Lately, the organization 50CAN has spread from state to state, bringing bad ideas that hurt children and promote corporate control of public schools (aka privatization). The CAN strategy always begins with grading and labeling schools, so that those at the bottom are demoralized and feel like failures, no matter how hard they try.
North Carolina has CarolinaCAN, which is grading schools as the first step in destroying the school and decimating the local community, taking away its most stable institution, its public school. You can always count on a slick charter operator to fly in, pick on the bones of the public school, push out the kids with disabilities, push out the English learners, push out the kids with low scores, then boast of its great success.
Shameful, just shameful.
Pamela Grundy, a parent activist on behalf of public schools, sent her son to a high-minority, low-income school called Shamrock Gardens Elementary School in Charlotte, which she describes here.
CarolinaCAN has decided that Shamrock Gardens must be destroyed. These corporate robots, who do not know the school, have never walked its halls or met its children or teachers or parents, have given it a grade. They say it is a D- school. They give it a badge of shame. All the efforts of the children, the parents, and the teachers at the school went for nought. This CAN did what other CANs do: they operate as a corporate machine to destroy the lives of children and communities while patting themselves on the back.
In the psychiatric literature, CAN is an acronym for “Child Abuse and Neglect.” Remember that next time you hear that a CAN In your state says your local public school is rotten. Remember that they have a goal. To turn it over to a corporation.
Forgive my anger. Once again, the powerful pick on the powerless, and it makes me mad. Someone will say I was “mean” for picking on an organization that is funded by the wealthy to destroy public schools. I don’t care. I care about the children. In olden days, these know-nothings would be run out of town on a rail because of the harm they do. Now they issue press releases and get respect that they do not deserve, because so much corporate money is backing their machine.
Here is what Pamela Grundy wrote:
“The large, orange-red D-minus dominates the web page, leaping out from the white background. I’m looking at a so-called “Report Card” for Shamrock Gardens Elementary School, prepared by a lobbying group known as The Carolina Campaign for Achievement Now, or CarolinaCAN. As everyone who has ever gotten a report card knows, a D-minus is a mark of shame, a hair shy of utter failure. You get a D-minus in a class when you had no idea what you were doing or when you barely tried at all.
“Our school does not deserve that kind of grade.
“Normally, I wouldn’t pay much attention to the assessment of a group brought in from outside the state, which has a single staff member and whose idea of “research” seems to be a slick and shallow repackaging of readily available public information…..
“By 2012, Shamrock had become a thriving, sanction-free school with vibrant extracurriculars, strong parent involvement programs and a growing number of middle-class families who had once shunned the school but who had begun to see it as a good place for their children. My son had enjoyed six years of a marvelous education, provided by a skilled and dedicated staff who constantly went above and beyond for their students. I’d be happy to match the group of teachers who taught our 2012 testing grades against any in the state.
“Still, Shamrock continued to face plenty of challenges. In 2012, 95 percent of our tested population qualified as economically disadvantaged. Nine percent of the tested students had diagnosed disabilities, and 16 percent had yet to master English. At least 10 percent were homeless at some point during the year. Fewer than 1 in 3of the fifth-graders had been at Shamrock for all six years of elementary school, and some students had been at the school only a few months before they took the tests.
“These challenges made raising aggregate test scores tough. While the majority of our low-income students thrived, others struggled, especially those whose family instability meant frequent moves from school to school. The reading test posed particular problems because success often depended on navigating the test-makers’ verbal tricks, an especially difficult task for English language learners.
“The result: In 2012, approximately 58 percent of the state tests our fifth-graders took were scored at or above grade level (and this was before the state Board of Education’s recent decision to significantly raise the bar for testing proficiency). On CarolinaCAN’s grading scale, which closely resembles that used for classroom grades, a 58 translates to a D-minus.
“But getting 58 percent of a challenged and often transient student body to grade level or above is a meaningful accomplishment. It should not be equated to getting a grade of 58 on an exam or in a class. A high-poverty school with a 58 percent proficiency rate needs to improve. Neither its teachers nor its students deserve to be shamed with a D-minus.
“The purveyors of the A-F grading system argue that the “newfound transparency” of the system will spur teachers and parents to work harder to improve their schools. I predict a far different scenario.
“State-mandated A-F grades will intensify the focus on the narrow range of material that standardized tests cover, compounding the well-documented damage that this kind of testing has done to American education. And because they will paint a portrait that is often far more negative than reality, they will further undercut confidence in North Carolina public schools and teachers. Most families will not try to improve schools labeled with D-minuses. Rather, they will do their best to avoid them.
“It is perhaps not surprising that the proponents of A-F grading, including the American Legislative Exchange Council and CarolinaCAN’s parent organization, 50CAN, are also prominent backers of expanding charter schools and vouchers. One way to build support for charters and vouchers, of course, is to convince parents and politicians that public schools are worse than they actually are.
“If our legislators truly want to help our public schools improve, they should abandon their harmful plans for A-F grading and turn their efforts to measures that will make a positive difference in children’s educational experiences. They should restore class-size caps, reduce the number of time-consuming standardized tests and raise teacher pay to more respectable levels.”
Pamela Grundy of Charlotte is co-chair of MecklenburgACTS.org, a grassroots group working on issues of equity and excellence in Mecklenburg County public schools.
Read more here: http://www.newsobserver.com/2013/10/11/3273018/how-allowing-nc-schools-to-be.html#storylink=cpy

School district field-tests 52 (yes, 52) new tests on kids.
Question: Is this CHILD ABUSE?
Check out this link from Valerie Strauss. http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/post/school-district-field-tests-52-yes-52-new-tests-on-kids/2011/04/20/AFFbGXFE_blog.html
Quote: This is happening in Charlotte-Mecklenburg Public Schools, which spent nearly $2 million to test the tests so that a new teacher evaluation system can be implemented that grades teachers on how well their students do on standardized tests, the Charlotte Observer reported.
Follow the $$$$$ and ask, “CUI BONO?” Answer: NOT THE STUDENTS.
LikeLike
Happily, parent activism squashed the new tests in Mecklenburg County. Unhappily, North Carolina’s Race to the Top grant and NCLB are putting many of them back into place at a statewide level. See MecklenburgACTS.org for a description.
LikeLike
Seen this one?
http://bobbraunsledger.com/workers-on-plantations-dont-need-unions-right/
Sent from my iPhone, with keys way too small for humans.
>
LikeLike
How is it that a well-funded corporation can get away with actions that would quite rightly land the employees of a public school system in jail on abuse / neglect charges?
Infuriating!
LikeLike
Diane,
Your anger is completely justified, please don’t apologize. We have PennCan here pushing the corporate agenda. They are an outgrowth of the Philadelphia School Partnership, a private organization which the school district listens to much more than to the parents or teachers.
PSP/PennCan has been lobbying the Governor NOT to fund schools until the union makes major concessions, including giving up seniority. It is a reprehensible and morally indefensible position, but that doesn’t stop them.
LikeLike
Have reformers ever been challenged on the contradiction between their parent-excluding methods and the stated claim of wanting parental involvement?
Parental involvement is one of the keys to successful students, is it not? Yet they parachute into these communities where there are already engaged and committed parents and roll right over them. So what are we really talking about here? When they say they want parental involvement they really mean “as long as the parents want exactly what we want”?
We have seen this again and again and again. In Chicago, in Philadelphia, in New Orleans, in the parent-trigger targeted districts. These public schools existed BEFORE this huge cadre of reformers all joined the payroll at the seemingly hundreds of reform non-profits. They WERE the engaged parents we’re all supposedly looking for. Yet they’re completely ignored.
Can school reformers explain this contradiction between what they say and what they do?
LikeLike
“CarolinaCAN”
Can we get a working definition of a “special interest”? Because these fake-grassroots groups would certainly qualify under any ordinary definition. Is this another instance where reformers are redefining terms to fit an agenda?
How many of the members of any of the “CAN” groups are on a reform payroll?
LikeLike
Label any group that has a connection to Teach for America or corporatization as a special interest group. Any group that is really grass roots should be called a local advocacy group or children’s advocacy organization. This could include the unions. A bad label can go a long way. The latest term, for example, of conservative anti-abortion groups that don’t support programs that help children is “PRO-FETUS”. It’s the same as “homosexual activist” vs “equal rights”. A lot is in the label. Just my thoughts.
LikeLike
Diane, your anger is righteous and justified and I deeply appreciate it. You are one of the few voices speaking out against this atrocity.
As i’ve reported here before my school in Florida is a victim of this school grading mess. We are one of 13 Title I schools in the district that were labeled with “F” grades last year when the state DOE dramatically and arbitrarily raised the cut score on the FCAT test. Coincidentally all the “F” schools are also those with the highest populations of poor, minority, and ELL students and this is true statewide. The mostly white, middle class schools are all “A” schools (for now).
There are 2 schools in my district that have had an “F” grade for the last 3 years. They have been under total state control for the entire time and they both have a transient, extremely poor population of immigrant children. It’s the same old, same old “rigor, relevance, higher order thinking” nonsense with 10 page lesson plans for each lesson mandated (I’m not exaggerating — that’s the requirement) and an extra hour of test prep at the end of the school day as the “cure”.
Even though the state has failed itself to “turn around” these 2 schools in any way they now have control of 11 other schools where they are applying the same snake oil solutions. It is clear that the people the state has hired to do this work are political appointees and they are not nice people. They have contempt for teachers and blame us for every problem but offer no solutions other than “you’re doing it wrong, you’ve always done it wrong, you don’t understand good ‘teaching’, etc.”. They never make a positive or encouraging comment. I’ve asked many teachers at the schools they’ve been running for 3 years. Nothing is ever enough and it is always bad and wrong, even when you do exactly what they say and comply with their every whim.
They make no mention of their own failure to make any difference whatsoever in the schools they’ve been running for years or the disaster that the state DOE has been itself for the last 11 years with it’s revolving door of scandalized leaders and the constant fumbling and missteps with test scores and school grades and the massive increase in “D” and “F” schools due to the ridiculous constant raising of the FCAT cut scores.
It’s very clear to me at least that the long term plan is closure, not help. They cut the budgets for all the schools making it impossible for us to buy the materials we need to remediate and even teach the core curriculum. They eliminated librarians and teacher’s aides positions in every school and make other support personnel serve 3 -5 schools every week, eliminating real and needed support services on a timely basis. They refuse to purchase needed materials and have delayed the few materials we did receive because they had to be “approved” as “research-based” and reassured that we were using them with “fidelity”. We were given a very small raise but the catch was that we are now not allowed to call in sick — the money that was formally used to pay substitute teachers was used to pay the tiny raises. We come to work sick or our classes are divided up between our colleagues, breeding resentment and anger because of the constant monitoring and gotcha walkthroughs that penalize you when you have 6 or 7 extra kids that aren’t working when they visit.
It’s all a shell game pretending that they are going to support and help us. Instead they are preparing us for the eventual closure and sale of to the highest charter political contributor. I feel for the people on NC and elsewhere that have become victims of this Frankenstein-like program that was brought to life here in FL under Jeb Bush. The monstrous and evil program of school grading must be stopped before they succeed in eliminating all public schools. They are destroying local public schools that are often the only safe place our kids have in their lives.
LikeLike
I’m appalled at many things that you have to deal with, but you actually cannot EVER get sick? Disgusting. Forcing you all to come in sick is not only horrible and could spread illness, but is that even legal?
LikeLike
“The CAN strategy always begins with grading and labeling schools. . . ”
Well if that is a particularly poor educational malpractice what about the “labelling and grading” of students?
Is the “grading” of students an acceptable educational practice or is it a malpractice????
Place your votes, folks, yes or no!
LikeLike
Duane–as I have learned from reading your Wilson list posts, grades tell us about a moment in time: mastery of material at that moment in time. They do tell us where we are in a given set of circumstances, and generally (it used to be) that there was a clear understanding (based on a syllabus, homework, readings, variety of projects and tests that accounted for learning styles and learning expression) that mastery as evident in grades was relevant to a class, and where that took you beyond the class was really up to the learner (or based on any predetermined consequences tied to the grade). But the grading of schools is too vast to be carried on like grading students in a class because there is no personal relationship as part of it, and the consequences do not make sense. Whereas, if a student cannot show mastery on multiplication facts, it makes sense that the consequence be that they take it again after receiving more time and and attention for learning them. Grading and labeling schools is like hanging carpet on a clothesline to dry. Hanging personal clothing items on a clothes line to dry makes sense; but wall to wall carpet has to air dry or have some other method. What works on a small scale does not always work on a large scale.
Also, as so many have pointed out, the techno-gurus behind all of our reforms are projecting one way of understanding and valuing the world on our children. We all have our notions of “if people would just understand_____________” everything would be fine; an art teacher might say the color wheel, a music teacher the circle of fifths, you might say “the boot” (that’s the only thing I remember from my one semester of Spanish, as I was a Latin and French girl), some might say the 10 Commandments. We all have our persuasions in that area. So while the techo and data dudes are calling the shots right now, the consequences are not appropriate.
So I vote yes. And NO!
LikeLike
Joanna,
“But the grading of schools is too vast to be carried on like grading students in a class because there is no personal relationship as part of it”
I would contend that the “grading” of students is “too vast” vaster than “grading” a school due to those “personal relationships”
But you did bring up a point-the personal relationships-that I hadn’t thought of before. Thanks!
LikeLike
NC is my home. We have to develop the same mentality every woman finds in herself when she looks in the mirror and does not see Barbie. These “standards” were not agreed upon; they were not negotiated; they were not assigned by people who have any personal relationship to folks in these school buildings. At the end of the day, education rests on personal relationships and as long as those of us who do care about public education continue to nurture and foster personal relationships with our colleagues, our students, our principals and our school families, we will find light at the end of this tunnel. It’s as is we were scaling the mountain just fine (albeit having to tend to fatigue and obstacles along the way), and now they have closed the mountain and sent us underground. Fine. We can do this. And we will come out on the other side just the same. Let truth be our light while we’re down there. Let creativity be our sustenance. Let us help each other along the way. And we will come out on the other side.
LikeLike
Michigan’s Mackinac Center has discovered that high poverty schools are at the bottom of the state top-to-bottom school ranking (based on test scores). I thought this an amazing breakthrough. But their solution is more charter schools with higher state subsidies and unlimited inter-district choice.
I puzzled over the logical connection between the identified problem and the proposed solution. Then I realized that the real problem they are solving is not the correlation between poverty and achievement, but the fact that the state wants to help these schools improve — a hopeless endeavor. Now it all makes sense.
Here’s the summary from Mackinac that left me puzzling. it has a link to the full article which gives clues to the rationale.
Mackinac Center Criticizes State Ranking System
TOP
LANSING, Mich. – The Mackinac Center for Public Policy recently released a study criticizing the state’s Top-to-Bottom school rankings, according to MLive.
MLive reports that the Center found that a majority of the variation of school rankings could be explained by the percentage of students in poverty. According to MLive, other states have created school ranking systems with lower correlations.
“Such a system risks penalizing schools based not on their actual performance, but rather on the portion of low-income students they happen to enroll,” the Center’s report says according to MLive.
SOURCE: MLive, “Mackinac Center criticizes top-to-bottom school accountability system, says penalizes poor districts,” Oct. 10, 2013
FURTHER READING: Mackinac Center for Public Policy, “Michigan’s Top-to-Bottom Ranking: A Measure of School Quality or Student Poverty,” Oct. 10 2013
LikeLike
One of my things is that, in Louisana, “C” schools are designated as failing and the kids can go to voucher schools. What, pray tell is wrong with a C if that is they best a child can do. C is Satisfactory. Of course we know the true agenda, the only public schools that get As and Bs are the ones that have few disadvantaged children and the selective magnets that only take high performing students.
LikeLike
The link to the article on the Mackinac Center didn’t come through in my comment, so here it is:
http://www.mlive.com/education/index.ssf/2013/10/mackinac_center_criticizes_top.html?
LikeLike
Sounds like Indiana and our {illustrious?} Tony Bennett – former Supt. of Public Education – and now we are saddled with his political aspirations.
LikeLike
“It is not light that we need, but fire; it is not the gentle shower, but thunder. We need the storm, the whirlwind, and the earthquake.” [Frederick Douglass]
To the owner of this blog: there is absolute nothing wrong with strongly disapproving of dishonorable actions and shameful words. You have done so before, e.g., in the case of the shabby treatment meted out to Irma Cobian.
I am being presumptuous, but I think I speak for many who visit this blog—we expect nothing less of you,
Because you expect nothing less of yourself.
Many thanks to a Most KrazyHistoryLady who is not afraid to speak truth to power.
🙂
LikeLike