In response to an earlier post about the IDEA charter chain, which won a $29 million Race to the Top grant just months ago, a teacher writes:
I taught at an IDEA secondary school during the school year 2011-2012. When I began, one of the phrases scarred in teachers’ and students’ minds is “No Excuses”. I understood this to mean that students should not give any excuses because the teachers equip them with the necessary abilities to complete the work and pass the exams.
Within a short time I realized it meant that teachers must go above and beyond to do as much for students that there was no possible way they could give an excuse (this came just short of basically doing the work for the students). Examples were fill-in-the-blank notes, doing homework together (question by question), giving students the notes, teaching them the questions that were to appear on the exam, accepting homework or make-up work months late, and many more. Because students still did not perform, grades had to be changed. No student could have a grade lower than a 60 appear on their report card and no assignment can receive a grade lower than a 50 (even if never turned in).
I can definitely back-up this article by reiterating that “the numbers” for TAKS look good because “they teach to the test.” The standards for students are ridiculously low, and the expectations for teachers are impossibly high. When you’re asking the teacher to do the work for the student, how can you expect them to be college-ready? I had this argument with my assistant principal WEEKLY. I could not change my teaching philosophy to think like them, and I went to work everyday miserably, knowing full-well that my efforts were useless. These kids were doomed, and there was no way they would make it in college.
At the beginning I went in actually teaching. However, because these students were not used to it, I got so much push-back from the students and absolutely no support from administrators. I quickly realized these students were like that because of past teachers and administrators at IDEA.
One thing you might not know is that most administrators are white and almost all students are Hispanic. A good amount of teachers are also white (and TFA members).
Teachers and administrators have the mentality that these are poor, Mexican kids, and we can’t expect them to do anything for themselves. They are their saviors sent from up North, come to finish their high school education for them. I know this sounds extreme, even racist, but you have to teach here in order to believe the things that occur in this school.

“The standards for students are ridiculously low, and the expectations for teachers are impossibly high.”
There it is: guaranteed “success.”
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Schneider always nails it. How is this a prescription for success in general. No way. More smoke and mirrors so the game is to freeze frame the spinning mirrors and take a real look and when you do that they are real failures.
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Thanks, George. 🙂
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Sadly, this is also true of “public” schools. The principal starts out singing a tune of “high expectations,” for both students and teachers, then when his bosses don’t like the numbers, they force him to force teachers to keep giving assignments to replace old ones or accept the old ones late (and these are SO late, that the assignments have to be re-taught to students after school to students who are VERY capable of doing the work the first time). The last email I got from my principal on grades said something like, “You have two days to clean your classrooms after school is out. You will continue receiving student work until 3:45 on Friday [last day of school].” Our principal started out with decent values, but as time passed, it was clear he’d become a pawn. And at some point, as the above email suggests, he must have begun believing all the propaganda on bad, lazy teachers because we (teachers) couldn’t have been holding students accountable as a matter of principle; no, it was simply that we were all lazy and wanting to clean our rooms for the summer. This is all a matter of corporate politics and their mantra of profit: “Blame the Teachers,” and, apparently, even good people succumb given enough repetition and time.
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I had an administrator try to override a student’s grade in my class nly once in 21 years. I was brought into the principal’s office and told that failing the student “would do no good” and that I should change the grade. Of course, I did not “fail” the student.
I told the principal that I wanted it noted for the record that I opposed the grade change and that if he wanted the grade changed, he would have to do it himself. I would not do it.
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What happened next? Did he change the grade? Were you fired for refusing to change it?
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This sort of missionary ideology is what we used to call liberal racism. And it is rampant in many schools. This coupled with students being petrified to make mistakes because of incessant standardized testing has created an atmosphere in schools where students need everything confirmed by a teacher BEFORE they hand in their work. It is insane. I want to hear what students think…and they insist I tell them the “right” answer first!
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gvirchick: the updated version of the “missionary ideology” of “liberal racism” is the “missionary ideology” of “rainbow racism.” The leaders of this latest wave of edufrauds is composed of women and men of all colors and ethnicities [but surprisingly {?} united in being well fed and clothed] who play no favorites: they treat the majority of children and their parents, of all races and ethnicities, as being barely adequate to the task of learning low-level skills and obedience. [Beginning, intermediate and advanced drawing of water and hewing of wood, anyone?]
Why run the risk of authentic democracy breaking out all over by allowing teachers to encourage students to be critical thinkers? Better to make the students dependent on the teachers, the teachers on the educrats, and the educrats on the edupreneurs. Mix in fear and uncertainty and doubt, top off with a generous helping of big punishments and minor rewards and—voilà—you have $tudent $ucce$$!
You can bank on it!
😦
But the schemes of the eduvultures can only succeed if people refuse to challenge the mental and moral servitude they are being taught is natural and inevitable. The growing popularity of this blog is one proof among many that the tide is very slowly, but demonstrably, beginning to turn against the edubullies. Yet even as the lunacy of their policies and arguments becomes more and more apparent, they are genuinely puzzled why an increasing number of people oppose their ‘creative destruction’ of public education.
“Whom the gods would destroy, they first make mad.” [Euripides]
And it couldn’t happen to a nicer bunch of folks.
🙂
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That is the only way a corporate model will work in education. They have to have a narrowly defined outcome to “prove” their method works and thereby receive more tax dollars to continue. The problem is education can’t be narrowly defined and be appropriate for all “consumers.” Meeting a corporate goal is not the same as meeting a child where there are and educating them. This is so sad.
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Could it be that the charter schools aren’t selling college graduation, but college admission?
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Yes.
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Duncan is an absolute disaster for local public schools.
History is not going to kind to President Obama for hiring this hack and continuing to allow him to experiment with hundreds of millions in taxpayer dollars and tens of millions of children.
Is there anyway we can pay Duncan outright to go work for one of the for profit educorps? It’ll be cheaper, long run, and he’s completely captured by that industry anyway.
They should be paying his salary, not me.
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Duncan is not an educator. He is a hedge fund manager, and Obama chose him to run education after he failed at it in Chicago. Wall Street is their only street. See all the Wall Street people Obama has chosen to run our country. He is not the guy we voted for looking to hope and change. Google Duncan and read up on his background…he is also Obama’s long time basketball buddy.
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Distressing. I thought “No Excuses” meant that the student would be expected to do the work willy nilly and not offer any excuses for not getting it done. Maybe it would be enough to return to honest grading.
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Teachers work late to impress our principal. He hails the tireless teachers for waking up at 3am to grade papers. He sends weekly kudos to teachers that stay at school for hours after the final bell rings. I choose to do my very best to help students to tap into their potential. I refuse to enable students by accepting mediocrity from them. So, after parent/teacher meetings, I received a written reprimand. It basically stated that I use too much rigor.
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Charter schools are another form of colonialism. If we are in a poor SES school, we get the missionary-colonialist treatment, token education to placate the natives. However, access and success in college/university are illusory. Some people mistake the no expectations for appropriate treatment of the natives because they are not whole persons or students.
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Oh, Pshaw. How is it possible? Teachers are fully enlightened liberals and would NEVER think this way. After all they’re in favor of abortion on demand, gay marriage, believe in global warming, think President Obama is wonderful. They’ve read Heart of Darkness and wouldn’t be corrupted like Kurtz? Would they?
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Your opinion is important to us.
Please write again.
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It’s up to the TEACHERS to contact parents REGULARLY (at least monthly) by phone for at least 1 positive thing to say about each child. Now, when I was growing up, parents looked for a quarterly report card. Now EVERY child has a quarterly report card, a quarterly progress report, the at least monthly phone call, plus two opportunities for parent-teacher conferences that the teachers have to make a point of fitting into 10 minutes… not to mention email availability… and it never ceases to amaze me how some parents can be SURPRISED that their wittle bitty baby might need to repeat a grade… oh, that’s right, parent avoided my phone calls, agreed to show up at conferences, but never did, never signed/returned the progress reports/report cards (or if they did, doubt they read it), an never bothered to show initiative to contact me… but somehow, this is still my fault??? YeNOOO! “No excuses” applies ONLY to teachers… NOT parents, NOT students.
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“See all the Wall Street people Obama has chosen to run our country. He is not the guy we voted for looking to hope and change.”
He’s definitely not the guy I voted for, because I DIDN’T VOTE FOR HIM! Why are people so easily fooled by WORDS??? You got change all right. That’s all you have left in your pocket.
Name one politician who cares what you think once they are elected. They are all from the David Coleman School of Nobody Gives a S*** What You Think. At least David is honest enough to say it to us.
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This can happen anywhere. i live in AZ and spent years before in N.E. .As an independent advocate for children with disabilities for over 30 years I urge people to learn Section 504 of the RHA (civil rights) and the Americans Disability Act as amended..ADAA). Both statutes and rules are extremely powerful …Some years ago I pretty much abandoned the IDEA because it is so poorly enforced at every level of administration., However, the Office of Civil Rights (OCR) can and will move mountains if you effectively use the 504 Complaint process ..EVERY public and charter school MUST respond.if it receives ANY federal funds (and what one doesn’t). There is NO choice…This route is seldom used because people have not taken the time to learn the 504 process, instead depending on IDEA. OCR is especially interested in racial discrimination and schools..CIVIL RIGHTS. are not up for sale! Section 504 and the ADAA are the best kept secrets by those responsible for public education, including charters and can be held responsible……and that is a promise..
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As I said many times, the Carpetbaggers are coming.
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Did you know that IDEA Public Schools bounce out any student who intends to join the Armed Forces instead of going straight to college? It interferes with their 100% college-bound promise.
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idea is not the only charter system that goes by this mentality. ask yourself this question: if charter schools are so great, how come they are not in the higher SES income bracket neighborhoods?????
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When IDEA was founded,t “No excuses” was all about students bucking up and doing their best.
Making money replaced a solid philosophy… Sadly. No more Spanish, no more libraries, no more elementary art and music.
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I’ve worked in a school just like this. One thing that happens is that they use fear and intimidation to force teachers to pass students in order to keep graduation rates up so the school looks like it is better than it is. One difference is that the school is 100% African American and the majority of administrators are African American. The teachers are mostly white and come in with high expectations but the students often do not complete homework and classwork when asked. I disagree with the assertion that the student pushback is because of past administrators and teachers. I think that idea is racist. Teachers at the school I’ve worked at care about their students and have high expectations. They get burned out and frustrated when the students do not do their work yet are the teachers are often forced to pass undeserving students. I’ve seen parents who don’t follow through with discipline and do little to ensure the success of their own child.
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Is it true that public schools promote students because studies show having a student repeat a grade above 3rd or so increases the probability a student will drop out of school?
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Our middle school certainly thinks so. A colleague had 80% of 8th graders failing with a percentages under 40% – they will all enter 9th grade next year. The high school teachers will spend the entire year trying to convince them that grades actually count, but few will believe it.
What increases our drop out rate is the fact that students enter high school with few skills and no work ethic. They can’t pass state assessments (required for graduation) and basically waste a couple of years before their ignorance becomes embarrassing. They can’t read the textbooks, can’t write a coherent paragraph (if you could even read the handwriting that is worse than my 5 year old’s) and just copy from their friends and the internet. Sadly, our administration keeps asking why all these kids are dropping out.
Some days you just want to smack them on the head and say “duh!”
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Yes, research has established being held back increases the chances of becoming a drop out, especially for those in a low income bracket. HOWEVER…if a child is that far behind…the question should be, “Why”.would a child feel he was stupid..if he was learning as well as classmates? That is the crux . By grade 3 if a childn has not b een taught how his language is put together. in the areas of writing (which helps a child learn to read), reading and spelling, the chances are he is a future drop out. No one drops out from where he is successful and respected..
Lisa, I would challenge any school that “bounces IDEA students who intend to join the armed forces rather than going to directly to college. IN WRITING In request a copy of the federal regulation, (which always takes precedence) permitting a student with on IDEA to be “bounced” if the student fails to continue on to college upon graduation.. Further, EVERY IEP-IDEA student is eligible to be served on an an IEP through the age of 21. if it is desired. The IEP controls all outcomes.. Parents have the say here. .. ALWAYS make such requests in writing, and keep a copy. Do no business on the phone…. .Schools have butchered the IDEA and will continue to do so if teachers and parents alike do not spend time learning of the provisions and protections in those federal sources. Request workshops from a source proficient in the federal statutes and regulations… Teachers are protected as well as students and their parents! An excellent Internet source (free) is at http://www.wrightslaw.com.
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i’m confused. IDEA is the name of the charter school. not sure how the concept of IEP-IDEA is connected-
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Since 1990 the term IDEA has stood for “Individuals Disability Education Act” throughout the education industry nationally. Before 1990 this statue title was titled “Education Handicapped Act (EHA) (1975.) .In education circles use of the term, IDEA, means only one thing..”.Individual Disability Education Act”. Students recognized under this Act are served under IEP’s or an, Individual Education Plan. I hope this clears up your confusion..
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Right-but how are special ed services connected to this article? Not every low performing student who is eligible for services gets them (especially at the high school level) and not every low performing student is eligible for services. I do feel that if a student is being held back testing should be done to determine the scope of the problem at hand for targeted remediation, but getting a school to do the testing, especially at the high school level, can be a difficult procedure. Parents and students may have rights, but schools have more resources that often intimidate parents/students into being able to fully exercise these rights.
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I think some of you may be confusing IDEA: “Individuals Disability Education Act” with the IDEA Charter Public Schools in Texas, which is what this article is about.
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that’s what i was trying to say- thanks for seeing and throwing your support 😀
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