Archives for the month of: April, 2013

About once a week, I receive emails from an organization I do not know. It contains beautiful graphics claiming to rate different aspects of education. Usually I delete without opening, but this one caught my eye because it said it was rating the states.

The email says:

“Hi Diane,

“Ever wonder how your state working to create a better education system? Please take a look at this infographic based on data from the State of Education: State Policy Report Card 2013. Feel free to share and discuss the infographic on Diane Ravitch’s Blog as you like.

“Like all of our educational materials, we’ve published this under a free-to-use Creative Commons license. All sources are cited in the footer but if you have any questions, or are open to a guest post on the topic, do not hesitate to get in touch.

“Mu.


Muhammad Saleem
http://muhammadsaleem.com
(312) – 576 – 1575”

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I did open it and found that it rated Louisiana and Florida as the top states in the nation for education policy. Ha! The state where Bobby Jindal and John White are handing out public money to Bible schools and for-profit vendors. And the state touted by Jeb Bush where the graduation rate is lower than that of Alabama.

I quickly looked to the source and realized that it was Rhee’s StudentsFirst, which ranked states based on criteria she likes, such as readiness to privatize and to eliminate all rights for teachers.

So, yes, I decided it was time to cite this info graphic on my blog and warn readers not to trust any of its slick packaging.

EduShyster opines that Bill Gates has 3.7 truly transformational ideas every day.

She is certain that the next one will be the biggest and best of all.

Read here to find out what is on the way.

Education Trust, a Washington public policy group, recently prepared a report about education reform in Michigan. A reader asked me to review it, and I turned to William Mathis of the National Education Policy Center to write an analysis.

Now, given that Governor Rick Snyder is working with an external group to defund public education, these recommendations must be seen in the light of a governor and a legislature that will do whatever they can to outsource funding and education to private entrepreneurs.

Here is Mathis’ take on the Education Trust report:

“Invest in What Works: An Education Road Map for Michigan Leaders.”
EdTrust Midwest

 

                  In a new report by The Education Trust – Midwest, the authors spell out what they describe as a “common sense” agenda for the reform of Michigan schools. They set forth a six part program – one with which most reasonable people would agree. However, since the proposal is at a high level of abstraction, the devil is in how the details get worked-out. For example, the report calls for a more adequate funding system as well as for a better accountability system. Will policy-makers adopt a better funding scheme or will they adopt a harsher accountability system?

                  This 20 page report is heavy on photographs, charts, borders and boxes. The reader would be well advised to check their supply of color ink cartridges before printing. Instead of research (which gets a vague nod in places), the report supports its recommendations by state and district level anecdotes.

                  The paper sets up the problem in the time-honored and much used “Nation at Risk” format, which can be summarized as “Ain’t it awful!!!” The problems with Michigan education are catalogued using NAEP and state testing results. As can be predicted, the charts are cherry-picked to show Michigan as the lowest performing of the selected comparison states.

                  As contrasted with other reports in this expanding genre, the report surprisingly lays the blame for this mediocrity on an unusual source:

“Michigan’s primary strategy has been to expand school choice by allowing charter and virtual schools to proliferate, regardless of quality. Michigan has largely counted on choice to dramatically raise achievement – and that strategy hasn’t paid off.” (p. 4)

The report then presents four pages illustrating that the charter and virtual schools have received heavy public emoluments but have simply not delivered on their promises.

Having laid the ground-work, the report then sets forth its six point program.

The first is a “sustained focus on implementation and quality.” True to the “common sense” motif, few would disagree that reforms need long-term and sustained support. Many would lay a good part of the short-comings of NCLB to such a lack of support.

The second is “effective teaching and school leadership.” Again, few would disagree. State leaders are said to have failed to step up to the plate. The authors are undoubtedly correct when they note that districts lack the resources or expertise to carry-out teacher improvement systems. Does this mean test-based evaluation systems? There is an allusion to such a system in the text and the anecdotes but the reader is left adrift on this point. They dodge the issue.

The third is “rigorous college and career-ready leadership.” Although parroting the federal line, the authors recognize that “adoption of these policies is not enough.” Support systems to make this a reality are not in place.

Fourth is “improve school accountability and support.” At some point, the education policy community will become weary of the now meaningless, chest-thumping phrase, “held accountable.” While a school evaluation system is certainly a universal requirement, repeating the empty mantra does not provide useful insight. Recognizing the need for school improvement capacity, the authors do say the schools need “support for improvement based in research and proven expertise, rather than wishful thinking.”

Fifth is to ”revise school funding formulas.” The authors raise the funding adequacy issue particularly for the neediest children. Since 2008 (and the recession) the question of financial adequacy has been eclipsed by the mentality that accountability systems will solve all problems. In fact, some pseudo-research from right wing think-tanks say schools have enough funds (The money matters argument was effectively resolved by 1995 but that doesn’t keep it from resurfacing).  The authors are to be commended for raising this vital point.

The final point is “strengthen relationships with parents and communities.” This point can be found on just about anybody’s list. It seems to be a requirement of all task force reports to bow in this direction.  How this is to be done is left basically unanswered.

If taken in the whole, the “road map” could be quite helpful. Although supported by anecdotes rather than research, many of the points enjoy a strong research foundation. Particularly unusual for the genre, EdTrust Midwest is to be commended for (1) pointing out the shortcomings of charter and virtual schools, (2) highlighting the call for adequate funding particularly for the neediest children, and (3) consistently noting that the school improvement agenda has not been adequately supported.

While applauding the authors for highlighting these findings, the danger of this report (or of any such report) is that, like the report itself, it can be cherry-picked by policymakers to support pre-existing political opinions. This is a danger of reports and recommendations at such high levels of abstraction.

William J. Mathis

National Education Policy Center

April 23, 2013

This just in:

Could you help to encourage educators, parents and community members to attend the rally for Public Education in Olympia, WA. On April 27 at 9:30 a.m., WEA Representative Assembly delegates will stand on the capitol steps in the final hours of the legislative session to make one last stand for our students, our professions and our schools. Please join us!

https://www.facebook.com/events/239545506170761/

Jason Stanford wonders why Texas Instruments wants every student to pass Algebra 2 as a graduation requirement. That is the current requirement. And why Texas Instruments feels so keenly about it that it hired high-powered lobbyist Sandy Kress to work the Legislature. Stanford explains why TI is so passionate about this particular subject.

Kress was the architect of No Child Left Behind. He also lobbies for Pearson. He is an outstanding lobbyist. Pearson won a $500 million contract to test kids in Texas even as the state cut funding by more than $5 billion for public schools.

Once you start following the money, it’s hard to stop.

A reader offers this observation:

“Before teaching, I worked in software development. If our company released a major product revision with no quality assurance testing and no trial beta release, we would be out of business in a week as well as the laughing stock of the industry.

“Common Core is a corporate initiative written from ivory towers. Teachers had little say. The standards are poorly written and suppress innovation and learning. We have no idea if they are effective or relevant. The logo for Common Core should be a picture of lemmings going over a cliff.”

Educators in Louisiana will rally today against Bobby Jindal’s radical privatization “reforms.”

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Media writers, reporters, editors, webmasters, bloggers:

TODAY at the Capitol — Unified Education Organizations to Address Jindal Agenda

WHO: Major State Education Organizations representing Louisiana public schools

WHAT: Press conference to announce unified opposition to re-enacting elements of Acts 1 and 2 of the 2012 Session

WHEN: TODAY — Tuesday, April 23, 2013 at 3 p.m.

WHERE: Steps of the Louisiana State Capitol — located at 900 N. 3rd Street in Baton Rouge

WHICH Organizations:
Coalition for Louisiana Public Education
Louisiana School Boards Association (LSBA)
Louisiana Association of School Superintendents (LASS)
Louisiana Association of School Executives (LASE)
Louisiana Association of Educators (LAE)
Louisiana Federation of Teachers (LFT)

An unprecedented alliance of education organizations will hold a joint press conference at 3 p.m. Tuesday, April 23, to announce their opposition to the re-enactment of elements of Governor Bobby Jindal’s education agenda.

Act 1 and Act 2 of the 2012 Legislative Session have both been declared unconstitutional by district courts.

Instead of working with stakeholders on meaningful, research-based education reform, the governor and his allies seem intent on rehashing the same failed policies that have frustrated educators and school boards around the state.

Leaders of organizations including the Louisiana Association of Educators (LAE), Louisiana Association of School Executives (LASE), Louisiana Association of School Superintendents (LASS), Louisiana Federation of Teachers (LFT), and Louisiana School Boards Association (LSBA) will announce their unity plans at the press conference.

Look for these contacts today at the Capitol, or call them for more details:
CONTACT: LSBA — Executive Director Scott Richard – (225)769-3191
LASS — President Mike Faulk – (225) 791-0365
LAE — Communications Specialist Ashley Davies – (225) 343-9243 ext. 119.
LFT — Director of Public Relations Les Landon – (225) 923-1037
Coalition for Louisiana Public Education — Founder/Chairman Jack Loup — 985-373-1781
— jackloup@wildblue.net
Thank you for your coverage,
Mary K. Bellisario
Member, Coalition for Louisiana Public Education
bayouduo@bellsouth.net
Check us out on Facebook!

The Network for Public Education has developed an excellent news source of stories from across the nation.

Follow it to stay informed.

And please consider joining the Network. It is only $20 for membership. Join with your friends and allies as we push back against those who are imposing failed ideas on our children and our schools.

Many people in Louisiana are fed up with a Bobby Jindal’s war on the public sector.

A rally is planned for April 30.

For Immediate Release
For more information contact:
Mike Stagg, Forward Louisiana
Phone: 337-962-1680
eMail: mstagg@forwardla.org

Enough Is Enough!
Louisianans to Rally For the Common Good on April 30th

BATON ROUGE — Thousands of Louisianans will gather on the steps of the state Capitol April 30th calling on the Legislature to reject Governor Bobby Jindal’s distorted and discredited policies and adopt a pro-common good agenda.

Rallying under the banner of Enough Is Enough, people from across Louisiana will gather on the steps of the state Capitol at 11 am on April 30th to reclaim our history, our culture, our infrastructure and our government. Our governor has conducted reckless social experiments on the people of Louisiana in a desperate attempt to position himself for a run for the Presidency of the United States. The human toll has been staggering. In rejecting these policies, the people of Louisiana have said “Enough Is Enough!”

The Jindal record is one of coddling corporations with tax exemptions, tax cuts for the rich, shifting the burden of government onto working families, attacking the job and retirement security of state workers, turning public education into a casino for private school operators, and dismantling essential public health infrastructure for the benefit of private interests.

The Governor’s arbitrary decision deny more than 500,000 Louisiana citizens access to health coverage under the Medicaid expansion undermines the health security of every Louisiana citizen by denying essential federal funding to healthcare providers across the state.

The refusal to participate in Medicaid expansion, combined with the privatization of the LSU Charity hospitals without provisions being made to care for the uninsured sets the stage for a fiscal, medical and human catastrophe in Louisiana.

Everyone is invited and encouraged to come to the Capitol in Baton Rouge at 11 a.m. on Tuesday, April 30th, 2013 to declare that “Enough Is Enough.”

Angelina Iles of Pineville, the founder of Enough Is Enough, said that after months of battling Bayou Health on behalf of her disabled brother, the proposed closure of Huey P. Long Medical Center was the final straw.

“What I learned through Bayou Health was that this was a system set up to benefit the companies that run it, but not the patients in need nor their families,” Ms. Iles said. “If I’d have let them have their way, my brother would be dead now. I would not let that happen. I can’t sit idly by and let this Governor destroy the public hospital system that belongs to us all.”

The Coalition has come together around these ideas:
We The People have rejected this Governor and his policies.
We appreciate the value of public education.
We know that we are one paycheck away from needing the services of a public hospital, or one illness away from bankruptcy.
We want public employees treated fairly.
We want higher education to remain affordable for all Louisiana families so that pathways to prosperity are not locked off behind gated communities.
We want a Louisiana where everyone has access to the basic resources and tools we will need to build successful lives here.
We want families with children with disabilities to have access to services, not waiting lists.
We want children with behavioral health issues to get the treatments and care we need to grow up to be productive citizens.
We want those with mental health issues to have access to care, regardless of our income.
We want environmental protection that safeguards the health of our communities and the natural treasures of our state, not the interests of corporate polluters.
Bobby Jindal’s policies have undermined all of the above and more. WE ARE COMING TO BATON ROUGE TO BEGIN RESTORING OUR STATE.

“The Legislature needs to catch up with the people,” said Mike Stagg, Baton Rouge coordinator of the rally. “If Legislators don’t restore balance by bringing in more revenue in a fair and responsible way, these legislators will own these cuts and they will have the same kind of unpopularity the Governor is experiencing today.”

The coalition organizing the event includes religious leaders, civic and social leaders, teachers, students, public employees, retirees, mental health, public health and social services advocates, and supporters of Medicaid expansion , from every geographic region of Louisiana.

Louisiana has had enough of Bobby Jindal and his policies of comforting the comfortable and afflicting the afflicted.

We will make that message loud and clear on April 30th and we will offer Louisiana a clear path forward. Please come and join us.

For additional information on the rally, visit Enough Is Enough on Facebook. The event website can be found at http://www.louisianashadenough.org

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Leo Casey, a long-time union activist, here reviews a recent report by the Thomas B. Fordham Institute decrying the immense power of teachers’ unions. Michael Petrilli of TBF described the unions as “Goliaths” battling the weak, underfunded “Davids” of the corporate reform movement.

Casey challenges the report and the characterization, pointing out that corporate reformers have deployed vast amounts of money–far greater than the teachers’ unions could ever muster–to destroy the last vestige of teacher unionism. This assures that teachers have no voice at the table when governors and legislatures decide to slash spending on education or to privatize it to the benefit of entrepreneurs and campaign contributors.