Archives for the month of: April, 2013

The California Democratic Party passed a resolution opposing corporate education reform.

It specifically criticized Michelle Rhee’s StudentsFirst and the Wall Street hedge fund managers’ group called “Democrats for Education Reform” as fronts for Republicans and corporate interests.

See the story in the Los Angeles Times here. The headline repeats the “reform” claim that they just want to “overhaul” schools, when the resolution below correctly describes their agenda.

The message is getting out. The public is beginning to understand the privatizers’ game of talking “reform” and “great teachers” while dismantling public education and the teaching profession.

This is great news!

Here is the resolution:

Supporting California’s Public Schools and Dispelling the Corporate “Reform” Agenda
Whereas, the reform initiatives of Students First, rely on destructive anti-educator policies that do nothing for students but blame educators and their unions for the ills of society, make testing the goal of education, shatter communities by closing their public schools, and see public schools as potential profit centers and children as measureable commodities; and

Whereas, the political action committee, entitled Democrats for Education Reform is funded by corporations, Republican operatives and wealthy individuals dedicated to privatization and anti-educator initiatives, and not grassroots democrats or classroom educators; and

Whereas, the billionaires funding Students First and Democrats for Education Reform are supporting candidates and local programs that would dismantle a free public education for every student in California and replace it with company run charter schools, non-credentialed teachers and unproven untested so-called “reforms”;

THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that the California Democratic Party reaffirms its commitment to free accessible public schools for all which offer a fair, substantive opportunity to learn with educators who have the right to be represented by their union, bargain collectively and have a voice in the policies which affect their schools, classrooms and their students;

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the California Democratic Party send this resolution to all elected Democratic leaders in California, publicize the corporate and Republican funding of these groups and work with the authors of this resolution to dispel the false reforms and support the real needs of the classroom: trained teachers, adequate funding, safe and clean facilities, diverse and stimulating curriculum and access to pre-school and higher education.

Dennis Walcott and other city and state officials in New York announced that they expect test scores to fall by 30% this year because of the switch to the Common Core.

They keep saying, almost too gleefully, how hard the test is. (Reader, remember that the test is “hard” only because state officials decided to raise the passing mark.)

Walcott said, “It’s time to rip the Band-Aid off, and we have a responsibility to rip that Band-aid off.”

Readers, I have been trying to figure out what that statement means.

Clearly, the chancellor thought it was profound so he said it twice.

What is the Band-aid?

What wound is it protecting?

Why is it good to rip it off?

Doesn’t it inflict pain when you do that?

Why would the chancellor want to inflict pain on so many children?

I welcome your deconstruction of this deep exclamation.

The same reader wins two straight weeks! In this article, he writes about the Washington Post’s internal dissent about covering Michelle Rhee. Jo-Ann Armao, the editorial writer, was a Rhee fan. Bill Turque was the reporter who covered Rhee, fairly and without bias.

He writes:

I won “COMMENT OF THE DAY (SO FAR” last Saturday,
in an article Dr. Ravitch wrote of the same name about
that COMMENT.

I’m gunning for “BEST COMMENT” two Saturdays in a row here.
[Editor’s note: Sorry, it is not Saturday.]

Here goes…

Jo-Ann Armao has a proven history of re-writing and softening
former education reporter Bill Turque’s criticisms of Rhee… without
either the knowledge, permission, or prior input of Turque.

For her part, Rhee was livid at Turque’s coverage, and consequently
refused to talk to Turque, and directed all D.C Public Schools
staff to do likewise.

Well, WaPo education reporter Bill Turque
wrote the following regarding Editor Jo Ann Armao’s bias
in favor of former D.C. Public Schools Chancellor Michelle
Rhee (Turque’s criticism made the initial print and on-line
editions… the parts that were later re-written by Armao are
in CAPITALS):

Turque: “THE CHANCELLOR IS CLEARLY MORE
COMFORTABLE SPEAKING WITH JO-ANN, WHICH
IS WHOLLY UNSURPRISING. I’M A BEAT REPORTER
CHARGED WITH COVERING, AS FULLY AND AS FAIRLY
AS I CAN, AN OFTEN TURBULENT STORY ABOUT THE
CHANCELLOR’S ATTEMPTS TO FIX THE DISTRICT’S
PUBLIC SCHOOLS.

“THIS JOB INVOLVES CHRONICLING MESSY AND
CONTENTIOUS DEBATES BASED IN BOTH POLITICS
AND POLICY, AND SOMETIMES PUBLISHING
INFORMATION (that Michelle Rhee) WOULD RATHER NOT
SEE IN THE PUBLIC DOMAIN .

“JO-ANN, ON THE OTHER HAND, SITS ON AND EDITORIAL
BOARD WHOSE SUPPORT FOR THE CHANCELLOR HAS BEEN
STEADFAST, PROTECTIVE AND AT TIMES, ADORING. WHERE
THIS GETS COMPLICATED IS THAT THE BOARD’S STANCE, AND
THE CHANCELLOR’S OBVIOUS RAPPORT WITH JO-ANN
ALSO MEANS THAT DCPS HAS A GUARANTEED SOFT LANDING
SPOT FOR UNCOMFORTABLE AND INCONVENIENT DISCLOSURES —
KIND OF A PRINT VERSION OF THE LARRY KING SHOW.”

(1/27/2011)

Ouch! A supposedly objective pillar of U.S. journalism—the
very entity that brought down a corrupt president—now
” HAS A GUARANTEED (Michelle Rhee) SOFT LANDING
SPOT FOR UNCOMFORTABLE AND INCONVENIENT DISCLOSURES —
KIND OF A PRINT VERSION OF THE LARRY KING SHOW

Dem’s fightin’ words!

Well, Jo Ann was non-plussed by this characterization, and
without Turque’s knowledge or consent,
had the last sentences re-written & greatly condensed for the later print and
on-line editions thusly:

“Where this gets complicated is that board’s stance, and THE
CHANCELLOR’S obvious RAPPORT WITH JO-ANN MEANS THAT DCPS WOULD
PREFER TO TALK TO HER THAN ME.”

(again, the part BELOW that Armao rewrote/condensed is in CAPITALS…
note how Armao excised the pointed adjective “OBVIOUS”… to make
Armao appear more objective that Turque believes she is.)

Again, this alteration was printed as if Turque himself wrote the
Above words (in CAPITALS), when it came from Armao’s keyboard
without any prior permission and input from Turque… to the public,
this misleading at best, despicable at worst.

Other sections of Turque’s piece were similarly watered down by
Armao. This was a huge story during January and February 2011.

As a pro-union teacher out her in L.A., I could go on at length about
my problems with the L.A. Times coverage of education.
Don’t get me wrong. Occasionally, its coverage is fair and
accurate, but at other times, most of the coverage is…
well, let’s not get into all that here.

However, the problems with bias at the L.A. Times pales
In comparison to such an action on Armao’s part. She
deliberately misled people into thinking Turque wrote
words that he did not.

Regarding the Turque/Armao WaPo controversy, Robert
Pondiscio of Core Knowlege put it best at:

http://blog.coreknowledge.org/2010/01/28/who-censored-the-washington-posts-rhee-item/

Regarding the Armao rewriting / censoring, Pondiscio states:

“Having spent the better part of my career in journalism, I was
thrilled to read Turque’s original blog post, and delighted the
paper showed enough respect for its readers to lift the curtain
on its processes. By explaining the behind-the-scenes
machinations and showing how powerful people maneuver
to affect coverage and spin perceptions, they were treating
readers like grownups, holding both Rhee and the paper
itself accountable.

“But what happened? Why change the story?”

Undeterred by the release of John Merrow’s report of widespread cheating on her watch, Michelle Rhee traveled to South Carolina to attack teachers. She said they were defenders of the status quo. She said they were protecting their self-interest. She said they ride a “gravy train.”

The average teacher’s salary in SC is $46,306.67.

Rhee is paid $50,000 for lecturing and taking questions for an hour.

Who is on a gravy train?

Who deserves credit for creating the anti-testing movement in New York State?

Governor Andrew Cuomo.

He is so devoted to standardized testing that students in third grade in New York will have “six straight days of tests, 90 minutes a day.”

Cuomo loves standardized testing and high stakes, though not for his own children, of course.

Mark Naison also credits State Commissioner John King, who shares Cuomo’s devotion to tests and punishments and regularly displays a “contemptuous attitude…towards parents, teachers, and principals who question the usefulness of so much testing.”

Friends, we do not have to tolerate what we know is wrong for children.

Opt out.

Maureen Reedy wrote an opinion piece criticizing charters in Ohio.

The Thomas B. Fordham Institute, which sponsors charters in Ohio, published a blog post criticizing Maureen Reedy for her negative views about charters and defended the record of charters in that state.

Stephen Dyer, a former state legislator who works for Innovation Ohio, a think tank, wrote a response to the Fordham critique. Since I don’t have a link, I am reprinting it here:

The Fordham Foundation, always quick to point out how much they want Charter Schools to be held accountable, once again defended the indefensible recently, namely trying to explain away Ohio’s horrific Charter School performance.

After 15 years and more than $6 billion spent on Ohio’s Charter School program, 3 out of 4 will rate F on the state’s new report card grading system.

Fordham, took to task two recent news stories – one a straight news story, the other an opinion piece – to show how alleged “canards” about Ohio’s Charter School system impede healthy discussion of Charter Schools in this state.

Let me first say that I am not opposed to the idea of Charter Schools, namely the idea of having small incubators of innovation and creativity that work with local school districts to upscale techniques and learning environments that can better help children succeed, regardless of school type.

Unfortunately, that’s not how Ohio’s Charter School system works. And the folks at Fordham know this. Yet they continue to manipulate data to make facts seem less likely truths.

Let’s begin with Fordham’s first “canard” – that children go from higher performing school districts to lower performing Charters. The facts are pretty overwhelming that they do, contrary to Fordham’s assertion. According to data from the Ohio Department of Education, 40% of the money transferred from Districts to Charters that are rated by the state go from districts that perform better on both the state’s report card rating and performance index score (which is the state’s benchmark proficiency test index).

Meanwhile, there are more than 100 of the 300+ Charters in this state that take kids exclusively from districts that perform better on either or both of those measures. And only 23 of the 300+ Charters in this state rate above the state average performance index score.

The news story Fordham cites examined the same data I just mentioned from the 2011-2012 school year. However, Fordham examined different data from different years to somehow “prove” the newspaper was wrong or misleading or something. And, of course, Fordham did not explain why every public school child in Ohio receives 6.5% less state revenue than the state says they need to succeed because the state sends so much of its money to the Charters. Is that system fair to the 90% of public school children who don’t attend a Charter School? Is it fair that the state provides about $7,100 for every Charter School child, and barely more than $3000 for every non-Charter child after Charters get their cut?

Fordham’s second canard is even more easily dismissed. The column to which the Fordham article referred was examining school performance index score data from 2011 that looked at districts and charters (charters are considered separate school districts under Ohio law). In fact, the bottom 113 districts in this state on its benchmark proficiency test index are Charters, according to that spreadsheet.

Fordham’s third “canard” – that Charters are run by big, bad operators who rob taxpayers and dupe parents is also not exactly a canard. In far too many cases, it’s the truth. The fact that there is even a discussion about Charter Schools in Ohio costing in the same ballpark as public schools, even though they pay teachers 40% of what they get paid in the public schools, don’t have to bus kids and are exempt from about 270 sections of state law, is amazing.

In fact, a recent analysis from the Ohio Department of Education found that brick and mortar Charters spend $54 more per pupil than their traditional public school counterparts.

Ohio’s e-schools get so many taxpayer dollars that they could afford to provide 15:1 student-teacher ratios, $2000 laptops for every child and still clear about 40% profit. K-12, Inc., the largest online operator in the country, has said in SEC filings that the largess of the Ohio taxpayer subsidizes its work nationwide.

Perhaps it’s difficult to kill these “canards”, as Fordham puts it, not because they’re stubborn, but because they’re true.

We in Ohio need Fordham to stand stronger for Charter School accountability. Fordham has been among the better conservative organizations on this issue, but they frequently fall into these traps of defending the indefensible just out of habit, I think.

They have also tried out a few canards of their own. Here are how they play out (and how they play out with other Charter School advocates around Ohio).

1) Charter performance should only be compared with the performance in Ohio’s big 8 Urban districts (Akron, Canton, Cincinnati, Columbus, Dayton, Toledo and Youngstown).

Unfortunately for Fordham and others, according to the latest funding report from the Ohio Department of Education, about half of all the kids going to Charters, and half the money, comes from non-Big 8 districts. So Fordham and others are trying to say something like this: “We’ll take money and kids from anywhere, but only compare us with the most struggling districts, which only provide about half our population and state revenue.”

2) Only compare Charters at the building level, not the district level.

As I mentioned earlier, in Ohio, Charter Schools are treated as districts under the law. They should, therefore, be compared with districts.

3) Anyone who questions Charter Schools has an agenda, while Charter School proponents, some of whom have made hundreds of millions of dollars off the taxpayers of Ohio for running some of the worst schools in the state, are only looking out for the kids.

Whether it is I, or Maureen Reedy (a former Ohio Teacher of the Year who lost a bid for the Ohio House last fall), Fordham frequently will cite the fact that critics of Charters have lost races, or are otherwise worthy of distrust because of who they are (Reedy is labeled as “jilted”). As if the deliverer of the message materially impacts the facts in the message. This is a far-too-common tactic of ideologues to try to dismiss opponents, not their arguments. Fordham should let their arguments stand on their own.

The reason Fordham and others try to limit any performance comparisons is because the comparisons are so absolutely dismal for Ohio’s Charter Schools, if they are done as they should. Are there Charter Schools in Ohio doing great things? Absolutely. And they should be applauded, even rewarded. I count these school officials among Ohio’s finest.

But too often, Ohio’s Charter Schools are able to take more and more money from local school districts, forcing local taxpayers to raise their property taxes, or eliminate programs, all while providing mostly inferior educational opportunities for our kids.

We need Fordham to take the first step on the road to recovery – to admit Ohio has a major Charter School problem. We’re spending nearly $1 billion a year on Charters, three-fourths of which will receive Fs on the new report card. That is a problem, regardless of who says it.

And the sad part is that Fordham should be the ones saying it loudest.

Maureen Reedy, a veteran teacher and a teacher of the year in Ohio, has been fighting valiantly against the privatization movement in Ohio.

In this article that she wrote in the Columbus Despatch, she demonstrates how charters of low quality have diverted billions of dollars from the state’s public schools.

Consider:

“While 77 percent of Ohio’s public schools were successful last year (rated Excellent with Distinction, Achieving or Effective), only 23 percent of Ohio’s charters were successful (rated Effective or Achieving). So 77 percent of Ohio’s public schools are receiving A’s, B’s and C’s while 77 percent of Ohio’s charter schools are receiving D’s and F’s. And the bottom 111 performing schools last year? All were charter schools.”

And consider this:

““Following the money” also leads us to family-run charter-school operations with hefty salaries and few education credentials, including multimillion-dollar salaries for the CEOs of Ohio’s two largest charter-school chains, David Brennan of White Hat Management Co. and William Lager of Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow. Our tax dollars also are going to pay for advertising campaigns to recruit students to attend their underperforming charter schools.”

And here is a fact that is very odd: When public money goes to charters in Ohio, there is no transparency or accountability. It mysteriously transformed into private money belonging to the charter operator.

The Thomas B. Fordham Institute, which sponsors charters in Ohio, disagrees with Reedy. It says that most charter schools are not for-profit (although the two that Reedy mentions are reaping huge profits), and that the number of failing charter schools and failing district schools are about the same.

Willa Powell, a member of the school board in Rochester, New York, will keep her child home on testing day.

Buried in this story is a very strange comment by State Commissioner John King.

“As we looked at flat test scores in New York and across the country, it was impossible to ignore a few sobering facts,” said state Education Commissioner John King in a video message to parents. “We’re not faring as well as we should be in the new global marketplace. Too many of our graduates aren’t prepared to succeed in college or their careers. The Common Core state standards are the answer to this problem.”

Help me understand.

He says the scores are flat, so we will adopt tests that we believe will cause the scores to go down.

He says too many of our graduates are not ready for college or careers. We think the new standards–though no one has any evidence– will solve this problem.

What am I missing here? Logic?

Matt Taibbi in Rolling Stone has a hilarious article about a hedge fund manager who manages pension funds, but is also a board member and co-founder of StudentsFirst in New York, which advocates against defined benefit pension plans.

You will enjoy reading the exchange between Dan Loeb, the hedge fund manager, and Randi Weingarten, who tries to set up a meeting to discuss the inconsistencies in his views.

As this article in the New York Times explains, elementary schoolchildren are frightened by the tests that start this week, based on the Common Core.

The article points out that neither the students nor the teachers are prepared. Some of the material was never taught. “But the standards are so new that many New York schools have yet to fully adopt new curriculums — including reading material, lesson plans and exercises — to match. And the textbook industry has not completely caught up either. State and city officials have urged teachers over the last year to begin working in some elements of new curriculums, and have offered lesson plans and tutorials on official Web sites. But they acknowledge that scores will most likely fall from last year’s levels.”

Merryl Tisch, who head the state Board of Regents, toured a school and heard about how upset the students.

“Believe me, I relate to test anxiety,” she said during a visit last week to the Academy of Arts and Letters in Fort Greene, Brooklyn, one of several schools that city and state education officials visited to express support for the new tests. “We can’t wait,” she said. “We have to just jump into the deep end.”

“We” have to jump into the deep end? No, your child must.

Think about it. As a parent, would you throw your child into the deep end, even if he or she can’t swim?

Opt out.