Archives for the month of: March, 2013

Yesterday I wrote a post about a decision by the Los Angeles school board to reject Steve Barr’s request to put a “pilot school” in Venice High School. Presumably the rejection was influenced by a massive outpouring of opposition by parents and students. Barr is an entrepreneur, not an educator. He started Green Dot charter schools but resigned over a financial issue involving misuse of school funds.

Thus far, I have had to rely on accounts from local parents about what is happening in Venice because the story has gotten almost no media attention, other than an incomplete blog entry at the Los Angeles Times.

This comment just in on the fate of Venice High School.

The writer says:

“Venice now has to vote on whether the “empty space” will be given over to a charter school or that same pilot school. In essence, they now get to choose their method of execution. Interesting times.”

Notice the choice hat is missing: none of the bone.

This is what corporate reformers mean by choice: You may not choose a community school. You must choose what they give you whether you want it or not. You may not choose to say no.

The recent MetLife survey of the American teacher showed a high level of demoralization among the Marion’s teachers. For those wondering why, read on.

John Louis Meeks Jr. Is a Florida social studies teacher. He is a veteran of the U.S. Air Force. He wrote an open letter to Governor Scott to protest the disrespect shown to the state’s teachers. He points out that the Starr’s evaluation system makes no sense.

Governor Scott, please listen to Mr. Meeks:

Dear Governor Scott,

I have been teaching gifted social studies for over ten years in Florida and never have I experienced the type of fear and intimidation that I have endured either in my service to our nation in the Air Force or in any other capacity in which I have worked.

We would like to believe that education reform is designed to lift our students to a higher level of learning to best prepare them for citizenship and careers.

We would like to believe that the work of our state’s leaders is to truly improve our schools to ensure that educators are doing the work necessary to best serve our state and its future.

I take issue, however with the manner in which we evaluate our educators to gauge their work to teach our students and future leaders. The CAST evaluation system, in my opinion is grievously flawed because the value added formula actually ignores the value of the work that educators do every day.

First of all, the time that administrators are charged with observing educators is limited to small windows of opportunity to grade teachers according to a rubric that is well-intentioned but restricts them to what they actually see in the classroom. In this finite amount of time, principals and their designees only are allowed to record what they see and hear. I find fault in this because it provides no real context with which to judge classroom performance.

For example, a principal can walk into a classroom and can see that a teacher is sitting down to take attendance. This is behavior that is frowned upon as teachers are expected to be walking around the room and constantly hovering over their students.

For example, a principal can walk into a classroom and hear students talking about something other than their work. It is the teacher’s fault that they are not limiting their conversation to the work at hand. For example, a principal can walk into a classroom and observe that students are cleaning up the room to prepare for the next class. There is no instruction going on, therefore there is no learning going on.

And, once the administrator leaves, whatever flawed impression he or she has of the classroom is written in stone. It is because of this that I believe that CAST was designed to be a gotcha to drum out allegedly bad teachers for what may have been an anomaly in their performance that includes 180 days of constant work to help our students.

The darker side of CAST is the assessment end of the evaluation which is tied to student learning gains. Even with value added factors, this is a set-up in my opinion. The value of student learning gains cannot and should not be forced to rely on students’ performance on tests only.

Based on this metric, I am the second-worst social studies teacher in my school and this will become public knowledge when these CAST scores become public record in accordance with state law……

I am disappointed because I am often the last person to leave work each day because there is always something else to work on or complete and it is often the custodians who remind me when they are locking up the school. I am disappointed because there is no metric for the dedication that I have for my students and my school, and yet there is plenty of punishment lined up for me is I fail to make the grade for my students.

This is not the usual ranting of a lazy union flunky who wants to rest on his laurels. There have been days when I was sick and still went to work because it was my ultimate responsibility to serve the public. There have been days when I went to work on sick days to collect work to complete in my sick bed. Instead of appreciation, the usual condemnation that I receive from critics continues because I am a victim of the trite stereotypes that we are all bad teachers who get what is coming to us.

You might wonder why I do not leave for greener pastures. I should have left after being hospitalized for two weeks last year. I should have left after dealing with students who did not want to do any work no matter what incentives, prizes and rewards I offer. I should have left after my test scores remained stagnant in spite of all of my most sincere efforts. I stay, however, because I trust that our state’s leaders will finally hear what our educators have to say about CAST and its unintended consequences. I keep teaching because I know that a better day for education is ahead and because there will always be a better day for our students if we all believe that we are working as a team for public education.

Sincerely,
//signed//
John Louis Meeks, Jr.
Educator

Louisiana teacher Mercedes Schneider has uncovered a curious puzzle. When five veteran administrators are hired by the state superintendent as “network leaders,” at high salaries, then disappear from view, where did they go? What do they do?

I received an urgent message from a parent of a student at Venice High school in Los Angeles. She was desperate because had just learned that the privatization-friendly LA school board was about to vote on whether to give half of Venice High School to Steve Barr, eduentrepreneur (founder of Green Dot charters but now running a new charter chain). He wanted to start a “pilot school,” and this parent was outraged because, she said, Venice is a good school and didn’t need another school to take half its space away.

She wrote later to tell me that Venice High had narrowly escaped.

This reader offers his perspective:

“At the Tuesday LAUSD Board Meeting Deasy’s and Steve Barr’s sneak attack on Venice High School was stopped. The board voted to approve the plan but not the location because LAUSD and Barr made sure that until the last moment the public did not know. In fact a board member brought up Barr’s name and said it was in their documentation. I looked at my large printout and it was in theirs not ours. A student obtained in less than 2 days about 1,000 signature to not have that school on their campus.

“Previous to this as a result of Steve Zimmer being elected instead of the corporate privatizer put up by Rhee and friends Monica Garcia, every privatizers bought and sold friend, will not be board president after this term. She has had six and that has never before happened. Now no one can have it for more than 2 years.”

Most observers of the DC political scene think that Adrian Fenty lost to Vincent Gray because of the unpopularity and divisiveness of Michelle Rhee. A month after Gray wi, Rhee resigned and went on to create StudentsFirst, which has collected millions of dollars, mostly spent to elect Republicans in state legislatures.

Rhee may be out of DC, but her hand-picked team still runs the district. Gray may have won, but he dared not offend the city’s power structure by bringing in his own team.

Rhee’s deputy Kaya Henderson replaced her. Now Mayor Gray has chosen another Rhee clone to be his Deputy Mayor for education.

A reader sends this commentary and links to DC news:

“Greetings from DC. Just a few items that got my blood boiling.

“DC Mayor Gray – Appoints former TFA’er Abigail Smith as Deputy Mayor for Education

http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/gray-names-abigail-smith-deputy-mayor-for-education/2013/03/21/d24decb2-923d-11e2-bdea-e32ad90da239_story.html

“A little background on: (previous Bill Turque article)

“Smith was a major player in some of Rhee’s most controversial initiatives, such as the 2008 closure and consolidation of 23 schools and Capital Gains, the now-defunct program that paid cash to middle schoolers in exchange for good grades and behavior.”

Also PG County Executive Seeks Control of Schools:

http://washingtonexaminer.com/p.g.-county-executive-rushern-bakers-school-reform-bill-moves-from-maryland-house-to-senate/article/2525100

Most prophetic comments: a press release from PG County BOE:

“Mr. Baker’s proposal reduces public oversight of schools and voids the rights of our parents, students and labor unions,” the statement says. “The bill resembles that of the D.C. school takeover by former D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty. However, similar to the District, the bill falls short and fails to address the core issues facing our community.”

The school board in Lansing, Michigan, reached a deal with its teachers union to slash the budget. The district will eliminate teachers of the arts, music, and physical education in elementary schools. That is a cut of 87 teachers in a staff of 915. The teachers also accepted a pay freeze.

What kind of state and nation can’t afford arts and physical education for its young children?

I have to take my hat off to Jersey Jazzman. He has endless patience to read the tendentious “studies” produced by corporate reformers with the intent of proving that poverty doesn’t matter.

Here he takes on another one, asserting that “quality” teachers trump everything.

There is a simple way to prove the proposition. Why not take the entire staff of New Jersey’s highest performing public school and switch them with the staff of the state’s worst “dropout factory”?

Don’t take into consideration that the high-performing school has smaller classes, better resources, a full curriculum, etc., just switch the teachers.

There is lots more that goes into the differences but at least we could test the simplistic claim that high test scores and low test scores are solely the result of differences between teachers..

Philadelphia journalist Will Bunch connects lots of dots: school closings in Philadelphia, the senseless killing of a black teen in Brooklyn, obscene income inequality, a new high in the stock market.

When people are disrespected and unheard, they explode.

Iowa officials are very proud of a school that increased test scores of low-income kids. One reason, officials say, was that the school eliminated morning recess.

This teacher says the tradeoff is a bad deal. Was it to make time for more instruction or more test prep?

Chris Liebig engaged in a Twitter debate with State Commissioner Jason Glass.

Chris writes:

“You can be the judge of whether the discussion is going anywhere. But it seems clear that Glass must have a different definition of test prep than I have. Mine would be: single-mindedly pursuing higher test scores at the expense of other values that are cumulatively more important. One such value is providing a humane school experience. Another is preserving a child’s enjoyment of learning. Another is not teaching authoritarian values. Another is giving enough attention to subjects that aren’t tested or don’t lend themselves to testing.”

Another question: Would Jason Glass want this for his own children?

Kris Neilsen wrote the most amazing post I have ever posted.

It was called “N.C. Teacher: I Quit.”

It went viral.

On one day, it was opened over 66,000 times.

It went around the world and was reprinted on many other blogs.

Here is one of his latest posts.

It is called “First, Do No Harm.”