Archives for the month of: December, 2013

Susie Kaeser lives in Cleveland Heights and is former director of Reaching Heights. She serves on the national board of Parents for Public Schools.

She writes:

I prefer to ignore charter schools. I know good people who work in them and use them. Charters don’t appear to have much to do with my school district. How much good can they do? How much harm?

Reports of fraud, profiteering and failure pushed me to learn more. Because charter schools are funded with public funds, I thought I would go to the heart of the matter and “follow the money.” I turned to Bill Phillis, a longtime advocate of reforming school funding in Ohio, for an explanation of the system that now uses state tax dollars to fund two different kinds of public schools. I am troubled by what I learned.

The Ohio Constitution requires the state to provide all children a thorough and efficient education. In carrying out that responsibility, the state legislature funds and regulates schools. In 1998 the legislature created “community schools,” its name for charters, and began a dual system of publicly funded schools with major differences in funding, regulation and oversight. Today there are more than 390 charters in Ohio, using close to $1 billion in state funding.

The funding mechanism is costly to traditional public schools. Public resources flow from schools that are governed by an elected school board-and expected to adhere to state regulations covering financial oversight, teacher qualification and accountability, and educational programs-to loosely governed and deregulated charter schools.

Each year the legislature determines the funding level for charter students and those in traditional public schools. According to a 2013 Department of Education report, the funding level for every charter student was set at $5,732. By contrast, state funding for traditional public school students is specific to the school district they attend, based on the property wealth of each district. Because I live in the Cleveland Heights-University Heights City School District, I thought I’d focus on its funding. According to CH-UH treasurer Scott Gainer, our per-pupil allocation in 2012-13 was $1,741, or just 30 percent of the amount promised to charter students.

Not only do charter students receive more state funds than their public school peers, but the difference comes out of the per-pupil contributions for public school students. This is how it works. The state creates a pot of money for each school district that will pay for both charter and traditional students who reside in that district. While the state promised $5,732 to charter students living in Cleveland Heights, it only put $1,741 in the pot for each of those students. This is the same amount that is added to the pot for each of the 5,787 public school students who live in the district.

When it is time to pay for charter students, the state subtracts the guaranteed amount-$5,732-for each student and sends it to their charter school. Public school kids get what is left. The $4,000 shortfall for each charter student comes out of what was put in the pot for the public school students. In 2012-13, about $2.5 million was sent to pay for 371 Heights charter school students, even though they only brought 30 percent of that money into the pot. In effect, traditional public school students subsidize 70 percent of the cost of charter school students.

To add insult to injury, once the money passes out of public hands to the charter, there is no elected school board to be held accountable for how it is used.

The state legislature has been loath to increase resources for its public schools, but when it comes to charter schools they do not hold back, at a sizeable reduction to local school district budgets. How does that make public schools better?

As I see it, the legislature has created a dual system for delivering education. Those systems receive different levels of state support, operate with different expectations, and are governed by different rules. Charter schools-no matter their quality-operate without adequate safeguards to protect public funds and undermine authentic public schools by draining away resources and children. This is wrong.

Ohio’s charter schools are not harmless. The system encourages waste through inefficiency and slack oversight. Creating two systems that follow dramatically different rules makes no sense. It endangers public education, violates public trust and undermines education pursued as a common good.

Our elected officials need to end their reckless use of public resources and fulfill their obligation to create an effective system of common schools, the bedrock institution of our democracy.

I am glad I finally decided to learn more.

Susie Kaeser

Sharon Higgins has followed the expansion of the Gulen charter chain for years. The Gulen schools are now the largest charter chain in the nation. They were founded by allies of a reclusive Turkish cleric, Fetullah Gulen, who lives in the Poconos.

She writes:

A political crisis has overtaken the Republic of Turkey. Most Americans don’t know that it has a direct relationship to charter school expansion policies in the US, but it does.

The two most powerful men in Turkey, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Fethullah Gulen – the country’s most powerful religious leader – are involved in a titanic power struggle that will determine Turkey’s future. The two men were close allies until recently. Foreign Policy magazine explained (see “The End of Erdogan?”):

Partners for much of the past decade in the AKP’s [the ruling party] systematic efforts to undermine the foundations of Ataturk’s secular republic and bring the Turkish military to heel, Erdogan and the Gulenists have now turned on each other with a vengeance…

Ivan Watson, CNN’s senior international correspondent based in Istanbul, delivered an excellent report on the situation on December 21st saying “I’ve never seen anything like this in my ten years in Turkey.”

Followers of Fethullah Gulen, also known as the Gulen Movement, operate the largest charter school network in the United States. As the New York Times reported (see “Growing Corruption Inquiry Hits Close to Turkish Leader.”):

“[Gulen] lives quietly in Pennsylvania, though his followers are involved in an array of businesses and organizations in the United States and abroad, and some of them helped start a collection of charter schools in Texas and other states.”

While the first Gulen Movement-associated charter schools opened in 1999 under the Clinton administration, both the Bush and Obama administrations allowed their expansion to flourish. Today, Gulen Movement-operatives run 143 charter schools. They are in the process of attempting to open more than a dozen more next fall, three of which have already been authorized. The Gulen Movement operates schools around the world in many countries with US having the largest number outside of Turkey. Due to our unique charter school laws, the US is the only country where the Gulen Movement has been able to have its schools fully supported by taxpayers.

Gulen charter schools employ a portion of American teachers along with a miniscule number of American administrators, but the Gulenist in-group always controls the finances. As with most charter schools, these schools are subjected to very little oversight so how they truly spend the nearly half-billion dollars per year that is funneled into their pockets is a mystery.

The Gulen Movement is highly skillful at marketing its charter schools, but the reputations that are so cleverly and carefully crafted are misleading. Many of the schools have big problems, for instance the Gulen charter school in Baton Rouge that was raided by the FBI just two weeks ago. (see “Kenilworth charter school, subject of apparent FBI inquiry, has ties to Turkish education movement.”).

That school also once had a “sister” school in New Orleans, but its charter was abruptly revoked in 2011 (see “Abramson Charter in eastern New Orleans shut down amid TP investigation into startling misconduct.”).

At the time, Louisiana Department of Education officials announced that they would be launching an investigation into the Baton Rouge school as well, however nothing has ever been revealed to the public about its status.

Both Louisiana schools had close ties to the large Harmony charter school operator in Texas (also known as the Cosmos Foundation), sharing some Turkish staff members and paying Harmony a percentage of their funding. In June 2011, a major New York Times investigative piece about Harmony exposed an extensive array of shady business practices (see “Charter Schools Tied to Turkey Grow in Texas.”).

Articles about Fethullah Gulen have periodically appeared in US news, but nothing compares to the media attention he’s been given this past week. For instance, an April 2012 New York Times article about Fethullah Gulen contained this comment (see “Turkey Feels Sway of Reclusive Cleric in the U.S.”):

“We are troubled by the secretive nature of the Gulen movement, all the smoke and mirrors,” said a senior American official, who requested anonymity to avoid breaching diplomatic protocol. “It is clear they want influence and power. We are concerned there is a hidden agenda to challenge secular Turkey and guide the country in a more Islamic direction.”

Despite the many concerns, Harmony recently obtained approval to open a new charter school in our nation’s capitol in the fall (“Harmony charter school seeks to expand to D.C.; business practices raised questions.”). Before the DC Public Charter School Board delivered their unanimous vote, they not only engaged in zero meaningful public discussion about Harmony’s known Gulen Movement-affiliation and associated concerns, they demonstrated a profound tolerance for Harmony’s denials.

Enough is enough. For the past 15 years, the US Department of Education has been helping this secretive, powerful, and highly controversial foreign group to rapidly expand its network of charter schools in stealth. Is it not time for our clear-headed elected public officials to insist on transparency and full disclosure from US Secretary of Education Arne Duncan?

Some of the questions for which the public deserves answers:

1. Why isn’t the US Department of Education insisting that these school operators publicly divulge their relationship to the Gulen Movement’s expanding empire of schools around the world?

2. Why does the US Department of Education think it is acceptable for unaware taxpayers to fund the Gulen Movement’s schools in perpetuity?

3. Why hasn’t the House and/or Senate Education Committees held hearings about this matter?

4. Why is our government allowing American schoolchildren to be mixed up in these geopolitical games?

Some reading about the current situation in Turkey:

Fethullah Gulen: Is Islamic Cleric in Self-Exile Behind Turkey’s High-Profile Arrests?” International Business Times UK, 12/19/2013

The Political Future Of Turkey May Be Decided On This Quiet Road In Rural Pennsylvania.” Business Insider Australia, 12/19/2013

Turkey’s House of Cards Moment: Arrests and Scandal Signal a Crisis for Erdogan.” Time World, 12/19/2013

Preacher at the Center of Turkish Political Storm.” ABC News, 12/20/2013

AKP, Gülen set for battle until end: Investigative journalist.” Hurriyet Daily News (TR), 12/20/2013

Turkish prime minister faces biggest threat of his rule.” Reuters, 12/202013

For more information about the Gulen Movement and its charter schools, see these posts on my Perimeter Primate blog.

What a fabulous story!

Chicago Public Schools, known for their love of charters, turned down a proposal to open two new Concept charters. The one existing Concept charter school in Chicago had unimpressive test scores. So Concept went to the Illinois State Charter School Commission and won their charters!

What a coup! How did it happen? Well, it seems that Concept charters are affiliated with the Turkish Gulen chain, the largest in the nation. And they have a very good friend: House Speaker Michael Madigan.

Madigan is “the South Side Democrat who’s a powerful advocate of Concept and the faith-based Gulen movement to which the schools are connected.”

Better yet, the Concept charters will get 33% more funding than other charters in Chicago!

Madigan really, really likes Turkey, and he truly likes the Gulen charters, too, according to the story by investigative journalist Dan Mihalopoulos.

“Madigan, who’s also the Illinois Democratic Party chairman, visited Concept’s Chicago Math and Science Academy last year. In a video the school posted on YouTube, Madigan praised the school, founded and run by Turkish immigrants.

“The speaker’s son Andrew Madigan also visited and filmed an endorsement of the CMSA campus at 7212 N. Clark St. Andrew Madigan works for Mesirow Insurance Services Inc., whose clients include CMSA and the two new, state-approved Concept schools in McKinley Park and Austin, according to records obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times.

“The elder Madigan has ties to other Chicago Turkish immigrant groups that, like Concept, have connections to a worldwide movement led by Fethullah Gulen. He’s a politically powerful Muslim cleric from Turkey who moved to this country in 1999 shortly before being implicated in a plot to overthrow Turkey’s secular rulers and install an Islamic government — charges that were later dropped.

“Madigan has taken four trips in the past four years to Turkey as the guest of the Chicago-based Niagara Foundation — whose honorary president is Gulen — and the Chicago Turkish American Chamber of Commerce, according to disclosure reports the speaker has filed.

“State records show Madigan’s visits were among 32 trips lawmakers took to Turkey from 2008 through 2012. The speaker and members of his House Democratic caucus took 29 of those trips, which they described as “educational missions.”

Ah, the wonders of school reform, putting kids first.

Bruce Baker of Rutgers is a one-man truth squad, policing the excessive claims of the “reform” movement.

In this post, he begins by defining “Ignorati,” then identifies the pundits who reached the top of his charts.

Here is his definition of “Ignorati”:

“Elites who, despite their power, wealth, or influence, are prone to making serious errors when discussing science and other technical matters. They resort to magical thinking and scapegoating with alarming ease and can usually be found furiously adding fuel to moral panics and information cascades. [ http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Ignorati ]”

Now read who is on his honor roll.

Jason Stanford, an independent political journalist in Texas, calls for an investigation of Pearson in Texas.

Stanford noticed that New York’s State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman extracted a settlement of $7.7 million from Pearson because of the co-mingled activities of its charitable foundation and its for-profit activities.

He believes that is similar problems would be found in Texas. Pearson has a five-year contract for $32 million in New York, but a $462 million contract for the same period in Texas.

He writes:

“This kind of hand-in-glove relationship between Pearson’s foundation and for-profit interests exists in Texas. In 2009 and in 2010, the Pearson Foundation gave two endowments totaling $400,000 to the University of Texas College of Education, home to the Pearson Center for Applied Psychometric Research where they do “cutting edge statistical and psychometric research and evaluation services to further educational improvements … and to inform educators, researchers, policymakers, and other stakeholders in the education process.” And since 2000, these policymakers have given Pearson contracts totaling $1.2 billion.

“There’s a “you get what you pay for” quality to academic research that dovetails with the corporate interests that fund it, creating the appearance of a conflict of interest. If the former had anything to do with the latter, the Pearson Foundation may have broken the law and is why the Texas Attorney General needs to take a close look at Pearson.

“According to local custom, Texas has elected leaders openly hostile to regulating polluters, assault weapons, and exploding fertilizer plants—in short, everything except a woman’s uterus. And there’s ample evidence that state officials have put the lazy in laissez faire when it comes to providing effective oversight of Pearson’s massive contract.”

Ray Salazar, a teacher in Chicago, wrote a blog post asking me to respond to four questions. I will try to do that here. I am not sure I will accurately characterize his questions, so be sure to read his post before you read my responses.

Before I start, let me say that he obviously hasn’t read my book Reign of Error. Consequently, he relies on a five-minute interview on the Jon Stewart show and a 30-minute interview on NPR’s Morning Edition to characterize my views. Surely, he knows that sound bites–which is what you hear on radio and television–are not a full representation of one’s life work or message. I am very disappointed that he did not read my book, because if he had, he would have been able to answer the questions he posed to me, and he might have asked different questions, or at least been better informed about my views and the evidence for them.

First, he objects to my statement that poverty is the most important predictor of poor academic performance, even though it is empirically accurate. He claims I am making excuses for poor teaching and that I am saying that we can’t fix schools until we eliminate poverty. But in my book, I make clear that we must both reduce poverty and improve schools, not choose one over the other. He says that teachers can’t reduce poverty, can’t reduce class size, can’t control who takes arts classes, and have no control over external circumstances. This is true, but he doesn’t seem to recognize that my book was not written as a teachers’ guide, but as a guide to national and state policy. Policymakers do control class size; do control resources; do make decisions that either lift children and families out of poverty, or shrug and say “let the schools do it.” There is no nation in the world where school reform has ended poverty, nor will school reform end it here. Salazar does not seem to understand that I am trying to open the minds of Congressmen, Senators, Cabinet officials, Governors, and State Legislatures, that I want them to take action to improve the lives of children and families; I want them to understand that they should not be cutting the jobs of librarians and nurses and increasing class sizes, and they should not be tying teachers’ compensation to test scores. I agree with Salazar that teachers make a huge difference in the lives of children, but I want him to acknowledge that the deck is stacked against poor children. It is stacked by circumstances, and it is stacked by our schools’ obsessive reliance on standardized tests. Standardized tests are normed on a bell curve. Bell curves do not produce equality of educational opportunity. They favor the advantaged over the disadvantaged. We as a society have an obligation to do something about it. He would understand all this far better if he read my book instead of listening to a TV show and a radio program.

His second point accuses me of opposing standards because I do not support the Common Core standards. That is ridiculous. I support standards, but I don’t support the federal imposition of standards that were written mostly by non-educators, that were adopted because of a federal inducement of billions of dollars, that have never been tested anywhere, and that–as the tests aligned to them are rolled out–cause the scores of students with the highest needs to collapse. In New York, for example, 3% of English learners passed the Common Core tests, along with 5% of students with disabilities, and less than 20% of African American and Hispanic students. The two major testing consortia funded by the U.S. Department of Education selected NAEP proficient as the cut score (passing mark) for their tests; that is an unwarranted decision, because NAEP proficient was never intended to be a passing mark for state tests. It represents “solid academic achievement,” not “passing.” Only in one state–Massachusettts–have as many as 50% of students reached the 50% mark on NAEP proficient. Thus, the testing consortia will either be compelled to drop the cut score (and claim progress and victory) or more than 50% of students in the U.S. (and far more in urban districts like Chicago) will never earn a high school diploma. Of course, I want to see students in Chicago and every other urban district reach high levels of performance, but that won’t happen until politicians stop cutting the school budget, stop laying off teachers, ensure that every school has the resources it needs for the students it enrolls, stop using test scores for high-stakes for students, teachers and schools, and make sure that all children have food security, access to medical care, and the basic necessities of life. Salazar seems to suggest that poverty doesn’t matter all that much, as long as teachers are creating a “college-going” culture. In effect, he is shifting blame to teachers for failing to create such a culture; but no school can create such a culture without the tools and resources and staff to do it.

Third, Salazar criticizes my concern that school choice is intended to create a marketplace of charters, leading to a dual school system. He wants more school choice. I don’t think school choice answers the fundamental challenge to school leaders: how can they create good public schools in every neighborhood? That is their duty and their obligation. Salazar says that good neighborhood schools don’t exist now, and I agree. But choice won’t bring the change we need. It will create a competition for a few good placements, but it wont create more good schools. Choice does not improve neighborhood schools. it abandons them. We will never have good neighborhood schools if we create a system where all kids are on school buses in search of a better school. In some cities, it is the schools that do the choosing, not the students or their families. Many of those “schools of choice” don’t want the kids who will pull down their all-important scores. So, what should happen right now? The mayors of big cities who want to be education leaders should make sure that every school has the resources it needs: the teachers, librarians, social workers, nurses, after-school programs, summer programs, small classes, arts classes, physical education, foreign languages, etc. In a choice system, it is left to students to find a school that will accept them and hope it is better than the one in their neighborhood. I say that students, parents, educators, and communities must demand that the politicians invest in improving every school. As Pasi Sahlberg, the great Finnish expert, has said about his nation’s schools, “we aimed for equity, and we got excellence.” As for Ray’s crack about my “choices,” I attended neighborhood schools: Montrose Elementary School; Sutton Elementary School; Albert Sidney Johnston Jr. High School; and San Jacinto High School. Were they the best schools in Houston? I have no idea. They were good neighborhood schools.

In his fourth point, Salazar repeats his belief that there is both a poverty crisis and an educational crisis. I agree. If he read my book, he would know that. The poverty crisis created the educational crisis. If we ignore the poverty crisis, we will never solve the educational crisis.

Comment from a reader:

 

I’ve been rereading FAHRENHEIT 451 and in 1951 Ray Bradbury saw today coming. He has his protagonist’s boss say, “Give the people contests they win by remembering….names of state capitals or how much corn Iowa grew last year. Cram them full of noncombustible data….and facts….. Then they’ll feel they’re thinking….And they’ll be happy because facts of that sort don’t change. Don’t give them any slippery stuff like philosophy or sociology to tie things up with. …..” He goes on to point out that thinking critically leads to unhappiness because critical thinking leads to conflicting theory and thought. No Utopian society is possible unless everyone is happy and thinking alike.

Gads. Doesn’t that sound like common core? Make all the round pegs fit in the square holes. There is only one correct answer to a MC question. Grade the essay by the number and length of words and the number of mechanical errors. Doesn’t matter if kids are required by law to have accommodations. Doesn’t matter if they just moved to this country and never had a day of education anywhere. Doesn’t matter if a kid sees something new in a book and defends it with evidence from the text.

Teachers should be capos: we tune the student’s mind like a metal bar across a guitar fret changes the key of a song. Capo teachers know their students, recognize that what works for one will not work for another. Capo teachers know that one child’s sculpture can represent the deepest levels of Bloom’s Taxonomy, while another student may write a poem, or even write an essay which also expresses their deep level understanding. But both CCSS and standardized testing are trying to make teachers into KAPOs, a Nazi concentration camp prisoner who was given privileges if they would supervise work gangs.

I will not be a Kapo. I will endeavor on a daily basis to convince my students that they are far more than a data point on a chart, that they and their parents should have a voice in how education continues in this wonderful country of ours.

My hat is off to all the Badass Teachers who stand up for their students. Yes, I need my job as much as the next person, maybe more, as I am my sole support. But I will not be forced into becoming a child abuser through the guise of “rigor” (mortis). The deformers, like Gates and Walton, Rhee and ALEC and Broad have manipulated facts and used scare-tactic rhetoric to mold the public mind for their own financial well being.

I am reminded in the scene in SCHINDLER’s LIST where the older gentleman is registering for the ghetto. The Nazi officer tags him as nonessential. As Stern leads him away to safety, the older man says, “Nonessential? I don’t think he knows what the word means. I am a teacher of history and philosophy”.

I already lost most of my family to the Holocaust. I will not go down this time without a fight.

 

Jersey Jazzman reports that Newark officials, who love to close public schools, will close a school that First Lady Michelle Obama highly praised. When she visited Maple Avenue Elementary School in 2010, she praised the staff and called the school “phenomenal.”

The Obama administration loves closing public schools and firing everyone who works in them. This is called a “turnaround.” It is one of the administration’s worst initiatives. Call it the Donald Trump approach to school reform: “You’re fired!”

A question from a reader:

Hi Ms. Ravitch,

As a young person (about to finish undergrad) interested in potentially becoming a teacher but with a lack of formal educational training, I’m wondering if you might have some recommendations for me, for strong fellowship/teacher-training programs.

TFA doesn’t seem to provide enough support to its teachers (and in so doing, to the students they teach). Working for a huge corporately-run charter school (even if it does provide more support than TFA would for newbies) doesn’t seem fair either, particularly when it takes up building space, doesn’t train a culturally-sensitive or critical-thinking approach to teaching, and siphons money away from public schools. Trying NYC Teaching Fellows looks like it might also be a bust, for lots of the same reasons that TFA is. Is there ANYWHERE I can go with little prior formal teaching education to get a fair, supportive, and well-structured start to a future teaching career, or should I just go back to school?

Thanks for your advice,

Pendle

Charter Schools USA took over some low-performing schools in Indiana, and its three schools are still low-performing.

The state paid out $30 million to five so-called “turnarounds,” but none has turned around.

The chief academic officer for Charter Schools USA, which operates Emma Donnan, Manual and Howe, says turnaround is not “a quick fix.”

“What is encouraging about our results as we’ve been tracking them,” Sherry Hage wrote in a statement, “is that while we may have received an ‘F,’ our schools are most definitely not failing any longer.

Ex-State Commissioner Tony Bennett’s wife works for Charter Schools USA.

The corporation donated to Bennett’s failed re-election campaign.