Archives for the month of: September, 2013

New York City mayoral candidate Bill de Blasio attacked the Bloomberg administration’s policy of placing privately managed charter schools in public school buildings. Not only does this cause overcrowding and increased class size, but it creates a two-class system, with privileged charters sited alongside public school students who must make do with less access to their library, their playground, their auditorium.

De Blasio, now leading  in the latest polls, has a strong chance to change the direction of education in New York City, and thus, have a major impact on national education policy. Because he served on a community school board, and he has a child in the public schools, he understands the needs of public schools.

This is the press release opposing the practice of giving away public space to well-funded charters:

From: De Blasio Press <deblasiopress@billdeblasio.com>
Date: Tue, Sep 3, 2013 at 8:25 AM
Subject: DE BLASIO BLASTS NEW BLOOMBERG SCHOOL CO-LOCATION PLANS, DEMANDS SPEAKER QUINN SUPPORT A MORATORIUM
To: De Blasio Press <deblasiopress@billdeblasio.com>

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: September 3, 2013
CONTACT: DAN LEVITAN dan@berlinrosen.com(646) 200-5315

DE BLASIO BLASTS NEW BLOOMBERG SCHOOL CO-LOCATION PLANS, DEMANDS SPEAKER QUINN SUPPORT A MORATORIUM

Half of New DoE School Co-Location Plans Would Put Schools over 100% Capacity

Speaker Quinn Once Again Sides with Bloomberg by Refusing to Support a Moratorium

De Blasio Renews Call for Moratorium on School Closures until a New Process is in Place

Brooklyn, NY – Public Advocate and Democratic candidate for mayor Bill de Blasio today criticized Mayor Bloomberg’s eleventh-hour efforts to push through deeply divisive school co-location plans, and blasted Bloomberg’s chief ally Speaker Quinn for refusing to call for a moratorium on school co-locations and closures – effectively acquiescing to these eleventh-hour changes.

“If Mayor Bloomberg has his way while his closest political partner Speaker Quinn stays silent, nearly half of the proposed co-location plans will put schools over 100% capacity.  This means larger class sizes for our students,” said de Blasio.  “Bloomberg’s proposals are a cynical effort to lock communities into permanent changes while ignoring community voices, and Speaker Quinn’s refusal to support a moratorium is letting Bloomberg have his way.”

Bill de Blasio is calling for an immediate halt to co-location and closure plans for the remainder of Bloomberg’s term and until a new process can be put in place. Despite years of community opposition and multiple efforts at reforming this deeply broken process, the thirty recently released Educational Impact Statements – the plans that outline significant changes in school utilization – unfortunately represent “business as usual” for Mayor Bloomberg and Speaker Quinn.  Of the proposals released, nearly half will place school buildings over 100% capacity.  In two proposals, when the school is fully phased-in, the buildings will be close to 135% capacity.

This is just the latest example of Speaker Quinn refusing to challenge Mayor Bloomberg, and routinely defending the Bloomberg status quo. When schools faced unfair co-locations and closures due to Department of Education’s lack of community engagement – such as the proposed closure of P.S. 114 in Brooklyn – Speaker Quinn stood on the sidelines. When parents and communities sought real involvement when schools faced disastrous co-locations, particularly during the Brandeis Educational Complex co-location, she was silent. De Blasio, in contrast, led the charge in fighting these wrong-headed policies. And Speaker Quinn praised Joel Klein as schools chancellor.

“The next administration deserves the opportunity to shape the future of the educational system in New York City, not be saddled with another Bloomberg plan offered in the twilight of his term that will last long after he is gone,” said de Blasio.  “Speaker Quinn seems content to stand by and let that happen.  These thirty “schools – nearly half of which will be left overcrowded – deserve better.”

As Mayor, de Blasio will create real reforms in the co-location process and elevate the voices of parents. He will create a class size reduction plan – not push through plans that contribute to overcapacity. De Blasio will also expand successful parent engagement models and ensure that district superintendent offices are proactively empowering communities with information about their schools. As Mayor, de Blasio will improve Mayoral Control and expand the role of Community Education Councils in decisions relating to co-locations, ensuring greater community influence.  He will make sure all of our schools have great leaders, open 100 community schools over the next four years, and provide universal pre-kindergarten and expanded after school programs by asking the wealthy to pay a little more in taxes.

FACT: Speaker Quinn Refuses to Support a Moratorium on School Closures. City Council Speaker Christine Quinn refused to attend a press conference with public school parents calling for an immediate moratorium on school closings. Quinn said, “I do not support a moratorium [on school closures]”. [NY Post, 1/24/2013; New Yorkers for Great Public Schools, “Quinn Along Among Democrats in Not Supporting Moratorium”, 1/31/2013]

FACT: Key Bloomberg Education Backer Said That Schools Will Probably Still Close if Quinn Became Mayor and That “The Policy Itself May Be Not All That Different [From Bloomberg’s]”. In a Jan 2013 Wall Street Journal story, Joe Williams, executive director of Democrats for Education Reform, praised Quinn’s approach on school closings. The story states, “Williams said schools will probably still close if Quinn ends up leading the city” and that “the policy itself may be not all that different” from Mayor Bloomberg’s proposals. [Wall Street Journal, “In Speech, Quinn Spells Out Education Platform”, 1/15/2013]

FACT: Speaker Quinn Said Bloomberg’s Schools Chancellor Joel Klein Did a “Terrific Job”. According to the New York Times, “She [Quinn] praised the mayor’s selection of Ms. Black’s predecessor, Joel I. Klein, a former federal prosecutor, saying he had done a ‘terrific job.’” [NY Times, “As Candidates Vow to Hire Educator as Chancellor, Quinn Keeps Options Open”, 5/8/2013]

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NOTE: I cross-posted this piece on Huffington Post. Be sure to leave comments there too.

Two years ago, Kevin Kosar, a former graduate student of mine, conducted an Internet search for the term “failing school.” What he discovered was fascinating. Until the 1990s, the term was virtually unknown. About the mid-1990s, the term began appearing with greater frequency. With the passage of No Child Left Behind, the use of the expression exploded and became a commonplace.

Kosar did not speculate on the reasons. But I venture to say that the rise of the accountability movement created the idea of “failing schools.”

“Accountability” was taken to mean that if students have low test scores, someone must be blamed. Since Bush’s NCLB, it became conventional to blame the school. With President Obama’s Race to the Top, blame shifted to teachers. The solution to “failing schools,” according to Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, is to fire the staff and close the school.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo recently took this idea to an extreme by saying that he wanted a “death penalty” for “failing schools.” His believes that when schools have persistently low test scores, they should lose democratic control.

They should be taken over by the state, given to private charter corporations, or put under mayoral control. In fact, none of these ideas has been successful.

Low-performing school districts in New Jersey have been under state control for more than 20 years without turning them into high-performing districts. Mayoral control in Cleveland and Chicago has been a flop. And private charters typically do no better than public schools, except when they exclude low-scoring students.

Undoubtedly there are some schools where the leadership is rotten and corrupt. In such cases, the responsibility lies with the district superintendent to review the staff and programs, and make significant changes as needed

But these days, any school with low test scores is called a “failing school,” without any inquiry into the circumstances of the school.

Instead of closing the school or privatizing it, the responsible officials should act to improve the school. they should ask:

What proportion of the students are new immigrants and need help learning English? What proportion entered the school far behind their grade level? What proportion have disabilities and need more time to learn? What resources are available to the school? An in-depth analysis is likely to reveal that most “failing schools” are not failing schools, but are schools that enroll high proportions of students who need extra help, extra tutoring, smaller classes, social workers, guidance counselors, psychologists, and a variety of other interventions.

Firing the staff does not turn around a low-performing school. Nor does handing it over to a charter chain. Nor does mayoral control. Most of the time, what we call a “failing school” is a school that lacks the personnel and resources to meet the needs of its students.

Closing schools does not make them better. Nor does closing schools help students. It’s way past time to stop blaming the people who work in troubled schools and start helping them by providing the tools they need and the support their students need.

In this post, Jonathan Pelto describes the rigid discipline at the Jumoke Academy in Connecticut.

The astonishing thing about this school is who is not enrolled.

First came the Jumoke Academy, a Hartford based, discipline oriented charter school that over its history failed to take a single bilingual or non-English speaking student since it opened, despite the fact that one in five Hartford student’s aren’t fluent in English and nearly 50% of all students come from households that don’t speak English.

So Governor Malloy, Commissioner Stefan Pryor, the State Board of Education and the Hartford Board of Education gave Hartford’s Milner School, a predominantly Latino  local public elementary school, to Jumoke Academy to manage.

This year, with no evidence that Jumoke has the skill to manage other public schools, Governor Malloy, Commissioner Stefan Pryor, the State Board of Education, Paul Vallas and the Bridgeport Board of Education gave Bridgeport’s local Dunbar elementary school to Jumoke Academy to manage.

Wait, What?

Not a single bilingual or non-English speaking student in a city where one in five students are in that category?

Is this legal? Where is the ACLU? Where are the civil rights groups that defend students? Where is the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights?

Needless to say, the new “academy” will be staffed by Teach for America, recent college graduates who are malleable and plan a two-year “career.”

Arthur Getzel has been a teacher of special education in New York City since 1978. On his blog, he describes his preparations as the school year begins. It is his last year. He goes shopping for supplies and spends $200 of his own money for necessities. He cleans the classroom to get it ready for his students.

He knows everything is supposed to change this year because of Common Core.

But, he writes:

“Seriously, I do not plan to change the way I teach my students. I will do my best to teach them the skills that they really need to succeed. My goals are for my student to meet their IEP objectives. I care not one iota about this curriculum. I will not teach them goals that are unachievable. Whatever happens will happen. I plan to do my “personal best” as I have done since 1978. I know that for the last 35 years, I have been an effective special education teacher in which most of my career has been with high need students. I taught kids that had everything stacked against them. Yet, I do know many who have made it against all odds. One of my students is a supervisor for the Metropolitan Transit Authority (who has a learning-disabled adolescent) and another is presently a registered male nurse in a large city hospital after spending part of his life in a correctional facility. These former students are real people and not data driven numbers or some TFA made-up anecdote.

“I will tell you one thing. When I retire on July 1, 2014, I am not going to rest. I am just closing a chapter. I plan to begin anew. I plan a chapter in which I will adamantly advocate for disabled children and fight to save the public education system. We retired teachers will become an army to oppose the reformers and privateers. We cannot be intimidated and will not be afraid to speak truth to power.”

I first learned about the Common Core standards while attending a briefing for Congressional staff at a conference sponsored by the Aspen Institute in 2009. it was held at Wye Plantation, a lovely and isolated conference center in Maryland. Dane Linn of the National Governors
Association described the development work. I was invited to talk about the history of standards in the U.S.

In the discussion following Linn’s presentation, I recommended field
testing. In my experience in working on state standards in California, the standards needed to be vetted by experienced teachers. There needed to be a feedback process in which teachers used the standards and had the chance to tell someone in charge what worked and what didn’t, what was placed in the wrong grade (too hard or too easy), and which expectations were unrealistic.

In 2010, I was invited to the White House to meet with
three top officials–Melody Barnes, director of the Domestic Policy
Council, Rahm Emanuel, the President’s chief of staff, and Roberto
Rodriguez, the President’s education advisor. We talked for an hour
(Emanuel got bored and left early). They asked many questions, like what do you think of merit pay? i told them it had been tried repeatedly and failed every time. they responded that the Obama administration was putting $1 billion into merit pay.

Another of their questions was:
“What do you think of the Common Core standards?” My answer: “They
should have a trial in a few states for a few years before they are
made national standards. You need to find out what needs fixing.
They might be so rigorous that they increase achievement gaps and
hurt the kids who are not doing well now, especially poor kids and
kids of color.” I had a suggestion: “Why don’t you try the
standards out in three to five states, offer grants to those that
want to do it, and see how they work and what consequences they
have?” They were not interested. I left the meeting at the White House feeling that I had just spent an hour talking to people who heard nothing that I said. They told me what they planned to do, but they never engaged in dialogue about whether it was a good idea. Oh, and before Rahm Emanuel abruptly left the meeting to do more important things, his first question was “What can we learn from Catholic schools?”

For four years, I sat on the fence, waiting for evidence one way or the other about the Common Core standards. It really bothered me that no one cared to find out how they worked in real classrooms before imposing them. Then, earlier this year, I wrote a post
explaining that the way the standards were imposed
, with
no trial, no feedback, no way to update them, made it impossible
for me to support them. Critics responded that standards need no evidence, but I don’t believe it. No big corporation would roll out a big product without field testing. Why should an entire nation accept education standards without finding out how they work?

Now we do have evidence. This is what
we know: the Common Core tests cause a huge decline in test scores.
Passing rates fell 30% in Kentucky and about the same in New York.

What is worse is that the achievement gaps grew larger. As
Carol Burris recently wrote
, the test results were
especially devastating for black and Latino children. “The results
expanded the black/white achievement gap. In 2012, there was a
12-point black/white achievement gap between average third grade
English Language Arts scores, and a 14-point gap in eighth grade
ELA scores. This year, the respective gaps grew to 19 and 25
points. In 2012, there was an 8-point gap between black/white
third-grade math scores and a 13-point gap between eighth-grade
math scores. The respective gaps are now 14 and 18 points. The gap
expansion extended to other groups as well. The achievement gap
between White and Latino students in eighth-grade ELA grew from 3
points to 22 points. Students who already believe they are not as
academically successful as their more affluent peers, will further
internalize defeat. “The percentage of black students who scored
“below basic” in third-grade English Language Arts rose from 15.5
percent to 50 percent. In seventh-grade math, black students
labeled “below basic” jumped from 16.5 percent to a staggering 70
percent. Nearly one-third of all New York children scored “below
basic” across the grade level tests. Students often score “below
basic” because they guess or give up. Principals and teachers
cannot get accurate feedback on student learning. Although Ms.
Tisch [chancellor of the New York State Board of Regents] may say
that “this does not mean there’s no learning going on,” what will
parents think? Students will now need to be placed in remediation,
or Academic Intervention Services. Schools that serve a
predominately minority, poor student body will be fiscally
overwhelmed as they try to meet the needs of so many children.
Those who truly need the additional support will find that support
is watered-down.”

Maybe the standards are okay, but the tests are
not.

Who is in charge? By law, the U.S. Department of Education is not
allowed to interfere with curriculum or instruction. Who
can find out what went wrong? Or will we feel okay about imposing
reforms that widen the gaps? In New York, the charter schools did
no better than the public schools. Where are we heading? It won’t
do to keep saying, as Secretary Duncan likes to, that only
extremists oppose the standards. Reasonable people question them as
well. To whom should we turn for a careful, thoughtful analysis of
what is going terribly wrong?

Howard Blume reports in this morning’s Los Angeles Times that the school district’s $500 million purchase of iPads did not include the keyboards that will be necessary when the students use them to take standardized tests. The district has also committed to spend another $500 million to install wireless Internet in every school. The iPads were purchased for testing students on the new Common Core.

Blume writes:

The project is funded by voter-approved school construction bonds, which typically are paid off by taxpayers over about 25 years.

Students at two elementary schools received the iPads last week in the first rollout. All students are supposed to have tablets by December 2014.

As of now, the iPad project does not include wireless keyboards, in part because the tablet computers have touch screens.

But that setup might not satisfy the needs of older students writing term papers, for example. And if typing on them proves more difficult, that could frustrate or hinder students as they take new online tests. The device’s touch screen could even obscure portions of a test item that would be visible in its entirety on a full screen.

For some time, the district has planned to use the devices for testing based on new English and math learning standards, called the Common Core, that were adopted by California and 44 other states.

There are rumors in the tech industry that Apple will soon release a new generation of iPads, which raises the question of whether they are dumping the soon-to-be-obsolete version on LA students.

Alexandra Miletta is a teacher, like her mother, in New
York. When I was in graduate school at Teachers College in the late
1960s, Maureen Miletta and I were in classes together. I am happy
to see Alexandra carrying forward her mother’s legacy as a devoted
educator. Alexandra thinks we can all find inspiration in this
particular Harry Potter story.

Thoughts on education from a teacher
educator.

Dumbledore’s Army

In case you are not a fan of the Harry Potter saga (as I am) allow me to
sum up an interesting moment in the story when it seemed there was
no hope of learning to defeat evil. (For the longer summary with a
bit more context, read this.) The part that I find interesting is
when Hermione (my favorite character) tells her peers:
“Well…erm…well, you know why you’re here. Erm…well, Harry here had
the idea – I mean” – Harry had thrown her a sharp look – “I had the
idea – that it might be good if people who wanted to study Defense
Against the Dark Arts – and I mean, really study it, you know, not
the rubbish that Umbridge is doing with us” – (Hermione’s voice
became suddenly much stronger and more confident) – “because nobody
could call that Defense Against the Dark Arts” – “Hear, hear,” said
Anthony Goldstein, and Hermione looked heartened – “well, I thought
it would be good if we, well, took matters into our own hands.” (p.
339 in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, 2003) In the
movie version, this is simplified to the line, “We need a teacher,
a proper teacher.”

The students of Hogwarts realized that they were
not going to learn the real spells and magic they would need if
they just accepted the status quo being delivered by Dolores
Umbridge and her dull and useless textbook.

Hermione was intelligent enough to recognize that her friend Harry had
experience and knowledge that he could teach them. The group was
formed, a place for secret practice was found, and “Dumbledore’s
Army” was born.

Maybe the analogy of preparing for war in the
wizarding world seems extreme for those returning to school here in
New York State, but as the nation debates the possible consequences
of engaging in real war in Syria, Governor Cuomo ramped up the
hostile rhetoric today by saying failing schools deserve the “death
penalty.” Yes, you read that correctly, it’s a quote. I could
hardly believe it when I saw it. What’s really failing is the
leadership in Albany that has accepted the federal bribe money
through Race to the Top and is creating havoc with lousy tests,
inappropriate measures of teacher performance and school quality,
and a privatization plan that is unproven and as scary as the
return of Lord Voldemort.

So teachers and students, don’t despair.

You don’t have to start this year in fear – of failing, of being
unfairly judged, of seeing your school closed or resources cut to
the bone.

It’s time to learn how to defend yourself against these
dark times. Here are some tips for starting the year off strong:

1. Read and get informed. That means not just the news, which is
sorely lacking in investigative journalists, at least in education.
Find the blogs, the active Twitter users, the Facebook groups, the
organizations of people who are actively working for positive
change and supporting the public schools that are under assault. A
good place to start is Diane Ravitch’s new book Reign of Error:The
Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger to America’s
PublicSchools, out in mid-September. F

2. Practice your talking points. You will need these not just for staff meetings, informal
lunch conversations, PTA meetings, or school board testimonies. You
need to start talking at dinner parties, after lectures and book
talks, at the gym, in the taxi, anywhere you find people willing to
engage in conversation so they too can be informed and involved.

3. Get inspired. Learn from history, from role model activists like
Bayard Rustin, who just was awarded the Presidential Medal of
Freedom posthumously (you can see a beautiful documentary about him
called Brother Outsider: The Life of Bayard Rustin).

4. Show off and be proud of your many accomplishments. You have bulletin boards,
windows and walls, and strings to hang things from across your
classrooms, and websites and email newsletters, and concert and
play performances, and charitable actions and good deeds. Let the
world know that you are proud of what you do.

5. Find strength in numbers. Join up with others, make a regular working lunch date to
talk and strategize, organize pot lucks, ask for volunteers, help
people who want to get involved but don’t know how to begin.

6. Make time for play, and joy, and being creative. If that doesn’t
come naturally, maybe you can start by organizing a cardboard
challenge on October 8th for some kids and let them teach you.

7. Ask for help and support when you need it. It’s normal to have bad
days, to feel depressed and overwhelmed. Reach out to your friends
and let them know you need their encouragement and kind words.

8. Sometimes you just need to go on a march. If that seems
old-fashioned or ineffective, read about the 50th anniversary of
the 1963 March for Jobs and Freedom and listen to the speeches of
Martin Luther King Jr.’s family, Rep. John Lewis, President Obama,
and others who commemorated the anniversary on August 28th.

Most of all, have a good year. Do good, and be well.

From a reader who read the emails gathered by investigative
reporter Tom Lobianco of the Associated Press, insights about the
back room discussions to impose “reforms” without talking to
legislators.

 

She wrote:

 

“Todd Huston, Tony Bennett’s Chief of
Staff, Indiana Department of Education is clearly in collusion with
a small circle of deformers to destroy public education in Indiana.
Al Hubbard, a classmate and fundraiser for GWB and David Harris of
the Mind Trust are involved in the plan of destruction. According
to Hutson, “We have to lead the media.” and “If we respond to the
educrats, we will always be on the defensive.”
http://www.theindychannel.com/news/local-news/an-email-timeline-of-indianas-education-reforms
http://hosted.ap.org/specials/interactives/_documents/ind_ed/choice.pdf
pg 1 of 3 Al and I have encouraged him to pay attention to ed and
he’s having lunch soon w D Harris. He knows the Mind Trust has
hired commissioned a study that will support Mayor control. pg 3 of
3 4) We have to lead the media. If we respond to the educrats, we
will always be on the defensive. Instead, we should begin a strong
communications effort focused on the major media markets. Our
experience has been that the Indianapolis, South Bend, Evansville
and Lake County papers really desire educational reform and those
are the markets we have to win in. The rural and small town markets
won’t care and could even be persuaded that it might mean more
money for them.
http://hosted.ap.org/specials/interactives/_documents/ind_ed/last_nights_agenda.pdf
http://hosted.ap.org/specials/interactives/_documents/ind_ed/notes_and_agenda.pdf
http://hosted.ap.org/specials/interactives/_documents/ind_ed/agenda_wrap.pdf
http://hosted.ap.org/specials/interactives/_documents/ind_ed/meeting_notes.pdf
http://www.ibrc.indiana.edu/auber/bios/miles.pdf
http://inhrcc.com/candidates/37/todd-huston
http://www.indystar.com/VideoNetwork/1334522956001/Matthew-Tully-with-Mind-Trust-CEO-David-Harris

This note came from a reader, who may know that Geoffrey Canada’s Harlem Children’s Zone has $200 million in the bank and two billionaires on its board. The reader wonders if Canada might help restore the library in the school where she worked in Philadelphia, which is closed due to budget cuts:

“Saw a group of charming students from Canada’s program at the 50th anniversary March on Wednesday. Staff photographing the group for PR. Gave them a copy of A. Philip Randolph’s bio with notation that high school in Philadelphia named for him has no library.

“Held up my sign:

“Philadelphia, Mississippi: 1963 Black children not allowed in libraries

“Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: 2013 No school libraries”

Barbara McDowell Dowdall English Department Head (Ret.) A, Philip Randolph Technical High School

“Which Side Are You On?” is one of the most popular union
songs. According to Alan Lomax, who collected folk songs for the
Archive of American Folk Songs at the Library of Congress, this song was
written by Florence Reece, th
e 12-year-old daughter of a
miner who was on strike in Harlan County, Kentucky. Lomax wrote
that she sang it to him in front of the family hearth of a log
cabin in 1937. This version
is sung by Pete Seege
r, one of the most popular folk
singers of the 20th century. This is a version
with allusions to contemporary corporations and
politicians.