Archives for the month of: June, 2013

Karen Lewis, president of the Chicago Teachers Union, told the Chicago City Club that the city’s elites were failing the city’s children and public schools. She blamed school closings on public officials, “rich white people,” and banks that decided to disinvest in black communities. She singled out Bank of America as an institution that had exacerbated inequality.

“Lewis said, “there is nothing radical about me other than I want each and every student in Chicago to get the best education we have to offer,” and added the union is more than willing to work with the Board of Education and the Emanuel administration to solve the myriad issues facing the school system, but “we can’t work together on these issues because they keep creating new problems.”

From a reader:

“As a public school teacher in Miami, FL I would like to reach out to you and express my similar hope in developing a long-term coalition and eventual movement of teachers, parents and community to fight back against the pro-corporate anti-public education policies being pushed in FL. If someone knows of any organization or coalition that is already up and running please let me know. There are thousands of disgruntled parents, students, and teachers in schools in Miami whom I think would act and fight back alongside other across the state if there was an entity to unite us. I strongly propose we create this if it doesn’t yet exist.”

I recall a few years ago when I learned from Forbes’ columnist Erik Kain that Governor Snyder of Michigan was slashing school spending at the same time that he was cutting state corporate taxes.

This turns out to have been a popular tactic in many states. Governors and legislators have decided to get more jobs now by sacrificing the future of their state’s children.

An analysis of 155 large corporations found that they pay very low taxes.

“For 2011 and 2012, the 155 companies paid just 1.8 percent of their total income in state taxes, and 3.6 percent of their declared U.S. income. The average required rate for the 50 states is 6.56 percent.”

As the big corporations avoided taxes, schools paid the price.

What happens to a society that ignores its children and favors corporations?

Valerie Strauss published a terrific column by a Chicago public school parent, Karen McKeegan Fraid.

Fraid has written a wonderful translation of some of the reformers’ favorite phrases, which they repeat ad infinitum.

It begins thus:

Assessment (noun): A test made by a corporation and protected from peer review and public scrutiny by intellectual property laws and strict confidentiality agreements.

Data-Driven Assessment (noun): A test made by a corporation and protected from peer review by intellectual property laws and strict confidentiality agreements whose purpose is to provide numbers too complicated and nuanced for the general public to understand, but vague enough that they can be molded into a variety of purposes as the need for “data” to support reforms arises.

Failing School (noun): A school for poor children of color whose intended funding subsidizes corporations.

For the Children (phrase): This actually doesn’t mean anything. The Reformy equivalent to chanting “USA! USA!”

You can see the possibilities of exposing the rhetoric that masks failed and harmful policies.

What is promising is that people are beginning to see behind the rhetoric and the mask. That is a danger to the corporate reformers, who use words to deceive and mislead.

In Connecticut, the charter chain Achievement First is a financial and political powerhouse. State Commissioner of Education Stefan Pryor was one of its founders.

But there is a worm in the apple. Achievement First leads the state in suspensions. Half its students are suspended or expelled at some point during the year. Legal Aid in Hartford filed a claim against the charter chain for its treatment of students with disabilities and won a ruling from the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights.

“The complaint filed last year by the legal aid group said that students with disabilities were not getting “a free and appropriate education” because of the academy’s “failure to provide accommodations, modifications, and specialized instruction” as required under state and federal law.” It turns out that charter schools are not exempt from federal law.

One case was especially troubling:

“Johanna Rodriguez, whose eighth-grade son was included in the civil rights complaint, said her son was suspended and at home for most of last year, while this year she said he was suspended in school most of the time in a room set aside for students who are removed from class because of a behavior issue.

“For lesser offenses, he was given “re-orientation” where he could remain in class, but had to wear a white shirt and other students were not allowed to talk to him.”

Achievement First is a “no excuses” school and it treated this student as if he was trying to make excuses.

Richard Allington is a well-known scholar of reading. These are his comments on the NCTQ report in teacher preparation institutions. (He left this comment on the blog, so there is no other source.)

“Imagine a person reviews the restaurants in your city by examining the menus they found on-line. Never tasted the food or ever visited any restaurant. How seriously would you take the reviews that were written? That is the NCTQ report on colleges of education. Had NCTQ not already developed a reputation for sloppy “research” perhaps ed schools would have cooperated. Personally, I’m glad they didn’t.”

Renee Dinnerstein is an early childhood educator with many years of experience. In this post, she shows how the overly prescriptive approach encouraged by the Common Core can ruin the concept of Choice Time in kindergarten.

She writes: “Choice Time is not a time to give children tasks. It should be an opportunity for children to direct their own play and therefore, their own learning. The teacher carefully sets up centers with materials that provoke investigations but it is the child who discovers ways of using the materials.”

And further:

“Once we outline a detailed guide for kindergarten mastery we are immediately off –base. As the authors of Developmentally Appropriate Practice write, educators of kindergarten children need to, “meet children where they are as individuals and as a group.” Micromanaging what all kindergarten children must master by the end of a school year is contradictory to what we know about how young children develop and about what we need to do to support their creative, social and intellectual development. I’m not implying that we should not have high standards for all children. We do not need to have a checklist of how, what and when children need to meet very specific academic benchmarks.”

Frankly, the very idea that five-year-old children are on track for “college and career readiness” is absurd.

A few years ago, I went to an event at the Aspen Ideas Festival where Secretary Arne Duncan waxed eloquent about the importance of unstructured play and tinkering. He seemed to grasp that young children should not be placed on a treadmill of benchmarks and prescribed standards.

Too bad that the Common Core for young children does not reflect that wisdom.

The new, utterly distinguished Badass Teachers Association is roaring to life.

It has a website, a Twitter account, a blog site, and 10,000 members.

These are teachers who say a loud No to corporate reform that seeks to turn us all into data points, aggregate us, disaggregate us, buy and sell our schools, and put us into a portfolio.

We know that reformers love tests,

The love it when kids take tests, the more the better.

They love it when teachers get bonuses or get fired because of test scores.

So Ed Berger, a retired teacher in Arizona, decided it is time to write a test especially for the reformers.

Most if his blog is not the test but the report card.

Here are a few of his judgments on our favorite reformers:

“You are too ignorant of reality to understand where you are leading.

Many of those who hide under your coattails are hurting kids, families, and communities, for profit. You think profit is good, so you ignore the fact that they put profit and access to taxpayer dollars ahead of children.

The list of failed programs you have supported is long. In the wake of the ideas you have forced on educators without doing the research or identifying the root problems, you have earned a failing grade.

You did not pass the test. To deal with this record of failure you blame teachers and intend to destroy the people who do not support your ego ignorance.”

A few days ago, I was baby sitting with my youngest grandson. He is not yet a month old. As I held him in my arms, I watched his sleeping face intently. It is, of course, beautiful. He was swaddled, as is the fashion nowadays (not in my day). As he slept, I saw his expressions change, from a frown to a knitted brow to a tiny smile, and then utterly placid, and repeat, in random order. I took his little hand out of the swaddling blanket, held it in my large hand, and marveled at his long, perfect fingers.

And I thought of these lines, “Not in entire forgetfulness,/and not in utter nakedness,/But trailing clouds of glory do we come/From God, who is our home.”

That is a tiny excerpt from a lovely poem by William Wordsworth called “Ode: Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood.” I read the poem in college many decades ago and have always loved it,

I know it may seem strange but I could see and feel those clouds of glory surrounding and trailing little Asher Saul.