This came to my personal email. The writer requested anonymity:
“Hello, Ms. Ravitch,
“My name is —- ——-, and I am a big fan of your scholarship, specifically that around charter school efficacy.
“I spent my first 2 years in education as an ELA teacher at a KIPP school in New Orleans while also taking classes as part of a post-bac teacher certification program at one of the best universities in the Crescent City.
“I have read, and used as a source for a presentation on charter school efficacy, the original CREDO report, and I am in full agreement with your assertion that charter schools are, at best, at par with TPSs in terms of efficacy – not better. It is not only your research that has supported this assertion, and as you know, there is, in fact, a wide body of research that suggests the exact same thing. And, as a formally-educated educator, I am well versed in research study methodology, and always look at the methodology prior to considering the veracity of the findings of a study. Faulty methodology = faulty findings. And the methodology of the CREDO report is nothing short of air-tight as study methodology can be.
“I am writing because I would love to find out from you any resources that might be of assistance as I research charter schools.
“In my opinion, as someone who has worked at KIPP and another CMO (charter management organization) in New Orleans, I can say, based upon years of experience, I am deeply concerned about:
a) their lack of real accountability
b) the lack of compliance with Federal laws pertaining to education, including IDEA
c) the inhumane conditions (including excessive hours, no breaks, etc) to which teachers, at many charters, are subjected
d) a lack of real-world experience, and formal education education (i.e. graduate work, or even undergraduate work, and practicum hours, through a nationally accredited school of education) had by the majority of the teachers, and administrators, at many charter schools
“For years, I endured the inhumane working conditions, and turned a blind eye to ridiculous violations and inefficiencies, but I am finished being a follower.
“As an African-American who completed my elementary and secondary educational work in an affluent public school district, I can say with certainty that the students at each and every charter school with which I am familiar in the city of New Orleans, and I am familiar with many schools within many CMOs, these schools are not at all preparing their students for success in college. Most of the schools do not include computer education as part of their curriculum, special education students frequently do not receive the services they are, by law, entitled to, teachers are under-assigning homework, many of the instructors are not at all masters of the content areas, etc. etc.
“And then there is the KIPP/TFA connection. KIPP and Teach for America are literally in bed with each other, due to the fact that KIPP Foundation CEO, Richard Barth, and Wendy Kopp, CEO and Co-Founder of Teach for America, are married with children. Boy, I see a serious issue with the number of folks who are KIPP employees who are TFA Corps members or alumni, especially given this fact. Were some similar arrangement to be the case in the private sector, it would most definitely be seen as a conflict of interest. Were either of them politicians and there was a similar arrangement, there would be major ethical issues. And the same is the case with the education of the children of America, especially the black and brown, and impoverished, of whatever color.
“I know you are incredibly busy, but I would love, even if I cannot speak directly to you, to be put into contact with someone with your organization who can point me in the proper direction of some resources. The general public is completely ill-informed, and/or ignorant, when it comes to what is really going on in terms of educational reform, and it is, in my mind, an ethical issue, and a matter of national security, that our children are being mis-educated, their parents lied to. Not to mention all of the wonderful teachers who have been demonized, laid off, and stripped of their financial independence as a result of the latest, greatest wave of educational reform.
“Humbly yours,
—- ——-
“former charter school teacher, life-long educator & activist”

I always wondered why Barth/Kopp didn’t sent their own children to an NYC KIPP, especially if they are such “great” schools?
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I commend her for speaking out and will be encouraged if more teachers do the same.
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Mercedes! Crazycrawfish! I know I am missing some, but these two wonderful accomplished, knowledgeable bloggers certainly can lead her to water.
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2old2tch: you took the bloggers right out of my mouth!
🙂
Dr. Mercedes Schneider aka deutsch29 aka KrazyMathLady: http://deutsch29.wordpress.com
CrazyCrawfish: http://crazycrawfish.wordpress.com
There is an added bonus. These two bloggers in Louisiana [and there are others] are smitten with three incurable conditions: integrity, knowledge, and honesty.
Caveat emptor: if you come in contact with them, you might become infected.
🙂
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This is a devastating letter.
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As the correspondent points out, so-called education reform is an incestuous little club, made up of edupreneurs, malanthropists, academics for hire, political advocates and media stenographers. The KIPP-TFA nexus is symbolic of that closed, airless, monied little world.
Manipulating the idealism of young people, and selling snake oil to poor communities so that the rich and powerful can become more so, is a despicable thing, and it is bound to eventually create a backlash among the young people who’ve had their trust and idealism abused. This letter is proof of that emerging phenomena.
The fact that Diane is beginning to hear from disillusioned charter school teachers and staffers in districts controlled by so-called reformers is an important development, demonstrating that their lies are being found out.
The next step will for these young people to go public, blowing the whistle on the sanctimonious profiteers who are trying to take over public education.
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To the author, check out Jim Horn’s research and writing about KIPP. http://www.schoolsmatter.info/2012/09/a-former-kipp-teacher-shares-her-story.html. He’s a great and outspoken scholar on KIPP culture.
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The description sounds so typical of charter schools. They are awful places to work. I can’t believe this garbage has been promoted as a way to educate children in urban areas. This is nothing more than a crazy money maker for people at the top. How do they look in the mirror each day?
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Krazy TA, Crazy Crawfish and Mercedes Schneider are the bomb for their true research and understanding of how things work and their proofs with full documentation. This I totally respect as I know what it take to do it. It is massive investigation and reading and then putting it into a comprehensible manner for others to understand. This take real work.
Thank you teacher for bringing this up to us all. We need to know what is on the ground around the country to see the game.
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Good luck!
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I keep seeing more and more insiders slowly starting to speak out against charters, some publicly and others anonymously. I know that there are probably more who feel the same way but are afraid to. Obviously, if their livelihood depends on it, then they wouldn’t speak out against their organization. But I hope each person who does know that bad things are happening will muster the courage to resign, find employment elsewhere, then educate the public. Or, speak out even if you’re threatened to be fired. Do it for the children who are being harmed. Ironically, a lot of these charters were created to put children first. Maybe public education isn’t as simple as reformers make it out to be.
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Dee Dee, they see millions, at LAUSD billions, in the mirror and then it is OK.
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Yes, it must cleanse their souls as soon as they see their bank accounts.
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