I received an email from Lottie Beebe, a member of the Louisiana Board of Elementary and Secondary Education. She is an experienced educator who won a seat on the board and has been a voice of sanity in a dark time.
| As a member of the Louisiana Board of Elementary and Secondary Education (BESE), I want to thank you for your continued efforts to inform education stakeholders across our wonderful country and beyond of the concerns related to Louisiana’s education reform. As an experienced educator of 27 years, I decided to seek the BESE position because I truly wanted to contribute to the responsible reform of our educational system. However, shortly after securing the District 3 BESE seat, I realized my voice would be muffled by a group outnumbering me whose vision is strictly that of CHOICE. My desire is to preserve traditional public education; however, I don’t see this happening in Louisiana. My idea of reform is to identify the strengths of the education system and build from those without totally dismantling the traditonal public education system. I recognize our society is broken. Until we acknowledge the poverty, apathy, dysfunction, lack of parental involvement, and all other factors that adversely impact student learning, we will continue to struggle to improve our educational ranking at the local, state, federal, and international levels–regardless of the educational setting. We can no longer continue to bury our heads in the sand. To quote a Louisiana legislator in a letter to his colleagues, he stated, “our society is broken and we can’t fix it.” Thus, in my opinion, the blame was placed on educators and there was a rush to “fix education.” On another note, I am so proud of the educators throughout Louisiana who exhibited professionalism despite the constant criticism heard throughout the education reform debates. I applaud our educators for their continued commitment and desire for educational excellence despite the teacher bashing that occurred this year leading up to and during the Louisiana legislative session. Television commercials aired frequently showing students banging their heads against lockers in an attempt to vilify our hardworking teachers and administrators. Despite the educator bashing, the release of 2012 test scores revealed academic improvement across Louisiana’s public schools. Imagine this! The improvement was attributed to the most recent education reforms. (Not true). For the last decade, Louisiana’s test scores have improved and can be verified via the Louisiana Department of Education website. In closing, I will say to those in other states who want to emulate Louisiana’s education reform–BEWARE! As Ms. Raviitch and many others have communicated, where is the Accountability? Louisiana’s traditonal schools will be compelled to adhere to stringent federal and state guidelines where voucher and charter schools can exercise flexibility in curriculum, teacher evaluation, certification requirements, etc. How do we measure success when we are not comparing apples to apples or competing on an equitable field? Competition has been a resounding theme in Louisiana’s education reform debate. Imagine a football game—how fair is it for traditional schools (without the football gear) to compete with vouchers and charters who are in full game attire–helmets, etc? Who do you think stands the better chance of winning? My point, exactly! I am a voice for responsible education reform and welcome the competition as long as it is fair! THis is not the case in Louisiana and I predict it is only a matter of time before this ed reform movement will find its way to your communities. |

While I cannot write letters directly voicing my concerns and disagreements with local educational policies due to the pressure and harassment that will follow, I have started writing letters of appreciation for those like, Ms. Beebe, who voice their concerns about the hijacking of public education in Louisiana and else where. Perhaps it will help them have the energy to deal with the lies and money backed noise machines they are trying to oppose. I know after dealing with a particularly difficult peer or parent a kind word from a peer, even if done quietly,(loud praise for those of us fighting for public education is often whispered here) goes a long way towards helping me take a deep breath and fight on. My hope is they will feel the same support.
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I can write directly because I don’t work for anybody and will send a note to Ms. Beebe. I hope other teachers who feel safe and all the retired teachers out there will do the same.
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Thank you, Diane, for using Ms. Beebe’s comment as a blog. She is really the only sane individual on BESE. Thank goodness the voters came out in her district on election day. Now, if we could get everyone else who truly has a desire to make public education the best in Louisiana out to vote, there could be some changes made.
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As a teacher in Louisiana, I certainly understand your fear. I work in Jefferson Parish and when a teacher at a systemwide meeting pointed out socio-economic issues handicapping her students learning before she could finish she was attacked by an administrator for “making excuses” and asked if she had visited the homes of her students,etc. She was relatively young…teaching about 5 years and obviously looking for help and essentially the administrator humiliated the woman. Later, the same administrator had toned down his diatribe and had his arm around her. Talk about mixed messages. Dialogue was essentially stymied for the rest of the meeting whose purpose was “honest dialogue”. I appreciate the efforts of Mrs. Beene and will write some letters to support her and pass her message on to colleagues.
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Bobby stacked the BESE Board to eliminate the power of people like Ms. Beebe by putting conservative extremists in his appointed BESE positions and supporting the election of 2 other Republicans, Chas Roemer, an attorney whose kids go to parochial school (instead of Donald Songy the retired superintendent of one of the highest achieving parishes in Louisiana) and Holly Boffy a Teacher of the Gifted who quit her classroom position to work for a non-profit. She was a member of an alternative non-union formed for conservative teachers who did not like the causes the NEA supports. Prior to the last election, the moderate members held the majority on BESE and were a major hindrance to the King getting his legislation through (Much like Bush could not start the war in Iraq until Congress was in Republican hands).
The power of the governor in Louisiana is getting to be a serious problem. Even Huey Long looked out for the needs of the state even though he had a crookedness issue. This one is just using his power to further his standing with the national GOP even though he has 2 strikes that have traditionally prevented a presidency. First he is a person of color form and immigrant family and second he is very short (about 5’3″ and maybe 130 pounds). He is working real hard at being impressive at the expense of a state that has a tendency to vote for anyone who says he is “pro-life”.
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Holly went to work for A+PEL right after she left the classroom. She worked there for awhile anyway.
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Ms. Twinkie,
I agree with everything you have said about Bobby Jindal, except for your description of him. I am 5’6″, and have stood right next to him on numerous occasions. Both he and Supriya are very tall. He is probably at least 5’10”, if not 6 feet. So the other variables are correct and may affect his “charisma factor” in efforts to attract national voters. But he is not short. Robert R. “Bob” Womack STPSB, District 11
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Supported Lottie from the beginning and I will continue to support her. She has been there, done that, and is still there. She knows what is really going on in education and she is watching, as we are, public education disappear. She knows she is out-voted, yet she still speaks up and votes for public education. Very proud to know you Lottie Beebe. Let me know when you want to run for Governor. I’ll get out and work for your votes!
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Some of the best news I’ve read today!
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I am lucky to have worked side by side with Lottie in the same school district. She speaks her mind and knows her stuff. She will not be silenced. Lottie is a force to be reckoned with. We are lucky to have her voice speaking up for us. Keep up the great work Lottie, we need leaders like you here in Louisiana, who works in the best interest of educators and students. With leaders like you on our side we can eventually win this battle.
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2 say BESE calls may violate open meeting law http://www.shreveporttimes.com/article/20120728/NEWS0401/120728014/2-say-BESE-calls-may-violate-open-meeting-law-
Ms. Beebe and Ms Hill are trying their best to keep the BESE meetings legal and transparent!
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