our work isn’t about teacher unions, charters, or technology; our work is about children — and the future of our democracy.”
“I believe that unarmed truth and unconditional love will have the final say in reality.”
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr
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I agree, Mr. Bowman writes a very powerful letter. Unfortunately, I think our Governor lacks the cognitive abilities required to fully understand the impacts outlined. Cuomo’s policies are often developed and controlled by special interest groups and corporate donors.
We are still waiting for our Governor to visit our schools. His outright refusal to set foot in a public school should be grounds for impeachment.
When he continues to claim that he continues to “circumvent the “machine” of the teacher union bureaucracy” every union in the country should call him out on that.
It’s time we label him for what he is.. a failure
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What a great Thanksgiving gift for the soul. One of the best posts on your blog, Diane.
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Amazing how all us “old, dumb” teachers in the profession have help create the greatest nation of the century. So much for thanksgiving.
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What a powerful message! It makes you wonder how those in positions of power can still justify ignoring the voices of career educators. The power brokers just cannot understand that there are people who want to spend their careers in the classroom. To them, teaching is the low rung on the educational ladder. It is beyond their understanding that a teacher can spend an entire career as a teacher with no aspirations to “higher” and more lucrative positions. Who better to speak for the profession than those who are devoting their lives to its practice.
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Thankful for Diane Ravitch and the Jamaal Bowman’s of this world…
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Andrew Cuomo and David Gergen are playing a game of intelli-limbo.
Both have gone under the bar set at 1 inch and are now trying for a new world record low of one half inch.
May the stupidest man win.
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David Gergen lauded charter schools as places that provide “24/7 support to children and families.” This is unqualified praise that is most characteristic of a sales pitch, not a sober and realistic discussion of education.
However, let’s run with this for a second. Since there is a constant complaint that charter schools are public schools—except for regulations regarding screening/pushing out/expelling expensive/troublesome students and labor relations and fiscal transparency and CEO salaries and such—but on the other hand and simultaneously are better than those “factories of failure” aka public schools as well as being severely underfunded compared to their public school “peers” then I have to ask the obvious question—
Where in the world are they getting all those huge amounts of $$$$ to fund that 24/7 support? And why can’t the public schools that are not charters get all those big bucks too? And when you go on a major push to charterize a large part of the 2nd biggest school in the country (LAUSD), aren’t you starving the real public schools in order to support charters that are providing “24/7 support to children and families”?
I can imagine rheephormistas visiting this blog trying to parse the above in order to save it from complete self-destruction. And qualifying it this way and that in order to tone down its lunacy.
Unfortunately, the rest of us have to deal with the real shot callers and enforcers and heavyweights of self-styled “education reform” that pay no attention to those trying to clean up after them.
Is it too much to ask that the MSM purveyors and political enablers of rheephorm know the difference between fantasy and reality?
Perhaps the answer to my rhetorical question lies in this old Spanish saying:
*“No le pidas peras al olmo” / “Don’t ask for pears from an elm tree.”
😎
P.S. *For those struggling with their CCSS decontextualized informational texts, the thrust in English is: don’t expect things from people that can’t deliver the goods.
P.P.S. SomeDAM Poet: TAGO!
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As with, getting “pears from an elm tree,” Krazy and Poet…. it would be an interesting and telling study to see how the children of the Rhee/deformers actually turn out and what they achieve in life. The privileged scions of Cuomo, Gergen, Broad, Wasserman, Waltons, etc. who have attended primarily private schools, and are untouched by their parents favorite scourge, ‘teachers unions,’ should be under a grad students microscope for dissertation material. Compare 1) no pressure re standardized testing, the best of health care and nutrition and safe homes with easy access to rest, with, 2) the inner city poverty students lives. Compare both their schools teacher training, grading systems, college readiness and success, counseling, tutoring, and PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT, as affecting their further outcomes.
When TFA grads who are recent students themselves, and who have a modicum of 5 weeks training, are placed in public schools (as in LAUSD, to teach Special Ed, and/or inner city teens and pre teens) the outcomes are predictable. These TFA kids often ‘fail and flee’ from the profession of education which is so demanding and requires years of higher ed before matriculating to the job of teaching with tenacity and dedication.
I meet REAL trained teachers every day who literally cry about their students (3 – 8 grades) angst at all the CC testing. And what is also eye-opening is talking with Tea Party parents, who not only find government suspect (which these days does not seem so crazed), they understand the dangers to their children of the this endless testing. Unfortunately their jump to home schooling is generally not the answer.
Yes, there is a vast difference between true learning and developing critical thinking skills, and testing for obscure facts. There are so many current scientific studies on how the brain works that validate this difference…why aren’t the deformers addressing these? Read Dan Siegel’s (UCLA psychiatrist) books on brain development.
Thanks Diane for this spot-on professional letter from Jamaal Bowman. It is a Thanksgiving gift. Yes, I will send it to all my lists.
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Could Cuomo be reversing his stance on teacher evaluations? This is from today’s Albany TImes Union:
http://blog.timesunion.com/capitol/archives/243769/report-cuomo-to-soften-stance-on-teacher-evaluations/
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Don’t we need unions to prevent teachers from being expected to work “24/7?”
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Ask which charter is providing support 24/7. Never seen one.
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The sad thing is that the most eloquent case one could make will never convince any poitician who has allied himself with the big money folks who push the ‘reform’ agenda. This is not about reason or even the welfare of children. It is and always has been since the passage of NCLB, about money.
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“Reasoning with the Unreasonable”
Reason only works
With reasonable folks
It doesn’t work with jerks
And doesn’t work with jokes
It doesn’t work on those
With evil moneyvations
Unreasonable to suppose
That reason rules relations
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Mr. Bowman sheds light on some key issues. Scores on testing do not determine the value of students, teachers or schools. Cuomo is biased against public education because he fails to see the many wonderful programs in New York public schools. While charters may improve outcomes for a few students, they are not replicatable on a large scale, and they do a lot of harm to children and public schools in the process. TFA is hardly a success story. If the governor does not value certified teachers, why do New York and other states require certified teachers? It is to ensure teachers are minimally prepared to do the job;TFA members are often ill prepared for the challenges of teaching. Cuomo should step down if he does not want public education to succeed. He does not comprehend that many New Yorkers value the education their children receive in the state’s public schools. New York contains many districts in which more than 85% of the students are college bound. Why doesn’t he look at ways to make other public school districts learn from those that have succeeded instead of trying to destroy what many New York citizens respect and trust. Why doesn’t he work to make the schools more equitable instead of trying to destroy a key asset of New York State?
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Cuomo especially hates the Buffalo Public Schools and the Buffalo Teachers Federation. Watch as the newly devised Receivership plan takes hold where Superintendent Cash (hand selected by Evilia) sets the rules and ignores the teacher’s contract (still unsettled after twelve years) and the School Board.
First a few schools, then a bunch more, and then . . . After which – watch out Rochester and Syracuse.
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It’s a wonderful letter. Now, how do we get it out to parents so that they can turn frustration into action. Yes, there are those fighting Common Core/PAARC testing but not in time to stop an entire generation of uneducated children who just sit and get ready for the next test.
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Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Education.
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Bravo to a principal who stands up to this current unfounded theory of “education”.
Memories will never be built on “I took college and career test 1.4”. Mr. Bowman shows true care for his students and teachers. Let’s hope more admin will become “upstanders”!
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Reblogged this on Crazy Normal – the Classroom Exposé.
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Bravo!
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wow. Reading this blog is frightening. Any dissent will be crushed (and all of you will praise anyone who then dissents on your side). Is your call for diversity a one way street? 1984.
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Yeah, at times the feelings run high. You are reading posts from a lot of people who have been directly impacted by poor policy. You are reading posts from people who have a wealth of experience who have been routinely ignored by people who have never set foot in a public school. Sometimes it reads like a giant bull session that never was intended to go beyond a certain circle, but it is what it is. It is not so much that most people can’t see merit in other points of view. It is more that when you feel like you are in a fight for your life, your vision must be focused. Other things which would normally not be seen as suspicious are rejected out of hand because of how they have been used against public education. Having said all of that and after rereading what has been posted here, I am having trouble figuring out what compelled you to make your observation on this post. I truly do not understand your comments.
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Zephyr Teachout explains the situation in : “http://billmoyers.com/2015/12/02/sheldon-silvers-legacy-selling-out-new-york-city-and-state-to-the-wealthy/
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can anyone explain to me how this New York governing debacle is different from the New York owner of the Marlins who gets a stadium built in Miami.???? He is worth 500 million and he is not respected in the business of baseball (Charley Pierce calls it “the Marlin’s Way”)… I am not a sports fan and never was…. I am asking for people who understand Money Ball how we justify these systems (sports/governing)….
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