The following letter appeared as a guest post on Anthony Cody’s blog:
Paul Horton’s Open Letter to President Obama: Listen to Committed
Dear Mr. President,
Like thousands of experienced classroom teachers throughout our great country, I am very concerned about how you decided to go the way that you did with your Education policies. I was recently told by a close friend of the yours that “Arne’s Team looked at all of the options” and decided to go with its current policies because “they would get us where we needed to go more quickly than any other set of alternatives.” I was also told, “that not everybody could be in the room.”
The problem was that you and Mr. Duncan did not listen to experience. The blueprint for Arne’s plan for stimulus investment that morphed into the Race to the Top Mandates (RTTT) featured advisers from the Gates and Broad Foundations, analysts from McKinsey Consulting, and a couple of dozen superintendents who were connected, like Mr. Duncan, to the Broad Foundation. Most of those who were invited to advise you were committed supporters of heavy private investment in Education who favored high stakes testing tied to teacher evaluations. Most of these advisers also favored the scaling up of measurable data collection as a way to measure progress or lack of progress in American Education.
If you had listened to the leading experts on standardized testing and the achievement gap, you would have learned that your policies were bound to fail. Our former colleague here at the U of C, Professor James Coleman, was the first to establish this empirically. You should have taken the time to learn learn about Campbell’s Law, a concept that is taught in every graduate level statistics course here at the University of Chicago.
On a more personal level, Mr. President, you consulted many of your contacts in Democrats for Education Reform, an organization funded mostly by Democratic leaning Wall Street investment firms. And you were also very impressed by the ideas and passion of a Denver charter school principal and Democratic activist, Michael Johnston….
Thousands of teachers possess the experience, training, and commitment to advise you on Education matters. But you chose to listen to those who went to places like Harvard, Yale, and Stanford who have only two years of classroom experience. Commitment, I submit, is a very important word.
The true measure of one’s commitment to Education is one’s willingness to sacrifice one’s will to power and economic potential to be successful in the classroom. TFA kids who go back to grad school after two years in the classroom and buy into corporate education reform are embracing their will to power. Most of these kids tend to have every advantage to begin with, they get an Ivy League education, and they are ambitious young liberals. Rather than staying in the classroom and truly making a difference by developing their teaching skills over twenty or thirty years, they can achieve administrative positions in the charter world that have far more economic potential than teaching positions by buying into the mantra of data-driven corporate reform lingo.
You have left thousands of us behind and allowed inexperienced “experts” yellow-brick road access to take charge. You and your administration have encouraged a “Cultural Revolution” in American education. Your Education Secretary embraced and applauded the Madame Mao of this movement and allowed his Inspector General to whitewash an investigation of cheating in DC Schools. You promoted your basketball buddy and very close friend of your campaign finance manager to be Secretary of Education. You chose someone with a Broad Foundation background. The Broad Foundation has written a “toolkit” for the destruction of public schools that is being used in Chicago, Philly, and New Yorks and in many cities across the country.
Your policies represent a new elitism. You seem to think that: “if we can get these really smart Ivy League educated former TFA people in senior policy, superintendent, and administrative positions, then we can turn this whole thing around.”
This idea is arrogant beyond belief, the equivalent of the “best and the brightest” idea that drove us into the ground in Vietnam, only you have decided to do it in Education. Robert McNamara was brilliant, he had an analytical razor, but he lacked a moral compass and anything resembling empathy for the lives of those who were dying in a “winnable” war. Mr. Duncan has a great deal of empathy, however his policies are misguided. Indeed, in my humble opinion, his department’s policies are an inarticulate mess. If he were ever asked the tough questions under oath in senator Harkin’s committee, we could very well discover that his use of the authority of his office overstepped the legal parameters of the laws circumscribing federal involvement in the formulation of Education policy. Ms. Weiss and Mr. Sheldon III, two of Secretary Duncan’s advisors who worked for the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation prior to serving under Secretary Duncan, articulated what Mr. Gates wanted on his terms in exchange for tacit support for your campaigns. Several Wall Street investing firms also made it clear to you and to Mr. Emanuel that they were willing to support you if your Education policies encouraged private investment in charter schools.
Much as McNamara destroyed the U.S. Army in Vietnam, your Education policies are destroying two or three generations of dedicated and excellent classroom teachers by allowing them to be humiliated by young people who have very little experience. The policies that you have endorsed will set the teaching profession back twenty years much as the Cultural Revolution set China back twenty years. While recent studies have indicated that only two to three percent of classroom teachers are ineffective, your policies vilify the 98% who are effective and exemplary. Your policy makers would have done well to examine the teacher assessment policies of Montgomery County, Maryland that are based on the AFT’s Toledo Plan to learn how to deal with ineffective teachers.
You have bought into a corporate model of Education Reform: you seek to create competition among public and private schools, you encourage the “creative destruction” that your University of Chicago Business School buddies and Judge Posner love, and you seem to be gung-ho about selling off the public commons of American Education that were built with the sweat and blood of American farmers and workers. Do your policies work for young people who need stability in their lives? Creative destruction might benefit some kids (I was a military brat), but it probably does not benefit most.
Your Education policies embrace the management tactics of McKinsey Consulting that call for the firing of twenty to twenty-five percent of the teacher workforce every two years. You have said that Education should not “all be about bubble tests,” but your policies measure progress by bubble tests and they narrow the curriculum when they require standardized testing in some subjects, but not in others.
Your campaign pledged to address income inequality, but you and many of the mayors that you support are actively working to destroy what is left of the American middle class. Your Education policies work actively to destroy teacher unions. Many of your mayors and governors are working to bust teacher, hospital, public employee, firemen’s, and police unions….
The questions that you need to examine more closely are:
How do we get and keep candidates who would be brilliant in any career into the classroom?
How do you increase the size of the quality teaching pool?
The answers are clear and they don’t have anything to do with charter schools.
If Mr. Gates were really serious about Education in this country, he could invest in creating a system like Finland’s. The problem is that he is more interested in selling product than investing in four well qualified and well trained teachers in every classroom.
Progress in Education is not about buildings, it is not about technology: It is about human investment, not the expansion of markets.
President Obama, I have great respect for you. I have taught many of the young people who work for you. Ask the young man who has cooked for you for many years what a hard ass teacher I was. Please find the time to talk to committed teachers who have given their entire professional careers to improving Education in this country. This would require you to step outside of your comfort zone inside of Democrats for Education Reform and Teach for America circles. It will also require you to look beyond the mess that Ms. Weiss, Mr. Shelton III, and Bill Gates have helped to create. It will require you to talk to exemplary, veteran teachers about teaching and schools rather than to Arne Duncan
Please encourage Senator Durbin and his committee to completely defund No Child Left Behind. Do you prefer to fund Pearson Education or allow thousands of teachers to be laid off? This is what it is coming down to. Will you allow the middle class to be further eroded? Or will you fight for the jobs of teachers? Will you reward Wall Street investors in Education and Bill Gates, or are you willing to fight for neighborhood schools and arts and humanities programs? Will you use Value Added Measures tied to standardized testing to further discredit teachers? Or will you begin to understand how complex real learning is, learning that can not be measured by “bubble tests.” These are your choices, Mr. President. Please look beyond your current Education advisors if you want to explore complex questions and solutions.
All best,
Paul Horton
History Instructor
University High School
The University of Chicago Laboratory Schools

good letter.
I hope he starts listening. Please let him listen.
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“You have said that Education should not “all be about bubble tests,” but your policies measure progress by bubble tests and they narrow the curriculum when they require standardized testing in some subjects, but not in others.”
Hi everyone,
I’d like to share a talk I gave to the School Board of Palm Beach County, FL, titled: “Testing Has Become Toxic.” July 23, 2014. This was inspired by the business item against “Toxic Testing” that we adopted at the recent Representative Assembly of the National Education Association.
http://youtu.be/jwnXJrh31kQ
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Politicians don’t read long letters. They only read sound bites.
And Narcissistic Politicians do not care what others think, nor do they recognize the impact of their behavior on others.
This letter was good, but it failed to point out that children are the biggest losers in this circus….they are the ones who will suffer lifetimes of depression and anxiety from the psychological abuse and neglect of arrogant politicians.
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Here’s my sound bite for the President, from a music teacher in a right to work state. https://m.youtube.com/watch?feature=em-upload_owner&v=0Le8ceErZ08
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You’ve got pipes, Joanna.
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Agreed. Short, concise letters have much more impact and power
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This is a great letter. Sad that some people cannot digest long letters.
I love this part:
“Much as McNamara destroyed the U.S. Army in Vietnam, your Education policies are destroying two or three generations of dedicated and excellent classroom teachers by allowing them to be humiliated by young people who have very little experience.”
I hate the de rigeur smugness of the TFA crowd.
To Paul Horton: I don’t think “education” should be capitalized.
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You are correct!
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Bottom line: You can’t use a business model to run the actual process of educating children. The product is learning. It can’t be commodified. The raw materials are different per each child. Education should not be a short term quarterly profit motivated “vision” looking at test scores as indicative of “efficiency”. The children can’t be put in an off-shore bank to give the business “profits”. So, they scalp salaries and undermine decades and centuries of educational psychology and pedagogy.
No thanks.
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Thank you, Paul Horton, yet again, for being an ally to public education. As a private school teacher in an elite, private institution, you could easily sit back and enjoy the cocoon of the Chicago Lab Schools. I greatly respect the dedication, time, and passion you put into this and so many other posts. I believe that you give us all a voice that we would not otherwise have. Chicago politics have quite a history, but who knows, maybe you are just the person who will get some truth through to the top… and if not, you are a role model for trying. Your students, your school, and your union are lucky to have you. As are we, the parents and teachers of American public schools.
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This letter is spot on and would be a good response to the glib self-serving Op-Ed by the former Mayor of LA (Antonio Villaraigosa) in the July 20 WSJ.
See
http://online.wsj.com/articles/antonio-villaraigosa-why-are-teachers-unions-so-opposed-to-change-1405893828?KEYWORDS=%22Antonio+Villaraigosa%22
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The Democratic Party has been recently asking for birthday messages for the President. This is what I wrote to the President:
I am an Sp Ed Teacher in Philadelphia.As part of training for an ESL certificate this summer I researched how poverty influences social,emotional,psychological aspects of learning.http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3534742/pdf/nihms396475.pdf This article reviews research finding POOR ACADEMIC&BEHAVIORAL OUTCOMES among students who show individual risk,(early aggressive behavior,difficult temperament,low IQ)&experience stressful family circumstances (LOW SES,family violence).The present study in this report used a multi-year social-emotional learning program (PATH CURRICULUM),including weekly consultation&feedback for teachers by program consultants.The result was significant&meaningful PREVENTION effects LOWERING aggression,&INCREASING social competence&academic engagement over three grades.Also,in the MORE STABLE (less mobility)&LESS AT RISK SCHOOLS/LESS IMPOVERISHED SCHOOLS (45 instead of 80% free lunch),the PREVENTATIVE rates were stronger&longer lasting.
These findings are consistent with research from Australia concluding in socioeconomic disadvantaged communities”continuing presence of appropriate adult staff&mentors,or a stable relationship with a successful adult,are important aspects of program delivery.” https://www.det.nsw.edu.au/media/downloads/about-us/statistics-and-research/public-reviews-and -enquiries/school-counselling-services-review/models-of-effective-practice.pdf
The above is heartening&disheartening:heartening that CHILDREN LIVING IN POVERTY can rise above their downtrodden lot with the help of social network&supports within the school…&disheartening that RESOURCES&SUPPORTS ARE SO LACKING IN THESE COMMUNITIES.
Politicians,judges,school administrators should think twice before pursuing policies like not funding our schools appropriately,laying off staff&decreasing support systems.Without these essentials,it is unrealistic to provide these students scores from standardized tests&to evaluate teachers of these students in this way.We want to keep teachers in our school who have established a relationship with these students.
The research makes clear that using such scores,without adjusting for poverty,to evaluate teachers is wrong,&the real”civil rights”issue of our time is the continuing refusal of our political leaders to fully&fairly fund our public schools,provide the resources which are needed,&which do work,&support the policies which assure our children have committed,valued,&experienced teachers in their classrooms.
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Happy Birthday Mr. President. My birthday wish for you is many many more cards and letters like those of CHIME and Paul Horton, letters which hopefully you will read and use to change your misguided education policies. Before it is too late.
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While reading Paul Horton’s excellent letter, I kept thinking that it is not the letter I would write. Of course, what that means is that I need to write a letter. I can’t get myself from California to D.C. for the rally, but I can write a letter-and apparently letters get read. If thousands of teachers write letters, he would at least get a report. So that’s my assignment for today. Feel free to join me.
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Bravo, Paul Horton! My eyes well with tears as I read the sad truths in your powerful letter that will likely fall on deaf ears.
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Excellent letter. The only point I would change is the request to defund No Child Left Behind. That has been an unfunded mandate all along. We have to repeal NCLB. End it. No ESEA flexibility waivers. Just end the ridiculous mandates of NCLB immediately.
The re authorization of ESEA is the battleground for real change. They have already passed an outrageous bill in the house, H.R.5. The senate has an awful companion bill, S.1094, ready to establish a national school board and a change in the language governing Title I funds and IDEA that will allow those to follow the child to any private or religious school and will potentially submit all children to “intervention” programming. It has not been brought to the floor probably because the technology required to implement it is not in place in all schools yet.
The e-rate grants are on their way! Apply now to speed the destruction of your local public school district. (Without computers which can supply boatloads of “measurable” data the whole system falls apart.)
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Excellent point! Money that is going to Pearson should be going to rehire support staff that is being laid off all over the country. We need our certified Librarians, certified Special Education teachers, certified clinical social workers and counselors back. We need the arts, humanities, and languages fully funded!
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Paul, you are an excellent writer so I would love to see you use your talent to spread the word on the bait and switch maneuvers that are going on now regarding the ESEA flexibility waivers. Some states are saying they have ended their association with the Common Core standards meanwhile they have actually amended their own state standards to align with “college and career ready” standards and have agreed to implement them by signing the ESEA flexibility waivers which gives the federal government the right to monitor that through testing of course. It is all very confusing and double dealing and underhanded but the result is going to be disastrous. Please help.
Back when outcome based education was the name of the game, Anita Hoge sued the Pennsylvania Department of Education and won. Here is her take today’s situation.
http://www.conspiracyplot.com/?p=239
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In response to Paul Horton’s Open Letter to the President, he expressed what thousands of teachers who have put our students first and stayed in the trenches and made personal sacrifices on behalf of our students. It’s frustrating to see administrators and policy makers with a few years in the classroom jumpstart their careers on the backs of the students. Every policy maker should spend one year in the life of an inner city teacher before any policies are made. What looks good on paper, does not necessarily work in real life.
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we must demand that the next democratic candidate for president respects and listens to public school teachers. john Edwards, a graduate of north Carolina state university, would have had a completely different perspective on education. elite backgrounds make for elite thinking….bravo paul Horton.
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Agreed. Sadly John Edwards had a different perspective on honesty.
Bernie Sanders in 2016.
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Superb letter, Dr. Horton. Thanks for the post, Dr. Ravitch. It’s a letter that makes the key points, that all Americans need to understand.
Powerful idea, English teacher in California.
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English teacher in California,
I hope you’ll post your letter at this blog for all to read.
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We need a follow-up letter printed in NYTIMES:
“Mr. President: Fire Duncan. End Race to the Top. Stop the Common Core and its high-stakes testing. Reduce class size instead. The Eli Broad Playbook and the Bill Gates Grants are destroying public schools, demoralizing teachers, and abusing children.”
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How much does a full page ad cost? This is the only way we will ever be heard in the NY Times. It is difficult for me to read this condescending rag anymore except for the Krugman pieces. How they have slanted every story from Gaza, including headlines, is nothing short of an outrage! I just read the Guardian….
Maybe the NPE officers can weigh the possibility of an ad, but we might be better off using our resources to organize with other unions, especially nontenured university teachers and staff, high school seniors, service sector workers, recent college graduates in debt, and retail workers.
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The U.S. has reached the point where we have more “public relations” propagandists than professional reporters. So is it any wonder that more than half of what we see, hear or read is created by professional liars? It is their job to keep people watching TV, eating toxic food, and shopping.
Turn your TV off. Throw out the New York Times, even the Paul Krugman columns. Has Krugman called for the reinstatement of the Glass Steagall Act? No. Any economist who is not vociferously calling for GS right now is not worth his salt. Look what the vulture speculators have done to Detroit, the city, the schools, the pensions. GS says, “NO” to the demands of unscrupulous bankers who lied and cheated to create phony debts for cities to have to pay back. There are quadrillions of dollars of debt on the books that can never be paid off. The only reasonable solution is GS which would separate the speculative looting from legitimate debt. It would force the break up of the big banks.
H.R. 129 in the House. S.1282 Call congress and demand they pass these bills before they go home. Congressional switchboard number: (202) 224-3121. All you have to know is your zip code..
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Paul Horton has again produced what is, overall, a wonderful and true statement.
I feel obligated to point out that the realities regarding TFA are more complex than the position in the letter suggests. The young people who sign up to teach are not the organization that recruited them, which is indeed reprehensible. They come in not knowing any of the dynamics that are correctly identified here, and really do want to make a difference. They are then thrown in the deep end at the most vulnerable schools in the nation with only four weeks of training.
It is true that then the majority of them discover that they do not wish to make a career out of teaching, and it is easy to see why. They are put under pressures for impossible score gains from their administrators plus TFA pressure for even better data results, and micromanaging of their teaching that extends even to scripted kindergartens! If I had the pressures that they do when I was first teaching, I don’t know if I would have continued, either.
Yes, some ascend the ladder in TFA or the charters that hired them (and remember, they are contractually obligated to take the first teaching job they are offered), most still with the best intention of making positive change. Of course, within any organization, it is easy to gradually become part of its culture of inner circles within inner circles (much reminiscent of C.S. Lewis’ description of how evil actually functions in That Hideous Strength).
But there are some, and the numbers are rising every year, who quickly recognize what is really going on. They are smart kids, remember – you can’t fool all the people all the time, especially when you immerse them in reality. They learn quickly that the entire scheme of big data, standards, accountability — that it’s all a disaster, and that what the children (now THEIR children) really need is so much deeper and wider. They get connected to their students, as all good teachers do, and start to see the real needs, the real possibilities.
Even those who have these epiphanies but do not continue as teachers are part of what I like to think of as the ‘vanguard of unforeseen consequences for TFA’. They go forth into other professions knowing the real story. Don’t be surprised when individuals from this group are key players in bringing this horrendous system down and in building something better.
Then, some of them do choose to continue as teachers (and this number is rising). The ones I know from this group are on their way to becoming quite good teachers. They are in the vanguard as well to replace the current, ridiculous system with one that is humane and truly educational.
I have firsthand experience with this more complex, real version of what happens with TFA because I am the academic advisor for every secondary TFA teacher in the city of Chicago, and I teach two-three of the middle-school-teachers’ courses in their program every year. Believe me, most of them are awake to the injustices and inefficacy of the data-driven system, and to the broad spectrum of needs in the communities in which they teach. They become aware quickly of the place of the TFA organization in the grand scheme. I and other professors are there to encourage their critical spirit, to help them actualize their understanding of the issues, as well as to help them become the best, most empathetic and humane teachers they can be while they are in the classroom.
The best populists understand that every person is a potential populist – they merely need to be awakened. A better opportunity for Freire-an praxis could not be asked for than two years of being a TFA teacher.
I and others who participate in the program do not approve of TFA as a union-buster or a means of undermining good teachers and their jobs. We know that it is happening, and that the top of the organization is all about these things, and most of us hate that. But our work is with new, unprepared teachers who have a daunting task in teaching in the toughest conditions in the country and we do our best to help them serve their students in real time, plus we end up recruiting many powerful young minds to the cause that Paul Horton represents in the letter.
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Greg Harman: thank you for your comments.
😎
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This is certainly worthy of some thought. I had a conversation with two TFA kids in a coffee shop the other day. Sweet kids, one a recent graduate from Rhodes, the other young lady, the mentor who just finished three years in CPS. The mentor was saying good things, but she was a baby. After teasing them, I had a real conversation with them about teaching and they listened and accorded me some respect, “thank you sir.”
The TFA model is not good, both kids were clearly well intentioned, but the younger kid was scared to death. They were both novices. So, you are right. Perhaps if we find a way to work with some of these kids if they signed a contract to stay in for ten years and join a union so that they could receive a proper apprenticeship. TFA kids do not typically earn the trust of veteran teachers because in many cases they are taking the jobs of blacklisted teachers in many urban systems. If NEA and AFT could offer five year apprenticeships we might be able to make some progress. This will not happen unless we can unionize charters where many TFA are contracted to go. We have a local in a UNO school here in Chicago……
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This is a great letter, but I just don’t think the President is operating out of cluelessness. He knows exactly what he’s doing. And now that he won’t be running for anything, there’s even less reason for him to listen.
Unfortunately, there’s not going to be an easy solution to this. We have to do the hard work of changing hearts and minds at the local level. And when that happens, we’ll start to see things like David Weigel of Slate saying of CCSS in New York, “When independents break against something by a 14-point margin, politicians generally look awkwardly for the escape hatches.”
We need to have politicians looking for the escape hatches, and that is going to have to start at the local level and work it’s way up.
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Could we write an open letter, simpler version, have people sign it and publish it in the NY Times? Has anything like that been done? Have any of the well-known movers and shakers against ed deform done it? We need to organize nationally. I have not made any headway in my local district. No one gets it.
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Great letter, Paul.
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Thanks Barry, say hello to your family for me!
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“Horton Hears a Who!”
(with greatest admiration for Dr. Seuss, who knew a thing or two about education)
Horton writes a letter
Cuz Horton hears a Who!
A real attention getter:
“Teachers are experts too!”
But unbeknownst to Horton
In rooms with garden view
There’s bound to be retortin’
With mocking cries “Boo hoo!”
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I am certain! I am used to it.
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But Horton knows it better
Than Some DAM Poets do
That’s why he wrote the letter
To make Obama rue
(Great letter, by the way! The poem was not intended to detract from that, only to indicate Some DAM Poet’s cynicism)
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Paul AFT 2063: according to the usual unconfirmed rumors, some of the leading charterites/privatizers have been circulating amongst themselves the following observation by Mark Twain; they ruefully claim they can’t read it without thinking of you:
“Few things are harder to put up with than the annoyance of a good example.”
😏
Well, just let me be the first to tell you that you shouldn’t take offense. At least they’re thinking of you.
😜
Isn’t it nice to be remembered?
Keep on keepin’ on.
😎
P.S. And to think you even inspire poetry! How much better could this day get?!?!?
😉
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“The questions that you need to examine more closely are:
How do we get and keep candidates who would be brilliant in any career into the classroom?”
Does Finland have rock star teachers? Japan? Korea? I was just wondering if individual teachers are touted as national icons in “high performing” countries. I really am not interested in corralling brilliant people into choosing teaching over any other career. What is this hangup we have with brilliance and what do we mean by it? Perhaps we need to start a quasi religious order dedicated to teaching as a calling more important than any other. I’m thinking celibacy should be a requirement. Outside interests, and particularly families, get in the way of such dedication.
I read an editorial in this morning’s paper that implied that teachers should remember that while their pension fund was being underfunded, that money was being used to fund other worthy human service programs. Really? Would anyone in private industry be expected to feel honored at having their pensions raided to benefit other worthy causes? Why is it that teachers should willingly sacrifice? Is it because we already spend so much of our own money to support our classrooms? Enough already.
I apologize to Paul Horton for what sounds like an attack on his excellent critique of the shortcomings of current educational initiatives. I echo his sentiments wholeheartedly. Current dogma is destroying public education and the teaching profession. I just want to recognize the millions of teachers who continue to work hard for their students, who will never be labeled as brilliant but still manage to touch the lives of those around them.
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No need to apologize, the free flow of ideas is most important. You make excellent points!
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“Perhaps we need to start a quasi religious order dedicated to teaching as a calling more important than any other. I’m thinking celibacy should be a requirement. Outside interests, and particularly families, get in the way of such dedication.”
That order already exists. It’s the Society of Mary, the Marianists. The high school that I attended, Vianney HS in Kirkwood, MO is run by the Marianists.
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I’m guessing a mass exodus of teachers to the Society of Mary might cause them some difficulties, especially the non Catholic recruits. One of my ancestors deserted his family and went on to become a Catholic bishop. The family mythology is that when he died the church advertized in French speaking newspapers for heirs. His estate became a Campus for a Catholic college; the family was not French speaking. Someday, I’ll have to check the story out.
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You get to name it, Duane!
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That explains a lot. Are you marionette?
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I’m confundido:
What is the “that”? and what does “that” explain?
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Paul Horton’s letter is wonderful. I look forward to a response from the White House.
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Diane, it states that this is an open letter to President Obama —– why was it not sent directly to him so he would have it in his hands to read and digest. How do we know that he saw the letter and read it. Glenda from Northern New York StateOriginal Message —– From: Diane Ravitch’s blog To: gwches@verizon.net Sent: Friday, July 25, 2014 8:00 AM Subject: [New post] Paul Horton Writes a Letter to President Obama
dianeravitch posted: “The following letter appeared as a guest post on Anthony Cody’s blog: Paul Horton’s Open Letter to President Obama: Listen to Committed Dear Mr. President, Like thousands of experienced classroom teachers throughout our great country, I am very “
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Dear Glenda,
The people around Barack, I was told, all support Arne and his Education policies. This is what I have heard from sources very close to the President. Everybody in Hyde Park is one degree of separation and I have two good friends who were thrown under the bus during his first campaign. He does not communicate directly with anyone who is openly critical. The best we will get, I am afraid, is the canned meeting with the four teachers.
He needs to create a dialogue with critics behind closed doors and without Arne or anyone from DOEd. I think that there is too much campaign and PAC money coming into the Democratic party from interests that support current policies to make them think hard about changing them.
I passed the senior state senator from Hyde Park today outside of our favorite used bookstore and told her that I could no longer support Democrats for state or national office who have supported corporate education reform. I can not vote for Gov. Quinn because he chose Paul Vallas to be his running mate. I will vote for the Citizens or Green Parties. We are fed up.
None of the people who are a part of Obama’s “team” can be seen walking around the neighborhood any more, it is curb to curb limo service. They all want to avoid unpleasant and non canned conversations.
All best
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Investigate Green candidate for governor, Scott Summers.
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When I sent an e-mail to the White House, the reply that came back supposedly signed by President Obama said that he was working with his partners in reforming the public schools.
Partners means, for instance, Bill Gates and Arne Duncan, and reform means whatever neo-liberalism thinks would be the best way to educate Americans children without the mess that a national debate through the democratic process would mean.
If you know you can’t win in a debate, then you use the bully pulpit of the White House to force what you want on the nation.
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I applaud the letter and I would like to add that the “Reform of Public Schools” damages children, communities, and families. Obama’s education policies ignore scientific evidence about how children learn, ignores responsibility for providing teachers with minimally adequate resources and tools to teach and models behaviors that are the antithesis of lifelong learning.
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Disruption is the rage! Everybody around the President is involved in charters or stands to make a lot of money on the gentrification of the south and west sides of Chicago if units can be sold.
Look at the list on the Chicago Public Housing Board in the late 90s and who do you see: the President’s best friend, Rahmbo, somebody very closely related to Bruce Rauner….the people who stand to clear the most from privatization, charters, and gentrification are those who are funneling money into the mayor’s reelection campaign: the Crowns…… ditto in many other cities.
The President will pursue policies that disrupt because a lot of big Democratic donors in major cities want disruption to buy cheap and sell high…
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Another great letter, Paul Horton. However, there’s no writing to Obama, as there is no dialogue (has never been), and there is nothing left to say to him. I think the NEA made its “Duncan should resign” resolution quite clear, with the voices of the nation’s largest teachers’ union reaching to the POTUS in the White House.
As per usual, no response and–don’t forget–it wasn’t long ago that Obama appointed Ted Mitchell. So–stick a fork in it–it’s done–& work on 2016—NOW. Bernie Sanders indeed, GST. Or Elizabeth Warren. Or Alan Grayson. Also–agree w/laura coodley,” We must demand that the next democratic candidate for president respects & listens to public school teachers.” We must also–as we did NOT in either the 2008 or 2012 (& ESPECIALLY should have done so in 2012!!) NOT give that candidate ANY endorsement (such as happened w/the NEA in 2012, & was a done deal, even WAY before that year’s national convention–as a rank-&-file member, I don’t recall giving my approval for that Obama endorsement!) from the large education unions/associations
without a platform statement FROM THAT CANDIDATE PLEDGING–Yes, I said PLEDGING–her/his total support for public education, eradication of ANY/ALL programs such as RTTT, NCLB and Toxic Testing, and EVERY ATTEMPT MADE POSSIBLE to ameliorate and ERADICATE poverty in America (how about a reclamation of the 1964 War on Poverty, on STEROIDS/!!! {unlike NCLB on steroids!!!).
Again, Paul, wonderful letter…falling on still-deaf ears.
Better yet, send him those walking shoes for his birthday gift.
You know, the ones he never wore in Madison, WI…or anywhere else in the U.S., for that matter.
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All excellent points, we need to refuse to become cynical! There is strength in fighting together! Solidarity!
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Yes, Paul AFT–yes, WE can…and we WILL! Just look at what’s happened in Georgia, Newark, NYC, LAUSD School Board races, Indiana (I STILL think Glenda can rise above her opposition–GO, Indiana parents, communities, educators & students–FIGHT for her & for YOUR RIGHT to a free & appropriate PUBLIC
education!), FBI raids on Gulen, closure of numerous charter schools & better–yes, I say BETTER!–print news reporters–Hartford Courant, The Chicago Sun-Times’ Dan Mihilapoulos, some recent good stories even in the NYTimes, the continued on-target reporting of Valerie (they haven’t cut her off yet!) Strauss in The Washington Post, the recent tome by John Merrow, and–he’s baaaack!–the inestimable David Sirota.
Not to mention all the great updates on Diane’s Blog RE: all the Fair Test pushback–by ALL of the states.
It’s happening people, and our kids WILL win!
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A very fine letter, which Obama will never read, and would smirk if he did so.
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Agreed, Michael–so who cares? Fugeddaboudhim!
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I agree with you completely: he should not only be ignored, but shunned.
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