[In response to many comments by teachers in California who insist that the state is NOT on the right track, I have revised the title, turning it into a question, not a judgment.]
Jeff Bryant, one of the nation’s most sensible commentators in education, describes the chaos that NCLB and Race to the Top have unleashed on schools. Matters have been made worse by battles over Commin Core and the reaction against Common Core testing.
One state, he says, seems to be navigating these treacherous waters: California, thus far with minimal turmoil.
Bryant interviews veteran educator and former state superintendent Bill Honig about California’s path. (Note: Bill has been a good friend of mine since the mid-1980s, when he invited me to participate in rewriting the state’s history-social sciences curriculum, a document that remains in use).
Bryant writes:
“Instead of taking massive budget cuts to public schools, California is flowing more money into schools and has taken steps to ensure school funding is more equitable. Instead of tormenting teachers with shoddy evaluations, many California school principals are resisting the policy of using standardized test scores to judge teacher performance. And the state recently refused to include a teacher evaluation system based on student test scores in its application for a waiver from the mandates of No Child Left Behind laws.”
Note that California has not started Common Core testing, nor the punitive consequences that follow. Those events seem to ignite both parent and teacher reactions, and they are seldom if ever positive.
Here is a portion of Bryant’s interview with Honig:
Bryant: For quite some time, most federal and state education policy has been dominated by what’s often called a “reform” agenda. Anyone opposed to that is accused of supporting the “status quo.” How do you see the debate?
Honig: That accusation is a transparent debating ploy. People opposed to the “reforms” understand the need to improve our schools but contend that the high-stakes, test-driven accountability measures being advocated haven’t worked. What currently passes for “reform” has caused considerable collateral damage to schools and teachers. There are better alternatives that are based on a huge amount of research, scholarship, and evidence from schools and districts. Why “reformers” don’t look at these other models as exemplars, I don’t know. California has, and the state is taking this alternative path to improve schools that I believe is more promising.
Bryant: What is California doing that is different?
Honig: In 2010 Jerry Brown was elected governor in 2010, Tom Torlakson was elected State Superintendent, and a new State Board of Education was appointed by Brown under the leadership of Michael Kirst. California’s education policy shifted as it followed a different path from many other states and different from the federal government, especially under U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan and the Obama administration. Those policy makers have been pursuing a “Test-and-Punish” policy primarily relying on tests as a way of holding schools and teachers accountable and using threats to pressure schools.
Under Governor Brown, California has adopted an alternative approach which relies much less on testing. The California model believes educators want to do a better job, trusts them to improve if given proper support, and provides local schools and districts the leeway and resources so they can improve. We also put instruction – what goes on in the classroom and the interactions between teachers and students – at the center of our improvement efforts. When you do that, the question becomes, how do you build support and structures to increase the ability and capacity of teachers, not how do you scare them into improving. That’s why we call it a “Build-and-Support” approach.
Bryant: How would you describe a Build-and-Support approach?
Honig: It’s what high-performing districts, states, and countries have done. They’ve built successful teams at the school site that have an ability to continue to improve. They provide support structures and resources to bolster the effort. They put a strong liberal arts curriculum in the center, like the Common Core, which is what we use in California. Teachers visit each other’s classrooms. Teachers and principals in these schools talk to each other about what works and what doesn’t and how to do it better next time. They tap into the vast knowledge of successful teaching approaches that has been developed in recent years. And they use information about student performance to do better. This approach is just like the strategy that industry and professional outfits have followed for years. There’s a tremendous amount of research, scholarship, and experience supporting these policies. They work.
Bryant: What are the advantages a Build-and-Support approach has compared to Test-and-Punish?
Honig: The problem with test-driven reform coupled with punishments is that it causes schools and teachers to spend too much time on test-prep, to narrow the curriculum to just what is tested at the expense of deeper learning, to game the system, and even to cheat. Science, history, humanities, understanding of the world, civic education, and a broad education all suffer. And it reduces cooperation because teachers are made to compete against each other. Fifty years ago, W. Edwards Deming argued that heavy evaluation schemes based on fear don’t produce strong performance boosts. Engagement and team-building do. School districts that have used the Build-and-Support approach have gotten stellar results. Districts primarily following the Test-and-Punish strategy have floundered. This misplaced emphasis on punitive approaches has taken a severe toll on educational morale and performance.”
Reblogged this on Crazy Normal – the Classroom Exposé and commented:
But do NOT think the corporate education reformers are not pouring money into California’s elections in an attempt to take over the state and then force their agenda down the same path in California that most of the country is suffering from.
A perfect example is a special election that will be held in the district where I live in California. I wrote about that May 19th election here:
Evidence of a Corporate Reformer Pretending to be something he isn’t
http://wp.me/p2mPRS-GV
@lflwriter
Diane…this article, posted today and juxtaposed against the one on Burbank’s new Broad hire for Supertintendent, is so schizophrenic that my head is spinning.
Ellen, mine too. We live with cognitive dissonance. No state is getting everything right.
New Jersey is getting everything wrong.
More on StudentsFirst lawsuit from Capitol and Main…Bill Raden.
Faced with stiffening resistance from parents, educators and elected officials, the proponents of school privatization are learning to get what they want the old-fashioned way: By suing their opponents into submission. Last year the free-marketeers behind Vergara v. California deprived public school teachers of key workplace safeguards. Now, in Bain v. California Teachers Association, StudentsFirst is going further by seeking to deprive state teachers unions of a large portion of the dues income they depend on to influence the legislative process.
Read Bill Raden’s account of the moneyed libertarian strategy to weaken teachers unions and reduce their effectiveness in Sacramento.
No, the challenge for many people to understand is the massive, diverse size of California. CA is the state with high class sizes going on decades. CA is the state in which many districts slashed teacher salaries and health care for the past seven years. Do not believe all you hear. Teachers are way overworked, undervalued, trampled on, and disrespected by many. We don’t have friends in either major party. We have #CommonCore, #SBAC, and Chromebook debacles. We buy our own supplies. And we are blamed for the “failure” of students. If you are single, don’t even try to live off the income of a teacher in this state.
Please note that I changed the title on the piece to a question, in response to the comments from teachers in California.
Much better as a question Diane…thanks.
As a public policy educator, I know I often sound like a one note commentator…but my view is angled a bit differently than my wonderful colleagues who teach in California and nationwide.
So here I go again…and below you will find a column written by Robert Skeels who is so sound in his longtime voice on LAUSD issues. Robert names names…and is factual, with so much heart and diligence in his report.
This is in regard to our upcoming election pitting two Charter demons, Rodriguez and Galatzan, against two legit educators, Kayser and Schmerelson.
Ellen
——————————————————————————–
From: rdsathene@ucla.edu
To: rdsathene@ucla.edu
Sent: 4/15/2015 10:41:36 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time
Subj: Article Submission: Is CNCA paying parents to support CCSA’s Ref Rodriguez’s LAUSD Board campaign?
Author’s current bio and photo available here: http://about.me/rdsathene
Is CNCA paying parents to support CCSA’s Ref Rodriguez’s LAUSD Board campaign?
“Walmart fortune heiress, Carrie Walton Penner, is currently the CCSA Board Vice-Chair (term ending 6/30/2017). By most accounts Walton Penner is close to both profiteer “Ref” Rodriguez of the PUC Charter School Corporation, and the well-heeled Ana Ponce of the Camino Nuevo Charter School Corporation.” — Robert D. Skeels
Charter industry profiteer Refugio “Ref” Rodriguez, and his California Charter Schools Association’s (CCSA) ruthless campaign to capture the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) Board of Education seat for District 5 has had every advantage. Rodriguez is backed with millions of dollars from an assortment of billionaires ranging from right-wing extremists like the Walton Family Fortune (Walmart) heirs to anti-public-commons ideologues including Reed Hastings, Eli Broad, and Michael Bloomberg. He has received uncritical press from all the major Los Angeles corporate media outlets. Rodriguez has waged a dishonest campaign that viciously mocked the incumbent school board member’s disabilities, and went as far to make deplorable accusations of racism. With essentially unlimited funding at his disposal, one would think that the profit hungry corporate charter school executive wouldn’t need any more advantages. However, Rodriguez and his CCSA allies are leaving nothing to chance in defense of their lucrative profits. Profits that have been threatened by an incumbent who has insisted that the charter industry serve all students, not just the ones that are “cheap” to educate.
Evidence of possible further impropriety was provided by Cheryl Ortega. Ortega is the Director of Bilingual Education at United Teachers Los Angeles, has taught in the community for nearly half a century, is a member of the Greater Echo Park Elysian Neighborhood Council, and was recently honored as the 28th Congressional District Woman of the Year. Given her long-standing ties to the community, parents frequently use her as a clearinghouse for education issues. For example, this revelation that she posted on her Facebook feed:
Interesting and shocking fact regarding the Kayser – Rodriguez LAUSD school board race. A long time friend and former school parent at Logan Elementary School, told me that parents at the Sandra Cisneros/Camino Nuevo Charter Corp School in Echo Park were paid to attend political meetings to help elect Ref Rodriguez. They were told that Bennet Kayser would “close down their school” if elected to the school board. I am not surprised at Camino Nuevo’s message given their record of “misleading” parents.
Asking around, I’ve been informed that these parents are being paid in kind (not cash), with expensive dinners, trips to Starbucks, etc. These reports corroborate each other, and with definitive proof that CCSA and Rodriguez are chasing profits, their purported “payment” of parents to sway this election makes perfect sense. Who is doing it makes sense too.
Camino Nuevo Charter Corporation’s profits depend on market share
Camino Nuevo Charter Academy Corporation (CNCA) has a long record of duplicity. Their fourteen member Board of Directors, comprised mostly of hedge fund/investment managers, venture capitalists, brokers, and bankers, is wholly unaccountable to the community. CNCA’s campaign to expropriate the newly constructed CRES #14 school site during Gates Foundation employee Yolie Flores’ so-called Public School Choice (PSC) charter school handout project, saw CNCA trying to stack the vote by busing in outsiders. CNCA lost to the community public school plan by more than 2 to 1 margin, but Flores gave them our school anyway. Here is a photo, taken at Rosemont ES during the CRES #14 advisory vote, of one of nearly a dozen buses brought in by the Camino Nuevo Charter Corporation.
Charter schools using parents as political pawns for profits
It should be no surprise if CNCA is bribing parents to campaign and vote for Rodriguez. Even when they aren’t using meals, gift cards, t-shirts, and other material enticements to induce parents into engaging in charter political activities, the lucrative charter school industry has another means of getting what they want—forced parent work policies. For years social justice activists have pointed out that CCSA, CCSA Advocates, Families that Can, and individual corporate charter chains have compelled parents to participate in their political activities by evoking their required “volunteer” hours. However, it wasn’t until the watershed report from Public Advocates Inc. entitled Charging for Access: How California Charter Schools Exclude Vulnerable Students by Imposing Illegal Family Work Quotas was published that we began to recognize the full extent of this practice.
Wealthy Ana Ponce and Ref Rodriguez aiming for more profits
The essay PROFITS! Why Ref Rodriguez and his CCSA covet the LAUSD Board Seat exposed the connections between the CCSA, transnational corporations, and local charter school profiteers. This quote is extremely important:
Walmart fortune heiress, Carrie Walton Penner, is currently the CCSA Board Vice-Chair (term ending 6/30/2017). By most accounts Walton Penner is close to both profiteer “Ref” Rodriguez of the PUC Charter School Corporation, and the well-heeled Ana Ponce of the Camino Nuevo Charter School Corporation.
CNCA Corporation’s 2012 Form 990, Part VII§A shows Ponce stuffing her pockets with a mind-boggling $230,811.00. Her ties to Rodriguez extend beyond their mutual profiteering, and California Charter Schools Association (CCSA) board memberships. Ponce did postgraduate work at Loyola Marymount University (LMU), and Rodriguez is an adjunct instructor there. Sadly LMU’s education department faculty and administration is dominated by neoliberal privatizers, like Shane P. Martin, who actively work to destroy public education at the behest of their corporate sponsors. The one exception to LMU’s complicity with the Broad/Gates/Walton Triumvirate is that of renowned Freirian scholar Professor Antonia Darder, who writes brilliant essays like Racism and the Charter School Movement: Unveiling the Myths. Darder’s is the sole voice of reason in LMU’s cacophony of corporate concerns.
Paying parents to advocate for the charter industry’s political and financial aims, whether those payments are in kind, through required “volunteer” hours, or any other form of consideration is highly unethical, immoral, and likely illegal. In other words, it’s just the sort of thing that Refugio “Ref” Rodriguez and his CCSA cabal would do.
If you live in LAUSD District 5, I implore you to demonstrate to charter profiteer Ref Rodriguez, his CNCA allies, and his deep-pocketed CCSA trade association that our communities value pupils over profits. Reelect the Honorable Bennett Kayser in the May 19, 2015 General Municipal Election!
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All of this is great but without any data and reporting on how successful these strategies actually are makes Build and Support useless. No Testing + No Data = No Accountability.
The claim that “There’s a tremendous amount of research, scholarship, and experience supporting these policies.” is a great statement to make…how about PROVING IT with a reporting model that is independent, “propaganda free” and unable to be manipulated by the District?
Districts like San Diego Unified use “warm and fuzzy” measurements (like “Did the front office clerk smile and say good morning to you when you came in the office?) and manipulate internal assessments to make themselves look good.
Are Common Core Standards and Testing perfect?: No
Should Common Core Standards and Testing be used as the only assessment of a District, School, Teacher or Student?: No
Should we do absolutely nothing to independently and technically measure progress towards achieving Common Core Standards in Districts, Schools and with Teachers and Students?: No, unless you want to NOT accept Federal funds.
What California, Brown and Torlakson are doing is fraud..taking money and not wanting to prove delivery of the educational product.
What a great lesson to teach our students!
Maybe in California we aren’t fixated on verifying progress through questionable testing to outsiders who merely want data to make money. Our verification as the state superintendent said . Would be obtained from our educators assessment inside the classroom. ThT way, progress of the student is determined by the teacher and used diagnostically to help students instead of a means to mKe money from students. Simple but effective.
The problem with using “educators assessment within the classroom” as a sole measure is there is no uniform quality standard that can be verified and reproduced independent of the district…it is at the discretion of an employee that reports to a Principal and/or Superintendent who wants to show positive results…and an employee who could lose their job if they don’t report good results. No independent monitoring and measurement creates District propaganda with no way of truly measuring one component of District, School, Teacher and Student achievement.
You have a point but a test can have some utility without it being high stakes. The test should not be a major determiner of student progress, placement, or teacher effectiveness. Especially with social promotion where students are passed from grade to grade w/o mastery ofa y skill.
“A day without laughter is a day wasted.” [Charlie Chaplin]
This day was not wasted.
😎
Frank
I would like to issue you the “Kool Aide Challenge”. It won’t be easy, but if you try really hard, you may be the first to succeed. The “KAC” is an on-again, off-again,
opportunity for true believers to impress. A non-response is the usual, so don’t feel bad if it is a bit too challenging. Here goes . . .
Identify the one specific, 7th or 8th grade Common Core standard (ELA or math) that targets content knowledge that is relevant, interesting and important. The two criteria that I think any student would respond to in a positive way (“Mr. Engle, I really enjoyed that lesson. It’s about time we learned something new and interesting and relevant to the world I am growing up in. Thanks Mr. E, can’t wait for tomorrow!”)
1, 2, 3, GO!
three criteria
That is why my kids will take the test…to find that answer for our family. Not take the opinion of a teacher in a different state that has no idea what is relevant, interesting and important to my kids or their education within our family. If the patronizing way you communicated with me as an example of the type of standards you propose,..and the way you speak to complete strangers, I’ll take anything Common Core has to offer as an alternative.
I wasn’t asking for test questions, just one CC standard. One relevant, interesting, and important piece of content knowledge. They are all available on-line, so no need to wait for the test. And if they offer your children ZERO content that is interesting, relevant, and important, what’s next?
I think perhaps Frank is stumped.
No one told him how to actually support his position from a base of personal knowledge on the subject.
What’s funny about this, Frank is that the test will “tell” you and your children what they “know” from several states, or even nations, away. You chide someone for giving you an answer who may be in another state, but you implicitly trust a testing conglomeration? Wouldn’t you rather be told what your children know from the people who know best–your observations, your children’s descriptions of what they are learning, and teacher observations?
“Accountability,” ie, student test scores, should not be conflated with research, scholarship and experience. Corporate privatizers like to punish schools that serve poor students and call it accountability. It isn’t.
I agree…they should not be confused…and punishing is not an effective strategy. But also let’s not conflate testing, measuring and tracking as punishment just because that is how it has been misused in the past. I will stand beside anyone who is being unfairly punished for independent accountability measures…and I have helped prevent the closing of a local school for that reason in my past. But I cannot support NO accountability based on NO independent assessments.
We must hold our politicians responsible for the privateers…not our students hostage to no accountability.
Frank, I believe in real accountability. Test-based accountability is a fraud. Read about PAR–peer assistance and review. That works. It is the considered judgment of peers and supervisors. Read the American Statistical Association statement on VAM and you will learn why tests are not an appropriate way to hold individual teachers accountable. It’s like measuring the effectiveness of oncologists by the survival rate of their patients as compared to dermatologists and dentists.
Diane-it seems that when Accountability is discussed that it always reduced to a choice of all or nothing. Either the tests and results should be used as the sole standard of accountability measurement for States, Districts, Teachers and Students or should not be used at all.
I like and support PAR-Peer assistance and review. I understand that the straight-line application with no environmental conditions or situational adjustments of VAM as the sole evaluation for teachers is totally inaccurate and morally wrong. My premise is that it is OUR job as educational advocates to cut through the intractable “Yes or No” and find a way to INDEPENDENTLY measure District, School, Teacher and Student performance using MULTIPLE indicators and conditions to come up with an accurate accountability measure. NOT testing and NOT tracking Districts and Schools just opens the door wider for local manipulation far beyond the NCLB negative experience. If evaluation is based solely on a personal opinion and Principals and Teachers become that much more vulnerable for issues outside the classroom than in it…and it makes parents, guardians and students victims of crony assessments.
Thank you for your perspective!
So, you think a test that has not shown reliability or validity is going to do this? Are you recommending someone actually write a reliable, valid test? What fraud is being perpetrated? It seems it is the one by the federal government.
This is the first year and the actual results of the test country wide are months away, So instead of taking the test and determining the degree that the tests need to be adjusted we should just NOT participate? That gets us nowhere and validates the erroneous messages of the privateers.
I say, have kids take the tests, mobilize parents around the changes that must be made in both content and accountability impact and move on to a better version.
Without participation there is no way to determine overall or nuanced reliability and validity within the wide variety of locations and students. And again…this is not to say it is used to punish or to act as the sole criteria for performance…but it IS an independent evaluation that cannot be manipulated by local school boards and Superintendents.
For Brown/Torlakson to take federal money to carry out a program including all guidelines and then try to subvert it is fraud.
Thank you for your perspective…I really do appreciate it.
There you go… Where have we heard this one before
“Next years tests will be better. Just you wait and see.”
We have been waiting for years already.
The tests were not better last year or the year before or the year before that.
I have seen the tests this year and they are not better.
And next year they will not be better because, the fact is, children do not come in standard form and a bubble test tells us nothing about what the vast majority of children know and what they can do.
They tell us that some children can be prepped to do well on bubble tests.
Standardized tests do not benefit children, parents, teachers or the general public.
Standardized tests benefit business interests and politicians. That’s about it.
Betsy Marshall: forgive the presumption, but let me expand a bit on your sentence—
“We have been waiting for years already.”
Banesh Hoffman, THE TYRANNY OF TESTING. The 2003 paperback is a reprint of the 1964 re-edition of the 1962 original.
The aforementioned book is a reminder that over 50 years ago we heard the same mantra you mention:
“‘Next years tests will be better. Just you wait and see.’”
That tiresome rewording of the “don’t make the perfect the enemy of the good” was already a worn out cliché when Hoffman’s book was first published!
And just what did we get decades after all that improving and tweaking and twerking? Better, yes, if you count “better” as meaning “better at making ridiculous and avoidable mistakes.”
Just google “pineapple” and “hare” and “Daniel Pinkwater.”
‘Nuff said.
😎
First, decide what you mean by accountability. Business seems to want career ready workers, yet which jobs are a future career is unknown. Colleges want students ready for their courses of study, yet themselves struggle to accommodate the varied student populations now entering post-secondary. Parents want a nurturing, personalized classroom that is focused on their students’ individual needs. Politicians want votes. Students want to be successful and have teachers who view them as more than a data point.
Contrary to Reformer rhetoric, I do not mind accountability as a way to improve my teaching. If you truly believe a flawed, 2 hour test can reliably measure a year’s worth of learning, then we might as well rank dentists by patient shoe size – about as accurate. And even then, I do not get the results of my tests until well after the students have moved on.
Too many Reformers embrace accountability as a perverse form of national retribution for some perceived wrong doing by teachers. Teachers are blamed for everything from teen pregnancy to national security. This test and punish nonsense is not working. Let teachers teach. Listen to those in the classroom. Testing + Reform = Chaos
Sounds very promising. I’m not a fan of Common Core, but it seems there’s less resistance to it in CA – perhaps because they’re not pushing a test and punish approach with it.
You are right. California has less resistance to CC because the testing has not started, nor the punishments.
Once again Diane, the testing has started last month, in spite of your denial. I told you this before and you denied it and now you are denying it again. I am speaking from experience, my grand children have already taken it. I have also talked to the teachers and they agree that they have administered the SBAC tests. California had STAR testing until this year, now they have replaced it with SBAC. That means they are not spending more time testing than ever before.
I have also seen articles in LA Times and in the LASchool report website. You have access to the Internet and I humbly request that you find out about California SBAC testing. The California Department of Education has quite a bit of information.
I just found out, from KRCA in Sacramento, that parents have the right to opt their child out from standardized testing in California. My junior begged to be opted out; he couldn’t stand sitting for 16 hours of testing. I suggested to the school that he could do class assignments, study for the SAT, or study for the AP. It was very easy. I sent a handwritten letter to the school and followed up with an email.
We need a national opt out movement to counteract these deform efforts to commercialize education and our students data. Believe me, if parents refuse to allow this biased testing and decide to protect their children’ data, there would be no market for this high stakes testing.
Most of us felt Common Core at secondary level matched standards already developed. It is the elementary standards that are being questioned.
One thing that proved interesting, is that in at least one wealthier suburb, parents were put out with the testing for common core when their children who had done well on more fact based testing suddenly lacked ability on common core while those who had scored less well on fact based tests suddenly showed their thinking skill. The newly lower scoring children had not reached that jump in intellectual ability that teachers with experience can attest to. The increased speed of acquisition for higher level thinking skills from seventh grade to eighth grade, for example, can be dynamic. This is one reason parents are put off by the high stakes test.
I recall in the from the late 80’s or early 90’s an educator from CO talking about how the shift from multiple choice to essay writing on tests had actually favored the second language students who now scored as did CO born students. This put off the American parents.
My conclusion was that race and a sense of ownership of the scoring would then drive curriculum and testing choices.
This was an issue as well in the 1890’s and early 20th centuries during a time of technological change and immigration.
Nothing new.
But do NOT think the corporate education reformers are not pouring money into California’s elections in an attempt to take over the state and then force their agenda down the same path in California that most of the country is suffering from.
A perfect example is a special election that will be held in the district where I live in California. I wrote about this May 19th election here:
Evidence of a Corporate Reformer Pretending to be something he isn’t
http://wp.me/p2mPRS-GV
@lflwriter
Another example was the 2014 election in California for the top spot in California’s Department of Education:
Former president of Green Dot Public Charter School Marshall Tuck and incumbent Tom Torlakson (both Democrats) ran against each other for the position of state superintendent of schools.
Torlakson won the election with 53% of the vote, but the contest drew more than $35 million, more than for any other elected office in California that fall. Billionaire philanthropists (supporting Tuck,a former charter school operator) looking to overhaul California’s public schools squared off against the teacher unions (who supported Torlakson, a former teacher).
Independent spending supporting the candidates leaned heavily in Tuck’s favor ($11.7 million to $4.2 million) almost 3 to 1.
http://edsource.org/2014/a-look-at-whos-funding-torlakson-and-tuck/69036#.VTKHFCFVhBc
Lloyd,
Once the corporate reformers have bought all the state boards and think tanks, they will own the problems. Then they will have to face the failure of everything they advocate: charters, vouchers, merit pay, high-stakes testing, test-based teacher evaluation. Once they destroy public education, what will be left for the 99%? A choice of a religious school or a corporate-owned charter, taught by uncertified teachers. That is ALEC’s nightmare vision.
The best way to fight back was revealed this past week in New York: Opt out of the reformers’ tests. The tests were designed to fail most children and to create the crisis atmosphere that will drive parents to charters and vouchers. The best reaction is to refuse the test. Let the reformers take their tests, not children.
If parents Opt their children out and teachers call in sick on days when the tests are given, that would double the challenge for the corporate education reformers to pull off their con game.
What’s interesting in the special May 19 election for a state senate seat in the district where I live in California is that there is no Republican candidate running for the seat. A Republican wouldn’t stand a chance so they don’t even bother to run under their own party. Instead, former Republicans and/or Independents are changing their party affiliation and pretending to be Democrats.
For instance, what we have in this election are two candidates claiming to be Democrats but only one of them has the endorsement of the Democratic Party and that is Susan Bonilla. The other candidate is a corporate education reformer pretending to be a Democrat who is getting outside funding support from many current and former Republican Party donors.
Lloyd,
Democrats for Education Reform (DFER), the hedge-fund managers group, established the practice of calling oneself a “Democrat” when it is necessary to appear to be liberal, on the side of children, deeply concerned about the poor (we know that to be a Wall Street trait). In Texas, the affiliate is called “Texans for Education Reform,” because calling themselves “Democrats” would drive the elites away. Strange world we live in.
Yes, strange and dangerous like a battlefield.
Lloyd,
I’m in your district. I always describe Glazer as a “fake Democrat” or a “Republican in disguise”. We need to expose him. I’ve been phone banking for Bonilla and will be doing precinct walks. On my To Do list for today was “Research Glazer” –I need more facts. I see that you’ve blogged about him, so maybe you’ve done my work for me. We’re lucky to have enlightened Democrats like Brown and Honig in office, but the rise of fake Democrats imperils this state of affairs.
I hope I’ve exposed Glazer, but if no one reads my post, they will still be ignorant of his tricks and might be fooled by him and his financial supporters. Sometimes the fool them as often as possible tactics of the reformers fails but it also succeeded like it did in Chicago when Rahm Emanuel was reelected and in NY State when Cuomo won reelection.
Most of the voters who helped this two vampires win were voting against their own interests.
Lloyd,
Opt out is not on most parents’ radar screens here. If I weren’t a currently employed teacher, I’d demonstrate in front of the local Safeway with a big “Opt Out of Common Core Tests” sign. Someone just needs to introduce the idea and it will spread.
It is spreading. Look at what happened in New York State this week and earlier in New Mexico and Colorado. No telling how big the Opt Out Movement will be next year at this time if we don’t let up. If we keep feeding the fire, then it will spread beyond the control of the corporate education reformers to stop it.
But we must be forewarned. When the Ed Reformers think they are backed into a corner, they will double down and be doubly dangerous.
Diane,
Your above comment reminds me of this prophetic five-year-old story;
The Teachers’ Unions’ Last Stand – NYTimes.com
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/23/magazine/23Race-t.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
Richard Holsworth, that article was written by Steve Brill, who subsequently published a book called “Class Warfare,” praising the corporate reformers, DFER, charters, and everyone associated with the hostile attacks on public schools.
Unfortunately, the LA County Democratic Central Committee seems to have DFERs controlling their process.
Ellen, do they? I think it might be more mixed. The LA County Democratic party sent a cease & desist letter to Steve Barr’s California DFER telling them to stop using the name “Democrat”. I was hoping that was a good sign that they were not in bed with them. Have things changed?
Karen…let’s talk by phone tomorrow and catch up on all this.
If self-proclaimed “education reform” could live up to even a fraction of its promises then every media site, print and digital, would be lit up constantly with the wonders of New Orleans.
Yes, opt out. Or rather, follow the example of the schools that the heavyweights in the rheephorm movement send THEIR OWN CHILDREN to like Lakeside School [Bill Gates and his children]. Better yet, learn a lesson from Dr. Candace McQueen about CCSS and its conjoined twin of high-stakes standardized tests.
This blog, 3-23-2014, “Common Core for Commoners, Not My School!”—the entire posting follows:
[start posting]
This is an unintentionally hilarious story about Common Core in Tennessee. Dr. Candace McQueen has been dean of Lipscomb College’s school of education and also the state’s’s chief cheerleader for Common Core. However, she was named headmistress of private Lipscomb Academy, and guess what? She will not have the school adopt the Common Core! Go figure.
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Link: https://dianeravitch.net/2014/03/23/common-core-for-commoners-not-my-school/
Read the thread too.
The Rheeal “civil rights movement of our time” is all in for test-and-punish so that the comfortable are comforted and there is a doubling down on the afflictions of the afflicted [for “doubling down” see NJ Commissioner of Education].
The real civil rights movement of our time is in the tradition of the movement to end chattel slavery and a woman’s right to vote and an end to Jim Crow laws and practices and the right of ordinary people to organize in unions and organizations to protect their human dignity and lives.
So just what does that mean today?
“I prayed for twenty years but received no answer until I prayed with my legs.”
Frederick Douglass. His enslavement didn’t end until he acted decisively.
The public school staffs and students and parents and their communities won’t end their enslavement to the test-and-punish regimen of high-stakes standardized tests until they opt out—
Decisively.
And hold the self-proclaimed “education reformers” to their promises that every poor and middle class child should have the right to the same education as their wealthy counterparts. And when the rheephormsters belly ache about the cost remind them that you aren’t going to get a Mercedes Benz education by shopping at the Rheephorm 99¢ Store.
Time for the hypocrites that spend world-class amounts of resources garnered from $tudent $ucce$$ on THEIR OWN CHILDREN to do the same for OTHER PEOPLE’S CHILDREN.
Nothing less than Lakeside for everyone.
No excuses.
😎
Should we make this one of our battle cries—“Lakeside for Every Child. If it’s good for Bill Gates and his children, it should be good for ours.”
I taught in a diverse school district in New York where, through collaborative efforts, ongoing assessment, continuous monitoring and intervention for struggling students balanced literacy and a constructivist approach to most of the comprehensive curriculum, we improved outcomes for our students. Our elementary school was a Blue Ribbon school in 2000. It should be noted that most of the assessment was diagnostic to determine where a student was having difficulty. Then IST, the instructional support team, then met with the teacher, to plan a course of action to help the student and met again to see if the student improved. The idea was to catch the student before the student fell too far behind. At the end of the year we were required to administer a standardized test, but it was NOT the focus of our efforts. Once NCLB took over, lots of these elements were lost.
Sounds like educators were in control of your district and what you were doing there could be done at other schools. The emphasis in any student progress should be in the classroom.
It was; teachers had a lot of input at that time. However, in the test crazed world of today, the curriculum becomes narrow and innovation is quashed.
This is not what I’m hearing from teachers. Elementary students are being timed, most of the year is on testing and the same for high school.
Not sure what their sources are, but I’m talking to people in the classroom.
Hollister, CA
More reason for a national opt out.
Marian…I am hearing the same from LAUSD teachers. Last week the 3rd graders sat for many hours of testing. My teacher friend who had to administer these tests was in tears at the end of the day as she described the frustration of these 7 and 8 year old small children.
WHAT!!!!!! OUR CA, PALOS VERDES UNIFIED DISTRICT IS THREATENING PARENTS THAT IF THEY DON’T TAKE THE SMARTER BALANCED TESTS THEIR CHILDREN WILL NOT GET INTO ADVANCED CLASSES AND SCHOOLS WILL LOSE MONEY.
TEACHERS ARE BEING THREATENED AND ARE SCARED TO DEATH.
LOTS OF LIES.
IN ADDITION, BROWN HAS AUTHORED THE LOCAL CONTROL FUNDING FORMULA,THAT IS GIFTING MONEY TO DISTRICTS LIKE CENTINELA VALLEY–WHILE CENTINELA IS BEING INVESTIGATED BY THE FBI FOR MIS-USE OF FUNDS–
AND BROWN IS PUNISHING OTHER DISTRICTS.
THE FUNDING FORMULA IS UNSUBSTANTIATED AND HAS LITTLE OVERSIGHT.
DISTRICTS WILL BE $1,000’S AWAY FROM EACH OTHER FOR PER PUPIL SPENDING.
CENTINELA VALLEY UNIFIED = $ 14,750 PER CHILD
PALOS VERDES UNIFIED = $9100 PER CHILD
CA IS SUPPOSED TO HAVE EQUALIZED FUNDING–ALL TAXES GO TO THE STATE TO BE DISPERSED EQUALLY.
BROWN FORGOT THAT PART.
So much for Prop. 30.
So much for shift keys.
And we have a winner!
Florida $7100 per child and the Governor is bragging about how monumental this paltry record per pupil expenditure is. What a joke!
j135cooper, I think that’s a misreading of Prop 30.
Prop 30 does not equalize funding it makes it EQUITABLE. That means the districts that have the neediest students receive more funding. It is more expensive for schools to provide all the services that poor children need. This seems like a very good thing.
Palos Verdes is an extremely wealthy area and school district. They probably want those test results because they know their students are going to hit the top.
Jerry Brown spoke to the issue of equity for inner city children in his State of the State address just after Prop. 30 won. Of course we remember he strong armed the voters into supporting it by saying we would lose school buses, etc…and this scared most parents.
I mentioned this in the comments section of the article on Salon, but I think this is a very polly-annaish vision of what is happening in California. For example, Honig holds up Long Beach as a high-achieving district, but fails to note that it’s leadership is straight out of Broad Academy and its success has been touted by….wait for it…the Broad Foundation. That high achieving district actually has a very intense testing culture and an appalling opportunity gap. Some of the Local Control Funding Formula money in LBUSD has gone to the PTA of a school in the wealthiest part of town; I’m so curious about what they will do with that money to help their students, but of course we will never know because there is no true accountability to the public. The reason California parents have not risen up is because the state board of education has decided to give testing corporations, districts, etc. time to fiddle with the tests to get the results they want, results that will serve the interests of corporate-led educational reform and not those of children, parents, or progressive education.
Almost all of these public schools have a 501(c)(3) PTO advantage in raising funds for school improvement. And all of these are mandated by Federal law to produce an annual report indicating use of funds, and outcomes. If they do not do this, they can lose their tax free status. All parents should demand to see this report.
If what a previous commenter said is true, the state has authorized parents to opt out of testing for their kids. If your district threatens to deprive you’re kid of participation in any classes, think about suing it, seriously
The punishments HAVE started. Any teacher who accidentally says something negative about the CC will not be renewed. It’s happened to thousands of probationary teachers.
There are gag orders on entire districts NOT to inform parents of their RIGHT to opt out of California testing.
Brown, Torlakson and the rest are simply the most competent shills for the oligarchy.
I know what you are describing. I taught in the public schools for thirty years in California—1975-2005. It’s just worse today than it was then, but I saw it go from bad to horrible and now it is obviously catastrophic. I still know teachers in the classroom and I’m hearing horror stories much worse than the horror stories I lived through as a public school teacher in a California classroom.
http://ellenbrown.com/2015/02/20/swimming-with-the-sharks-goldman-sachs-school-districts-and-capital-appreciation-bonds/
Thanks for this Ellen Brown link, jb2. Once again she gets it right. Hope everyone reads it.
We begin the testing debacle in Monday and that is when the protests will begin. I am not going to look at the results and have opted out my children. As long as we have a system of standardized testing education will get worse. As a special educator I will lose 3 weeks of my AM instructional time to provide small group testing and accommodations. My students will suffer.
I teach in Fresno — one of the California school districts that went behind the backs of the teachers, school boards, and parents/students and applied for/received the C.O.R.E. waiver from Arne Duncan. We are set to begin “testing the tar out of” our middle schoolers starting on the 27th. We will, undoubtedly, have tears, kids throwing up, high stress, and mayhem…all for a test that we will not get results from.
How is that “educating” anyone (besides British-owned Pearson)?
Dear California,
The testing is here, wish it was beautiful.
Best Wishes,
New York
I do not see the positivity expressed here in my day to day experiences in my public CA school. Though the state is increasing funding, out title 1 funds are being cut severely for next year, which means a net loss. Our teacher pay is one of the lowest in the nation, though we have one of the highest costs of living. My school has no art teacher, like most elementary schools here. K-3 has 25 students per class, 4-5 has 32. I hear over and over how this huge class size affects differentiation and supporting struggling learners and challenging advanced students. We just started the SBAC and science CST tests last week. Our 5th graders were subjected to 9 hours of testing just the first week alone. I did a practice test with my third and fourth grade students. I have never seen them get so upset over schoolwork, even though I told them repeatedly that it was just practice. What is the silver lining? That they did not get rid of tenure and we’re not being judged by test scores yet? I believe that will happen next year when scores become available.
Thanks Diane. And I agree with your rationale for changing the title of your post to a question. My intention was never to argue that California is doing everything right, just to point out that it is going a very different direction than most other states and certainly different from what the federal government is mandating. I also believe Honig is a thoughtful and persuasive person whose voice needs amplification. That doesn’t mean that I agree with everything he says. I’ve gotten criticisms, for instance, for not challenging him more assertively on his support for Common Core. What is most important about my conversation with him, in my view, is his framing of current policy as Test-and-Punish vs. the more promising way forward he advocates, Build-and-Support. You can agree or disagree with him about the extent to which Build-and-Support is actually being implemented in California. But what you can’t disagree with is that Build-and-Support is a different and more promising pathway forward compared to what most states and the feds are doing.
“They put a strong liberal arts curriculum in the center, like the Common Core, which is what we use in California.”
Honig didn’t read his homework and is trying to BS those who didn’t read the standards either. Anyone who has read the CCS knows that they are divorced from any content knowledge. Nothing but vague, abstract, and contrived skills that have almost no relationship to any normal human activity.
If Honig believes that Common Core standards are “a strong liberal arts curriculum” he needs to take my “Kool Aid Challenge”. Come on Honig, be the next to fall silent as you search for just one fragment of content knowledge that is relevant, interesting, and important contained in the CCS. And please, no generalities. To complete the KAC one must supply the judges with the specific standard, verbatim from the CC website.
Good luck Honig!
Wikipedia:
In modern times, liberal arts education is a term that can be interpreted in different ways. It can refer to certain areas of literature, languages, art history, music history, philosophy, history, mathematics, psychology, and science.It can also refer to studies on a liberal arts degree program. For example, Harvard University offers a Master of Liberal Arts degree, which covers biological and social sciences as well as the humanities.
I think there is no question that California is escaping the worst of the so-called reforms. The question is how long can we sustain it? As a teacher friend frequently says, “We are one governor away from becoming New York or Ohio or Florida.” She is right. We have all seen so-called Democrats sell out for their share of the wall street cash. Governor Brown is singular. I can’t imagine a regular, politically ambitious governor being able to resist the pressure like Race to the Top as Jerry Brown has.
The corporate privatizers are surely aware of that, too. In one of the leaked Sony emails, CEO Michael Lynton contrasts Brown with New York’s Joel Klein: “[Klein’s] book does a lot of union bashing, i know that. Unlike our governor and AG!” https://wikileaks.org/sony/emails/emailid/138493
And their E ticket is California’s new open primary in which voters of any party choose the top two candidates for a run-off. In a state where a Republican hardly has a chance, billionaires have started contributing to moderate Democrats to knock progressives or populists out of the running. It’s a strange world indeed.
Our Jerry the Jesuit has a far greater conscience, and far more IQ points than our former Gov, Arnie the Austrian whe really wants to be Prez…but then…so does Jerry who actually might win the Dem vote if he runs against Billary.
I am a little bewildered at times with a national culture very highly critical of the teaching profession in America. Many sincere educators and policy establishers use international measures of student achievement such as the NASP to evidence teachers’ failings here. The trouble with this inept teacher view of the primary cause of the international gap in achievement is that it does not compare apple for apples. The national culture of most high performing nations of the world hold that there is shared responsibility for student learning with the student and the home. As long as we are a nation who punishes teachers and other educators for circumstances beyond their control, blasts people who suggest a shared responsibility model and who uphold the test and punish “reform structure” of the present NCLB, there will not be a change in our national standing on international student achievement measures.
A little off topic, but I could stop myself.
Is this sacrilegious? Is it possible to have a system that is both content rich and constructivist? Call me crazy but there is something that tells me that I had better have some background from which I can construct understanding. My formative years in education tended toward the content end. It was really only in college that I was asked to do much really independent thinking. I remember studying for exams and having these massive amounts of information I had dutifully recorded begin to morph into an understandable whole. My immersion in learning through lecture was not totally devoid of independent thought. There definitely was a sense that students had to learn a lot of material before they were ready to independently manipulate it although my education wasn’t devoid of constructivist pedagogy. I do remember vividly a science teacher asking me a question about the formation of lava tubes. It was a question that asked me to extend myself beyond a report I had presented, not something that I could regurgitate. I really was proud of myself for being able to speculate credibly about their formation. Our constructivist leanings were really allowed free rein out of school where adults played a very minor role, unlike today. My husband is an incredible Mr. Fixit; he spent many happy hours as a kid taking apart, fixing, and building various contraptions. He thrived on those opportunities. If Armageddon comes, I am betting that he is going to be one of the old sages to help some survive. I don’t think there will be too many hedge fund managers in demand. I am not advocating for any particular approach to education. I am just relating how this old fogey remembers the past. There are plenty of more knowledgeable people than I who should be given a chance to morph what we currently believe into a plan that honors a wide range of ideas.
I am not even at liberty to write what I know or feel comfortable to share what I have experienced for the fear of what “they: will do to me (yes, I know, nothing can happen to me, truth is a defense to defamation claims etc., but the fear and paranoia persists).
I have taught on the East Coast (not comfortable even sharing which city) and extreme necessity led me to CA.
WHATEVER YOU ARE IMAGINING in CA as “BAD”, it is worse than that. The corporate takeover is beyond insidious. This is happening in rural communities—and most CA is THAT– where people outside the state don’t even know about the worst exploitations that are going on, where principals are just figureheads, and consultants from LA and Silicon Valley are hired at unconscionable rates. The parents are often illiterate or don’t know any better in these communities. The politicians are in the hands of the big companies (I can’t even name industries for the fear…) This is the first time I have ever written a comment here. I have no words to express how bad it is. But God is my witness, when the day comes when the fear has subsided, my words will be the brightest light to shed on what is actually going on there. Whatever “negative” articles exist about Success Academies and such, nothing compares to what is actually going on in CA.
Thank you for changing the title.
(Snark Alert) The good thing is that in L.A. the school board has two Ravitch-NPE endorsed candidates, Steve Zimmer and Bennett Kayser who proudly proclaim that they fire all teachers accused of anything. Soon enough all L.A. teachers will be new-hire short-timers and we won’t have anymore of this inconvenient and messy experience stuff. CC$A and the privateers are laughing in their beer at all of us. They don’t have much left to do but count their money.