Archives for the month of: December, 2012

A post on the NYC Parents Blog tells the sad story of a middle-school student who was not allowed to graduate with her class because she had supposedly failed the ELA exam. She was an honor student, and it made no sense, but the NYC Department of Education was adamant. The tests don’t lie, do they?

When her class walked across the stage to pick up their diplomas, she was not among them. She felt awful.

Except the tests were wrong. She had not failed the test. There was a mistake. She did pass the test. So many weeks after the graduation, she was able to report to the school and pick up her diploma, like picking up a letter, not like walking across the stage with her classmates in a meaningful ceremony.

And she was not the only victim of the mistake. Thousands of students like her were denied their diploma because of a testing error.

Why do we let fallible machines govern our lives? Why have we become so hostile to human judgment? Surely her teachers knew that she deserved to graduate. Yet we let the machines, which may be more error-prone than mere humans, destroy the lives of children.

When Marc Epstein, who was a history teacher at Jamaica High School in New York City (now closed to make way for small schools), read Carol Burris’s post opposing differentiated diplomas and tracking, he wrote to express his disagreement.

I invited him to write a post, and he said he had already written it.

It is here.

What do you think?

A reader who is a veteran teacher suggests incorporating the Mayan calendar into VAM evaluations.

It could be one of the multiple measures that everyone talks about and would very likely improve the overall accuracy of the VAM ratings.

Katie Osgood teaches children in a psychiatric hospital in Chicago. She is one of our most eloquent bloggers, whose understanding of the damage done to children in today’s society is unparalleled.

This post of hers sums up the meaning of what I called the Twitter kerfuffle.

Last week, I wrote a post about “The Hero Teachers of Newtown,” which caused a VP of TFA to recoil in horror on Twitter. I was never clear  what he found so “reprehensible” or why he thought I should immediately retract the post. It seemed to be my having mentioned that the teachers were all members of a union and some had tenure. But I really don’t know what it was that offended him so, since I never mentioned TFA. The only thing I knew for sure was that I would never submit to a demand that I censor myself.

Then Karen Lewis jumped in, and her words were distorted even more than mine.

Katie explains it all in this post.

I strongly recommend that you read it.

Here is some advice from Ms. Katie:

“Stop hiding behind your misinformation, your spin, your talking points, your complaints about tone, your phony research.  Come to where the kids are.  Listen to parents beg, plead, cry, yell, and chant to save their schools from closure.  Come to my psych hospital and hear children’s actual experience of charter schools, of zero tolerance discipline, of school closures, of disinvestment in neighborhood schools, of poorly trained teachers in their classrooms.  Listen to parents and students who occupy their schoolshold sit-ins, orlet themselves be arrested to stop school closures and charter expansion.

“Sandy Hook reminded us all of the first thing we must remember about schools.  We must protect children above all else.  Like the Hippocratic Oath in medicine, we must “first do no harm” in our attempts to better education.  And corporate education reform IS HURTING CHILDREN.”

Reformers, don’t mess with Katie Osgood.

She teaches kids whose lives are desperate.

She is fearless.

You can’t touch her.

Don’t even try.

Education Week reports that there was no significant difference between the performance of eighth grade students in Finland and the US in mathematics on the TIMSS.

Four American states had higher scores in eighth grade mathematics on TIMSS than Finland: Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, and Indiana.

This is not what you hear in the media, nor what you hear from the corporate reformers in these states, who are still crying wolf about the “crisis” in public education and the need to turn public schools over to private management as soon as possible.

Finland excels on the PISA exams, which tests have students use their learning to solve real-life problems. The TIMSS exams are aligned with the curriculum. Take your pick.

As I have written before and will write again, we should forget the horse race.

Once a nation reaches a certain level of economic and social development, the test scores predict nothing and are of far less importance than income inequality, poverty, and the physical and mental health of its people.

A teacher sent me this link and urged me to post it.

This is a story about Lauren Rousseau, a substitute teacher who lost her life during the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School on one of the days that she was hired to teach.

Teaching was what she most wanted to do, but Newtown had a declining enrollment and was not hiring teachers. It has laid off 10% of its teachers in the past few years.

Lauren Rousseau worked for $75 a day with no benefits.

She was a barista at Starbucks when she wasn’t teaching.

Read it soon because the Wall Street Journal will have it behind a paywall in a few days.

The teacher who sent it to me suggested that it was remarkable because the Wall Street Journal editorial pages are known for their nonstop tirades about teachers and public education.

The editorial board has long been a cheering section for vouchers and the free market and a loud critic of public education.

It is rare that one will see a kind word there about anyone connected to public education.

But I note that this is an article by the news staff, which has long been one of the best in the nation, and which does not share the political agenda of the editorial board.

Congratulations to the fine journalists on the news side of the WSJ for telling Lauren Rousseau’s moving story.

Carol Burris is the principal of an outstanding high school on Long Island in New York. She is a leader of the principals’ group opposing the new state evaluation system.

This post includes her recent letter to the Regents in opposition to a new diploma program that she fears will encourage tracking. Her own high school has no tracking and she explains why it is a bad idea.

A stunning editorial in the Statesman, a Louisiana publication, raises an important question about Governor Jindal’s voucher program: Why do conservatives remind everyone about the importance of adhering faithfully to the literal meaning of the state constitution except when they choose not to?

The Jindal voucher plan is funded by the Minimum Foundation Funding dedicated specifically in the state constitution to “public elementary and secondary schools.” Private and religious schools do not fit that definition. There is no loophole. They are not public.

A state judge (a Republican, by the way) struck down the funding for vouchers a few weeks ago, declaring that it violated the plain language of the state constitution.

But, say Jindal’s defenders, “it’s for the children.” Who cares about the constitution when the children “need” to attend a private or religious school using money that is taken away from public schools? Why be so picky about the literal meaning of the words?

One conservative quoted here says that since the state is using the same public funding for charter schools, which are not really public schools, why not bend the constitution a bit more to fit those private and religious schools in too?

A good question, and an argument that could be used to argue (in his words) that charter schools are also private and should not take money away from the minimum budget dedicated to public schools.

Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote many years ago that “a foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds,” but the very least conservatives could do is be consistent with their fundamental belief that the constitution means what it says. In the case of the Louisiana constitution, there is no wiggle room, no room for ambiguity.

A reader comments on the National Rifle Association’s ideas for school security:

“Let’s pretend. 100,000 schools would need 100,000 guards, preferably active police officers, who would by a conservative estimate cost at least $100,000 per year apiece in salary and benefits. That’s $10,000,000,000 to start, plus who knows how much more for the added costs of liability insurance, training, equipment, etc. Is this making any sense? Even if it did, how could we afford it? But wait, it may just be another golden opportunity for free-markets and privatization cloaked as public service to step in and save the day. The NRA could follow the TFA model to create GFA, Guards For America. Why, with just a few short weeks of specialized training, newly minted nonunion rookie guards would be ready to serve at half the cost for two years before moving on to that next rung on the career ladder. And just think of the profits that would flow to investors and those at the very top of the pyramid. Imagine that.”

Ron Isaac is a retired teacher of English in New York City. He writes:




What a shame that language is such a pliable substance!  It’s putty in the hands of folks who control public policy debates, especially about education. And it can be deadly to progress when it’s off the tongues of people who exercise authority unjustly, either enabled by their own title or position or else by their power to purchase the influence of others who are in such position to damage or enrich or simply make things happen.

These people do to phrases and sometimes to popular perceptions what whip-snapping “trainers” do to tigers in a circus. By making them heel, they in effect own these great creatures.

Language is also a great creatureAnd increasingly it too is being owned by the most formidable of predators: the bold and occasionally ignorant ( most of them know exactly what they are doing, which is why they realize the necessity of describing it differently) people and groups who master language. Not as orators but as slave-drivers.  They fiddle with the DNA of word-meanings and do violence to the concepts behind them.  They attach subliminal implications that don’t belong there and provide a cozy philosophical base for their biases. And then they deploy these adulterated definitions into the mainstream of parlance and the so-called marketplace of ideas.

As they see it, in a perfect world the marketplace itself would be their property. No trespassing.

They’ve created a new glossary made up of words whose meanings they’ve hijacked. There’s more of them than there are plankton sucked into the megamouth of feeding whale-shark. My favorite is “education reform.”

No thinking person will dispute the premise that education, like most things in life, can and should be improved. And that “reform: what needs to be improved” makes it better. And that it’s desirable to make our schools better so kids can prosper.

Voila!

But most “reformers” who talk that way, whether reactionaries or faux progressives, are talking in code. Very cynical but unfortunately it often gets the dirty job done. The surface message may resonate with an audience what may be clueless to the underlying code.

These “reformers” are actually preaching privatization, trying to seduce educators with flirtatious notions of “professionalism” that erode autonomy in the classroom, expunge retention and tenure rights from the law,  set up tricks and trip ropes in licensing, compensation and promotions, and overall peddling the surrender of civil service protections to the absolute and veto-proof prerogative of management.

There are many enlightened managers, no doubt. But that’s not the point. There are many enlightened reformers. But that’s not the point either.

The point is that a certain specie of “reformer” gives lip-service to the grandeur of the teaching vocation, but their fondness for the dignity of the workplace is like the affection of vipers for birds and rabbits.

They know that teachers uphold the value of standards. So using a morbid mutation of the word “standards,” they pursue “standardized testing.”  They realize that teachers who feel secure in their dedication and ability as professionals will not only tolerate but will embrace being judged. So in many areas across the country they are conspiring to set up evaluation schemes that superficially appeal to that confidence, but actually offer management the tools of execution that King Henry the Eighth would have envied.

Nowhere is their guilt in the misappropriation of language more venal than when these “reformers” strain to split teachers from their unions by suggesting that the two have contradictory interests.

They spread the lie that teachers’ opportunities for individual growth, recognition and reward are somehow hogtied by their union loyalties. They sharply contrast teacher virtue with union vice. They quote some dumbass research from some curiously-funded “think tank” or foundation to proclaim that if only teachers would free their diligent hides from the ripping talons of the union bird-of-prey, then “right to work” ( note: euphemisms qualify as a form of language abuse) heaven would reign on earth in a loss- of -dues-checkoff heartbeat.

Softening the language they use does not mean that they are soft-selling the demagoguery that inspires it. Some “reformers” use grace and humor as a vessel for murderous animus. With a twinkle of an eye or the winking of artful prose with co-oped words, they may assure vulnerable teachers that they have nothing to fear from disembowelment.  

One strategy to get teachers on board requires an incremental approach“Reformers” may use the ruse of getting on teachers’ “good side” by tantalizing them with the promise of a “seat at the table.”  But the presence of their union, though acknowledged, is downplayed. That’s makes sense, since what these ‘reformers” lust for is the demise of rights won for teachers by their unions over the generations.

They
 won’t choke out institutional memory outright, but they’ll exhaust all tactics to discredit it and make it seem irrelevant going forward.They’ll extend the proverbial “olive branch”  now and then or let some crumb of benefit nourish the hopes of teachers here and there. They’re banking on the false trust that teachers and their unions will be content to just “save face.”

But we’re not about “saving face.” We’re about saving language from predators. We’re about daring to call realities by their proper name.
We’re about not falling for false definitions but for standing up to them. We’re about education. We don’t shrink from the attraction of positive challenges.

Real reform, for instance.