Archives for the month of: March, 2014

The New York Legislature will decide whether to reappoint four members of the New York Regents on Tuesday. All four have passively supported the botched implementation of the Common Core and CC testing. They should be replaced.

A message from award-winning Long Island principal Carol Burris:

 

This Tuesday, the NY legislature will vote yea or nay on the re-appointment of the 4 incumbent Regents.  Often New Yorkers hear that the legislature does not control education policy and therefore there is little that can be done to influence the course of testing and the Common Core.
This, the appointment of the Regents, is a NY representative’s  best and most direct opportunity to influence educational policy and be responsive to the thousands who came out to express their unhappiness at forums across New York State.  
The Regents cannot be allowed to shirk this important duty. Do not let them off the hook.
New Yorkers write to your representative and send a simple message: Vote “no” for the re-appointment of the four incumbents. Even if that means four seats not filled, it sends a powerful message of change. If teachers are to be held accountable, those who make policy should be too. Follow up with a phone call.
Let them know you will be watching.
You can find their contact information here:
Assembly: http://assembly.state.ny.us/mem/
Senate: http://www.nysenate.gov
twitter #RejectTheRegents

Darcie Cimarusti (aka Mother Crusader) dives into the racially charged politics of Hoboken, where charter schools have become a refuge for those who don’t want to go to the public schools, which have an enrollment that is most poor and minority.

While many people think that charters are “saving poor minority kids from failing public schools,” charters in Hoboken are a means of encouraging gentrification by providing a haven for white and affluent families.

Darcie explains the politics behind a decision to expand the dual-language Hola charter school. Mayor Dawn Zimmer–famous for her role in the investigation of whether Governor Christie withheld Sandy relief funds for political reasons–is a charter school parent.
.

Hola had all the right political connections. As it grows, the public schools wither.

The Star-Ledger commended Hola for its high performance, while noting that only 11% of its students are poor.

As Darcie points out,

“HoLa’s Board President is not only a former Wall Street Journal Education Reporter, [and] she is also the “Chief External Officer,” AKA Director of Communications, for Uncommon Schools, one of the states favorite CMOs.”

In a scathing essay in TIME magazine, Leon Botstein, president of Bard College, lacerates the SAT.

The recently announced changes, he writes, are “too little, too late,” and are motivated mainly by the competition between the SAT and the ACT, which now tests more students than the SAT.

What Botstein makes clear is that the hoops and hurdles of the SAT are archaic and have little, if anything, to do with being well prepared for college.

He writes:

The SAT needs to be abandoned and replaced. The SAT has a status as a reliable measure of college readiness it does not deserve. The College Board has successfully marketed its exams to parents, students, colleges and universities as arbiters of educational standards. The nation actually needs fewer such exam schemes; they damage the high school curriculum and terrify both students and parents.

The blunt fact is that the SAT has never been a good predictor of academic achievement in college. High school grades adjusted to account for the curriculum and academic programs in the high school from which a student graduates are. The essential mechanism of the SAT, the multiple choice test question, is a bizarre relic of long outdated twentieth century social scientific assumptions and strategies. As every adult recognizes, knowing something or how to do something in real life is never defined by being able to choose a “right” answer from a set of possible answers (some of them intentionally misleading) put forward by faceless test designers who are rarely eminent experts. No scientist, engineer, writer, psychologist, artist, or physician—and certainly no scholar, and therefore no serious university faculty member—pursues his or her vocation by getting right answers from a set of prescribed alternatives that trivialize complexity and ambiguity.

The testing “experts” who write questions for the College Board or for Pearson or for McGraw Hill or for any of the other testing giants are seldom (if ever) scholars. The review process for the questions and answers is highly bureaucratic. And the scoring of the essays–which will now be abandoned on the SAT–are often done by people hired from Craig’s List and working for $11 an hour (or less). To learn more about the unsavory practices of the testing industry, read Todd Farley’s Making the Grades, which tells the sad story of the fifteen years he spent in that particular line of work.

Botstein goes on to criticize the value of the SAT:

First, despite the changes, these tests remain divorced from what is taught in high school and what ought to be taught in high school. Second, the test taker never really finds out whether he or she got any answer right or wrong and why. No baseball coach would train a team by accumulating an aggregate comparative numerical score of errors and well executed plays by each player, rating them, and then send them the results weeks later. When an error is committed it is immediately noted; the reasons are explained and the coach, at a moment in time close to the event, seeks to train the player how not to do it again.

What purpose is served by putting young people through an ordeal from which they learn nothing?

He ends on a hopeful note:

The time has come for colleges and universities to join together with the most innovative software designers to fundamentally reinvent a college entrance examination system.

I do not share his optimism. Since everyone, including David Coleman, the president of the College Board, agrees that high school grades say more about a student’s readiness for college than a one-shot college entrance examination, I doubt that even our most innovative software designers can come up with an examination that will mean more than reviewing students’ transcripts and other evidence of what they studied and how they showed their interests and commitments during their time in high school.

Competition to get into a prestigious college has grown incredibly fierce; going to the “right” college is seen as the key to a high-status occupation; the SAT and the ACT are not likely to give up their role as gatekeepers for these institutions; and as we know from ample research, the students who lose in this competition are those whose families lack the income, the connections, and the social status to compete. We are indeed in a testing quagmire. The best way to end it is if more and more colleges and universities go “test-optional,” that is, abandon the SAT and ACT as requirements for admission. This is one instance where the market might actually work, if the institutions are wise enough to take heed of the research on what matters most in picking their freshman class.

Myra Blackmon, who writes regularly for the Athens Banner-Herald in Georgia, returned from the Network for Public Education conference in Austin ready to write about what she learned and how it applied to Georgia.

She realized that the Common Core is just a symptom of a larger problem.

She writes:

My “a-ha moment” came when I realized CCSS and testing aren’t the real problems. They’re symptoms of a bigger problem. The real problem is a systemic, far-reaching one that can be stopped only by a revolt among parents and educators. The real problem is that a very few, very wealthy individuals override the voices of thousands upon thousands of experienced educators and parents.

The real problem is that Bill Gates, who has put more than $200 million into the CCSS, has more influence than his millions of customers. The Walton family has more influence than the 1.4 million Americans who try to scrape together a living working at their stores. The Broad Foundation carries more weight than the 15,000 elected school boards in this country.

The huge education companies, with Pearson at the head of the pack, have a hugely profitable lock on the education system. They write the tests, which favor their own textbooks and packaged teacher training. They administer and score the hundreds of thousands of tests administered each year. They pour huge amounts of money into the coffers of politicians and so-called “reform” organizations.

Friends, this is, pure and simple, a corporate takeover of American public education. When the education companies have more say-so in developing standards than experienced educators, we are out of whack. When education decisions are driven by profit instead of real student achievement, we have utterly surrendered control of what happens to our children in public schools.

The job for the public, she saw, was to wake up and take back their schools from destructive federal programs like No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top.

If it sounds like doomsday, it could well be if we don’t get busy and change it. We have to recommit at the local level, electing school boards willing to stand up to big money and the state and federal governments when they see policies that damage our children.

Thanks, Myra, for helping the public understand what is at risk today: our schools, our society, our future.

The spread of vouchers in recent years is alarming. Anywhere from 15-20 states have passed legislation to allow children to use public funds to attend religious schools. In two states that passed voucher laws–North Carolina and Louisiana–the state courts have blocked the diversion of public funds to religious schools (in North Carolina, at least temporarily).

Note that vouchers have never been approved by popular vote.

But what happens in those voucher schools? This article reviews what is taught in the fundamentalist church schools that use the most popular brand of Christian textbooks.

Of course, they learn that God created the world, just as the Bible says. They learn traditional math, which apparently has Biblical sanction. They teach children that gun control is intolerable. They teach that God approves of capital punishment and abhors homosexuality.

Well, you get the drift. Modern science, modern math, anything that tolerates the modern world is not acceptable.

And that’s what you call preparing our children for the 21st century these days.

STEM, in that world, is part of a flower, nothing more.

A reader writes. Be sure to read the last lines:

Dear President Obama,

Let’s face it.

Race to the Top is an epic fail just like No child Left Behind. Our children should not be the pawn of politics. Left or right, both have not gotten it right about education reform and it’s time we put that in the forefront.

I’m so tired of talking points. Some theories sound great on paper not in practice and there are testimonies after testimonies that children are NOT thriving with over-emphasis on state tests. Of course, we want children to learn how to think critically but saying that and making it happen needs serious input from EDUCATORS and our country might want to consider putting one in a position as important as US Secretary of Education. And perhaps, we need a NY Commissioner of Education that actually listens to what the feedback is and just perhaps we need Gov Cuomo to make a stand for our children because it’s inexcusable to distance himself from this whole issue.

And as the leader of the greatest country on Earth, please know that American’s excellence comes from our freedom, our love of this country and the promise of our children. Let’s get off the campaign trail you started many years ago and really make the people you put in charge of Education to do the right job for our children.

Please support the teachers that have been the inspiration for our children and please create a better initiative that truly rejects “filling in bubbles” because that is exactly what they are doing now and you need to stop the madness.

Thank you.

An American mother whose family fled Communist China and then left the oppressive British education in Hong Kong and was saved at age 8 by the love of American teachers who taught me to embrace the love of learning

Rupert Murdoch definitely does not like David Sirota.

Sirota is the journalist who broke the story about the Arnold Foundation funding PBS’ pension series. Arnold thinks all those greedy pensioners are bankrupting the country. Can’t have that!

Murdoch rushed to denounce Sirota and defend his fellow billionaire.

What is it with these billionaires? It is ok for them to live in luxury, right? Why do they want to cut the pensions of people who just want a decent retirement?

Peter Greene, high school teacher and blogger in Pennsylvania, is a master analyst of rhetoric. He particularly excels at spotting vapid commentary by non-educators who want to tell him how to conduct his classroom. Fortunately or unfortunately, this might well be a full-time job since there is an education industry of non-educators fully prepared to tell him how to teach.

In this post, he selects a pair of economists at the Brookings Institution for what he calls the “most clueless” commentary on the Common Core.

He writes:

“Their starting point is simple. The CCSS “are under attack from the right and the left. Liberals fear that policy makers will use the standards to punish teachers. Conservatives believe the Common Core is an attempt by the federal government to take over schools.” Oversimplified version of the opposition, but okay. Their goal is to mount “a fresh defense of the Common Core.”

“They explain how educational standards are supposed to work in paragraphs that seem designed to explain human schools to Martians (or, perhaps, economists). They summarize many of the objections to the CCSS, and get most of the major ones into a few sentences, including referencing the research that shows no connection between standards and student achievement.

“And then this “fresh defense” goes off the rails.

“Common Core will succeed where past standards based reform efforts have failed,” they boldly declare. Why, you ask? Sadly for this “fresh defense,” you already know all the answers.

“The CCSS were designed with teacher, researcher, and pedagogy expert feedback. This is duly cited with a reference to the CCSS website, so you know it must be true. A recent analysis of standards show that the Core are better than many states (citing the Fordham Institute research bought and paid for by CCSS backers).

“The CCSS assessments are better. You can even take them on computers! The authors argue that this is better because computer testing is cheaper (!), it eliminates written answers (hard to score!) and can include accommodations for special needs students (someday, probably). And those tests can be adaptive so that they match the skill level of the student. Not a word about test validity, but hey– at least they’re cheap, right?”

And he adds: “Eventually we arrive at a point. “Standards…are meant to simplify complicated problems.” And here’s our next standard talking point. “We ask too much of teachers. It is unreasonable to give them a classroom full of students and take full responsibility for teaching them on their own.” And I’ll take a moment here to get a glass of water so I can do a spit take. Yes, teachers– we need CCSS because our jobs are too hard for us. Why, gosh, thanks, boys.”

And sadly concludes:

“I actually scrolled back to make sure I wasn’t accidentally reading something from five years ago. But no– yesterday’s date. So with that, I award Brookings the gold medal for Most Clueless CCSS Commentary of 2014. Boys, sadly. your “fresh defense” is a collection of time-worn, over-used, discredited CCSS talking points. I mean, it does have the virtue of cramming as many of them into one space as I have ever seen. But fresh? I’ve seen fresher things on the Sci-Fi channel on a Saturday afternoon.”

Katie Lapham, a teacher in New York City, here recounts the disaster of Common Core testing in New York state. 

She wonders why children who don’t speak English are supposed to pass a high-stakes exam, with only one exemption.

She wonders why she, their teacher, will get no information about student performance except a score–no information about what her students learned and what they did not learn, just a score for each of them.

She wonders why anyone thinks this regime is good for children or for education.

When Katie returned from the Network for Public Education meeting in Austin last week, she was shocked to learn about the state’s policy for testing newcomers to our country:

 

When I returned from Texas, I discovered that the New York State Education Department (NYSED) had released its School Administrator’s Manual for the 2014 Common Core Math and ELA tests for grades 3-8. It is a whopping 86-pages long, and its treatment of ELLs is  particularly draconian.  Here’s an excerpt.

page 9 – Testing English-language learners

  • Schools are permitted to exempt from the 2014 Common Core English Language Arts Tests only those English language learners (including those from Puerto Rico) who, on April 1, 2014, will have been attending school in the United States for the first time for less than one year.
  • Recently arrived English language learners may be eligible for one, and only one, exemption from the administration of the 2014 Grades 3–8 Common Core English Language Arts Tests.
  • Subject to this limitation, schools may administer the New York State English as a Second Language Achievement Test (NYSESLAT) in lieu of the 2014 Grades 3–8 Common Core English Language Arts Tests, for participation purposes only, to recently arrived English language learners who meet the criterion above. All other English language learners must participate in the 2014 Grades 3–8 Common Core English Language Arts Tests, as well as in the NYSESLAT.
  • The provisions of the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) do not permit any exemption of English language learners from the 2014 Grades 3–8 Common Core Mathematics Tests. These tests are available in Chinese (traditional), Haitian-Creole, Korean, Russian, and Spanish. The tests can be translated orally into other languages for those English language learners whose first language is one for which a written translation is not available from the Department.

That’s right niños, only ONE exemption is allowed from the ELA. After just 12 months in our school system, you will be subjected to the same horror show as the rest of the state’s public school students in grades 3-8. Don’t worry, the state has generously offered to give you extended time (time and a half) on the tests; instead of 90 minutes per day for six days (3 days for ELA, 3 days for math), 5th grade ELLs, for example, are entitled to 135 minutes each testing day. That’s a total of 13.5 hours! As for the Common Core math test, there’s no getting off the hook the first year you are here because state provides translation services! And after all that, in May we are going to assess your English-language proficiency level by giving you a lengthy, four-part test in speaking, listening, reading and writing. NYSED has been hard at work aligning the NYSESLAT (New York State English as a Second Language Achievement Test) to the Common Core State Standards. It’s now more rigorous than ever before!

 

New York state has already become the poster state for botched implementation. It looks like it will get worse, certainly for the students and teachers.

Frustrated by the appointments made by the mayor who replaced Cory Booker, the Chris Christie administration is now considering a complete takeover of the finances of the city of Newark.

Newark’s schools have been under state control since 1995.

David Giambusso of the Star-Ledger reports:

After a months-long cold war over Newark Mayor Luis Quintana’s hiring practices and his approach to city budgeting, state officials today raised the specter of a takeover of the city’s finances.

Local Government Services director Thomas Neff raised the specter of a state takeover of Newark’s budget.

Thomas Neff, director of the state’s Division of Local Government Services, said in a letter to Quintana that his division, at its meeting on Wednesday would soon begin discussing “the level of financial stress in Newark and Newark’s lack of compliance with certain budget laws.”

However, he said, “the board will not be taking a formal vote with respect to placing Newark under supervision at this meeting,” Neff said.

Almost from the minute Quintana was appointed mayor in November, the city and state budget monitors have had an icy relationship.

The mayor ruffled feathers in Trenton when he went on a hiring spree, firing former Mayor Cory Booker’s department directors and appointing replacements without state approval, violating a memorandum of understanding between the city and state.

Quintana was appointed mayor when Booker was elected to the U.S. Senate.
Neff sent numerous letters indicating the state’s displeasure with Quintana’s actions, but his letter Friday was the most ominous to date.

If a state takeover were to happen, the state would likely have the final say over how Newark allocates its resources, who it hires and fires, and how much it charges in taxes.

This is rich. Trust the Christie administration, not local residents to govern themselves.