Archives for the month of: February, 2013

Readers of this blog know Jersey Jazzman as one of the sharpest bloggers on the web. I invited him to write something specially for the readers of this blog, and here it is:

 

 

As an American public school teacher, one of my greatest frustrations is how little our debate about education has been informed by the people who actually do the teaching. It’s not that I think teachers are the only ones who should have a say in education policy; that would be as foolish as thinking that only astronauts who’ve been in space should determine the direction of NASA.

Increasingly, however, I’m finding arguments put forward by pundits that are rather silly to someone who has actually spent his career in front of students. I read their op-eds and their blog posts and their magazine articles and I think to myself: “If this guy had spent a few years in front of a classroom, he never would have written this stuff.”
Take, for example, this post on teaching by the normally estimable Matthew Yglesias:
The new issue of the American Federation of Teachers’ magazine American Educator has a very interesting article from Richard Kahlenberg profiling the most innovative and effective socioeconomic integration schemes at work in public education today, and the considerable success these programs have at raising student achievement. But it ends on what struck me as an odd note:
I’ve been highly critical of Rhee’s attack on teachers’ unions in venues like Slate and the Washington Post. I don’t expect her to give up her fixation on unions, but I do help to convince others of a fundamental but too-often-ognored truth: the major problem with American schools is not teachers or their unions, but poverty and economic segregation. That’s what the research suggests. It’s what 80 school districts have come to realize. And until federal officials catch up, it’s what I will continue to push them to acknowledge.
The striking thing here is not so much the conclusion that classroom education isn’t very important compared to socioeconomic issues, but the venue in which it appears. The basic logic of “the enemy of my enemy is my friend” is fairly clear. Michelle Rhee is an enemy of the AFT, and Kahlenberg’s analysis suggests that Rhee’s agenda is mistaken. So AFT wants to publish Kahlenberg’s analysis.
But a straightforward reading of the policy implications of Kahlenberg’s piece is that instead of pursuing Rhee’s reforns, Adrian Fenty’s administration in DC ought to have reduced spending on teacher salaries and invested the funds instead in low-income housing subsidies and tax cuts for high-income families. Promoting more economically integrated schools and neighborhoods isn’t going to seriously reduce the city’s need for police and fire officers, for garbage collection and bus service, or most other things. But if it’s true that socioeconomic integration is much more important for student achievement than teacher quality, then it seems like a no-brainer to reduce expenditures on teachers (accepting that some good ones may leave and be replaced by somewhat worse candidates) and reinvest the funds directly in the key driver of achievement. Now maybe that’s right (though I doubt it) but certainly it’s not something AFT or other unions would be interested in seeing happen.
Yet it seems to me that if I want to make the business case for paying Slate writers, I have to persuade the bosses that Slate traffic is related to the quality of the writers employed in an important way. If it’s not fair to blame us for bad traffic because actually all that matters is the photos that accompany the stories, then obviously the thing to do would be to spend less on paying writers and more on photographers or photo licensing services.
See, I read this, and I think: “Matt has no idea what I do, does he? Because, if he did, he never would have written this; it’s embarrassingly clueless about teachers and schools.” I’m sorely tempted to leave it at that – but Yglesias is clever enough here that he deserves a rebuttal that’s based on more than argument by authority. So let me break down my specific objection:
Yglesias’s premise is fairly simple: teachers should not be pointing out the other factors that influence student achievement, because that diminishes their own importance.
But what if those factors are a necessary precondition for good teaching?
What Rhee and her ilk have been trying to sell lately is this notion of the Superteacher: a Mr. Chips or Mr. Holland or Mr. Escalante or Ms. Johnson (or Ms. Rhee – as if) so freakin’ awesome that even a kid with an abusive father or an unemployed mother or untreated allergies will rise above it all and conquer the world and be admitted to Dartmouth. It’s a nice story, and sometimes it even comes true. But not nearly as often as the reformy types would have us believe.
The sad truth is that the correlation between test-based student achievement and socio-economic status is nearly perfect; if poverty wasn’t destiny, that correlation would be far weaker. So it’s critical for good teaching to have a student that is ready to learn, and it’s ridiculous to assume teachers should simply shrug off these impediments and perform miracles.
But that’s not the same as saying that teaching doesn’t matter. Yglesias’s analogy is severely flawed – schools are not businesses – but let’s use it anyway:
If Yglesias’s bosses demanded that he generate traffic to his blog, but then refused to give him a stable connection to Slate’s servers, would that mean that he wasn’t important to the company? Of course not:  Slate needs him to generate content, but he can’t do that if he doesn’t have the preconditions necessary for him to do his job.
Imagine if the CEO of Slate went to Matt and said: “Look, nothing is more important than making sure we have good infrastructure, because if we’re not on-line, we can’t get viewers. So I’m going to slash your salary and gut the editorial department so we can invest in making sure our servers are rock-solid.”
Matt might say: “But how can we have a good magazine without writers?”
CEO: “Hey, you were the one always making excuses for not getting hits: you kept complaining that the servers were going down, and that’s why traffic was bad. We’re fixing that, just like you wanted. But YOU’RE the one who said the servers were important; don’t come around now and try to claim that you’re important too!”
Yes, this is absurd, but it’s the way Yglesias sees the teachers unions’ argument. He believes that pointing out the importance of poverty in student outcomes diminishes the importance of the teacher. But the effectiveness of the teacher’s work is predicated on the student’s environment: the teacher can’t teach if the student can’t learn.
I – and every other teacher in America – live this every day. It’s so ingrained into our daily work that we don’t even think about it: we find it silly to even consider the idea that our role is somehow diminished by the simple fact that student characteristics matter. We work closely with parents because we know what happens at home sets the stage for what we do at school. But the importance of the child’s life outside of school doesn’t mean that what we do is irrelevant.
All of this may not be immediately apparent to someone who doesn’t teach. All the more reason we should be more involved in the conversation.
I don’t know how many teachers Matt Yglesias interacts with, but I think it would benefit his perspectives on education enormously if he added a few more contacts to his address book who work in schools. For that matter, I’d like to see all education pundits spend some more time actually listening to those of us who are doing the job. I know you all went to school and you all send your kids to school, but that’s not really the same thing, is it?
Listen to us: you might be surprised at how much you learn.

A reader writes:

Shakedown Artists

A number of billboards have gone up recently in LAUSD board member and candidate for re-election, Monica Garcis’s district two months before school board elections. They read, ‘ Dream Big – Arts education fuels creative thinking’ and include a picture of a thirteen year old Monica Garcia. This billboard was funded by LA Fund (lafund.org), a non-profit group founded in 2011 by her political allies LAUSD Superintendent and former Deputy Director of Education for the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, John Deasy and Megan Chernin. One of the LA Fund projects is Arts Matter which was started in response to the deep cuts to arts education in Los Angeles. Their website points
out that ‘In four years, the LAUSD has gone from running a nationally recognized arts education program’, to today struggling to piece together a drastically reduced and inequitable program. However, neither the website nor billboards point out that it was Monica Garcia and John Deasy who cut the arts program to the bone and created this crisis in the first place!

The LA Fund website points out how the arts promote creative thinking while at the same time, Deasy and Garcia have supported a stripped down curriculum focused on standardized tests. To put it simply, they have created a phony crisis by cutting the arts and are now using that very crisis to ask for monetary donations to be made to Deasy’s foundation. And how is that money used? The LA Fund website states that ‘All proceeds raised throughout Arts Matter will directly support arts integration in LA. public schools’ when in fact, a great deal of their money is being used to create billboards of Monica Garcia! This is the same Monica Garcia who recently let the school board know how she feels about funding programs supported by the community. She suggested that, instead of funding the arts, adult and early childhood education, LAUSD should spend $500,000 on ipads for each student! It is also important to point out that Superintendent Deasy is an employee of LAUSD supervised by Ms. Garcia who has voted in favor of a number of raises for Deasy in the time since he founded the LA Fund.

The bottom line………Deasy created a crisis, created a non-profit to collect money to fix it and instead spends it on political ads for the woman who helped create the crisis and is responsible for his employment.

Matt Kogan

BILLIONAIRES OUT OF EDUCATION!!!!!!

EduShyster has discovered a brilliant program for highly effective teachers who don’t plan to hang around for very long. Read it and get a good laugh, as you always do when you read EduShyster.

Here is the sales pitch:

Do you dream of CRUSHING the achievement gap but aren’t sure that a 14 hour work day is right for you? Are you MAD passionate about training the next generation of test takers but worry that you lack the hand gestures to keep a large class of minority students on task? Reader: I’ve got excellent news. Thanks to our excellent and innovative friends atMATCH Education you can test drive your dream with absolutely no obligation to buy.

Gerald Coles here analyzes President Obama’s inaugural speech to divine what the President has in mind when he thinks about education policy.

Coles unpacks the assumptions.

The President seems to think of education only in terms of economic needs.

He sees children as global competitors.

He thinks that schools can overcome poverty.

It makes for interesting readin

Jersey Jazzman has been wondering whether governor Andrew Cuomo would copy the bullying tactics of New Jersey’s Governor Christie or would he adopt the collaborative style of Governor Jerry Brown.

Those of us who live in New York wonder why it took our brilliant friend in New Jersey to make his decision.

Minneapolis is one of America’s prettiest cities in one of its most beautiful states. But it has an ugly secret.

It has a charter sector that has resurrected segregation. Myron Orfield of the University of Minnesota Law School regularly tracks segregation in the Minneapolis-St. Paul schools. He says that seeing the charters–one white, one black–in the same neighborhood, feels like the Jim Crow era in the Deep South. Orfield estimates that three-quarters of the charters are segregated schools. Orfield’s 2012 study found that charter schools in the Twin Cities are more segregated and get worse results than public schools.

As NPR put it, summarizing Orfield’s study, said: “Nearly 20 years after Minnesota passed the nation’s first charter school law, charters in the Twin Cities continue to perform worse, are more segregated than traditional public schools and are forcing those traditional public schools to become more segregated.”

John Hechinger, a crack reporter for Bloomberg News, visited the Twin Cities and came away with the same reaction. He too saw the revival of the era preceding the Supreme Court’s Brown decision against “separate but equal” practices.

Sad that an idea that began with liberal impulses turned into a force for resegregation.

Mercedes Schneider has been reviewing the board of the National Council on Teacher Quality.

NCTQ gives grades to teacher training institutions and has positioned itself as a nonpartisan voice on the subject of teacher quality.

But what Dr. Schneider finds presents a different picture.

Read her earlier commentaries on NCTQ, which have been posted daily since January 30.

This coming Wednesday, February 6, 2013 educators, students, parents and supporters of public education nation-wide will take action in support of Garfield High School teachers and all teachers in Seattle Public Schools who are refusing to administer the MAP test.

Learn more at the Day of Action Facebook event page and on the Scrap The Map Blog.

Supporters of the boycott will be wearing red on February 6th to show solidarity for the historic effort to put an end to the inappropriate use of the MAP testing scheme.

This reader read the article by Professor Helen Ladd and Edward Fiske and decided to write to Senator Tom Harkin, the chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee.

I am so grateful for Helen Ladd’s voice and work.

Here is a letter I just sent to Senator Harkin, Chairman of the Senate Committee on Health and Education:

Senator Harkin,
I urge you to hold a senate hearing to investigate the closings of hundreds of public schools this year around our country. They will be replaced with privately-for-profit managed Charter Schools with no community oversight or process for ever returning them to neighborhood public schools.

Permanent, irreversible damage is happening to our local schools without policy review, or public awareness of the way this movement is being engineered by outside interests.

Please help defend our families and children from this onslaught to break our public schools.

Billions of dollars are being spent by private individuals and corporations to influence this process, along with engineered legislation sponsored by ALEC and other foundations intent on replacing public schools with their own version of education. This is not an innocent pilot project to help our schools.

I urge you to begin the process of investigating this issue that concerns the very heart and soul of our nation.

Sincerely,
Steve Cifka
Retired Classroom Teacher
Parent, Grandparent, Vietnam Vet and father of a soldier leaving for Afghanistan next month.

A New Orleans research group says comparing select and non-select schools is wrong.

Yet boosters of select charters do it often.