Archives for the month of: August, 2012

Recently I issued the KIPP Challenge.

I proposed that KIPP put an end to suspicion that they were skimming students and excluding low-performing students by taking over an entire district. A district with ELLs, special ed, the whole gamut of students. If they did that, they could show their stuff to the world and silence the skeptics.

Then Jersey Jazzman offered Camden, NJ (though he is in no position to offer it). It is distressed. It is not very large. It should be just the right size for the KIPP Challenge.

But what I didn’t know was that KIPP had already run a charter in Camden that failed.

Did Jersey Jazzman hoax me?

Even if it is true, Camden still looks like a perfect candidate for the Challenge due to the receptive political climate in the state.

This teacher has advice for Governor Rick Scott about the importance of quality time with his family:

 I am a 27 year veteran teacher from Miami Dade County, Florida, and I can finally say that Florida has done something right by invalidating a ridiculously arbitrary evaluation system that came without a valid rationale or explanation. I was also very pleased that our commissioner of education decided to resign to spend more time with his family after two public debacles with test scores and school grades. I can only hope that our governor follows his lead and decides his family, too, deserves more of his time.

I received the following comment with links from a reader. Does anyone reading this blog have knowledge of what is happening in Detroit and what is happening now that the “emergency manager” law is under court review?

The following two links show what is happening in Detroit right now. I find it interesting that the first link (which is to the later article), has comments to the effect that the two sides are committed to working together (presumably for the benefit of the students), yet the second link (which was posted a few days earlier) shows exactly the opposite. I so wish these adults would quit acting like three year olds.

http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20120826/SCHOOLS/208260307/DPS-interim-superintendent-waiting-for-PA4-defeat

http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20120824/SCHOOLS/208240360

By the way, is there any indication of what actual class sizes will be in DPS this year?

This post shows that our society is placing an unfair buden on children and their teachers. When was the last time you heard of a kindergarten with 43 students? Could this be the United States in 2012?

A teacher comments:

I had a class of 43 kindergarten students last week. What do you really think I can do with that many little ones? I often go into a class expecting a certain number only to have 8 to 12 more students. How can I be prepared to teach those extra students? Those students will either be repeating what I have already taught their own class or will be getting the lesson before the rest of their class. I have had to postpone my pretests that I will be using with my Student Learning Targets.

A reader commented:

There have been many times in history when the evidence and discoveries by researchers and scientists (such as Galileo and Darwin) was suppressed by those in power. This is one of those times.  

The peer-reviewed unbiased research in biology, neuroscience, education, and social science corroborates a humanistic, child-centered, constructive approach to how we raise and educate our children.  It’s amazing how the biological research into the workings of the brain supports the research from education and social science.  Many of us know that there is already evidence that tells us to do the opposite of what the laws and policies require.  

Someday people will look back and ask, “How could a society have done that to their children when they knew better?”

Diane Ravitch’s blog will be there, in archive, to tell the future how it happened. Thank you Diane.

Marie Corfield is a teacher in New Jersey who is running for a seat in the state Assembly.

I have met her and I can tell you she understands education and cares passionately about kids.

She deserves your support.

New Jersey is a state now controlled by a governor who insults teachers and their unions. He glories in his vulgarity.

He does not know that New Jersey is one of the top-scoring states on the National Assessment of Educational Progress.

He doesn’t believe in public schools, even though he is a public school graduate.

He is promoting privatization through charters and for-profit online schools.

The only way to check his assault on public education is to elect people who know what the schools need and who will support them.

Elect Marie Corfield.

Jersey Jazzman has a district to give to KIPP for the challenge: Camden, New Jersey.

The stars are aligned.

Chris Christie wants to take away any control from the citizens of Camden anyway.

The Democratic boss is an ally of Christie and won’t put up any resistance.

Chris Cerf, the acting commissioner of education, is a Broadie and he would certainly support the transfer of power to KIPP>

What about it, KIPP?

Take the challenge in Camden.

Take over a low-performing district and show how you can save every single child.

No child left behind.

Their zip code in Camden should not be their destiny.

On August 18, I was interviewed by Randi Kaye on CNN as a follow up to her sympathetic interview with Michelle Rhee.

She was prosecutorial and asked question after question as if she were channeling Rhee.

The interview was not posted online until a week or eight days later, long after the other interviews in the same show.

Now readers discovered that the comments originally posted to the interview were wiped away.

The 20 comments disappeared. I just checked, and  now there are three, asking what happened to the other comments.

This is really odd.

So I now repost this earlier post:

A reader sent a link to the CNN interview, in which Randi Kaye pretends for a few minutes to be Michelle Rhee:

in case this has not yet been posted. CNN News Room posted the Randi Kaye interview with Diane Ravitch. There is a comments section which I’m sure we’ll use responsibly. :)

http://newsroom.blogs.cnn.com/2012/08/24/randi-kaye-speaks-to-former-assistant-secretary-of-education-diane-ravitch-on-the-state-of-our-schools/

The Memphis public schools are about to merge with the Shelby County schools into a single district.

The guiding document was written by a 21-member Transition Planning Commission.

The director of the TPC happens to work for the reform group Stand for Children, now best known among educators for its efforts to crush the Chicago Teachers  Union.

Several articles about Memphis have appeared on this blog. The TPC proposed, for example, that the proportion of students in charter schools increase from 4 percent to 19 percent by 2016, even though it is by now clear that charter schools don’t get better results than public schools.

The TPC decided that teachers should have merit pay, despite the fact that merit pay has never been successful in producing anything but demoralization.

The TPC decided that teachers’ education and experience will not count.

This high school teacher says they are wrong.

He writes, “the TPC recommends teachers no longer be paid more for their advanced degrees. They claim master’s degrees and doctorates are irrelevant in the classroom. This is a terrible insult. To assert that education is the cornerstone of success for everyone in our community except teachers disrespects the professionals who teach and care for our children each day. It belittles the years of study and the large sums of money teachers invest in their careers, and it will ultimately run the best and brightest teachers out of our classrooms and into jobs that offer higher compensation and less degradation.”

Why does one teacher know more than a commission of 21 people?

In my initial post about KIPP, I described a critique of the KIPP charter school network by Gerald Coles, an educational psychologist.

Coles raised questions about the reliability of the research on KIPP and about the selection of students.

I suggested a challenge to KIPP, that it should take an entire impoverished district to test its theories, if such a district were willing.

Schorr responded with a post that rejected the challenge and questioned my objectivity and integrity.

Others have replied to Schorr, including Katie OsgoodCaroline Grannan, and Paul Thomas.

I hope that KIPP will give serious consideration to my challenge.

Gerald Coles responded to Schorr on his blog. Here is Coles’ remarks:

Jonathan Schorr objects to the suggestion that research on KIPP that is funded by the same corporations that help fund KIPP might be as biased as other corporation-funded research, such as by tobacco, drug, coal and companies, on the value and safety of the very products these corporations produced.

Consider these statements:

“KIPP is a *bold effort*  [my emphasis] to “transform and improve the educational opportunities available to low-income families.” 

“KIPP’S ‘Five Pillars’ *distinguish its approach* [my emphasis]: high expectations for all students to reach high academic achievement, regardless of students’ backgrounds.” 

“The promise seen in KIPP schools and other charter networks that use similar approaches is a prominent reason that the Obama administration is making the *expansion of high-quality charter schools a central component of its nationwide educational improvement agenda.* [my emphasis].”

No one would be surprised to read these cheerleading statements on the KIPP website.  Who would expect KIPP to do anything less than rah, rah, sis-boom-ba on its behalf?  But these quotes are not  from the KIPP website, rather, they come from the introduction of the very report of the “independent” research that supposedly, like all sound scientific investigations, is a disinterested, neutral investigation. 

Do cheerleading statements like these raise any skepticism for Mr. Schorr?   Given what Mr. Schorr surely must know about the history of industry-funded research, as well as about truly independent research at odds with results of the Mathematica study, how can he insist that any suggestion of “bias is both odd and easily disproven”?  

Had Mr. Schorr been an adult in the 1950s, would he have thought wholly credible the tobacco companies’ creation of the Tobacco Industry Research Council, staffed with credentialed researchers?  (After all, these companies were merely desirous of studying the outcomes of their products?)  Would he, in the 1960s, have thought credible this letter to an elementary school teacher from RJ Reynolds Tobacco Company assuring the teacher that: “medical science [funded by the tobacco industries] has been unable to establish that smoking has a direct causal link with any human disease”? 

Mr. Schorr issues “disclaimers,” noting that he “worked at KIPP for several years” and now works at a Fund that has supported KIPP schools.  What do such disclaimers mean?  Certainly they don’t necessarily mean independent thinking.  Yes, there’s no reason to question that the ideas he expresses on his blog are his own, as he says, but that’s not the same as saying that there’s any light between his ideas and those of his past and present employers.

With respect to the “accusation that KIPP’s performance is driven by selectivity in admissions,” far from what Mr. Schorr claims, it certainly does have a “place in responsible discussion.”   While it is true that KIPP does not “select” its students, it’s clear that KIPP’s “open enrollment” policy does not produce an equal playing field with the public schools: KIPP schools do have a “lower concentration of special education and limited English proficiency students than the public schools from which they draw.”  How did that happen?  Surely Mr. Schorr must know of this imbalance and he must also recognize that KIPP’s enrollment process is itself fostering a selective admission process, i.e., a self-selection (inherent cherry-picking self-selection) that tilts away from students with the most educational challenges .   As such, why would a discussion of this process be “irresponsible” and why is KIPP itself not critical of its “open enrollment” process? 

Regarding the issue of KIPP’s greater per-pupil spending, this finding has been duplicated, including in a  recent independent  study of KIPP in Texas, conducted by Julian Heilig.  That study found per student spending for KIPP Austin to be $17,286 vs. $10,667 for the Austin public schools; and $13,488 for KIPP Houston vs $10,127 for the Houston pubic schools.   (Heiig notes that the financial data are readily available online each year from the State of Texas.)

As for KIPP’s dropout rate for African-American students, the Heilig study concludes: “despite the claims that 88-90% of the children attending KIPP charters go on to college, their attrition rate for Black secondary students surpasses that of their peer urban districts.”  Why does Mr. Schorr seem not to pay attention to findings like these?

Mr. Schorr accused Diane Ravitch of positing a “silly” question” when she asks (actually she asks three questions):

“What is KIPP really trying to prove? Do they want the world to believe that poverty, homelessness, disabilities, extreme family circumstances, squalid living conditions have no effect on children’s readiness to learn? Doesn’t KIPP imply that schools can achieve 100% proficiency if they act like KIPP?”

Mr. Schorr describes these queries as “silly” because, he says, “Nobody at KIPP – indeed, nobody I know at all – believes poverty doesn’t matter.”   However, looking closely at his response explaining how “poverty” does “matter,” we see that in fact, in his mind poverty does not  matter, not in the way Ravitch means it (the obvious way, to anyone who gives her comments a fair reading!).  For Schorr (and, presumably, KIPP management), poverty matters because it creates the challenging personal qualities in KIPP students.  The students are hungry, traumatized, etc., all of which combine to make up “the realities of [poor] kids’ lives” that KIPP tries to address in a variety of instructional and ancillary service ways.  Give KIPP credit, Schorr urges, for responding in its “forthright and humble” ways to the “the difficulty of the challenge” of the personal qualities of poor children.

Let’s give Schorr credit for having a good heart, that is, I assume (& I’m saying this without cynicism) that he is genuinely concerned about the education and futures of poor kids.  However, in his concern, he echoes the “no excuses” mantra, that is, the insistence that poverty is no excuse for poor students’ educational failure.   Poor students can  go to school with the challenging personal qualities poverty creates, but in the right schools – “no excuses” schools — they will succeed.   Poverty can exist and continue to exist because “no excuses” schools like KIPP address and enable students to overcome poverty’s effects.  KIPP requires no national economic and social changes, no redistribution of wealth, etc. 

Ravitch’s point, which was obvious in the commentary to which Schorr replied, is that it is poverty itself that national policy must address directly.   When Ravitch asks, “What is KIPP trying to prove?,” she is asking, is KIPP trying to prove that in responding to the consequences of poverty there is not the foremost educational need to pursue the elimination (or at least a dramatic reduction) of the conditions of poverty?  Why does Mr. Schorr wholly contort and dismiss Ravitch’s point? 

Schorr is perplexed by Ravitch’s obdurate criticism of KIPP and appeals to her, explaining that KIPP is just “trying to build superb schools that give the kids who attend them terrific choices in life.”  Why Schorr wonders aloud, does “Dr. Ravitch finds that so disturbing?”  I wonder why is Mr. Schorr not paying more attention to the independent research on KIPP and other charters, and why did he completely misinterpret Ravitch’s very critical points about poverty?