The Gulen charter schools are the largest charter chain in the nation. To learn more about them, read Sharon Higgins’ blog.
William Phillis of the Ohio Equity and Adequacy Coalition posted this story by a teacher in Ohio:
Matt Blair, an Ohio teacher, with experience in a Turkish Gulen charter school, provides a glimpse into this operation, which is unaccountable and nontransparent.
How charter schools betray their students and communities
Time and time again, too many charter schools have failed our students. While the teachers in charter schools are passionate about education, their employers betray them and their students with constant administrative changes, a lack of support, and unethical practices that make the schools a disgrace.
After completing my Master’s, I was offered $26,000 to teach seventh and eighth grade social studies. Because there weren’t too many opportunities to even submit my resume that summer, I accepted the job and began planning the day I was hired, despite the many difficulties that lay ahead.
To begin with, no teacher in the building had any kind of curricular support. The principal told us to look online for copies of the state standards that were in effect at the time and then print copies for classroom decorations. Teachers had no textbooks and no reference material, not even classroom sets of books. I bought my own textbooks and then cut-and-pasted copies for students. Later in the year when a new administrator decided that teachers with 100 students would be limited to 25 copies per day, many of my teaching plans went out the window.
The school environment bordered on hazardous. The building was a former Catholic elementary school that had been vacant for some time. Because of mold problems, part of the school was closed off. Some of the classes that were used still had mold, as did the cafeteria. There were exposed wires in the hallways, torn carpets on the floors, uncovered electrical outlets in the classrooms, and even a bee’s nest in a boy’s bathroom that was never removed.
Less than a month after school started, four teachers were fired because the school’s enrollment was not as high as the school administration projected. Seventh graders were put in classes with eighth graders and taught different curriculum at the same time. It was not an ideal situation for the students but the teachers charged ahead.
The school was part of a multi-state chain based out of Chicago. Administrators throughout were all Turkish immigrants. Several teachers were also Turkish. While I understood the administrators and fellow teachers with ease given my background in teaching international students while in college, parents and students frequently complained that they were unintelligible. Only one of the administrators that I met during my time had actually studied in the United States and he was attending an online university. At first, our school had three administrators: a principal, a Director of Enrollment, and a Dean of Students. The latter two were rarely seen.
When the four teachers were fired, the charter school operator decided to simply switch our dean of students with the dean of students from the Columbus school. In December, the same thing happened to the principal. In March, it happened again with the principal position. Thus, during a few short months in the year, we had five different administrators for two positions.
During “count week,” children were given free meals, candy, and bus passes as an incentive to have them in school. This may have been great for the students, but they were otherwise treated very poorly by the various administrators who came and went. Administrators applied rules whimsically, both with regarding to student behavior and student achievement. When a particularly vociferous parent complained to one of the principals that their child’s grades were too low, the principal simply changed the child’s grades electronically, causing consternation among the other students and the staff.
I set up the school library with donated books. I made a dozen house visits. I arrived at school at 5:30 every morning and left at 4:30 in the afternoon. I received the best possible scores on my evaluations. I took students on field trips with money out of my own pocket.
When it came time for OATs, as they were called then, testing was a disaster. Several Turkish men arrived and pulled “at risk” students from their classrooms, taking them to the moldy rooms in small groups, despite the lack of written documentation allowing accommodations. The week after testing, I went to school on a Saturday morning in order to keep ahead of my planning, and I saw a dozen Turkish men sitting in a classroom with stacks of OATs on their desks. The current principal brought a cup of tea and a plate of cookies to me while I worked alone in my classroom. He said that the men were simply darkening in the answers for students who wrote too lightly.
The director of enrollment was rarely around because he was based in Columbus. He was also responsible for payroll. Sometime in April, several teachers realized that although money was being taken from our paychecks, money was not being paid to the insurance company or to the State Teachers Retirement System. The insurance company told me that my plan had been cancelled. When I inquired to the principal about the problem, I never received a response. I wrote e-mails to the members of the Board of Directors as listed on our school’s slick website; however, all but one of the e-mails bounced back. One person wrote back saying that they had worked with the school’s franchise in another city, but had resigned several years earlier on disagreeable terms.
That week, I was supposed to receive an evaluation from the principal at the time, despite having been evaluated with exemplary remarks by several other administrators, both based in Dayton and based in Chicago. When I politely asked the current principal why he missed my evaluation, he rescheduled it for the following week. The next day, he told me and three other teachers that we would not be hired for the next year. He gave no reason, although he told me that I was one of the hardest workers and best teachers he had ever seen. I inquired again about the money missing from my check and asked again why I was not being renewed. A week later, I was told not to return to school the following day.
Of the twelve teachers that started at the beginning of the year, only four remained at the end of the year, two of them were from Turkey. The other two were fired over the summer, one of the Turkish teachers was transferred to Columbus, and the other quit, telling me he wanted to complete his Bachelor’s degree in the United States. Thus, there was a 100% employee turnover within less than a year.
Perhaps the biggest problem with the charter school was that it encouraged students to swap in and out of other schools. If a student had bad grades or difficult behavior, they were literally asked to transfer to another charter school. The parents were brought in and told that their child would be expelled unless they transferred to another school. This is an endemic problem not just at the school where I taught, but at all the charter schools in the area. Children came and went, much like the administrators. By the end of my tenure, I knew several students who had been to three different schools in one year. The revolving door system meant that there was little consistency for students. Add to that the revolving door of administrators and employee turnover, and there was no consistency. This problem is disastrous for education, although it is rarely discussed and this small paragraph does not do the subject justice. The system, however, is advantageous to charter schools who are then allowed to manipulate their data more easily.
While teachers took responsibility for their students, the administrators saw them as numbers and problems. Parents often simply removed their children from school because of the administrative problems, electing to send their children back to public schools. Despite all my efforts, I can’t say that I blame the parents. They are lured with promises of science education, glossy brochures, and websites with polished clip art.
I loved being in the classroom at the charter school. I loved the students and the parents. Unfortunately, environmental problems, rotating administrators, unethical behavior on the part of the charter school and its sponsor, student manipulation, a complete and total lack of curricular support, and terrible employee relations made school difficult for students, parents, and teachers. This situation is regrettably found in too many charter schools.
By Matt Blair, Springboro Education Association
Some of what he described was what I experienced in a tiny startup private school once (which made me realize the public schools were a great place to work).
I do think we need to pay attention to what it is patents were missing that has caused the nation to be so easily duped into accepting schools like this (charter or private). I get the greed part and avoiding poor minorities (possibly), but I also think pro-public school folks (like my own family) need to consider that somehow something personal and nurturing was not being adequately met via public schools. I personally think that public schools were given the ta order of de-segregating our country without the tools to navigate that. Just armed Feds, initially, to make sure it happened, and then armed guards, eventually, to make sure people stayed safe. But, in hindsight, it’s clear that no intentional effort was given, that was enough anyway, to help bring about community spirit and bridge building. I think public schools did a pretty good job of handling the tall order of desegregating America, but now they are being blamed for every shortcoming that resulted from being strapped with that duty. It’s like giving a young mother five children under the age of five to look after, giving her very few resources to do it, and then hating her because her nails aren’t done and there are dishes in the sink.
Michele Rhee might have noticed the dishes in the sink and the unkempt hands, and she led a trend of going after the young mother. Instead of figuring how to actually help with taking care of five children under the age of five (analogy to educating a still segregated country under-equipped to properly instill community and zeal for a strong public entity).
She set a bad trend. Like it being cool or OK to throw your McDonalds trash out the window in the 70s.
I had the same experience here in Texas only it was worse. I enrolled my own disabled child with autism and got the shock of my life when working as the SpEd Coordinator could not get services for my son. I found the TEA and the OCR not very supportive either, since I found I needed to withdrawal my child just to try and save the school year. Once withdrawal you have no case. There were other low incident students too I feel I was blamed for bring in even though I never knew them before they enrolled. It was sort of my duty to deter them from coming. However being that I am certified, I knew it was illegal for me to turn them away. So my boss demoted me and put the uncertified and alternative teaching intern in my position. Later, my bosses tried to lie and cover up missing documents. The intern turned out to be mean and dishonest herself and was willing to play admins game. I do feel I was discriminated against because of my son and my educational background. However, since nothing is done by email there was little proof except my word. Being Texas it is an at will state and no unions or lawyer available to protect teachers. I therefore scream for better government over site!
Matt’s experiences suggest that charter schools are much like an iceberg: 90% of it is below the waterline out of sight and unseen and may be very different from that portion that is visible to a passing observer.
Good comment, Joanna. The ethics bar re: education in this country is so low that this does not surprise me one bit. Parents BEWARE of those BEARING education “marketing” lies, and they are evderywhere. Propaganda…OY.
Two Gulen charter schools were approved yesterday in Chicago. There are now a total of 4 such charters.
Were either in the area of Great Lakes Naval Air base? They tried to get a foothold there before.
They are on an Air force base in AZ. Not a good thing.
They are in the City of Chicago proper.
The trials and travails of Matt Blair at the charter school are like something from a novel, they sound like fiction but it’s all too real. 100% turnover of teachers and a high churn rate of the pupils. The teachers are being paid slave wages, poverty level wages; so where is the rest of the money going, it’s certainly not going to the upkeep of the building. It’s a disgrace, a travesty and a tragedy for American education.
Once again I have to ask, what are parents thinking when they put their kids in a school like this? Just how bad do you have to believe that public schools are for this to be an acceptable alternative?
I guess 30 + years of the “ourfailingschools” propaganda campaign worked.
It is just accepted, in some areas, that public schools have failed/ are failures.
Yes, it is. And people use the term without qualifying it at all. Using it seems to give them carte blanche in their minds to do whatever it takes to change what they perceive as failing. I would ask them, “which parts are failing?” Let’s break it down.
It echoes a society where “failed marriage” is tossed around too. Sometimes things fail because we let them, or we’ve made up our mind we want something else, so therefore what we want to leave behind or what demands something from us is “failing.”
Short sighted return on investments. I think that’s the ill. That’s what people want and it is foolish.
Dienne, Ang & Joanna Best: notice the verbal slight-of-hand.
The leading charterites/privatizers declaim incessantly that charters are, without even a smidgeon of a shadow of a doubt, public schools—
When they are after public funds.
Strangely [?], though, when it comes to “public schools are failing” we are informed that, without even a smidgeon of a shadow of a doubt, they are—
Quite obviously different from public schools because they’re charters.
Which is it? Both! Because when you are in mad dog pursuit of $tudent $ucce$$, even the most contradictory and illogical statements make a lot of ₵ent¢.
Rheeally!
And really!
“Honesty is the best policy — when there is money in it.” [Mark Twain]
😎
I don’t think it’s always that the parent thinks the public school is failing. In many cases parents see that urban public schools are filled with gang members and very difficult children. Administrators offer no help with these kinds of students often just sending them right back to class which empowers the bullies and gang members to continue to act out. The charter school offers a way for parents to get their child away from these difficult students. They know the charter will kick offending students out and/or ask them to leave.
I just signed the transfer of a student to the charter for that very reason.
I think you are right.
charters are very much about getting away from people.
No ELECTED boards.= No control. BIG PROFIT to charter from TAX dollars. Recreating a segregated country , beginning in our cities where little ethnic diversity exists in Charters. Destroying the public system via CHARTERS/CHOICE.
I call it “shiny object syndrome.” People think they’re missing out on something new and exciting if they send their children to the same old public schools. They don’t bother to look much further than the surface or the marketing brochure — and of course, they’ve been exposed to the “failing public schools” narrative.
CPS…35 5 yr olds with no aide (have you ever come in contact with that many 5 year olds at a time?). CPS Charter..26 5 year olds and an aide. Even a 1st grade aide. Much better, from a teacher and mother’s point of view.
CPS: nine kids with teacher and aide. Charter: illegally putting too many kids in special ed with no aide. Illegally providing no bilingual assistance. Allowing non-certified aide to teach kindergarten. Better situation?
If people in Ohio knew that ed reformers were bringing in employees from Turkey for publicly-funded Ohio jobs they would be really angry.
IF they knew how many tax dollars are being sent to Turkey and how volatile the political situation is there because of Gulen, they would be more than upset.
There is a Gulen charter on a U S AIRFORCE base in Arizona. Gulen has stated that he will work silently within the system until there is enough strength for an overthrow.
FBI investigations seem to dead end. Bears doing more that watching…
The Gulen movement is trying to come to Lancaster. http://gulencharterschools.weebly.com/proposed-abecs-school.html
That was last year. Now, they are trying again. What I really have trouble understanding is how they could appeal at the state level and be appproved. The people of Lancaster don’t want this. The School District of Lancaster Board and Superintendent don’t want this. The mayor and city council don’t want this. Yet it could still be forced on us. Ridiculous.
Does that charter schoolhave neighborhood attendance boundaries that enable segregation?
What really needs to be publicized to our citizenry is the background of the Gulen movement and the role of Fethullah Gulen himself, who, though he lives in the Poconos in Pennsylvania, is one of the most powerful men in Turkey. He is currently involved in a power struggle with Prime Minister Erdogan. It is naïve of anyone in this country to believe that there is no political, religious, or cultural agenda backing up these Gulen charter schools, which have been allowed to proliferate freely in many states. They obviously operate with no oversight or accountability. And our government and the “reformers” approve of this? Hard to believe and downright appalling.
Dear “Retired Teacher”,
You should truely research Gulen more, perhaps read some of his books, to understand him. You should also research this “power struggle” and see that this is nothing other than trying to stop a corrupt prime minister.
Dear John (i wouldn’t be surprised if that’s not your real name),
Your words don’t explain the reality.
This is incredible. How on earth is this legal ?
It does seem like there are multiple lawsuits just waiting to happen, doesn’t it?
Incredible? Legal? Chicago school board just approved 7 more. Politics supplants education.
We have several of these Gulan schools in Los Angeles. I hope they’re being run better than the ones in Ohio. What a travesty for the students. How can they possibly receive a good education under these circumstances?
Just posted on YouTube. Another ex-Gulen charter school teacher speaks out about her experience at one of Concept Schools’ Horizon Science Academy schools in Ohio in this video. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pj1aEPvX1Lk
And here’s another account from a different teacher: “Report from a former staff member at a Cleveland Concept School” @ http://gulencharterschools.weebly.com/report-from-concept-schools-staff-member.html
And yet more accounts from teachers who worked at Kenilworth Science & Technology Charter School in Louisiana, the school raided by the FBI in December 2013. WBRZ TV’s 2011 news report opens with: “Teachers make strong allegations about what’s going on inside a Baton Rough charter school.” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fy2-gL1vT0o
I think things are getting to the point when more and more teachers who have worked at Gulen charter schools are going to come out of the woodwork with their stories about all the unsavory things they’ve observed.
There are multiple allegations of cheating. This gets to the heart of the value prop of these and other schools. Whether or not these schools select students on the front end and cheat on tests could be determined by state inspectors. Why are the investigations not happening?
This type of management is horrendous. Not only for you as a professional, but certainly for those children and families that are in limbo from one school to another. Ridiculous – and not even consistent with the US itself. WHO is giving these charters their licenses to practice education?:???
something Is off about the story. To have money taken from the paycheck for health insurance, and then finding out that it was not paid, and then finding out that the insurance was cancelled, should have gone directly to the state’s attorney general and the police. That part seems to be left out of the story. I would like to find out more about that very issue and if elony charges were made.
after that level of theft, I find it hard to believe that the teacher continued to work for the school and was polite at any time after that moment.
There are 100 Gulen charter schools in the U.S. already with many more planned. I am quite sure that Obama and Duncan are aware of this phenomena. Part of the RTTT funds mandate was for each state to raise the cap on charter schools. This is the plan. This is not an abberation or a mistake.
The senate knows how many H1B visas are being processed to bring over these Turkish administrators and teachers under false pretenses. The Secretary of Labor has to sign off on these applications and follow up if the companies requesting them have really tried to fill the positions with American workers and failed making the visas imperative.
This is a scam and everyone in power is part of it.
I taught at one of the Columbus HSAs. I have a story to tell if you’re interested Diane. I don’t trust that administration at all.
Former charter teacher, feel free to tell your story about the Colimbus school that closed, online or offline
How about all you lazy “teachers “look into the amount of money a charter gets per student. It is far less than what you think. Also these charter schools are providing an excellent education.
This is a free country you can choose to enroll your child into a school or sent them to public school
A lot of the charter schools Pay for breakfast and lunch for all students no matter your financial status This cuts out a lot of bulling in schools. Do you smart educated people I mean ” teachers ” know the percentage of bullying in a charter school it is far less than Public Schools.
And yes you are right every institution on America has flaws.
Now how many of you know what you are talking about? Answer ZERO
And yes I do support the schools and I am involved with the Columbus HSAs
But not employed by them.
Charter schools are the future so get the hell out of the way. It is FREE Choice unlike public school system which is so perfect! Lol
Bullying went right on in my HSA classroom during class time and the administration did nothing about it, despite what I did to try to stop it. The strongest students in the school (those who had actually lasted until their junior and senior years) were averaging a 17 composite on the ACT. That is just barely above the bottom quartile. I would hardly define that as excellence. I also helped with science fairs, where students grew mold on bread, counted the number of seeds in different fruits, and observed the “difference” of what happens when you drop a pen and pencil. (Guess what? Gravity works pretty consistently!) These were not exceptions. These were typical student projects. This does not represent excellence. These are elementary level projects at best. The special ed room was overflowing. I discovered a student who was virtually illiterate. (All of the data-driven assessments failed to discover this. You don’t need to be literate to fill out multiple choice answers.). The computer science teacher spent most of his class time on Facebook. Turkish class mostly watched American movies dubbed in Turkish.
There are a few select students who do well and are groomed by the school. HSA takes them out to public events and shows them off. The rest of the students do not have a chance of graduating from college.
The tone of your response indicates why charters do what they do. They serve parents who are temperamental and believe public schools are terrible. This is not an attitude of loyalty and charters know it. They’re not going to risk making you upset because you left your public school, and if you get mad you’ll leave them too. And the money attached to your kid will walk away as well. The upperclass teachers at HSA knew they had to pass their students, whether the students deserved it or not. They said so out loud, although not to students. This is also why there was so little discipline of the students as well.
Do not tell me I don’t know what I’m talking about. I was there. I lived it. Many of the teachers I saw were exceptionally hard-working. But the circumstances were extremely difficult to deal with and undermined a lot of their dedication and concern.
I also taught at a Columbus HSA. I can’t in good conscience call it a “good” education. The science taught seems very superficial. The only benefit as another poster mentioned is getting away from gangs, etc., at the local public schools. I can’t support these schools when the administration is so secretive and downright shady. They do not support the teachers, who do their best to support the students. Everything I have seen done by the administration is either to save money, to help out a Turkish friend, or simply for PR. They even entertained the idea of making it mandatory for teachers to leave school to volunteer at an event (and pay for a sub on top of it) because they thought it would get the schools’ name out there. That is a decision that clearly was not made with education in mind.
And by the way, I worked at a different charter where virtually all the students were on the free breakfast/program. A disturbing number of kids waited in line, got their lunch, and immediately dumped the entire tray of food in the trash because “It’s gross.”
I actually go to one of these schools in NJ and i have nothing but love for my school but that doesn’t mean i am denying the things wrong with them but a lot of them have no ties to the school. Most lunches are done by an outside company hired for the school. Charter schools in NJ cannot build new buildings but rent one so a lot of the problems in my school are not the admins fault. Our middle school test rates are higher than some of the schools that the kids come from. I am an AP/Honor student and have had qualified teachers and not. A lot of problems people are complaining about I have seen at my normal public school. The problems aren’t them spreading or whatever, the problem is that schools on an individual basis, like a bunch of charter schools that are starting up, have problems.
This is so eerily similar to my job-it is a shame that there is poor oversight in these types of schools. I work in a Ohio-based charter school. I’m under great stress due to this under performing school. Misleading marketing leads unsuspecting parents to the school with inaccurate curriculum/academic expectations. Unfortunately, student turn-over is high, attendance/enrollment records are altered and no one ever questions-if you do, you just may lose your job. The principal is a bully and the superintendent is a pushover. Taxpayers don’t deserve for their hard-earned monies to be utilized in such a irresponsible fashion. There is no HR or outlet for employee grievances, no unions, the Department of Education really needs to stop winking at these degrading practices and shut underperforming schools down ASAP.
What I think is disturbing about the original posting is the “tea and cookies” detail. Whenever I had some issue, one of those Turks would offer me tea and cookies. It was like they were trained that they could pacify us with food. It was really strange.
Hello,
I am here to tell all what lies this is. Gulen is famous for their science and mathematics education, and in this country, the problem is purely student. I teach in US Gulen school, and I know that all American teachers is lazy and not good for teaching. They want it all. The students are like teachers, lazy and do not care. Turkish are famous for education and maybe this teacher will learn something from Gulen if only he has his eyes and ears open. Americans need to be more open to other cultures such as Turkish which can teach them to be leaders in education.
“Turkish Teacher”
Tell me more about how Turkish teachers are way better than American teachers.
I really don’t understand how people can be teachers when they can’t even explain a topic to a student. I could even tell how bad you are at talking in English. That is one of the worst things that has happened to me in my experience. Every Turkish teacher I had could not efficiently communicate with the students. At some point in the year the Turkish teachers would use some sort of YouTube video or website in order for us to “learn”. Does that seem like you guys are “good for teaching”? Along with that, who is being lazy? American teachers? Last time I checked, these Turkish teachers don’t completely care about their students. How is it even possible to only enter a minimum amount of grades in the system and be okay with that. Really.
But please, I beg you to keep explaining what Turkish teachers have done to be better than other teachers. You could even try to explain how this is not at all wrong.
Evidence speaks volumes. Why do US districts beg for Turkish schools? Because they know they are superior. I think the biggest problems with American teachers and students is their racism keeps them to think US is the best. They do not want to admit that Turkish education can be better. And so they do not want to learn this new way. And so a wealthy country will stay at the bottom of PISA rankings. You make fun of my language but I am fluent. This shows your racism. No wonder you do not want to learn from the Turkish teachers!
I shared my classroom with the Turkish teacher. She had no idea what she was doing. She wrote sentences on the board in incorrect English and asked them to be translated into Turkish. Mostly though, the students watched movies. She was really nice, but the kids walked all over her and she didn’t get anything done. She was absent frequently, much more than any other teacher.
The computer science teacher just didn’t care. He spent class time completely on Facebook or other social media. The math teacher was the only Turkish teacher that seemed to know what he was doing, and all he had to do was follow the OGT curriculum. If any of these teachers applied at a non-charter school, there is no way they would be hired. There was nothing new or revolutionary going on at my school. There was no new or special way of doing things. It was definitely worse than the city schools.
This is why teachers are treated unfairly. To witness abuse is the same as condoning abuse.
How effective can a teacher be if he/or she sits idly by and not report this -especially to a tune of 26 thousand dollars?
Until teachers begin to collectively stand for what is right, we are no better than the people who cause these atrocities. Take pics, send letters, or just TRY to do something. Stop being willing participants of foolishness.
I am a Turkish national maths teacher and I was one of the followers of Gulen movement. I also worked at one of the Gulen schools years ago and I quit after one year of service. I can imagine that all sorts of lies, deception and nepotism might be working fine for them as they don’t really care about education. The schools outside Turkey are for getting more support from Turkish business people so that they can outgrow government and also ensuring economic ties with, otherwise unknown countries. I have written a few articles on their real agenda. Mostly in Turkish except for one.
In English: http://gulenschoolsworldwide.blogspot.com/2012/07/gulen-movement-as-described-by-ex.html
In Turkish: http://rizaarican.blogspot.com/2013/12/dershaneler-egitim-ve-gelecegimiz.html
In Turkish: http://rizaarican.blogspot.com/2014/04/anne-ben-virus-muyum.html
Cheers,
aa
As a former student of Mr. Blair I can account for what most of what he says. He was a great teacher and I remember his lessons on world history and the creative worksheets he made. I was disheartened when during the final quarter if school he was fired most I had heard was he “had a disagreement with the new principal” who came sometime in the middle of the year as he said. Now I have clarity on the “disagreement”
I am a student going to a so called “gulen” charter school in AZ, and I can tell you, the school is nothing like above. The school has no relations with Gulen, whom I recommend for everyone to research. I dont even believe the conditions described above in the post. Even if they were true, wouldnt any student or parent speak up and do something about it?
Second, just becuase one school is like this, does not mean the other charter schools are similar. Many of these charter schools are top in their states, and are very succesfull.
Third, I dont even believe the Turkish Teacher above is real. I mean, come on, who would name themselves Turkish Teacher? Somebody is trying to make them look bad.
My kids go to Lotus school for exellence in Aurora, Colorado. Some teachers do not speak English well. I have to teach my kids at home. The staff is unstable, teachers and Deans come and go. And the most important problem is the location of the school: An old church on a busy Avenue, Alameda Avenue. I have noticed many accidents. The safety of the kids is at risk. I do not know why the city of Aurora do not close the school for safety issues.
Belmehdi A.
why do you send your children to such a poor school? It is a Gulen school.
I can echo almost the entire original story, and double it. I was asked to replace a teacher who had walked out during a fight, and heard they were making $12/hr. (Which I declined.) Another teacher had quit the month before. I arrived in the classroom with no login to attendance, no prior access to web site policies, no curriculum, no decent materials to work with. I bought materials and books for the entire school population the weeks I was there.
The school did not advertise as Gulen or even hint at it — there was no disclosure to applicants, just loads of marketing about having the best stats. They kept stats high by removing poorly-performing students. I watched one disappear nearly every day.
I wrote a two-year curriculum plan for the course, for the entire school, because nothing was provided.
They pushed college aspirations on the students, but these kids were far from prepared for the self-discipline and information level of college. What an injustice, to lead kids unprepared into a route where they will collapse financially, academically, and emotionally.
I can believe the story about filling in grades, because when I arrived, there were no grade records for the entire school, for my course. After a couple weeks I was expected to turn in quarterly grades and speak with irate parents. Administrators said, “Don’t worry about it, we’ll take care of it.” With no explanation of how or when they would evaluate each student’s performance for the whole term.
I could write a ten-page document on how many disturbing things went on.
The basic strategy of Gulen schools relies on advertisement and money. They tend to admit two types of students. The first caregory is the group of students who are bright and succesful. Gulen group does everything to lure these students. Sometimes offer scholarships, gifts etc. They spend a lot of effort on those students and make sure they go to good colleges. Then they use the success stories of these students in big advertisements to lure mediocore students who can bring large cash as donations. They target well off families, polish little accomplishments blended with high achievers’ stories to attract large donations to their organizations. Sometimes these comes with field trips to other schools in US and in other parts of the world. Success stories are being pumped to politicians to gain support. Then there are the third group of students. Underachievers with low income families. They do everything to expel and send these students away to keep averages high. These tricks has been played in Turkey for 25-30 years. They are master of it. Unfortunaltely all state schools suffer from mediocore or underachieeving students expelled from these charter schools while the charter schools enjoy large donations and better pool of students.