I cross-posted this article on Huffington Post, to reach a wider audience beyond the blog.
The moral of the story is that it is very risky to tangle with the charter school lobby.
They are very rich, they are very powerful, and they are accustomed to opening their boutique charters in public space without paying rent.
They are also accustomed to pushing aside the children already enrolled in the public schools where they “co-locate,” and they don’t care if the children have profound disabilities, or if they take away the children’s art room, dance room, library, playground, whatever. The other children don’t count. Only the children who enroll in their schools matter. Children who get high test scores count more than children with low test scores and deserve privileges.
The de Blasio administration tried to play nice, gave them 14 new charter schools out of 17 proposals, including five new schools for Eva Moskowitz’s Success Academy charter chain instead of the eight she wanted.
That, to Eva and her billionaire backers, was a declaration of war! Only five new schools! How dare he!
Since that decision, Eva is now trying to destroy the de Blasio administration, which won only a few months ago in a landslide victory.
The Rupert Murdoch press and the TV talk shows have been filled with tales of de Blasio’s crimes against children. This media blitz may be due in part to the fact that Success Academy pays at least $500,000 a year to Knickerbocker, a high-powered public relations firm in D.C., run by Anita Dunn, who served as President Obama’s director of communication in 2009.
Here is the article. Help it go viral:
Perhaps you have seen the headlines and the television interviews about how New York City’s new mayor, Bill de Blasio, is closing charter schools, evicting poor minority children, destroying their dreams for the future, and their chance to escape failing public schools.
Almost all the complaints come from Eva Moskowitz, who runs New York City’s largest charter chain. Her grievances have been amply vented on Fox News, MSNBC’sMorning Joe and Chris Mathews, in the Wall Street Journal and the New York Post.
Time for a fact check.
When de Blasio ran for mayor, he said he would slow the growth of charters and would charge them rent, based on their ability to pay. In the closing months of the Bloomberg administration, the city’s Department of Education approved 45 new co-locations. A co-location is a new school inserted into an existing public school, meaning that different schools must share the cafeteria, library, playground, and give up its art room, music room, and every other space that is not an active classroom. Public school parents hate co-locations, because it means overcrowding, jostling for space, and reduction of facilities.
The new mayor, having inherited 45 co-locations, decided to approve 36 of them. This disappointed many public school parents. The mayor turned down only nine co-locations.
The de Blasio administration rejected the nine based on these criteria:
- It would not approve putting an elementary school into a high school.
- It would not open any school with less than 250 students because the school would be too small to meet the needs of students.
- It would not approve any co-locations that required heavy construction.
- It would not approve any co-location that dislocated students with disabilities. The neediest kids would not be shoved aside to make room for other students.
The nine schools that were turned down did not meet these criteria.
Of 17 charter schools that applied, 14 were approved.
Success Academy, which has screamed the loudest about losing space, won five new charters, not the eight that it wanted. Yet Eva Moskowitz was so outraged that she closed her 22 schools for a day and bused thousands of students and parents to Albany to lead a mass rally against de Blasio’s failure to give her the eight schools she wanted. Governor Andrew Cuomo appeared at Moskowitz’s rally to pledge his loyalty to charter schools.
De Blasio did not abandon charters or evict children from charters. The attacks on him are a power play by charter operators, specifically Moskowitz, to restore the good old days of the Bloomberg administration, when her requests were never turned down. This blowup is also intended to send a message to de Blasio not to mess with charter schools. While it is true that they enroll only 3 percent of New York state’s children and only 6 percent of New York City’s children, their boards contain the city’s financial elite. They can pay millions for a media campaign; they can make $800,000 in campaign contributions to Governor Cuomo, but they refuse to pay rent.
There is another peculiar aspect to the charter controversy in New York City. The charter industry has a theory that schools with high scores are entitled to evict schools that serve children with profound disabilities. This is a challenge not only to Mayor de Blasio, but to our basic sense of fairness and decency. Should schools with high scores (even if they are obtained by excluding students with handicaps and students who don’t speak English) get preferential treatment as compared to schools that enroll students with lower scores and to schools that enroll students who are profoundly disabled?
Diane Ravitch is a historian of education and author of the national best-sellerReign of Error: The Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger to America’s Public Schools.
De Blasio gave them a five-school “time out” and they couldn’t take it. This is pathetic. Co-locations strip the “host” schools of a valuable resource, space, dilute school staff’s capacity to respond to student needs, and disunite the teachers, and de Blasio is supposed to pretend that this is a positive change? Eva Moscowitz should cut her salary and get rid of her PR firm and PAY RENT.
Even if the charters did pay rent for the co-locations, wouldn’t the disruptions be the same?
Yes, they need to find their own locations and rent them.
Probably. It just seems like a waste of public money when there’s space in buildings already built in such a high rent city as NYC. It just seems like sour grapes from the unionized teachers. Let Eva do her thing. You do your own thing.
There isn’t room, Harlan, don’t you get that? She is pushing other kids out to make way for her money-making scheme/aka charter schools. The existing public school kids lose classroom space, gym space, cafeteria space, office space – Eva Moskowitz and her minions and parents feel they are entitled to take whatever they want from public schools and public school kids. Special ed rooms need additional space for wheelchairs, hoyer lifts, standing tables, etc. But apparently you feel like Eva does and those kids don’t matter – just her wealthy, test-taking automatons matter. Disgusting.
I thought she wanted to occupy only unused space in those buildings. But even so, it’s a bit of a red herring isn’t to play the disability card? EVERY kid is entitled to an appropriate education. Funding it is a problem. I don’t see how eliminating charters for the hard working ambitious kids is going to benefit the disabled.
In my town, the new superintendent is trying to fill HER unused space by offering more schools of choice spots, thus cannibalizing neighboring districts. Zero sum game.
Is Moskowitcz playing a zero sum game too? I win but you lose?
It seems to me the anti-Eva crowd is exploiting the very high cost of real estate in just those areas where the neediest students are to try to drive her out of business.
Isn’t that’s what’s going on?
No wonder she sues.
I’m waiting for the day when you have something positive to say about unionized teachers or any public school teachers. Did you ever attend or teach at or have children in a public school? If not, you knowledge s not firsthand and is merely theoretical. Do you feel the same about public universities and colleges?
Well, you’ve made your personal comment about my person and family, but it’s pure ad hominum, not real argument.
I’m not attacking you. I’m simply asking how your personal experience has formed your opinions on public education.
Harlan never had to share space in his tony private school that he taught in to make room for another school. . . . . Harlan has about as much ability to think critically and empathize sometimes as a centipede does tying shoelaces . . . . .
Centipede, shoelaces? Herculean feat!
And Robert’s my friend.
I’m cross posting this with the thought in mind that
SHE CAN PAY THE RENT!
[crossposting begins]
I have a feeling that some commenters here will be organizing a “Pity the Poor Millionaires and Billionaires” rally.
😱
Let’s see. A recent New York Times article put Eva Moskowitz’s salary at $475,000 for 6,700 students.
Link: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/05/nyregion/de-blasio-and-builder-of-charter-school-empire-do-battle.html?_r=0
According to the NYPost, NYC Schools Chancellor Carmen Fariña makes $212,614@year [same as her predecessor Dennis Walcott] plus is collecting a DOE pension (after 40 years) of $199,579. *She is responsible for 1.1 million students.*
Link: http://nypost.com/2014/01/05/new-schools-boss-to-collect-double-de-blasios-pay/
So Eva M is collecting $475,000 ÷ 6,700 students = $70.90 approx., rounded off to $70 of $tudent $ucce$$ for every one of her data points. *Notice how I gave her the benefit of the rounding off?*
Carmen Fariña is already getting a pension; nothing about that has changed and it is irrelevant to this point. For the extra, very onerous and serious responsibility of leading the largest school system in the country she is getting $212,614 ÷ 1,100,000 = $0.19@student.
I am not bending over backwards as I did in previous postings to favor Eva M and disfavor Carmen F. Even steven. No hypocritical double standards. None of that new-fangled charterite/privatizer math.
Eva M: $70@student@year. Carmen F: $0.19@student@year.
So for every student they serve, Eva M’s bank account gets 368 times what Carmen F receives.
Which supposedly proves—according to the leaders and supporters of the “new civil rights movement of our time”—that Eva M is worth 368 times what Carmen F is worth.
Señor Swacker: while it may be difficult, or impossible, to put a numerical measure on a quality like shameless greed, don’t you think this comes awfully close to invalidating at least a bit of Noel Wilson?
Or as one of those old dead Greek guys wrote so very long ago:
“For greed all nature is too little.” [Lucius Annaeus Seneca]
😎
[crossposting ends]
Eva Moskowitz as a young girl: http://youtu.be/TRTkCHE1sS4
This morning’s MORNING JOE was a disgrace in their treatment of DeBlasio, and the fawning over Eva Moskovitz and her charters. The mayor handled it quite well, and pushed back against claims that charters are some how ‘better’ that regular old public schools, and articulated the case against co location quite well….
What was missing was the FACT that Eva Moskowitz draws nearly half a million bucks for educating far fewer students than any other similarly situated school organization, and the pushback against claims that charters can teach public sector far better than the reverse…
The MORNING JOE’s hosts seemed CLEARLY to voice the corporate right line on charters — TO A PERSON — but thank GOD for Jeffrey Sachs’ testimony to the contrary…. in his corroboration of DeBlasio’s assertions…
I can’t watch that show. I usually end up screaming at the TV for one reason or another, sometimes simply for how patronizing Joe is to Mika and how she just takes it. On the upside, I don’t need a cuppa Joe to get me going on those mornings!! If given a choice in right wing media, I much prefer Fox News where it is at least interesting to watch the rhetorical maneuvers unfurl over the hour.
I was flipping through the channels and happened to see Fox News’ explanation about what was happening in this case. There was nothing but lies told about it all. It is amazing how no one ever defends teachers on the news but they sure do jump on the corporate charter bandwagon. I think so many of these people have bought the lies and propaganda without researching facts.
I totally agree that Morning Joe was awful!
I wanted the mayor to talk about charter schools culling the herd, obscene teacher workloads, over the top administrative salaries, drilling for test skills, etc. Nevertheless, I have some respect for the man. He didn’t back down.
I kept waiting for him to say… There is another side beside the charter movement. They have rights and opinions on all this as well. They to have a right to be heard.
Morning Joe’s been on a multi-day smear campaign of the mayor and his school management. All under the guise of ole Joe trying to sound so “reasonable” for a rightie. Do not be fooled. And when is the left going to quit trying to be “reasonable” with these thugs? BeBlasio shouldn’t have approved any charters.
Yes, why did he approve the charters?
Eva Moskowitz as a spoiled little girl?: http://youtu.be/TRTkCHE1sS4
funny
Great article, Diane. I wanted to post this in response to one of your critics on the Huffington Post, but learned that they require sharing my entire email contact list in order to post. That’s too invasive, so maybe someone who already has a HuffPo account will take the time to post this in response to the offending commenter.
The real question is not how students in charter schools perform (and though Mr. Jauregui accurately cites the performance of charter students in New York City, it is also worth noting that the same study he cites shows charters generally perform no where near as well). The better question, though, is “how do charters affect overall performance for disadvantaged youth?” And the answer is that charters do not support better results at scale, because they segregate schools on whether parents are choosers or non-choosers. When students that would be choosers stay in traditional schools, good things happen for everyone — would-be “chooser” parents are more motivated and engaged in the school, thus forcing the school to become better; there are richer peer-peer interactions that benefit everyone (non-choosers learn more from their peers that would otherwise choose, and would-be choosers, forced into a “teaching” role, learn more, too); and teachers modify their instruction to challenge a classroom that, on average, performs better. Those effects are documented in research. When you open up charters and let all the choosers go, you lose those system-wide benefits. Results may go up slightly for the chooser population, but the broader results — for the majority of the other kids who do not choose — suffer.
Are we saying that the kids who flee to charters are a positive influence on the other kids, and when the ‘positive’ kids go, only the ‘negative’ or ‘difficult’ kids remain?
That’s an oversimplification. But an opt-in system, particularly one that buys a lot of favorable press describing it as delivering better instruction, is only going to enroll children of parents who are at least engaged enough to opt in. Parenting factors being more influential on kids’ education (and test scores) than teaching quality, that’s going to skew results.
When a ship is sinking you save as many as you can. It’s cruel to limit the number of lifeboats because you can’t save everyone.
You’re funny, Harlan. It’s your libertarian billionaire buddies who are sinking the ship. If you’re so concerned about life boats, why don’t you advocate for the rich to provide them – it’s the very least they could do after sinking the ship.
Harlan, sometimes you’re okay but other times you miss the point.
If you want to have schools where the “positive” kids go and leave the other schools to deal with the troublemakers, more expensive to educate and more challenging to educate kids, I guess that you can’t be convinced of the idea that it truly doesn’t lead to equality of opportunity. “I’ve had more than a few students who entered my classroom and left it better people and better students because they had the right combination of teachers and, more importantly, made friends with some “positive” kids.
But here’s the point you don’t acknowledge. If charters are skimming (and by your definition of “positive” kids, it’s clear that you think they are), then why is there EVER any comparison between a charter school and a traditional public school. It’s easier to educate those “positive” kids. I can make better jewelry with silver than with tin.
That’s the rub. I’m tired of hearing about how awesome charters are from Republicans and propagandists. They should be with their admission requirements and retention rates. They have a much easier job. I can speak to this because I teach both AP and low-level students. The AP kids are self-motivated and could excel in my class almost regardless of teacher. The struggling students need much more coaxing and focus. I’m the same teacher but I get different growth rates from these two groups.
Since charters don’t have any government oversight that dictates what is taught, how it’s taught, and who teaches it, is it not realistic to assume many of these charters make their lessons just easy enough so everyone passes? Why would someone who runs a charter school want their students to receive challenging instruction when the threat of low grades would tarnish the school’s reputation, and profits?
When a charter school co-locates, who is being displaced? I have experienced schools being closed and new schools entering. It sounds like there was an instance where a new school displaced a school of profoundly disabled students? This makes me wonder why. Typically, schools are closed because they have been evaluated and found to have failed on several criteria. The reason for the failure seems to be due to organizational and faculty deficiencies with respect to the particular student population. So I question the factual basis of the question “Should schools with high scores (even if they are obtained by excluding students with handicaps and students who don’t speak English) get preferential treatment as compared to schools that enroll students with lower scores and to schools that enroll students who are profoundly disabled?” What is meant by profoundly disabled? Low test scores??
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ‘Displacement’ here means the ‘regular’ kids are squeezed into, say, 75% of their space (resulting in larger classes, loss of art/music rooms, shorter/earlier lunch pd, gym– one elem in my former Bkln nbhd lost the library which had been funded & supplied by nbhd parents) to make room for a school which by charter has, say 25 kids/classroom, displacing 35 kids to become part of a 40-kid class. Harder/more expensive-to-ed students represent a higher proportion of the ‘regular’ population & are ‘displaced’ into smaller quarters/ larger classes, even losing necessities such as time-out areas for emotionally disturbed, larger aisles et al for wheelchairs etc.
As to criteria for closing schools, in NYC under Bloomberg it was done via A-F letter grade, whose makeup was revamped annually; in the most recent school year the grade consisted 85% of standardized test scores.
I’m a Special Education teacher that works with profoundly disabled students in a District 75 high school in the Bronx.
What is meant by the profoundly disabled? These are students that are not graded, and have extreme mental and physical disabilities. For example: We have students that are on the low end of the autism spectrum, many afflicted not only with autism, but also have very low intellectual abilities. Many are non-verbal, have behavioral problems, and don’t have the ability to take care of themselves in any way.
We also have many students confined to wheelchairs, must be fed and toileted by adults, and also exhibit low intellectual capacities. Many of these children, while not considered autistic, are also non-verbal.
Because these students are profoundly disabled, they are in smaller classroom settings, and many require paraprofessionals to assist them throughout the school day on a 1 to 1 basis.
District 75 is the Special Education branch of the NYC school system.
Hope that answers your question.
There’s only two ways public education is discussed among media celebrities: the dramatic and compelling negative story of how public schools are failure factories and the dramatic and compelling positive story of how charter schools are miraculous and wonderful.
When is the last time you heard a positive story about an ordinary public school on any of those cable programs? It’s reached the point where it’s comical. They cannot utter the phrase “public schools” without prefacing it with “failing”. I literally wait for it, and it’s always there.
I sometimes wonder if the “failed and failing schools” narrative reaches the tens of millions of kids who actually attend public schools, but hopefully they’re not watching “Morning Joe” before they head off to their respective “failure factory” 🙂
The devotion to the narrative is just amazing. It’s complete.
This is the NYTimes characterizing the dispute:
“Mr. de Blasio is facing pressure on the rent issue from education advocates across the spectrum, as defenders and detractors of charter schools alike look to New York City as a barometer of the movement’s future.”
There are only “defenders and detractors” of charter schools in this story. There are no people advocating FOR the public school kids who are already in those buildings, or anywhere else, really.
The public schools simply disappear, and we spend yet another week discussing the needs, desires, requirements of charter schools.
This week in Ohio we’re discussing whether private schools that take vouchers should have to administer standardized tests. It doesn’t matter that the vast majority of children in Ohio don’t use a voucher to attend a private school, and I could actually care less if they force voucher students to take standardized tests, but we’ll be consumed with this burning debate until summer at least. And we’ll have ignored public schools for another year.
And while public school libraries in Philadelphia are shuttered, many schools lack nurses and counselors, and class sizes grow in violation of state regulation and simply good practice, our Congress will vote for loan guarantees for Ukraine and the media will waste most of our time bloviating about CPAC and Obama’s difficulty spelling “respect”.
Remarkable.
Public schools and libraries are dull. This narrative is much more exciting.
I saw Arne Duncan was tweeting the other day because a charter school had an assembly to congratulate college acceptance for their seniors.
“We all have to do this!”
I don’t know, does this count as “innovative”? I think they’ve been holding an assembly to celebrate college acceptance at our ordinary public high school since like 1977 or something. Did he really once work in public schools? He doesn’t seem to know that much about them.
Some sense to this, GST. The Federal Government might indeed have a role in supporting education for the most needy in society because only it can draw on a large enough funding base to do any good.
But, no, the defenders of public education spend THEIR time bashing charters, which implies that they want control of everything. Only prison guards want everyone in their prison.
so true
Harlan, we bash charters because they purport to executing miracles when they work from a different cohort and have significantly different rules. Then we suffer from an unfair comparison. If you coached, you’d tire of hearing how another coach is great even though every kid he has will go to a Division I program while you’re coaching kids who wouldn’t even play at a small college.
Well, there’s a difference between being the victim of a smear campaign and walking straight into a buzzsaw.
BDB got a lot of votes last year by saying he was going to take on Eva Moskowitz. He was going to put a moratorium on new co-locations (is the moratorium over already?), and he was going to charge her rent. Did BDB actually think Moskowitz wouldn’t fight him on these issues? Did he really believe that she was going to quietly accept the loss of these co-locations because he was “trying to play nice”? Was he really surprised that Moskowitz didn’t react by saying, “Well, I probably should be happy that I only lost three of them. I guess I’ll just sit around and wait for the Mayor to formally announce that he’s going to charge my schools rent”?
I’m not being entirely facetious — is it really possible that BDB and the people he’s surrounded himself with are this naive and/or incompetent?
Of course. He’s a socialist Democrat, just like Obama. Eva is Putin annexing the Crimea. BeBlahsio won’t succeed in getting it back.
Poor De Blasio. But, the “smears” seem to be coming from HIS constituents who are, rightly or wrongly, displeased with the cut in charter schools. It does not matter its only a few to the parents of students who attend the ones closed.
DeBlasio is quickly learning liberal/progressive arrogance only get you so far, whether it is shutting down horse drawn carriages or thinking ‘you know best’ about weather conditions.
The new mayor is on a learning curve, and as Lindsay quickly learned it is sharp one.
Let’s hope after his wobbly appearance on Morning Joe he will treat all NYers with the respect they deserve.
THEN, he will be able to echo Ed Koch, and ask…”How Am I Doing?”
Mayor De Blasio was very clear about his intentions for charter schools when he was campaigning. If anything it seems like he went a little soft on the charters after he got elected. If I recall, he won by a landslide.
Anyone who voted for DeBlasio imagining he would act right when he can’t even think well must be as confused and deluded as all those Obama voters who put their faith in “hope and change.” The fact that a candidate wins, doesn’t guarantee he’s right.
Well, you bought him; you own him.
Between Moskowitz and de Blasio, de Blasio is right. Though he’d be more right if he was pushing back against charters harder.
I respectfully disagree. Moskowitz is right and deBlahsio is wrong. As evidence of his spinelessness, he tried to buy her off but withhold just enough to keep the NYC teachers happy.
Harlan, how exactly did the mayor buy Eva off?
How is he appeasing the public school camp when he has approved of the large majority of new charter?
Do you really believe what you are stating, or are you being facetious? Or do you really state these things with little thought and big impulsivity.
I like it better when you talk about the Constitution and our founding fathers and mothers, and what “freedom” has meant as its definition has evolved since the American Revolution. There, I hear scholarliness and careful thinking.
Other than that, please get yourself to the nearest neurologist and have him take some scans of the Grand Canyon, part two . . . .
Here’s an easy algorithm for DeBlasio to apply across the board to folks who want to rent space: don’t rent if there isn’t space; charge the market value to for profits; charge a cover-the-costs for non-profits… It’s a logical, fiscally responsible, and fair method for maximizing the use of publicly funded facilities.
And don’t define “space” as anything that does not contain a classroom of children x number of minutes/day. Gyms, libraries, art rooms, music rooms,…are not extra space.
It’s far more amazing to see the irrational behavior of pity Wall Street billionaires like Ropert Murdoch and money-cruncher Eva Moskowitz whining like spoiled brat than disappointment in de Blasio for being too lenient on charters. I don’t know how much power he has to check reform-minded Ed board and keep money grubbers and billion dollars corporations from stealing money from public education.
That’s the point. Eva is testing him, pushing him. Since he’s doing wrong, he is not likely to win.
Oh Harlan, I feel like you just don’t like democracy. DeBlasio was elected in large part due to his educational policies. It’s funny that you speak so much of freedom and whatnot but always seem so willing to submit to a plutocracy.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx DiBlasio has already appointed new school commissioner & replaced all members of PEP (formerly called school board) with his own appointees. He has inherited the total-mayoral-control model put in by Bloomberg, let’s see what happens.
Tweet to ReTweet
Robber Barons & Wolves of Sesame Street
Profiting fr dismantling public schools
Back Moskowitz attack on mayor of NYC
http://huff.to/1kaLD5m
My views: As mentioned before, ANYONE who knows anything about Rupert Murdoch and his shenanigans in England should not be surprised at ANYTHING he does. He has emulated that here in the U. S. also. Too, as stated before, he does NOT have an affinity for truth. Canada has laws which prohibit promoting falsehoods as news. One can express opinions but not lies expressed as truth. Ergo Fox news cannot get a license to broadcast “news” in Canada. Too bad we do not have similar legislation here.
Further: Why should we be surprised. These people care NOTHING about our children and posterity. Otherwise climate change would be a HUGE issue. Our military takes climate change VERY seriously. Our insurance companies likewise but those who put money ahead of children, we must expect such myopic thinking. It boggles my mind.
The US once had laws that encouraged telling the truth or at least helping to reveal the truth through a balanced debate, and it was enforced by the FDA—-called The Fairness Doctrine (1949 – 1987).
The Fairness Doctrine was a policy of the United States Federal Communications Commission (FCC), introduced in 1949, that required the holders of broadcast licenses to both present controversial issues of public importance and to do so in a manner that was, in the Commission’s view, honest, equitable and balanced.
Who do you think was against such a rash attempt at honesty? Imagine that, freedom of expression and honesty at the same time. What a novel idea.
Who benefits the most from using freedom of expression as a cover to tell lies and mislead the public?
In June 1987, Congress attempted to codify the Fairness Doctrine, but the legislation was vetoed by President Ronald Reagan. Another attempt to revive the doctrine in 1991 was stopped when President George H.W. Bush threatened another veto.
The Fairness Doctrine has been strongly opposed by prominent conservatives and libertarians who view it as an attack on First Amendment rights and property rights.
Editorials in The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Times in 2005 and 2008 said that Democratic attempts to bring back the Fairness Doctrine have been made largely in response to conservative talk radio (where cherry picking and telling lies is an art form).
What is it that some conservatives and libertarians have against the truth? Is it possible to even have a conservative or libertarian agenda without lies supporting its existence?
And, Mr. Wilder, do you propose yourself as chief government censor of the news? Are you to be arbiter of “truth.” That’s so Castro in Cuba, Maduro in Venezuela, Putin in Russia. I would have hoped you (and all of us) would be more on the side of the first amendment to our constitution.
If you want to understand WHY the public teaching cadre in this country as SUCH a bad reputation it is exactly because of their arrogance in assuming that only they know the “truth.”
If we are to observe the constitution the government CANNOT pass legislation limiting the freedom of the press or of speech.
Personally, although I’m not enough of a scientist to evaluate the data for and against global warming, my BELIEF is that it is a hoax. Whether that hoax is perpetrated knowingly or with innocent fervor I can’t always tell. You seem to be sincere in your fear.
As for children and posterity, I see the federal debt as a much more important problem than carbon dioxide loads in the atmosphere. Even such a respected figure as David Suzuki thinks there will be disaster if too many gigatons of carbon get put into the air. Shouldn’t I believe him? Why?
So, if you don’t want to permit the other side to speak, that, in my view totally destroys your credibility. I know you hate the concept of “marketplace” even if applied to ideas, but I don’t. I think the road to truth is through open discussion.
Practice what you preach, Harlan . . . . .
Well funded charter schools such as Success Academy should do more than pay rent. When they “co locate” they renovate the halls, add better lighting, remodel bathrooms, provide a Smart board in every classroom, furnish a teacher’s room with color copiers, printers, refrigerator,healthy snacks, abundant school supplies like paper and pencils and give every student a lap top or even an iPad. Students at Success Academy get science classes taught by a specialist. Unfortunately they also have many hours a day of test prep and drill, which helps account for the high test scores. If all but the latter could be shared with the host public school, then students in both schools might benefit. Judging by full page ads in the NYTimes, and money used for buses to protest marches, Success Academy has the money to burn, and could share it.
With the amount of money these investors and executives are spending on their media campaigns and lawsuits, they could build a brand new NFL stadium. Why don’t they build their own damn schools?
They probably should, eric. That way they’d at least be free of government regulation and red tape and not have to fight city hall (literally) in this case. The one problem I see is that real estate is SO expensive in NYC, and the educational need is SO great, why couldn’t DeBlahsio cooperate with Eva (well he did mostly) rather than fight her. After all, her method, whatever you think of it, WORKS.
I know. She doesn’t have to keep everyone. So what? She does well with the ones who want to put up with the grind.
She, at least, is giving the kids enough knowledge in reading and math so that they can make a living.
It just sounds like carping not to help her out. She’s a driver. She make quite good money. But, so what? ALL that matters is results of the literacy and numeracy kind, and she does deliver that.
Envy of the successful hard working students in the Success Academies, and BY TEACHERS, no less, is a bit of a disgrace, it seems to me.
I just don’t get it.
If she doesn’t have to keep everybody, then why are we worried about keeping the 3% who take advantage of the charter system? Why let such a small percentage take away resources of many? It’s the same mentality you have Harlan, when it comes to those who are disabled or don’t test as well. Just because they don’t have the same potential to earn the same paycheck eventually doesn’t make them less important as a human being. You also talk a lot about the doom and gloom of public education and how it doesn’t work. This seems very biased by you, and a bias formed by myths and legends. Public schools are fine.
The current Libertarian mindset does not belong in this democracy because its message is: “I love this society as long as I get what I want from it and do not have to give anything to it so that others get what they need.”
Selfish, selfish, selfish.
Why are we even discussing public education with a Libertarian mind that deigns to include insult after insult and slight after slight to public school teachers? I’m all for a discussion representing all sides of the debate, but I do not believe in continually feeding the trolls.
By “feeding the troll” you help this libertarian examine his views. I’m not being ironic.
And now the Washington Post has entered the fray: http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/why-is-new-york-mayor-bill-de-blasio-undermining-charter-schools/2014/03/10/2a1f02f0-a3db-11e3-8466-d34c451760b9_story.html
You’d think the Washington Post would be a little more circumspect about privatizing education given their own disastrous experience, but I guess not:
“Even as the Washington Post saw its circulation diminish and its advertising revenues evaporate in recent years, the paper’s parent company could draw on a conspicuous center of growth — a chain of for-profit colleges known collectively as Kaplan Higher Education.
So important was Kaplan to the overall health of the business that Washington Post Co. chairman and chief executive Donald Graham came to describe his enterprise in new terms.
“When I became CEO in 1991 and certainly before that, the Washington Post Company was a media company,” Graham told shareholders at a meeting six years ago, according to a transcript. “In a very short time we’re going to be calling it an education and media company, because that’s where the majority of our revenues are going to be coming from.”
By the end of last year, just as Graham and his company now acknowledge they began seeking a buyer for the Washington Post, operating income at Kaplan’s higher education division had plummeted to $27 million from $406 million two years earlier, a drop of 93 percent, according to the company’s securities filings.”
Online for-profits destroyed their own reputations. They got so greedy they discredited their own business model.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/08/06/washington-post-kaplan_n_3715396.html
Chiara…didn’t Jeff Bezo of Amazon buy the WP without Kaplan?
Did Harlan ever apologize for calling Diane a racist?
No, but he’s pretty darn quick to jump down other people’s throats for anything he perceives as an ad hominem attack against him. Not hypocritical in the least though…..
I was sucked into Harlan’s web too but now I have untangled myself and will not engage with him again. He is not here to engage in an honest debate. He’s here to hear himself pontificate the talking points of his masters. When I was dealing with him, he ignored many of the points I made and kept returning to his repeated parroted talking points and never provided valid evidence to support any of his thinking.
Harlan is either a paid stooge of the robber barons and wolves of Sesame Street or someone who has been brainwashed by decades of propaganda.
The person Harlan impresses the most is himself and others who have been fooled.
By his own admission, he says he taught in the private sector. He’s never mentioned that he taught in a public school. During the thirty years I taught in a barrio high school in a community dominated by poverty and violent multi-generational street gangs, we had a few new teachers who migrated from the private sector for the higher pay, retirement package and health benefits they didn’t have from the private schools they came from, and they all left in a short period of time to return to the private sector because they couldn’t work with our kids. They couldn’t take the stress of dealing with a population of at risk kids who can be rather difficult to control let alone teach.
I suspect that Harlan wouldn’t last long with the kids who go to inner city public schools where poverty and street gangs rule. Those kids would skin him alive and leave him a babbling wreck. I would like to introduce him to one student of mine, G, who at twelve had already killed several rival gang members and had a price tag on his head. Today, he is in his forties and G is high up the food chain of Puente 13, one of the most violent street gangs in America.
G wasn’t interested in books or education. His life was the streets and the violence of turf war between rival gangs. He had more to worry about than becoming literate and going to college. His main goal was to survive and live another day.
Ed Harris & K Quinn: ah, concentrating on the unimportant and trivial …
😭
But very tender concerns and sensitivities are aroused when it comes to the “rhetoric of demonization” and “rhetoric of scapegoating” that is another name for “anti-capitalist rhetoric.” Bad mouthing the Billionaire Boys Club is so, like, gag me with a spoon twentieth century…
More to the point, ingratitude to those whose noblesse oblige informs self-styled “education reform” is such an ugly sentiment because “Most of us make our livings working for corporate America.”
So even if one discounts the reasons divine and natural that compel us to unthinkingly obey the thin-skinned super-rich and their educrat know-it-alls and their edubully enforcers and edufraud spin artists and accountabully underlings, there is always the indisputable practical reason that “We can’t afford to attack the hand that feeds us.”
Look under the comments section of the following blog posting:
Link: https://dianeravitch.net/2014/03/03/guy-brandenburg-reports-on-the-first-conferece-of-the-network-for-public-education/
WE owe THEM. THEY do all the work; WE just feed off the crumbs they generously provide from the bounty they create.
And as it is in the present, so it was in the past.
“Them that’s got shall have
Them that’s not shall lose
So the Bible says and it still is news
Mama may have, Pappa may have
But God bless the child that’s got his own, that’s got his own.”
[Billy Holiday, first verse of GOD BLESS THE CHILD]
So look, y’all, putting this in historical perspective, quit that demonizing and scapegoating rhetoric of King George III. “We can’t afford to attack the hand that feeds us.”
Sheesh! Democracy, independence, challenging the divine right of kings and such…
What utter lunacy…
😎
P.S. Thank you for your comments.
I saw the ranking of Mousewitz’s schools, first in math, second in english. I’m sure the numbers are fudged, probably through cherry picking alone, but i haven’t hear mouse’s hired posters mention it. What statistical manipulations did they do to create those numbers?
Gary Rubenstein did some analysis of Success test scores on his blog
http://garyrubinstein.teachforus.org/2013/08/13/how-to-define-success/
Probably the same ones that Mayor Bloomberg used to inflate high school graduation rates in NYC.
Reblogged this on Middletown Voice.
Diane needs to go n MSNBC and get her article printed in the WSJ. I think people need to hear the other side of the argument and then they will understand why the Mayor is doing this. Right now, it seems the reporting is emotional and not all the facts are being shared. The facts are lost in a sea of yellow shirts, but there many children who are students at non-public-charters schools (some, if not many, by choice) who also need to have a voice. (Un)/fortunately, the administrators and teachers serving these students were not allowed to bus them to Albany for a protest”field trip”.
Bravo Ms. Ravitch!!! My concern is that neither Ms. Farina nor Mr. DeBlasio appear to present all the facts that you have when they are interviewed. The data speaks volumes. Who is responsible for prepping them so that the vultures don’t get the best of them?
Additionally, there are many DOE employees who benefitted financially from the former administration that are still employed and might benefit from this administration getting a “black eye”. Who is watching the cookie jar???
diblasio is being to diplomatic here…just charge them rent and let everyone yell and scream like we did when bloomy closed our school. we cried and ranted but he still closed the school…diblasio just charge rent