Eclectablog has been posting a series of articles about Michigan’s Education Achievement Authority, where the state has clustered its lowest-performing schools. There again is that nasty reformer habit of calling things the opposite of what they really are. Because the schools are the lowest-performing, they now have the honor of joining the state’s Education Achievement Authority. The leader is John Covington, trained–so to speak–in the unaccredited Broad Academy, where closing public schools and handing them over to private corporations or authoritarian leaders is considered a mark of success.

Governor Rick Snyder, who does not like public education, created the EAA as a special place for the state’s “worst” schools, apparently because not even a for-profit entity wanted them. But that is just my guess. Maybe he will eventually turn them over to one of the for-profit charter chains that is proliferating in Michigan.

In this post, Eclectablog interviews an unusual teacher at the EAA: she is experienced. Most of the EAA teachers are first-year teachers or members of Teach for America. Like others that the blogger has interviewed, this teacher is anonymous. The reasons should be obvious. If her name were used, she would be fired.

Read her description of the culture of the EAA schools. Does it sound like a climate that will foster excellence?

In the interest of balance, I remind you that the EAA disputes all these testimonies because they are anonymous.