Today, April 26, marks the two-year anniversary of this blog. When I began, I was not sure who would read it or how it would evolve.
In these past two years, the blog has received some 11,645,000 page views. I have put up nearly 8,000 posts, and you have registered nearly 200,000 comments.
My purpose when I started was to create a space where parents, students, teachers, principals, superintendents, public-spirited citizens, school board members, and anyone else who wishes to do so could share their ideas, dreams, fears, and hopes about the current state and future of American education. My guiding principle has been “a better education for all children.” I have never been so presumptuous as to assert that I know how to teach or that I have the answer to all questions. I rely on you, the readers, to share your knowledge and experiences as we together examine some of the ruinous policies now mandated by the federal government, policies that place more value on data than on children, that trust metrics more than professional judgment, and that prioritize standardized tests over learning and real education.
We have that space. We have the most vigorous discussion of education issues on the Internet. We don’t bar dissenting views, although I do ban certain curse words that I don’t want on my blog and I do not tolerate personal insults. We even have trolls. I have said repeatedly that this blog is my virtual living room (although sometimes it is my virtual classroom), and I expect a certain level of civility. You may feel angry, and you can express your anger or frustration or rage, but please mind your language. And remember, if you want to insult me, do it on another blog, not here. Other than those rather limited rules, the floor is always open.
If you post a fascinating comment, I may turn it into a featured post, but I won’t use your name unless you use it. If you write in anonymity, I will respect your need to protect your job.
I believe the tide is turning. I believe the American public is waking up to the orchestrated effort to privatize and monetize public education. We will not sit by idly as a small group of very wealthy people try to gain control of our public schools. We are organizing to educate the public. In state after state, teachers and parents are speaking out against high-stakes testing and privatization. I am convinced that the public will not willingly turn their children or their tax dollars over to entrepreneurs, hedge fund managers, corporations, and vendors of snake oil.
With Anthony Cody and others, I helped to create the Network for Public Education to bring together activists from across the nation. With the help of parent groups, teacher groups, the BATs, and friends of public education in every state, we will stop the effort to privatize our public schools. We understand the privatizers’ strategy: First, demand perfection (e.g., No Child Left Behind). Second, anything less than perfection is declared evidence of abject failure. Third, divert attention from the real causes of low academic performance, which is poverty and inequality. Fourth, attack anyone calling attention to poverty as someone just making excuses for bad teachers. Fifth, create a frenzied hunt for a statistical means of finding and firing those “bad” teachers. Sixth, eliminate due process for teachers so they can be fired for any reason without a hearing. On and on it goes.
That’s why this blog is here. It exists to tell parents and educators: You are not alone. We will join together and defeat those who would destroy one of our most important democratic institutions, doors open to all.
We will strive together so that all children have equality of educational opportunity. We will not stop until every child may attend schools with experienced teachers, reasonable class sizes, the arts, foreign languages, history, civics, physical education, mathematics, literature, and the sciences. Nor will we be content until every school has a library with librarians, counselors, a school nurse, and a psychologist. What we want for all children is what parents in well-resourced districts expect for their children.
Join the conversation. Join us as we organize, mobilize and speak out, not only for our children but for our society and our democracy.

DiRav, your blog is a statement in democracy, and for initiating it, along with your books and organizing, you are a great American.. I thank you…
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Congratulations on two years! Your work and what I read about (and from) others on this site keeps me going daily. Here’s a snapshot of what’s going on in the heart of the heartland.
-Inda
Missouri: Where Education Policy X School Choice Law = A Toxic Brew
Last summer I was hired into the Normandy School District just outside St. Louis. Against all odds, Normandy is fighting for life after 17 years of epic mismanagement. Our locally produced plan is to shift to more authentic, engaging curriculum; to empower teachers as professionals; to heal our relationships with families; to strengthen our ties with a major research university down the road; and to deepen our collaboration with non-profit community partners – including those in housing, health care, early childhood education, social and emotional support, and economic development. All around the district, transformation is underway.
This collective impact model will lead to meaningful achievement for our students, who reside in a low-income, high-poverty, highly mobile metropolitan community of color. Think Harlem Children’s Zone. Or Newark’s Global Village Zone. Or Community Solutions’ Brownsville Partnership in Brooklyn. In terms of complex social renewal, think of the Clinton Foundation’s CGI America. Education experts around the country have heartily endorsed our proposal.
The Missouri Commissioner of Education ignores it.
Since receiving our plan three months ago, the commissioner has not spoken about it publicly, talked to us about it, or shared it directly with her bosses, the Missouri State Board of Education, an administrative body appointed by the governor. What she did was appoint a task force. Now all of these characters have oversized roles to play in a big overarching story, within which Normandy is, from their perspective, a subplot.
Last summer, the Missouri Supreme Court ruled that families in unaccredited districts have a right to transfer their kids to accredited districts, and that the unaccredited district – the failing one – has to pay the receiving district’s tuition. This is thousands of dollars higher on average per student than what Normandy spends. Normandy is expected to run out of money by the end of June.
For nearly 60,000 students in Missouri districts teetering towards unaccreditation, the transfer law means that financial collapse is ever more likely.
The intersection of state law and state education policy will give tens of thousands of African American students in Missouri the right to be transported all over the state into predominantly white districts far from home in order to go to “good” schools where, on average in 2013, 33 percent of 8th graders scored proficient or higher on our state math test and 36 percent of 8th graders scored proficient or higher on our state reading test.
When the seven members of the Missouri State Board meet in May, they will decide what happens next. In the meantime, our legislators are working on a 102-page education bill that addresses school district governance, funding, taxation, tuition, charters, and transportation. Deep in our unfolding story is an active, politically influential billionaire, a Missourian determined to privatize the public domain.
Missouri’s education crisis is a national bellwether. We have a bad system inside which many good people are hunkered down, waiting out the war. For the next few weeks, after a year of uncertainty that included a round of cost-cutting layoffs in December (70 teachers gone), Normandy teachers and students are expected to submit to high-stakes testing, part of a Procrustean accountability framework limited to average daily attendance, graduation rates, disciplinary incidents, college and career readiness metrics, and the annual tests.
Insiders and outsiders are trying to fix the system, but many of these fixes ignore the fact that people need and want to act upon the world for themselves. Hence the solutions that rely on top-down, slash-and-burn turnaround models and violent haste in the rhetoric: Clearly, some say, we need to blow up public schools.
I feel the urgent need for radical reform in districts like Normandy no less than anyone who speaks of blowing up schools. But I also know that schools need to be places where caring adults work collaboratively in a climate of trust to create an environment in which everyone can learn for the sake of a shared community.
People who understand the power of words do not speak of blowing up the places where other people’s children are trying to read books.
People in power in Missouri who understand the power of education should make Normandy a pilot district of promise beginning this week and allow the Show-Me State to show the rest of the country how to get children and their local public schools safely off the battlefield.
Bio:
Inda Schaenen, PhD, is an instructional coach in the Normandy School District in Missouri. Her new book, Speaking of Fourth Grade: What Listening to Kids Tells Us About School in America, will be published by The New Press this summer. Contact indaschaenen@att.net
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Reading posts like yours makes me wish I was someone who could make a difference. The frustration must be almost paralyzing for you. It is so hard to understand why the powers that be refuse to even acknowledge those who have the professional expertize to be heard.
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Congrats on two years!
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Diane – you know that the BATs adore you and use your wisdom as a lead for where we go. We are so happy you use this blog to fight for all children, teachers, and public education. BATs will always be the army behind you!
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Marla, I was just thinking she was like our BAT general! Thank you, ms Ravitch, for being such an inspiration to us. Yes, we are all behind you and with you! ^o^
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Thank, Judy, I am honored to be a BAT but may have to be emeritus because of my knee!
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I remember discovering your blog by chance two years ago. After a rather full teaching day that included professional development, I googled something like, “What in the world is happening to public education?”
Thank you for helping me to find answers to this question and your suggested ways to take action. So many teachers in my school regularly read your blog now and my book club read, Reign of Error.
I, too, believe “the tide is turning”.
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Happy anniversary! Keep up the great work, Diane! You rock the education world!
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Amazing numbers: your posts and viewers. We all benefit from your voice.
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Your blog and other efforts have given me hope that democracy will eventually win, and a free public education will remain a pillar of our republic. Thank you, Diane, and all the folks working with you for that end. God bless all of you.
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Thanks so much. This is my go to blog every morning.
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Diane, this is YOUR blog, and YOU are the host.
But you make us feel as this is completely an “US” and “WE” movement.
We remained transformed. Many of us were the inert baking soda. You are the vinegar, the catalyst. Together, when we merge, we conitnue to create some bubbling, foaming, and very loud actions in the name of democracy.
How beautiful is that?!!!!!
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Robert Rendo, my hope and prayer are to see more heroes rising up across the land to take back control of public education from slick salesmen, hedge funders, know-nothing elites, and assorted busybodies. The schools belong to the public. The teaching profession belongs to professionals. That’s the way it is in high performing nations. No place for profiteers. We are united.
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Here, here!
United we are. We have all become Diane Ravtiches . . . . .
Wishing you positive, healing energy before, during, and post op . . . . . .
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Correction:
“But you make us feel as though this is completely an “US” and “WE” movement.”
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Thank you!
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Diane, I am so gateful to you for so beautifully dissecting and articulating the intricately interwoven strands of this sickening attack on democracy, public schools, the teaching profession and the middle, working and lower classes. I don’t know where this movement (do we have a name for it?) would be without you! Thank you so much for your voice , your perseverance, you
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My phone wouldn’t allow me to finish my post above. To complete: your
intellect and hard work. Also, my best wishes towards your excellent and speedy recovery!
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Happy 2 year Blog-iversary! Diane, you have been so inspirational to all of the nation’s educators in times of heavy fire. Thank you for your commitment to public education and what’s best for kids and educators. We need a zillion more people like you. Luckily we have nearly 45,000 BATs (and growing) to fight the good fight alongside you.
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Although there are days when I read about things on your blog that depress, frighten, overwhelm me, overall I generally come away encouraged, comforted, reassured and with a feeling of solidarity that is truly beneficial. Thank you for your time, your intelligence and your commitment. Everyone owes you thanks for the public service you do every day. Happy 2 year anniversary and keep up the stellar effort and know that your blog is important to so many people!
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Happy anniversary, and thank you! ^@^
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Congratulations on the two year anniversary of this blog! When future historians of education relate what became of this era’s “reform” movement, they will credit this educational historian as a major catalyst for its demise.
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Thank you for inviting all of us into your living room each day, for your inspiring example, your wit and your warmth. Don’t know what we’d do without you!
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Congrats on the completion of year number 2!
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Congrats on finishing year 2! I’m looking forward finding out what is in store for year 3. Wishing you continued growth and success.
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Thanks for all you do Diane. And I seriously hope that you are right about the “tide turning”. We are at ground zero here in Philadelphia and it’s getting more and more difficult to keep the “dogs at bay” so to speak. Our School Reform Commission (SRC) headed by one of the most virulently anti-teacher, anti-union, and anti-public education (newly appointed in January by our Governor who shares the same sentiments) is really starting to play dirty, and the more people begin to take a stand against the privatization of our schools the dirtier he is playing. Just to give an example, there was a SRC meeting Thursday evening which lasted from 5:30 until almost midnight. Parents and children were there to speak on behalf of their schools (schools whose fate upon which THEY will be voting next week…. whether to turn over to charters or not). At the last minute they switched up the schedule and rules of the meeting to keep those who wished to speak about this issue until the end (in hopes they would give up and leave). They also did away with the “3 minute” (you are only given 3 minutes to speak) rule for those who wished to speak on behalf of the charter schools that were up for renewal. Much to the chagrin of the SRC the parents and kids stayed and it was a pretty heated exchange.
In any event, between a SRC having no accountability and yet another “doomsday” budget released for next year we are all extremely worried. In addition, since the SRC suspended seniority (we are still waiting to hear from the state courts on that one), and the fact the central administration hired a former Teach for America person as a talent recruitment specialist (for 90k a year, yet I have to beg, borrow, and steal for a ream of copy paper), those like me with a PhD and 17 years in the system can see the writing on the wall. I fear I may be one of the 1000 layoffs mentioned by our superintendent later this spring/summer if extra funding does not come through.
The irony of all of this is I just won a teacher of the year award (found out yesterday)….. I love my kids, I love my school, and I love my career….. but if I am laid off I think I will leave the profession as I have had enough of being denigrated, disrespected, and belittled by my district, by the likes of Wendy Kopp and Michelle Rhee, and the “haters” out there who are convinced that teaching is such an easy job that we do not deserve to make a decent living.
Once again, thank you for being a voice of reason out there….. I am hoping more people will start to listen to that voice.
Daniel Meier
Philadelphia, PA
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Daniel, I’m in another state, but I have been following what’s happening in Philly with dismay and disgust. There are people who care. I have been telling people here in NY about what’s happening there. Keep us updated, keep getting the news out. Keep up the fight.
Thanks for teaching!
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Daniel, the tide and voices are changing. The topic and facts and opinions are being put out there more and more both in alternative and mainstream media.
But we will only make changes IF we persist and continue to grow and strengthen our grass root movements, and there are many of them. . . . .
The best is yet to come, but one must take these signs as difficult but not without hope.
Thank you for your powerful note.
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@Robert Rendo.. I am realizing how many teachers I work with who really do not follow what is going on in public education. They are very busy with all things education but it is a defensive position – gathering the data, trying to create good lessons despite the data, preparing students for testing, getting ready for observations, lessons for data gathering via SLO etc… Those of us teachers who do read the education take over issues of our times religiously (and I do feel I am not alone on this) work with the teachers I just described. MY GRASSROOTS EFFORT is talking to as many of these teachers as I can and giving them links to blogs like this one. I am not asking them to join groups or give donations… JUST TO READ UP and know where to read. They need to know what is happening in Philly, State of Washington, Ohio, Indiana and whatever latest event is happening in all the states. Also, I do it after school, before school or during lunch so that I do not interfere with the school day.
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I am doing the same thing. My co-workers at a public elementary school in Greater Boston do not know who Arne Duncan is! I tell them -he is your boss! And he wasnever a teacher! We need to educate ourselves. Thry are acting like sheep. They have no idea where the CCS came from.
I am compiling a notebook of posts from this blog and some other articles like “Crisis in Kindergarten.” I will be sharing it when I return to work tomorrow. I may just accidentally leave it in the teachers’ room….
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When I was down and wanted to leave teaching in public education, after 22 years at being a part of it, I was introduced to your blog and your books. I even had the opportunity to hear you speak in person in Syracuse, NY. You have given me hope for the future. You have inspired me to once again believe in what I do each and every day-teach. I know you speak truth and I think you are right-we are winning at this challenge by others who are trying to change the face of public education into privatized schools. It won’t happen, because we all will not let it. Here in America, we are a democracy, and always, always remember we all have one thing no one should ever take from us. A public education. Be well and get some rest. Know that you have inspired countless others to follow in your footsteps. It has been and always will be about the kids. All of our kids.
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Congratulations! You’ve done a wonderful thing with this blog. Good health and vigor! We need you.
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Thank you! Take enough time to heal completely. We are behind, in front, and on every side of you. We will carry you forward as you have carried us.
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You are the rudder who keeps us steady as we work our way through the shark infested waters of education reform. May you do well with and heal quickly from your surgery. GLWE. We love and appreciate you.
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Diane- Thank “you” for creating this forum that allows for the important and often uncomfortable dialogue necessary, to fight for globally enviable public education for EVERY child in America. Will we live to see a recommitment to “public” education? I often think we will not, but we have no chance if we stop the dialogue and give up believing in the 14th Amendment.
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Thank you for all you do ! Your blog is addicting…after a long day with students it is reassuring to read and reflect and know that others are in this fight…
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Diane,
You have helped my keep my sanity for the past two years. I read your blog everyday and find that you have so much wisdom to share. You inspire me to be more courageous in this fight. I’m not very good at that but I’m trying! I don’t feel like I’m very articulate when it comes to speaking with leaders who definitely need spoken with! The BATs connect me with people just like me in the trenches working with children. Edushyster and Curmuducation just make me laugh out loud. Sometimes you just have to laugh about some of this nonsense! My trip to Texas to the Network for Public Ed Conference was the best weekend of the year. All of my idols were in one room and I met new ones! Thanks for your blog and your tireless devotion to helping our children and our society.
P.S. BATs don’t need their knees because they have wings! I also read that their knees bend outward and backwards enabling them to move more quickly. You may want to mention this to your doctor! (Can you tell I teach first grade?)
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Congrats and thanks! Your blog is a source of hope.
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Happy Anniversary and Thank You for your work. I am a soon to retire Special Educator with Dist. 75 in N.Y.C
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Thank you Diane for this blog and for your support of teachers. I don’t know what we would do without your voice. You are the best! Take care and best wishes for a quick recovery after your knee surgery.
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Thank you, Diane for your leadership, erudition, and creation of a space for this conversation. Thank you, commenters, for adding so much to my knowledge with your experiences, and links to other websites with information, opinion and insights.
Each time I read a clueless newspaper article or opinion column mindlessly parroting the “reform” agenda with perspective that does not match what my family is experiencing and what I know is happening on the ground, I get so depressed.
To buck myself up, I can come here and see that I am not alone, that there are many people who are not buying the reform agenda, find out even more about what is really going on in other parts of the country (the education news not covered by the mainstream press), with links to many different bloggers and news sites sharing so many different perspectives. I can find out what’s happening and how I can fight back.
Thanks so much everyone, and most especially Diane.
Take care of yourself and I wish you a speedy recovery from your total knee replacement.
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This blog is my daily reality check, along with my students;). Happy Anniversary! Thank You!
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Thank you, Diane, for all you do.
You are helping us coalesce to so that public schools can be returned and maintained as part of our commons.
Happy Anniversary and only the best wishes for your speedy recovery!
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Happy Blogiversary, Diane.
I sure appreciate you. 🙂
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What Mercedes said!
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Mazel Tov Diane! You are a beacon of hope to public school teachers nationwide because you are helping us fight with truth and facts against the $$$ propaganda machine of the corporate reform movement. Personally speaking, you are an inspiration to me.
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So long the attacks were only in the inner city. Yet Diane held up the light. Today I run into parents or teachers in the richer suburbs, under huge attack, and again Diane continues to hold up the light. I cannot thank her and the blog enough. By the way, I call myself the Detroiter not to protect myself, but because who I am is not important, rather to explain and proudly represent where I’m from.
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From Inda to Diane: If at all possible, can we connect on Sunday? Thanks! Inda indaschaenen@att.net
> >
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Thank you thank you thank you! Your blog has changed my life!
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Love it..don’t stop…..kk
Sent from my iPhone
>
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Thank you for all you do for Public Education ^0^- TN BATs loves you and we love your Blog. PS- a quotation by you is on the cover of our TEA magazine this month–TEA loves you too!!!
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Congratulations! I have learned much since I began reading this blog and will continue to read and share what I learn.
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Thank you so much for all the information you share. I have learned a great deal by reading your blog. It is wonderful to know I can trust what you share. Thank you.
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Thank you!
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This blog makes me happy! Thank you so much, and congratulations!
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Excellent work in every post you write. I wish I had found this blog earlier.
I do have a question.
I am in Michigan and I find a lot of columns in a lot of newspapers and online sites refer to the National Education Trust Midwest. It is used as a news/data source, often. I know it SAYS it is a non-partisan group but I also realize that doesn’t mean it is slanted to the conservative side as I’m thinking it is.
How do I know if I can trust it or not?
This is an example of one of the plethora of columns referring to the data provided by the National Education Trust Midwest:
http://www.mlive.com/education/index.ssf/2014/04/my_schools_great_its_detroit_t.html#comments
Thank you for any help you can give me on this matter.
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Hi Pat. I don’t know if this helps, but these are the funders:
Laura & John Arnold Foundation
Bezos Family Foundation
Carnegie Corporation of New York
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
The Joyce Foundation
The Kresge Foundation
Lumina Foundation for Education
State Farm Companies Foundation
The Wallace Foundation
The Walton Family Foundation
It’s always the same foundations, the same people, as you probably know.
I saw the cure for Michigan in the piece was more charter schools, so there’s a shocker, huh?
Michigan has one of the least-regulated and most for profit-heavy charter sectors in the country. Why is the cure always more charters?
I would say that Michigan probably needs public school funding restored.
Why don’t they try that instead of opening new schools?
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And here’s the Education Trust promoting more standardized testing with the same bullet-pointed list of talking points you’ve seen in every single ed reform op ed piece. They all have the same funding sources, and they all sound the same to me, down to word choice:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kati-haycock/think-twice-before-jumpin_b_5051545.html
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From the two articles I read, The Education Trust is a bunch of propaganda pushing testing and common core while dissing teachers.
Please disregard everything they say – they have a definite agenda and it isn’t kid friendly.
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Your blog’s inception was serendipitous for me. I knew for a number of years that something was not right, that the public education was morphing in ways that made my skin crawl. Your blog validated my gut feelings and put a name to my discomfort. I now can speak intelligently about “reform” issues thanks to the venue you have provided.
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Thanks for helping to coalesce the opposition to “education reform gone wrong”. You are a leader when we needed one. Thanks for your insights and clarity on this messy troubling issue. Also thanks for introducing me to a group of wonderful intelligent and passionate people who want to protect and improve education for all children. You all keep me inspired to keep fighting the fight. I hope the surgery goes smoothly and you recover quickly.
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Congratulations! It has been great to be here every day…Thank You.
I hope. You will be ready to play football next fall after a successful knee surgery!
Be well.😍
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You’ve done more in two years than most people do in a lifetime. Keep up the good fight – we are right there behind you.
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This is definitely one of my favorite blogs I read on a daily basis. I cannot think of any blogs that invite over 11 million viewers in just two years(or 5.5 million per year).
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Thank you so much, Diane, for your bravery and integrity and unflagging support of our schools and students. You have our eternal gratitude. Best wishes for a speedy recovery of your knee.
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“Do the right thing. It will gratify some people and astonish the rest.” [Mark Twain]
Color me gratified and astonished.
Congratulations!
😎
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You are the Earth Mother of Truth in Education. Thank you.
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Diane,
1. Gratz!
2. Thank you for starting and continuing this blog; it has been my go-to place for two years, though I rarely comment. Before that, I was reading your articles on your .com site. It all started for me with “The Myth of Charter Schools,” your review of “Waiting for Superman. Thank you for writing that, too.
3. I think all of us are important to the resistance. But I don’t think we’d be anywhere without you. And I don’t think anybody could have filled your spot. One person can change the world, but we never know if we are that person until it’s done. For that reason, it’s important that we not look the other way when we see something wrong being perpetrated. You could have done any number of things differently, but you didn’t. You stepped up and called out when you saw the wrong that was being committed. You were and are the right person at the right time.
4. Take care of yourself. I expect to see many more anniversaries for this site, and I hope that many of them will fall during happier times, post ed-deform movement.
Sincerely,
cyn3wulf
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Thank you for your doggedness and your hard work and your welcoming attitude, Diane. Best wishes and a speedy recovery. We NEED you!
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Thank you for this forum, and attracting so many thoughtful people to comment on the new , events, and viewpoints that start or extend our conversations. Cheers to the most erudite and indefatigable cheerleader for public education.
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Greetings from Indiana, Dr. Ravitch.
Again and again, thank you a thousand times.
During the dark days in 2010 and 2011 when it looked like the tide of education reform was going to destroy us, I read your book “Death and Life” and I realized that I wasn’t going crazy. That book stirred me to action to oppose the terrible things that were happening in my state, and I became more interested in politics and education than I ever could’ve imagined. In my school building, some of the union representatives look to me for information on important topics routinely covered in your blog.
A few months ago, a 12th grade student, bound for an ivy-league school, was preparing for his senior “exit project” in his English class. He wanted to research education reform. Luckily for me, his teacher was one of our union negotiators, and he directed the boy to me because he knew how much material I’d gathered from your blog (and others I found through it). This young man wrote about Michelle Rhee and some of the education reforms. (I don’t think he has presented it yet.)
Here in the blog, I’ve found so many who’ve articulated my concerns far better than I could’ve expressed them. I draw courage from you and others who have joined you in speaking out and shredding the spurious claims by the edu-shysters (apologies to the Edu-shyster I see here often).
Your role here has been playground monitor, clearinghouse, spreader-of-information, creator-of-networks, and moderator.
Best wishes and good health to you as you continue this essential work!
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I found a quote that I think is applicable to the interesting times we live in as educators:
“…a nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
––President John F. Kennedy (1917–1963)
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What they said. Imagine each specific comment is a different blossom. There are little yellow trumpet-shaped ones, stalks of blue stars, snapdragons, delphinium, anemone and cornflower.
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God bless you, Dianne, for your commitment and faithfulness to public education. I cringe to think where we would be without you.
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And also you, Diane. *embarrassed*
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The best investigative education blog on the web Diane – and I am a Kiwi educator living in Brazil. With little to do with the US education system, however the same things happening in the US are happening in NZ and it concerns me greatly. Thank you!
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Thank you for this blog. I can’t tell you how much valuable information and insight I gain from it and get well soon.
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Thank you Diane, for all you do, but please don’t include BATs in your list of heroes. Many decent, thoughtful educators have been mocked, belittled, and banished from that group for daring to question the edicts of the administrators or otherwise running afoul of the vanities of the founders. While that group started out as a breath of fresh air as a safe place for beleaguered educators, it has for some time been focused on getting as many people to add their Facebook friends or to click join regardless of their stance on public education in order to artificially inflate their importance. Post some anti-CSSS screed from Glenn Beck, Andrew Breitbart, or Rush Limbaugh in BATs? Hey, no problem, but if you support even tepid support of Common Core or offer the mildest of criticism to the founders, administrators, or their policies and they BAT swarm all over the poor soul.
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As a retired teacher, 50 years spent in 5 US states, I thought I had seen it all. Two years before my first retirement the charter school movement was developed. It was known that public money bought the furnishings and supplies needed, and when the school was disbanded the furnishings and unused supplies belonged the the charter holder. What a rip off of public money.
Even before this in the south the “Academy” designed to exclude the undesirables was rampant. You know, the kids who aren’t totally white, totally smart and totally rich. It didn’t take long for these schools to be publicly financed, but they were permitted to operate outside State rules and regulations. This was the way around 1954 desegregation order.
The next step was Tax Credits, money which could be written off personal and business taxes when sent to church schools. How can this be legal? Let’s see Article 1 of the Constitution doesn’t count here? You know the one — seperation of church and state.
I have been angry about these conditions and want to help to place the emphasis on the child. How can I help? Julia
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Julia Summers, join the Network for a public Education and get involved with local and state groups fighting these schemes to waste tax dollars and harm education.
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Thanks to Diane and all the wonderful people who also care so much about our children and have taken the time to write on this blog. This IS what democracy looks like. It’s truly been an honor to have been included in some small way in these pages. Take care. -John O.
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Congratulations to you, Diane, for your part in this burgeoning movement to restore public education! Thanks immeasurably for your essential, unequaled role as a locus for knowledge and inspiration in this fight. May your unwavering commitment carry forward with full cooperation from your knees!
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“We have the most vigorous discussion of education issues on the Internet.”
That’s correct, Diane. You do. Allowing dissenting views provides opportunities to learn diverse perspectives which, as educators, should interest us. If only the Bat page thought so too…
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Thank yu, thank you, thank you Diane, for articulting everything so clearly and forcefully, and thank you to all you readers/commenters who make me feel i am part of a community with good sense, good will, and determination to make things right. I have benn reading your blog for a little over a year now, and I’ll admit there have been a lot of days when my stomach would clench and my head would ache at all I saw here. More and more I see GOOD news. Don’t stop now, everyone!
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Thanks to you, Dr. Ravitch, I understand that I was gotten rid of because they didn’t want to continue paying my salary and didn’t want me to stand up for my students. I found you in June, 2012 after I was forced to retire. I was depressed, grieving from my long-time partner’s death, now raising a young man who is at the low end of the spectrum for autism, but you lifted me up. I hope some day I am able to meet you and thank you in person.
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well done Congratulations ! I read it every day and while I may not agree with everything, I agree with most! Kay Merseth
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Diane, you have been my inspiration for years. I cannot thank you enough for buoying me up when I have been down and for making me believe that there is a bright future in education.
I remember the day you opened this blog and you were so unsure if anyone would read it. And now we celebrate two years and hundreds of posts and thousands of comments.
One of the things that makes your blog different is the interaction in the comments after each post. You are as active there as any of us. You built a true online community through your hard work and passion.
THANK YOU for all you have done for education and congratulations on your blogiversary!
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BIG CONGRATS, Diane.
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I am relatively new to the field of public education, just a few years in, after having practiced law for 20 years and finally switching to public education which is what I had wanted to do fresh out of college anyway. Shortly after earning my M.Ed., I was hired by a public school system, first as a teacher, then encouraged to be an assistant principal, and last year, I earned a spot as a principal. My fear is my lack of experience in the field of public education — I just listened to a February 2014 talk you gave at North Carolina State University in which you emphasize that when it matters, we need experience in our public schools, just like you would want an experienced pilot or lawyer or doctor, not an enthusiastic amateur. This hit me hard, as I completely agree and realize I am indeed an enthusiastic amateur. So, how do I get experience? What can I do to make myself a better principal, a better public school educator? I’m wondering if I should perhaps step down and let an experienced educator lead the school — it is a struggling school with 35% of its students designated as low income by the state. Having listened to your talk, I feel like a fraud, pretending I can actually lead this school without the requisite experience to do so. Looking for any advice you or others can offer.
Anonymous
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Congratulations on a huge milestone, Diane.
Words cannot express my sincerest appreciation for all that you do. Thank you once again for standing up for for the democratic principles essential to a free and healthy public education system, professional educators, parents, and most importantly…the respect and well-being of our children.
All best wishes to you.
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thank you to Diane, and to all my brother and sister educators for this important tool in the
war against the people who would buy and sell their own mothers if the price was right.
Usually when people are sad, they don’t do anything. They just cry over their condition. But when they get angry, they bring about a change.”
― Malcolm X
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Ms. Ravitch- Thank you for bringing not only light of truth but also the attention of the media to the education reform issues that matter so much. You – more than any other single person – have done the most to promote the value of public schools and teachers, and to put the needs of the students where they belong: first and foremost.
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I am a retired teacher and I know first hand what is going on in the schools. I don’t think there was a single year during my 23 years in the public school system where I wasn’t on the protest line outside of city hall. Your blog sometimes makes me cry. I am grief stricken over the changes in the national education system especially the one here in New York. When I look at my little baby grandson I just pray that some of this will somehow change before he has to go to school.
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thank you for all you do. I read your blog every day and share it with my teacher friends and co workers…..you have shed a light on the details everyone needs to know. thank you again and again…you are my hero.
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Ditto, ditto, ditto. I shared your most recent book and blog with my sister, an English teacher in a small town in Montana. She, like so many others, was relieved to at least, know that her suspicions of many years had a voice and someone out there was indeed fighting the powers that be.
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Diane, you are my hero! I love you. Thank you for galvanizing support for public ed and being so outspoken about the privatizing abuse of education in America today.
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Thanks for all you do to shed light on the truth about our public schools. You give me hope Diane!
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