Teachers at Crenshaw High School are trying to stop the executioners’ axe from falling on their school, as it has fallen on so many others. Is it too late?
They write:
“The last few days have been hard to bear—especially for those of us who want UTLA to become an organizing union, which puts forth our vision for how we can best educate our kids. Last night, teachers at Crenshaw High School—who, despite the most valiant and strategic fight we’ve seen yet against a reconstitution, had been forced to reapply for their jobs under the district’s “magnet conversion”—began receiving news about whether they’d been rehired for year. The news has been very bad.
“More than 30 teachers at Crenshaw — half the faculty — have been “rejected” by the hiring committee so far, including UTLA Chair Cathy Garcia, West Area UTLA Board member Alex Caputo-Pearl, and multiple veteran African-American teachers, who not only teach at Crenshaw, but make the area their home, and who, now, will not be allowed back to teach the kids at their own “home school.”
“In addition to being a part of militant actions against the reconstitution, once the re-application process started, the faculty organized the majority of teachers to re-apply, believing that “that this is our school, we are part of this community, and we won’t be pushed out without going through every piece of this struggle we can, even a re-application process.” Everyone was clear-eyed about the process – that it would be a kangaroo court, with decisions essentially a forgone conclusion. But teachers agreed to go through it anyway, and push it into the light of day, because stability was important for the students. They’re why we’re all here in the first place.
“This news about Crenshaw is devastating, not only because it further destabilizes another inner-city school that serves students of color. It’s worse because Crenshaw, despite ongoing district neglect, had worked, through years of organizing and investment in instructional innovation, to become a model for bottom-up, genuine reform. The teachers at Crenshaw, working in partnership with students, parents, community members, and university scholars, had created a nationally-recognized model for educating students of color: The Extended Learning Cultural Model (ELCM).
“The ELCM is the single most groundbreaking, all-encompassing model for genuine education transformation attempted at an urban high school. The ELCM combines cutting edge instructional pedagogy with community-based internships, leadership opportunities, and activities that connect to the students’ classroom learning. This “extends learning” out into the community. The model also included parent workshops to further support student learning and development. The ELCM was a model to educate the whole child in each and every one of his/her ecosystems: classroom, home, and community.
“And the model was working! The work of the students, teachers, parents, and community members at Crenshaw had garnered the attention of the Ford Foundation, who awarded Crenshaw a $250,000.00 grant to pilot their work, with the promise of more money to come. In addition, WASC, the accrediting board, who threatened to remove Crenshaw’s accreditation just a few years before, praised the work of the faculty and staff, and the newly created stability and “espirit d’corps” of the entire Crenshaw community under this new model. Test scores rose significantly in 2011-12. All of this success occurred in spite of years of district neglect, and a virtual revolving door of administrators (more than 30 in the seven years since Crenshaw’s accreditation was threatened). The ELCM was turning Crenshaw around. All that was needed was stability, and perhaps (dare we say it) even some district support.
“What did LAUSD do instead? They destroyed it. Superintendent Deasy went after Crenshaw this past year, ignoring all of the gains recognized by the Ford Foundation, WASC, and the actual data (which spoke for itself). Deasy HAD to destroy the Extended Learning Cultural Model. And, he made Crenshaw High School a huge political priority. The ELCM was a direct threat to him, his top-down philosophy of education, and his authority as superintendent. The ELCM was not created by him or the District. It operated largely independently of him and the District (though the school invited him to be involved in a positive manner, several times over the last two years). Teachers and parents raised their own money for it, which must have been upsetting for our superintendent—to know that peon teachers and parents had direct lines to international foundations over him. The ELCM is based on education as a tool for critical thinking and contribution to social justice, not education to create more workers for a market and business model, as Deasy promotes. It had the support of prominent academics of color, with whom Deasy could not stand toe-to-toe. It was led by progressive unionists, not District hacks. The ELCM was, pure and simple, a direct threat to Deasy, and he knew he had to destroy it. So he did.
“Deasy blamed the years of inadequate progress not on district ineptitude (as WASC clearly noted), but on the teachers. He called the school a failure, and decided to institute more of the same: reconstitution. This time – cleverly, because it brings in more resources and connotes positive change — under the guise of a “magnet conversion.” He very specifically obliterated the Social Justice and Law Academy, by rejecting ALL of its architect teachers – this was the Academy that had planted the seeds for the ELCM more than any.
“The results so far have been the same as at Fremont, Jordan, Manual Arts, and Muir: teachers were forced to reapply for their jobs, and almost all of the veteran/activist teachers have not been rehired. And just like all the other reconstitutions that came before it, big UTLA did not have the power or strategy to stop it. While some officers have provided valuable but limited support in communicating with District officials, the two big things that the Crenshaw community needed UTLA’s help with were not able to be put together – help to organize the other 6 schools that are being magnetized so that the relatively strong 7th school, Crenshaw, won’t be left out on a limb; and investment in public relations, community ads, etc., to frame the whole “magnet conversion” city-wide as a destabilizer. Just like with Public School Choice, teacher evaluations, etc. – when UTLA goes issue by issue, one by one, school by school, we lost.
“The ELC Model at Crenshaw is what the Schools LA Students Deserve Campaign is really about. This is the kind of work community partners and UTLA can be showcasing. But as dark as this time has been, the fight is not yet over. We may have lost a key part of this battle at Crenshaw, but the fight to preserve the ELCM is just beginning. And, students and parents, again, are finding their footing after this blow. Again, this is an incredibly innovative, student-centered educational model. It was attempted by teachers, working in partnership with students, parents, and community members. And it worked. Remember that. Remember what WE can do to counter the fake reform proposed by the district, the billionaire Boys Club, and the neoliberals who want to impose a corporate model on public education.”
More to come on the ELCM soon.
In Unity,
Cathy Garcia
UTLA Chapter Chair, Crenshaw High School
Joseph Zeccola
UTLA Year-Round Director
Design Team Leader, The Social Justice Schools at Maya Angelou Community High School

Thank you again Diane for publishing this extremely accurate article which substantiates the comments I have been posting here for many weeks. Cathy Garcia did not mention the heavy handed Deasy approach foisted on both Hamilton and Verdugo High Schools, and at Venice HS, 3 schools which also had successful bottom up programs and had the buy-in of parents, teachers, students, administrators and community. The authoritarian top down attitude of Deasy, plus his lack of truthfulness, are a huge detriment to LAUSD and all of us who support our public schools.
It is so discouraging to all the many hard working teachers, students, and families, in this diverse City with about 900,000 students who speak 109 different languages (according to Deasy) to have a Mayor and a Superintendent who want to shut down and/or takeover and convert to charters, so many of our schools that they independently/unilaterally determine as “failing.”
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Maybe have the students get some media attention much like the students in Providence did.
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You have to understand that both Rupert Murdoch and the Koch brothers are ‘duking it out’ to buy the failed LA Times. Sam Zell who owns the Chicago Tribune and subsidiaries, just came out of bankruptcy and is eager to sell,. Eli Broad wants to buy the Times only, but Zell wants to sell the whole package. My guess is that Murdoch will win.
The media does not give us the time in LA to expand on these issues. Perhaps with Diane focused in on us, they will loosen up and instead of always inviting Michelle Rhee to explain education problems, they will resist their lazy approach and hunt up some excellent presenters for the anti-StudentsFirst/pro-public schools perspective. There are many who could do this in LA. But a 30 second sound bite at the tail end of the news is not what would help.
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There was a huge amount of public protesting by the Crenshaw community, including parents and neighborhood activists. But, nowhere does money talk louder than in Los Angeles.
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While I was still teaching at a CA school, not far from Los Angeles, I was under the impression that if 50% of a faculty agreed, they could turn their school into a charter operated by the teachers themselves. Is this true? If so, perhaps these Crenshaw teachers need to find out what they can do to take possession of the school. For teachers who “don’t want all that paperwork,” remember that you can hire people to do the administrative work. Isn’t it time to see teachers running the show? Just a thought.
As for Deasy, soon he will be toast.
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THANK YOU FOR WRITING AND POSTING THIS.
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I keep contacting Howard Blume who writes on education for the LA Times, as I am sure many educators do, and implore him to do a real investigative article on this issue. He has the facts from teachers at all these schools, but so far the Times only did the major hit piece on teachers and testing scores last year that caused a fine long term teacher to commit suicide. Most of you read all about that. And they lauded Waiting for Superman.
It is not as simple as Linda seems to think. There are so many constrictions on teachers, and legal challenges which are paid for by Rhee’s billionaires, that it pits David, the teachers, against Goliath, Broad/Bloomberg/Walton/Koch/Murdoch et al.
Deasy has the backing of all these billionaires and the LA Mayor, the 2 current Mayoral candidates cannot be coaxed into saying how they feel about this but they too seem to support Deasy….I doubt that he is headed for the toaster….sadly. And only 17% of voters turned out for the last School Board election…and the next one in a few weeks might not garner even that many votes. This is why it is imperative for Linda and all of us, nationwide, to get out the vote for Monica Ratliff…and to send her some money. Sanchez already has close to $1,000,000 and he has NEVER taught but is the lackey of the StudentsFirst group, while she is a lawyer, a real Latina, and a classroom teacher.
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I don’t think it would be simple, but I’d sure love to see teachers go on the offensive!
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At Fremont High School during the reconstitution, the top teachers were not rehired (for the most part) and the same is true at Crenshaw. At Fremont, we had former editors, actresses and tv writers and engineers who were second career teachers at Fremont and they were fabulous. We had several former Fremont students who had come back to teach and they were not rehired. One was expert at using classics and higher level texts with urban students and he was not rehired. He was picked up by a magnet school- yet he wasn’t good enough to stay at Fremont. What a joke.
They could not manipulate us to teach a canned curriculum so we had to go. Test scores reflect poverty and a lack of books in the home, not bad teaching. Until parents stop equating standardized tests with progess, nothing will change. Raw and scaled scores can be manipulated, students can be checked out of school etc to make it look like a miraculous change has happened when in fact NOTHING has changed.
My heart aches for these teachers at Crenshaw. You will never look at your profession the same, sad to say but it is the bitter truth. Those who know the most about education have the least control of it.
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They don’t care about education. This whole game is about money and power.
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Something like 35 administrators have been run through Crenshaw in just the last six years. I know. I was one of them. Principals lasted a few months or maybe a year. LAUSD provided NO LEADERSHIP and NO SUPPORT in any fashion of any kind, let alone any coherent fashion, to that school. As an assistant principal, I lasted barely two years and trust me even that was a Herculean effort as the challenges were so immense. The community faces such tremendous challenges as to defy description. Those challenges manifest themselves every minute of every day on campus. I am six seven, two forty. My fourth day there, I had the unmitigated gall to insist a young lady go to class. She punched me in the face full throttle. She was five six, perhaps a hundred pounds. She did not punch like a girl. Trust me. She wasn’t even supposed to be on campus. She’d been arrested and was waiting arraignment. She came to school to hang out with her friends and have her hair done. When school police tracked her down, all I wanted was for her to admit what she’d done. It took some doing, but she finally did and I asked her her story. The police asked if I wanted to press charges. How was I going to press charges against what should have been a sweet sixteen year old girl living anyone’s worst nightmares on a daily basis? Unlike Deasy, I have some humanity. We sent her home and I told her I was sorry. Death threats are common from gang members. All it takes is, “You need to go to class.”
The teachers there, every single one of them, even the ones who have been eaten up there for years and have become so discouraged as to barely be able to teach anymore are HEROES. EVERY SINGLE ONE OF THEM. I have taught for 27 years from Watts to Mid City to Palms to Crenshaw to Marina Del Rey. There are no human beings on the planet that I hold in higher regard than the teachers at Crenshaw. They are heroes just for showing up every day to a school the District long ago threw to the dogs.
LAUSD provided no support, no leadership, and as I say certainly no coherent leadership, no nothing for Crenshaw. Deasy did nothing but insult the proud and extraordinarily intelligent activist parents who live in the very heart of LA’s African American Cultural Mecca, Leimert Park (parents that could have made a difference), and demonize the teachers who face challenges unimaginable to anyone not at Crenshaw (unless you count Dorsey, perhaps; another school Deasy is busy demonizing while throwing to the dogs.)
Blame the teachers, Mr. Deasy. Blame the teachers. What could be easier? Blame the teachers. Throw them to the wolves. Deasy will now toss those teachers like garbage into the “displaced teacher” pile and surreptitiously order principals to never hire them. In two years, they will share the fate inflicted upon those in Deasy’s multiple teacher jails. He will fire them. Since principals follow orders out of fear, no one will hire them and Deasy will falsely accuse them of incompetence. “Why else would no one hire them in two years?” False allegations are Deasy’s sole forte. He will destroy the lives of heroes. Hundreds of them.
Reconstitute, Mr. Deasy! Reconstitute! What could be easier? Bring in a bunch of untrained, ill-equipped Teach for America rookies. Well I’ve got news for you, Mr. Deasy. Teaching at Crenshaw is not something a French literature major from Long Island can master overnight.
And neither can a school full of them.
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This is so true. The media had the nerve to trash the teachers who actually care and show up to this environment. They’ve done this same bs in Detroit to the roughest schools in the city. The state took the schools over and you wouldn’t believe the mess. They hired a bunch of TFA right out of college who have no idea what they are doing. The turnover has been tremendous. People don’t understand that you have to give people incentives to show-up to schools like this ( raises, retirement, benefits, etc. ) When did anyone in the media interview you about what is going on in LA? NONE!! Instead Obama had the nerve to make speeches saying, “We need better teachers”. Can you imagine? Obama, come out and have the nerve to interview these people instead of entertaining rich people at dinners for campaign money. Detroit is fouled up mess. This is headed your way. It is all a sham.
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Joseph, you could be talking about Fremont. Same story. But when the district finally did give support to the school for a few years, it began to improve- which was apparently a problem for the district, because they labeled us “failure” teachers and reconstituted the school. Some teachers landed on their feet but others…well let’s just say they suffered immensely – some of the very best were forced out of the profession.
Funny, in the middle of an economic recession, the district somehow found 80 million dollars to reconstitute a stable, improving school. It’s amazing how that works, isn’t it? The cowardly administrators could not be found in those last few days in June 2010- they knew what they had done. My current school gets many Fremont students who complain that the school was screwed up after the reconstitution. Fremont claimed they “graduated ” 700 students two years later but the truth is many of the kids who walked the stage did not have all of their credits. And parents and students complained in an article published in the LA Times that the “new teachers” didn’t seem as concerned about education and in fact a graduating senior put it more bluntly. LAUSD did not hire teachers who were “up to the task.” So even the students knew the truth- the college bound ones anyway. They were quite aware they were not prepared for college.
The utter chaos and devastation, the waste of teacher talent cannot be quantified- it was that great- and so it will be at Crenshaw as well.
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Let’s hope that all the reconstitution doesn’t leave LAUSD bankrupt, like some other districts which chose to bring in outside “talent”. When those schools close, it sure makes for some mighty cheap real estate as well as gentrification of mostly African-American communities.
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None of anything has to do with talented teachers….
This has everything to do with Talented Tester Bull S**************
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