Archives for the month of: September, 2013

I honored Chris Weaver, a charter school teacher in North Carolina who spoke out against the governor and legislature’s wanton attacks on public schools. He even rejected his local paper’s effort to honor him. Here he responds to those who wrote letters about his actions.

Dear Diane & Readers,

Terry Kalb, my NY friend who sent my newspaper letter to Diane, sent me the link, and it’s the first time I’ve visited the blog (but not the last). Thank you Diane for the “honor roll” honor, and no, I surely don’t reject it. Thanks also for the most enheartening comments from readers. Here are a few follow-up thoughts:

For Joanna Best: I am with you 100% on the “best teacher” category in the “retail popularity contest” Best-Of issue of our news weekly. It does more harm than good, and I hope my letter helped folks to think a little more deeply.

For Michael Fiorillo: I appreciate your comment as well. As a teacher who has taught for eight years in district public schools in two states and for seven years in my current charter school, here is my take on the issue you raise, and some of my questions (I have many as-yet-unanswered questions–as all critical thinkers do):

I am opposed to any charter schools being managed by for-profit corporations.

I know that charter school legislation is used for political purposes as a “stepping stone” toward the privatization and dismantling of public education, and I am opposed to all such purposes.

I do consider the charter school where I work to be a public school. (I am open to different views.) We serve any student and family who enters our doors. We abide by strict fair-lottery rules. We are governed by a board elected by our public community. All board meetings are open and all financial and policy decisions are transparent. We do not serve an economically privileged student body.

I will share some of the ways that our school falls short as a public school. One of the “arguments” in favor of public charter schools is that they can serve as laboratories of innovation, which can develop and share best practices with the public school community. My school IS a laboratory of innovation, but we have, as of yet, been inadequate in our efforts to share best practices. The idea of sharing best practices is an ineffective idea if there are no structures in place to facilitate that sharing. I am working on developing structures for this in my own school and hopefully beyond, but my sense is that on the whole, charter schools focus on the needs of their own school communities (like independent schools do) and do not engage in all kinds of essential possible actions that could place them in true solidarity with the public school community (where I want to be). My school also, like most charter schools, does not offer breakfasts, lunches, or transportation to our students, rendering us inaccessible to many of the families in our city in the greatest need.

So why do I teach in a charter school? At the moment, I choose this setting because I believe in school self-governance. I believe in local school control of curriculum and staffing decisions. At heart, more important than any other factor in my teaching life, I am committed to child-centered education, which to me is holistic, hands-on, community-centered, and honoring of teacher autonomy, creativity, innovation, and academic freedom. Public charter schools CAN be, and SOMETIMES are, places where teachers are free to develop curriculum that is highly responsive to the gifts and needs of our students. District public school CAN be, and SOMETIMES are, the same.

When I taught in district schools, I did not teach any differently than I do now, but I was out on the experiential lunatic fringe among teachers, and I found myself bending and breaking more rules in order to meet my students’ (and my own) needs than I do in my current position. My school is full of innovative teachers, and if a rule or requirement is not right or does not make sense, we can take our ideas and concerns to our own administrators or board of directors and propose a change, and these folks have the authority to make many of these changes, and they listen to us (and when they don’t, we can become very persuasive)..

A specific example is that here in NC, the new state budget basically mandates the firing of all assistant teachers in 2nd and 3rd grades in public elementary schools statewide. The tragedy is two-fold. The decision itself is criminal in its destructive impact, but the structural centralization that allows such a thing to happen is equally a part of the problem. In my school, we take the hit of the budget cuts, but we will never remove the second teacher that we have in our primary grades, because the students need these teachers and we have the local autonomy to preserve the positions and make our cuts elsewhere.

I am interested in the movements in public schools and districts that are moving public education more in this direction of local autonomy.

At this point in my career, as I am about to turn 50, I am raising my head and looking around. In many ways I have been teaching in a “utopian bubble,” and I am satisfied and excited to break the bubble from the inside and not to be so self-centered and school-centered. To me, the most important best practices right now are process innovations and structural innovations that allow large organizations to be more decentralized and self-organizing. There is a lot of critical excellent work to be done in this arena. I have more thoughts about that of course, but I’ll save it for another time.

For now, I send my gratitude out to Diane and to the readers of this blog. I call on my fellow public school teachers to take heart, and keep our attention fully on the present needs of our students (holistically, not just academically), while simultaneously mobilizing to defuse the wave of misguided political stupidity as it crashes through our communities. This ignorance, like all ignorance, is not as mighty as it appears. We know about teaching and learning, a knowledge that is true, ancient, and unshakable. Now is the time to speak up, act as collectives, and, as I wrote in my letter to the paper, allow our unity and our wisdom to be self-evident. Every small step matters.

With Respect,

Chris Weaver, Asheville, NC

EduShyster is one of the most brilliant, clever, and downright funny bloggers in the pedagogic blogosphere. She is one of the very few bloggers who is consistently able to make me laugh out loud.

For reasons she will explain here, she has decided to reveal her name.

When I met her a year ago, she reminded me that we had first met in 2010, when I came to Boston to talk about my last book. She told me her name. I am terrible with remembering names. I told her that her secret was safe with me because I wouldn’t remember her name anyway.

But now the world, if it cares, knows her name. To me, she will always be EduShyster. Unforgettable.

Rick Hess believes that a report on the Tony Bennett grade-fixing scandal exonerated him. But Indiana parents and friends of public schools don’t agree. Here they explain that no one understood the school grading system and that Bennett was voted out of office because of his policies, not his style.

Somehow I suspect we haven’t heard the end of this matter. Waiting for the other shoe to drop.

Rick Hess believes that a report on the Tony Bennett grade-fixing scandal exonerated him. But Indiana parents and friends of public schools don’t agree. Here they explain that no one understood the school grading system and that Bennett was voted out of office because of his policies, not his style.

Somehow I suspect we haven’t heard the end of this matter. Waiting for the other shoe to drop.

Eduardo Andere is an education researcher and lawyer in
Mexico who has published widely about international trends in
education. After reading
articles
about teachers demonstrating in the streets, I
asked Andere if he would explain what is happening in Mexico. He
sent the following post:   What is real and
what is rhetoric in the Mexico’s 2013 Education
Reform?
Eduardo Andere
For you to get a clearer view
of the polemical Education Reform in Mexico you ought to have some
facts about education and education policy in the
country.
Education
policy and education curricula from kindergarten to 18 is ruled,
directed or ordered by the national federal government. By
constitutional law education in Mexico is a federal matter. States
or local authorities implement the national policy; they are local
CIOs as compared to the national CEOs, so to speak.

Under Mexican law, education
is compulsory from K to 12. Kindergarten or preschool education
runs from age three to five and children start a six-year long
elementary school at six. Middle school or lower secondary school
runs from grade 7 to 9; and upper secondary school from grade 10 to
12, although there are two-year long high school
programs.

Student-wise, the size of the whole student population
from K to university is around 40 million; all of them under the
national law, and a national authority called the Secretary of
Public Education (SEP). In this sense SEP is much more powerful
than the U.S. Department of Education. Mexico is probably the most
centralized OECD educational system. It is probably as centralized
as the Singapore’s high performing country, but in sheer numbers
Singapore is a small city-state-nation of 5 million people compared
to 118 million people in México.

Nobody knows for certain the
real number of teachers hired by SEP or other sub-systems of
education; and nobody knows for certain how many of the hired
teachers are really sitting for class or doing “commissioned-type”
work for special, some times no-transparent activities, for both
the government or the union. Many constituencies have complained
about this situation. They say that for starters this is a proof of
corruption between the governments and the union. Official
statistics number around 2 million teachers in the whole system of
which 1.2 millions are teaching at basic education (K to
9).
There are
several unions of teachers in Mexico, but by law, the union with
the highest registered number of teachers is the one with the right
to negotiate annual contractual agreements with the government.
Union membership is mandatory in Mexico. Teachers have no way to
opt out and the government retains a compulsory union’s fee from
their salary pay. This fee is transferred to the unions.

The largest teacher union in
Mexico is the SNTE (Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de la
Educación or Workers of Education National Union). Of course, over
the years there have been some democratization efforts that have
given rise to dissenters within the national union. One of these
attempts gave rise to a “separatist” group that operates de facto
rather than de jure called CNTE (Coordinadora Nacional de
Trabajadores de la Educación; or Workers of Education National
Coordination Group). This group has been the one making all
the street noise against the education reform.

What about the much more
powerful in terms of members SNTE? Most of the teachers are SNTE’s
main track teachers, and most of them are quiet. Dissenters are the
minority. But here as well there are some contextual facts that you
need to know before I continue the story behind the education
reform.
The SNTE
was born in 1943. Over the years as education became massive the
education union grew in members and power. By the 1980s the union
leader became very powerful and by government and media accounts
very corrupt and anti-governmental. In 1989, and under the
government of President Salinas, (influenced by a public sector
modernization movement from around the world, sometimes called New
Public Administration) many public policy reforms were launched.
Well, in the late 1980s the Salinas’ government tried to pave its
way for the new reforms by removing a couple of very powerful, and
again, perceived, very corrupt union leaders. One of those leaders
was the SNTE leader. A teacher, who later became known as “La
Maestra” (“The woman teacher”), replaced him. For years she was
wooed and lured by the national government to implement
modernization projects or keep teachers in the classrooms and
peaceful. The government and the union developed a close
corporativist relationship that lasted until late 2012. One of
those projects was the 1992-1993’s education reform. Since then, La
Maestra and her union became very powerful, not only in union
matters but also in policy and political matters.

Under the former President of
Mexico, Felipe Calderón’s regime, La Maestra became very
influential. She was even able to place her son-in-law as assistant
secretary of basic education at SEP, the second most important and
influential position in national school education in Mexico. But
not only that, for decades she managed to get annual real salary
increases for teachers who for decades earned very low salaries.
But most importantly, her union became co-signer in all relevant
national new policies of education. She was so powerful that some
people would call her the de facto vice president of Mexico.
Presidents came and went under her tenure but her power and
influence in politics and policy became uncomfortable to policy
makers and politicians. Since she was no shy at all in
showing off her political muscle she became very unpopular. Her low
charisma and extravagant way of life didn’t help either. She was
shrewd but not smart enough to foresee her demise.

The same day that President
Peña’s constitutional education reform was officially published she
was arrested (at the writing of this post, September
8th, 2013 she is still in jail). The news
became national level immediately, and the President’s popularity
skyrocketed among the media and the public opinion. Ever since the
SNTE’s leaders and most of teachers have been very quiet and
accommodating to the education reform. That is not the case with
the dissenters.

After the constitutional approval some secondary laws had
to be passed by the national or Union Congress. During the last two
weeks three new laws were passed pending only the presidential
approval (promulgation) and the publication by the federal
registrar.
What
are some of the main issues with the education reform?

1) Evaluation and
assessment of school education becomes a national state policy. A
new national body of evaluation called the Instituto Nacional para
la Evaluación de la Educación (National Institute for the
Evaluation of Education) has been established with federal state
powers. This is an agency with a governing body of five prestigious
former academic professors or researchers, La Junta, which will be
able to set national assessment policies, practices and criteria
that will influence national education policies as well. This Junta
has the power to overrule or nullify any evaluation attempt or
exercise against the federal wishes. This Institute (INEE) will set
up binding policies for federal and local authorities of education
and even set the rules for the assessment of teachers and students.
La Junta will also be able to set the minimum criteria to become a,
or remain as teacher from K to 12 grades. Indeed, a very powerful
mandate.
2) A new civil career
program for teachers is established with very precise rules and
regulations. All teachers will have to be examined by law: if they
fail to pass three rounds they will be ousted from the classroom.
If failing teachers have tenure they will be given non-teaching
jobs, positions or activities; no-tenure teachers will be fired.
This is one of the outcries from dissenters and no-dissenters
alike. Historically teachers’ unions, with the acquaintance or
acceptance of governments, were able to name, handle or manage the
hiring and promotion of teachers, principals and supervisors. Some
arrangements between the unions and governments even allowed the
sale and inheritance of “plazas” or teachers’ jobs. This was part
of the explicit or implicit corporativist arrangement between the
government and the unions. For years some academic experts and
media observers regarded this practice as corrupt. Some local
authorities on their own initiated changes in favor of some sort of
open competition for assignments or promotions of plazas or jobs,
but some kept the old system intact. Teachers who benefited from
this “rare” arrangement of course don’t like changes and bitterly
oppose to the new rules. What the new authorities see as corrupt
practices the union leaders and some teachers see it as a
class-obtained gain after many years of work and negotiation. You
have to know that historically teachers’ salaries have been very
low specially compared to the salary of the secretary and assistant
secretaries of education. I once did research about the topic and
the difference in the salary between an elementary school teacher
and the high-ranking officers of national education amounted to
around 40 times without fringe and PR benefits for the latter. So,
some dissenters and some main track teachers don’t see these
practices as necessarily corrupt but as a “well-deserved benefit”
for teachers and their families after years of struggle. After all,
the argument goes, many politicians and businesspeople have
obtained law or governmental protections or benefits, sometimes
monopoly-based, that have earned them much sizable assets to sell
or inherent to their children. Changing the rules of the game in
the middle of the game has made the big noise, and the problem does
not have a clear-cut solution. Of course, no one wants a system of
selling and inheriting jobs, but even as bad as it sounds, the full
story has to be laid out.
3)
Teachers, as deficient as they could be in their learning and
teaching, have been selected, trained and placed by the
government for decades. The national or state governments control
the training of basic education teachers in Mexico. Universities
are not allowed to train teachers for public or private basic
school education, although many schools, especially private, have a
way of gaming the system. There is no competition for training;
there is a national curriculum set up and controlled by the
national government; the newest curriculum dates from 1997; the
national curriculum for basic education students dates from 2011.
Quality is low. So, “what is the purpose of assessing teachers
whose average cognitive quality is low and we know it already
without tests?” Some say, this is a way of putting pressure on
teachers. If the new assessment policy is criterial (i.e., what
they should know) most of them will flank; if it is normal-based
(i.e., what they really know) most of them will pass. This is a
dilemma: If most of them fail, where from are we going to
find the new teachers? If most of them pass, we will keep the same
low level of quality in teaching. The new laws-to-be have loopholes
that could allow teachers to fence-off from the consequences of
high stake assessments, however, they also grant authorities enough
lee-way to apply strict measures of assessments and accountability
to teachers, principals, supervisors and students.

4) There are some miscellaneous
provisions like autonomy to schools, bans to junk food in schools
and full-day schools that follow popular perceptions rather than
academic recommendations.

Apparently, most of the teachers in the streets come from
the poorer states of Oaxaca, Michoacán and Guerrero. They face one
more strategic challenge: the more education policy is centralized
the less bargaining power they have in education and labor matters.
With decentralization they would negotiate at a local level, where
they maximize their negotiating power; with centralization a group
of local teachers, from one federal entity among 32 federal
entities, has to negotiate with the national government.

At the end it is not clear
how everything will change, my own perception is that the new
government bought the wrong diagnosis of the causes of the low
quality of education in Mexico. The new government fell into the
spell of the corporations’ view of education reform: more testing,
more accountability, more pressure on teachers, more
standardization, and less unionization. Little is said about the
real causes of education failure: poverty, segregation, inequality,
low quality in selection, training and placement of teachers, and
lack of family, school and community learning environments. Does
this sound similar to the U.S. education reform pushed by big
business and private donors?

Funny, I kept thinking about this famous speech of student leader Mario Savio, who led the Berkeley student protests in the 1960s. And a reader read my mind after reading Liz Rosenberg’s post where she explained that she and her partner would not look at their child’s test scores. They don’t care. They don’t matter. They don’t care if their child has higher or lower scores than children of the same age in Hong Kong or France. Stop the machine.

This reader takes me back 50 years with this comment:

“As a retired educator with 30+ years service in Special Education, I can only say BRAVO to Liz Rosenberg, her partner and all the parents and educators who have joined in the struggle to turn back the tide of what has become the dominant paradigm for “Educational Reform”. Diane has provided a critical mechanism for cross-country communication by those who oppose these so-called reforms, Reading Liz Rosenberg’s communication, I am drawn back some 50 years to the words of Mario Savio one of the spokespeople for the Berkeley Free Speech Movement:

““There’s a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious—makes you so sick at heart—that you can’t take part. You can’t even passively take part. And you’ve got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the apparatus, and you’ve got to make it stop. And you’ve got to indicate to the people who run it, to the people who own it, that unless you’re free, the machine will be prevented from working at all.”

We are at that moment that Mario Savio spoke about. I take heart from those who resist the machine of “Educational reform”

Almost a year ago, I posted a letter from a sixth-grade
student in the DC public schools who wrote about herself as a data
point. She identified herself as Noa Rosinplotz. The letter was so
articulate that many readers were certain that it was not written
by a child. In time, I received letters from well-known
journalists, including her mother, attesting to the fact that Noa
exists and that she really was only 12. Now Noa is in seventh
grade, and she shared this letter.

You might want to visit her
Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Datapoints-Inc/309583325823040

Noa speaks for a generation of data points:

Dear Mr. Duncan,

I’m writing you because I got my DC CAS results in the mail.

See, I thought you might want to know what they were. I certainly don’t. I
mean, the first thing I noticed in that packet was the paper. It’s
fancy and green-a pretty light green, which sort of fades out when
it gets to the end of the paper.

I thought you might want to know,
Mr. Duncan. Your system paid for my thick pastel green paper, and
for all the ink that goes into telling me that I got a 91% on
Reading Literary Text. Oh-I forgot to introduce myself. No need-I
got Advanced, which is what you’re wondering.

I bet you’re also wondering how I feel about that. Am I happy, relieved, perhaps
surprised? But I forgot-you don’t have to know, Mr. Duncan, because
all that matters is I got Advanced.

But I’ll tell you anyway. You can’t know every child in this country and their reactions to the
pretty green paper. But at least you can know me, just one
datapoint, one spot on the chart. When I saw that green paper, I
didn’t hold it up to the light or smile or show it to my parents. I
tossed it back on the table and went to eat an August nectarine.

Let me tell you what’s on my sheet, Mr. Duncan. It says my name,
student ID, teacher, birthday (ours are barely a month apart, Mr.
Duncan), and the city I live in, Washington, DC. You live here too.
I wonder if you’ve ever seen me on the street, riding my bike or
walking with friends. Your eyes probably went right over me and you
forgot me milliseconds after remembering.

You might know me, though, in the back of your brain, as Advanced. Let’s get back to
the sheet, though. Want to hear what I can do? I can read sixth
grade informational and literary texts and analyze author’s purpose
and supporting evidence. I can use and analyze diverse
organizational structures to locate information, interpret and
paraphrase information, interpret subtle language, analyze
relevance of setting to the events and mood of a narrative, and use
stated words, actions, and descriptions of characters to determine
their feelings and relationships to other characters.

But that’s not all! I can use tables to compare ratios! I can solve problems
involving finding the whole when given a part and the percent! I
can multiply slash divide multi digit decimals! I can use order of
operations to evaluate expressions with multiple variables and
whole-number exponents, solve an inequality that represents a
real-world math problem, analyze relationships of ordered pairs in
graphs slash tables!

Aren’t you proud of me, Mr. Duncan? I can see
you, in my head, reading this and thinking: “That girl sounds like
a real charmer. I mean, how many girls who can describe overall
pattern with reference to the context in which data were gathered
are there out there?”

But I don’t care, Mr. Duncan, I don’t care. I
can fill in bubbles and I can write my name nice and neat up in the
line on my answer sheet where it tells me to do so. I can use scrap
paper efficiently and check whether a pencil is #2 with a single
glance. I know the testing procedures, I know my testing seat, and
I know how to leave adequate time for BCRs.

Aren’t you proud of me, Mr. Duncan?

Because this is what I have learned. This is what No
Child Left Behind has taught me. I have learned to be a puppet and
take their tests and get a fancy green paper every year in the
mail, except for when it’s just a gray photocopy. I am twelve years
old and I know as well as anybody that standardized tests do
nothing but cause pain and stress for everybody involved. And oh,
have I learned. I’ve learned more than I ever thought possible.

School has taught me things, and tests have taught me other things.
I can speak Spanish fluently and find palindromic numbers and write
letters to education officials and formulate a hypothesis and
everything in between. But on test days, none of that matters.

All that matters is the busy work in front of me, the math problems and
confusing passages that swim beneath my vacant gaze and leave me
thinking of anything, everything but what lies ahead in the next
two hours. And after all this is done, after we drink water and use
the bathroom and return to our daily lives, what happens?

Fancy green papers are released and people’s fates are decided. But we,
the students, we, the people, are never consulted. We care and we
take the tests and we don’t like it. Do you want facts, Mr. Duncan?
I’ve got plenty. Oh, and by the way, I looked for a student survey
to show you here. There were none. ·

For my science experiment last
year, I gave our 5th grade citywide benchmark, the Paced Interim
Assessment, or PIA, to a group of English professors at various
universities across the country. Their average was a meager 89%,
much lower than one would expect from some of the experts on the
English language in the US. Nobody got a perfect score. · According
to a survey of Indiana teachers, 85.7% of teachers disagree or
strongly disagree that standardized testing is an accurate measure
of student achievement. ·

A mere 22% of Americans “believe
increased testing has helped the performance of local public
schools”, according to a poll released by PDK/Gallup · After the
implementation of NCLB, students faired no better on the PISA,
dropping from 18th place to 31st place in mathematics
internationally. · A New Mexico high school teacher, citing his
students’ impatience with standardized tests, revealed that the
kids had started drawing designs on their bubble sheets instead of
taking the actual tests: “Christmas tree designs were popular. So
were battleships and hearts.” ·

I was going to put a test question
here, but that’s making it too easy for you. Look at one yourself.
· And you know the rest, Mr. Duncan. Ask Google. Google will tell
you more. I’m not asking for you to stop these tests, Mr. Duncan. I
know it isn’t your fault. I just want you to hear a student’s
opinion. You have kids-they can tell you. Nobody listens to the
datapoints, so we must make ourselves heard.

Your job is to support us, Mr. Duncan. Please, do so, the best you can.

Listen, and look out for me on the streets of the nation’s capital. I’ll do the
same. Maybe on the basketball court, maybe in a café or a diner.
You might be downtown, taking your kids to the movies or boating on
the Potomac. You might be on the same bus as me, or waiting at the
same stoplight. We’re both people, Mr. Duncan, and you know that.

So listen and read this. Maybe it’ll make you think, change your
mind on all this. And if you do end up reading this, I’m the
Advanced kid with a purple bracelet on her right wrist and long
curly hair. Smile at me if you see me, but I won’t smile back. Not
until the fancy green paper stops arriving at my doorstep in
August. Sincerely, Advanced with a purple bracelet on her right
wrist

James Milgram is a professor emeritus of mathematics at
Stanford University. He served on the validation committee for the
Common Core mathematics. He did not agree to approve the standards.
He sent me the following letter. He has spoken out against the
standards in various states. See here
and here.
   

Dear Diane, In
your own writings you mention that the biggest issue with Core
Standards is the lack of evidence. This is largely true. But at
least in math there is significant international evidence that
major parts of the standards will not work. For example, the only
area we could find that has had success with CCSS-M's method of
treating geometry is in Flemish Belgium. But it was tried on a
national scale in Russia a number of years back, and was rapidly
dropped. Likewise, the extremely limited high school level content
is so weak that Jason Zimba, one of the three main writers
described it as follows: First, he defined "college readiness" by
stating: "We have agreement to the extent that it's a fuzzy
definition, that the minimally college-ready student is a student
who passed Algebra II." Perhaps this explains why the only math at
the high school level, aside from a snippet on trigonometry, is
material from Algebra I, Algebra II, and Geometry. Moreover, the
Algebra II component does not describe a complete course. Zimba's
definition is taken verbatim from his March 23, 2010 testimony
before the MA State Board of Elementary and Secondary Education.
Later, in the question period, Sandy Stotsky asked for some
clarification. The following is a verbatim transcript: Zimba stated
"In my original remarks, I didn't make that point strongly enough
or signal the agreement that we have on this - the definition of
college readiness. I think it's a fair critique that it's a minimal
definition of college readiness." Stotsky asked "For some
colleges?" and Zimba responded by stating: "Well, for the colleges
most kids go to, but not for the colleges most parents aspire to."
Stotsky then asked "Not for STEM, not for international
competitiveness?" and Zimba responded "Not only not for STEM, it’s
also not for selective colleges. For example, for UC Berkeley,
whether you are going to be an engineer or not, you'd better have
precalculus to get into UC Berkeley." Stotsky then pointed out:
"Right, but we have to think of the engineering colleges and the
scientific pathway." Zimba added "That's true, I think the third
pathway goes a lot towards that. But your issue is broader than
that." Stotsky agreed saying "I'm not just thinking about selective
colleges. There's a much broader question here," to which Zimba
added "That's right. It's both, I think, in the sense of being
clear about what this college readiness does and doesn't get you,
and that's the big subject." Stotsky then summarized her objections
to this minimalist definition by explaining that a set of standards
labeled as making students college-ready when the readiness level
applies only to a certain type of college and to a low level of
mathematical expertise wouldn’t command much international respect
in areas like technology, economics, and business. Zimba appeared
to agree as he then said "OK. Thank you." So these are the
standards that Sybilla Beckmann recently described by stating that
"No standards I know of are better than the CCSS-M." Well, if you
believe that then perhaps I can interest you in large bridge in
NYC. As to the "third pathway" that Zimba mentioned above, it never
actually existed. The version of CCSS-M Zimba was talking about was
the March 10 public draft. It had placemarkers for the key calculus
standards, but aside from those placemarkers, this version
contained about the same material -- only in Geometry, Algebra I,
Algebra II and a trig snippet -- as appears in the final version.
Moreover, the calculus placemarkers and any hint of a third pathway
are gone in the final version. It is also worth noting that
Clifford Adelman did an analysis of the odds of completing a
college degree based on the highest level math course completed in
high school. The odds for Geometry were 16.7%, for Algebra II they
were 39.3%, but for Trigonometry they were 60%, 74.6% for
Precalculus, and 83.3% for Calculus. So we can estimate that a
"minimally college ready student" has a less than 40% chance of
completing a college degree. Is this really what the National
Governor's Association, the Council of Chief State School Officers,
and the Gates and Broad Foundations want for our youth? Yours, Jim
Milgram 

We turn to our favorite Connecticut blogger, Jonathan Pelto, for an analysis of the upset win of the insurgent slate in Bridgeport. Suffice it to say that the primary was a big loss for the corporate reformers who control the state.

Step by step, the tide is turning. As the public understands what is happening, they join our struggle to save public education.

California officials want to end state testing as they prepare to phase in Common Core testing. They don’t want students subject to double testing. Now the state is locked in a showdown with Arne Duncan, who has warned the state that he might cut off federal aid if it stops state testing. Yesterday the state senate ignored Duncan’s threat and passed a bill to move forward with the plan to end current tests.

In his statement, Duncan said in part:

“A request from California to not measure the achievement of millions of students this year is not something we could approve in good conscience. Raising standards to better prepare students for college and careers is absolutely the right thing to do, but letting an entire school year pass for millions of students without sharing information on their schools’ performance with them and their families is the wrong way to go about this transition. No one wants to over-test, but if you are going to support all students’ achievement, you need to know how all students are doing.”