Archives for the month of: November, 2013

Charter school founder June Brown is on trial in Philadelphia for collecting multiple salaries from the charter schools and management firms she opened.

Brown is accused of defrauding the four charter schools she founded of $6.7 million and then conspiring with two former administrators to obstruct justice by orchestrating a cover-up.

Meanwhile, business leaders in Philadelphia hope to open more charter schools in that beleaguered city, where the public schools have been decimated by budget cuts and layoffs.

Mazinger G, a member of the unaccredited EduShyster Academy, here explains what happened in Rhode Island when a “reformer” took control of the state’s pension funds.

What happened when the state treasurer Gina Raimondo adopted a new strategy of investing the state’s pension funds into “alternative” investments?

“There has been much hullabaloo about Gina’s investing Rhode Island’s $7 billion state pension fund she manages into her *own* firm, just because it charges enormous fees and has no public track record. OK—so it’s true that in the finance industry it is considered somewhat unseemly to directly pocket the assets one is paid to manage. One is supposed to set up a far more discrete screen of consultants, firms, friends, relatives and a complex kickback structure. But that is exactly why people like Gina are such a breath of fresh air: innovative, disruptive and unconcerned with backward and fuddy-duddy notions like *self-dealing* and *conflict of interest.* If she didn’t have serious cred, would out-of-state hedge fund managers have spent big to sweep her into office? Besides there is proof that Raimondo’s cookie-jar-dippery has been perfectly ethical: there’s been no criminal investigation—at least so far!”

This post explains it all. Almost. All except why the governor and legislature sit idly by.

The state board of education in Texas turned down an application from Great Hearts Academy to open a charter school in Dallas. Great Hearts had already been approved by the state commissioner. The Arizona-based chain already has approval to open a charter in San Antonio. The state board expressed concern about the chain’s commitment and ability to serve low-income students.

The article in the Texas Tribune says:

But since the board’s approval of Great Hearts’ initial Texas campus [in San Antonio], doubts about its model have grown. While tuition-free like a traditional public school, it does not provide transportation to its campuses and charges fees for uniforms, field trips, extracurricular activities and athletics. Parents are also encouraged to assist the schools financially through personal donations.
Critics have pointed to the disproportionately white and affluent student body of Great Hearts’ 16 campuses in the Phoenix area as evidence that those practices keep low-income students out of the school. In a city where nearly 60 percent of public school students are Hispanic or black, 69 percent of the nearly 7,000 students are white. Only two of Great Hearts’ Arizona campuses participate in a federal program that offers free and reduced-price meals for low-income students.

Charters are big business in Texas. In San Antonio, civic leaders and philanthropists have put together a fund to open enough charters to accommodate 80,000 students–or more than 20%– in the public school system. Up until now, Texas has been open territory for charter growth. If experience serves as a guide, these schools will serve disproportionately small numbers of students with disabilities and English language learners. KIPP in Houston has received many millions to increase its campuses there. There are charters run by a tennis star, a football star, and a basketball star.

Great Hearts Academy, you may recall, was rejected four times by the Metro Nashville board of education. Tennessee Commissioner Kevin Huffman punished the district–which had similar concerns about GHA’s ability to serve a diverse enrollment–by withholding $3.4 million in state funds. The board worried that its plan would create the equivalent of a publicly funded private school for affluent white students in Nashville.

A year ago, an investigative reporter in Arizona raised questions about conflicts of interest in the business practices of Great Hearts Academy.

Another public forum in the suburbs of New York City, and another nearly unanimous display of outrage towards the policymakers in New York state.

Commissioner John King has made clear again and again that nothing said at these public forums will change his course of action.

He will stick to the Common Core and the testing no matter what parents and teachers say.

And so will the Board of Regents.

Of course, this display of disdain toward the public only serves to raise the temperature, and speakers were plenty heated by the knowledge that no one was listening.

According to the report linked here,

“They’re mad as hell — and they’re not going to take it anymore.

A Common Core forum held at Eastport-South Manor Tuesday night brought out scores of parents, educators and students who echoed a common refrain of disappointment, despair and anger over a curriculum they said stands to dim the light of learning in their children.”

Many were outspoken:

“Setting up kids to fail is damaging to their self-esteem,” said Kathleen Hedder of the Rocky Point Board of Education. “How can you accurately rate progress if no one understands the rules and the game has changed mid-stream?”

Added Jan Achilich, director of special education at the Remsenburg-Speonk Union Free School District, added, “What you are doing is tantamount to physically throwing them into a rushing river without a life preserver.”

The Blue Ribbon school, she said, where music and dance have long been celebrated, is “now a place where anxiety and stress shadow our days.”

Concerns were raised about special education students who cannot keep up to a cookie-cutter standard.

Achilich asked King to reevaluate the current situation.

Others blasted King.

Julie Lofstad of the Hampton Bays Mothers Association lashed into the commissioner. “Can you explain why our children aren’t as important to you as Mattel?” she asked. The toy company, she said, recalled toys that were “potentially harmful. Why don’t you recall the Common Core? Why aren’t you willing to admit the Common Core is flawed, and needs to be fixed, or the program scrapped?”

A local school board president said,

“This is a program that breaks the children, not educates,” he said. “It is destroying our children. Allow our teachers to teach, not be proctors.”

“Shame on you,” said Chris Tice of the Sag Harbor school board. “Please tell us specifically how you are going to fix this and give us a timeline.”

King responded by saying there was a “great gap” between the evening’s conversation and what is happening in classrooms that he’s visited, where children are writing and reading more challenging texts — his words were met by a loud outcry from the audience.

The standards were adopted in 2010 and would be phased in over seven years.

“They won’t be here in 2017 and neither will you,” one audience member yelled. 

John King again made clear that he disagrees with the public. They are wrong, he is right. Period. ”

He disagreed that Common Core instruction was “less joyful” and said he saw kids happy in their classroom. “Joy and rigor in learning aren’t opposites.”

The article does not mention the appearance of any members of the Tea Party or (as Frank Bruni put it recently in the New York Times) “left-wing paranoiacs.”

The speakers were parents and teachers and school board members in the local communities.

 

Mathematica Policy Research released a study that proves that experience matters.

Some readers thought the study was about merit pay, but it was not. Merit pay has never worked.

Merit pay studies usually compare one group of teachers matched to a similar group. One group is offered a bonus if they can raise test scores, the other is not. The bonus is supposed to incentivize the teachers to push their students to achieve higher test scores.

But that is not what happened in this study.

In this study, the the bonus was awarded for transferring to the low-performing school for two years, not for getting higher test scores.

What the study demonstrates is that if you offer a bonus of $20,000, you might attract the top talent in the district to teach in low-performing schools, and these older, experienced teachers will get better results than regular teachers, many of whom are brand new to teaching.

In her story about the study,  Dana Goldstein noted:

It’s also worth pointing out that these transfer teachers were far from the Teach for America archetype of a young, transient Ivy League grad. Their average age was 42, and they had an average of 12 years of experience in the classroom. They were also more likely than control group teachers to be African-American, to be homeowners, and to hold a master’s degree. In short, they were stable adults with deep ties to the cities in which they worked.

Audrey Amrein-Beardsley, one of the nation’s leading scholars of value-added measurement, points out the dissimilarity of the experimental group and the control group:

The high value-added teachers who were selected to participate in this study, and transfer into high-needs schools to teach for two years, were disproportionately National Board Certified Teachers and teachers with more years of teaching experience. The finding that these teachers, selected only because they were high value-added teachers was confounded by the very fact that they were compared to “similar” teachers in the high-needs schools, many of whom were not certified as exemplary teachers and many of whom (20%) were new teachers…as in, entirely new to the teaching profession! While the high value-added teachers who choose to teach in higher needs schools for two years (with $20,000 bonuses to boot) were likely wonderful teachers in their own rights, the same study results would have likely been achieved by simply choosing teachers with more than X years of experience or choosing teachers whose supervisors selected them as “the best.” Hence, this study was not about using “value-added” as the arbiter of all that is good and objective in measuring teacher effects, it was about selecting teachers who were distinctly different than the teachers to whom they were compared and attributing the predictable results back to the “value-added” selections that were made.

What the study really shows is the foolishness of the many states that are changing salary scales to discourage experienced teachers, removing stipends for masters degrees, and making other policies that discourage the very teachers that this study salutes. States like Tennessee and North Carolina, among others, are enacting laws to discourage or push out the very teachers that are considered “the best” in this study.

As Amrein-Beardsley observes:

Related, many of the politicians and policymakers who are advancing national and state value-added initiatives and policies forward are continuously using sets of false assumptions about teacher experience, teacher credentials, and how/why these things do not matter to advance their agendas forward. Rather, in this study, it seems that teacher experience and credentials mattered the most. Results from this study, hence, contradict initiatives, for example, to get rid of salary schedules that rely on years of experience and credentials, as value-added scores, as evidenced in this study, do seem to capture these other variables (i.e., experience and credentials) as well.

The takeaway? Blogger Steve Strieker of Wisconsin put it this way in an email to me:

Experience, education, age, and teacher willingness to participate seemed to matter in this case. The program also seems to have eyes on the eight ball.  Teacher accountability and stack-ranking evaluation systems are not part of the program. Unlike other merit pay studies, this was a low-stakes study. Testing scores were not connected to the bonus payout. Teachers chosen were paid the bonus for their service regardless of student performance.

If we want to see improvement and results, we should have policies and extra pay to recruit top teachers to work in hard-to-staff schools, and we should place high value on experience and education.

All too often these days, we hear certain buzz words: “personalized learning,” “individualized learning,” “customized learning.” Usually they are used all together, as in “personalized, individualized, customized learning.”

Buyer beware! What these words usually signify is that some corporation is selling a computerized learning program with pre-set questions and answers. The students will click through the questions to find out at what step they are on, until they reach the point where they get the wrong answer. Then the computer will respond with a pre-set instruction about what to do next.

Like everything else in the faux-reform vocabulary, this is the opposite of what is meant by personalized, customized, and individualized. This is mechanized teaching, with nothing individual, personalized, or custom about it. At bottom, the goal is to sell stuff to schools and make money. The hope: computers will replace teachers, won’t ever get a pension or a raise, and can save money.

Here is a comment from a reader, who sees what is going on:

“personalized learning” is a code word for kids in front of computers with a classroom aide running the shop and no teachers

It’s a tutoring centered approach to education, as tutors typically play a supporting role and often don’t choose problems or course materials, but help a student through problems and materials chosen by someone else.

Except, in this format, instead of being chosen by a teacher, the problems and course materials are chosen by the technology. This can work for about 10-20% of students, but most students need a human teacher making day-to-day and long-term decisions about content and learning activities.

Replacing human teachers with computers is a recipe for failure. The human interactions that are the foundation of our public education system have been around for thousands of years and can’t be replaced by technology. In the same way that the printing press didn’t replace human teachers, neither will computers.

But that doesn’t mean they’ll stop trying to replace teachers.$$$$$

Some weeks back, the media reported that the District of Columbia’s infamous teacher evaluation program–known as IMPACT–was successful, based on a paper by researchers Thomas Dee and James Wyckoff. The takeaway allegedly was that VAM (value-added measurement) works and that DC is right to judge teacher quality by student test scores.

But Audrey Amrein-Beardsley, one of the pre-eminent national experts on VAM, says “not so fast. Don’t believe the hype.”

In this post, she dissects the DC research and says it was never peer-reviewed and is deeply flawed.

She identifies many errors, but this one is the most egregious:

“Teacher Performance:” Probably the largest fatal flaw, or the study’s most major limitation was that only 17% of the teachers included in this study (i.e., teachers of reading and mathematics in grades 4 through 8) were actually evaluated under the IMPACT system for their “teacher performance,” or for that which they contributed to the system’s most valued indicator: student achievement. Rather, 83% of the teachers did not have student test scores available to determine if they were indeed effective (or not) using individual value-added scores. It is implied throughout the paper, as well as the media reports covering this study post release, that “teacher performance” was what was investigated when in fact for four out of five DC teachers their “performance” was evaluated only as per what they were observed doing or self-reported doing all the while. These teachers were evaluated on their “performance” using almost exclusively (except for the 5% school-level value-added indicator) the same subjective measures integral to many traditional evaluation systems as well as student achievement/growth on teacher-developed and administrator-approvedclassroom-based tests, instead.

Thus, it is wrong to say that the paper vindicates IMPACT or its reliance on VAM when more than four of every five teachers in the study did not have value-added scores available.

Do you want to know what parents really think?

Do you want to know what students really think?

Don’t ask a group funded by billionaires.

Ask parents and students.

Watch this video, made by parents in New York City. If that doesn’t work, try here on YouTube.

It is addressed to Mayor-Elect Bill de Blasio but it could just as well be addressed to every governor, state legislator, Congressman, and mayor in the nation.

The message from parents and children:

I am not a test score. I am so much more.

Educate me. Let me love learning without the threat of a test hanging over my head at every moment.

A letter from a teacher. “Second Order Change” sounds eerily like “creative destruction.” Wipe out everything that is and start over. See what happens. Then do it again:

 

Things are heating up again in Baltimore County. The teachers association just filed a grievance against the school district. Here is the link to the article in the paper here.
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/education/blog/bs-md-co-teacher-grievance-20131119,0,4440262.story
In the meantime, our superintendent went down to Washington yesterday to receive an award from President Obama with nine other superintendents. I feel like we are under an alien invasion. We always had a strong history of collaboration; our teachers once wrote our curriculum in summer workshops and it was even sold across the country. Long gone now. And of course, the coordinator of libraries is gone. They got rid of her by eliminating her position. All the camaraderie is gone. As a 29 year veteran, and the daughter of a 36 year veteran I feel more than sad. Everyone is paranoid and worried about their jobs.
The big buzz word here now is “Second Order Change” – basically tearing everything down so there is no going back and starting anew. Have you heard this term? I say beware Second Order Change.

I am reposting this because when I first posted it, the link didn’t work. It is a 3-minute video made by public school parents in Néw York City. My son Michael, the father of a second grader in a Brooklyn public school, is one of them. He is not in the video but he is very active in ParentVoicesNY.

Do you want to know what parents really think?

Do you want to know what students really think?

Don’t ask a group funded by billionaires.

Ask parents and students.

Watch this video, made by parents in New York City. If that doesn’t work, try here on YouTube.

It is addressed to Mayor-Elect Bill de Blasio but it could just as well be addressed to every governor, state legislator, Congressman, and mayor in the nation.

The message from parents and children:

I am not a test score. I am so much more.

Educate me. Let me love learning without the threat of a test hanging over my head at every moment.

Please help this video go viral.