Montclair, New Jersey, is a beautiful suburb, not far from New York City, which has long had a reputation for its good schools and its successful racial integration. But lately its schools and parents have been in turmoil. The town is split between supporters of public education and supporters of “reform” (aka privatization and testing). Recently the “reformers” have subpoenaed emails of those who support public schools, looking for a nefarious plot, for sources of funding, undue influence by teachers’ unions, or for any contacts with that notorious critic of corporate reform, Diane Ravitch. Apparently, their search turned up nothing. No national plot; no outside funding; no contact with me. Just local parents trying to fight off privatization and high-stakes testing. The corporate reformers filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for more than 1,000 emails written by Michelle Fine, who is a professor the City University of New York and a vocal critic of privatization and high-stakes testing.
Why Montclair? Montclair not only has parents devoted to their local public schools, it also is home to some of the most celebrated luminaries of the corporate reform movement. Voila! A clash of David and Goliath!
As Stan Karp explained in this article contrasting the two faces of “reform” in Newark and Montclair, Montclair adopted a mayor-appointed board to maintain its integration policy. But times changed, and in the current political context, the appointed board brought in a Broad-trained superintendent, whose actions deepened the divisions.
Karp wrote:
As the policy context for education reform has changed, the appointed board has become increasingly contentious.
It was against this backdrop that, in the summer of 2012, as Cami Anderson was hollowing out Newark, Montclair hired a new superintendent. Penny MacCormack was new to the state, had never been a superintendent, and wasn’t known to many in Montclair. But those who track state education politics knew she had been a district official in Connecticut who was recruited by Cerf to be an assistant commissioner in Christie’s DOE. The department had received several grants from the Eli Broad Foundation and was staffed with multiple Broad “fellows.” MacCormack, Cerf, and Anderson all have Broad ties.
MacCormack was at the N.J. Department of Education for less than a year when she suddenly resurfaced as the new Montclair superintendent without any public vetting, a clear sign the board knew this was a controversial hire.
Her welcome reception began with a video about the origins of the magnet system in the struggle to integrate the town’s schools. Some honored town elders who had played key roles were in the audience. MacCormack awkwardly attempted to connect her vision to the compelling town history framed in the video. Despite the town’s commitment to equity, she said, wide “achievement gaps” remained, and addressing those gaps would be her No. 1 priority.
MacCormack didn’t pledge to restore the equity supports that had been eroded in recent years or challenge Christie’s budget cuts. Instead, she announced that the Common Core standards and tests, and the state’s new teacher evaluation mandates, would “level the playing field” and “raise expectations for all.” “And,” she said, “I will be using the data to hold educators accountable and make sure we get results.”
After she finished, a latecomer took the floor and told the audience how lucky Montclair was to have MacCormack come to town. It was Jon Schnur, the architect of the Race to the Top. He also lives in Montclair. We later learned that Schnur was MacCormack’s “mentor” in a certification program she enrolled in after being hired without the required credentials to be superintendent.
In Montclair, there was no formal state takeover and no contested school board elections. Instead, the long reach of corporate education reform had used influence peddling, backdoor connections, and a compliant appointed school board to install one of their own at the head of one of the state’s model districts.
Over the next few months, MacCormack’s plans took shape, drawing on a familiar playbook. There was major shuffling at central office; experienced staff were replaced by well-paid imports. Half the district’s principals were moved or replaced.
The new superintendent created a multiyear strategic plan: a 20-page list of bulleted goals, strategies, and benchmarks. One stood out. MacCormack wanted to implement “districtwide Common Core-aligned quarterly assessments in reading, writing, mathematics, social studies, and science” from kindergarten through 12th grade.” The proposal quickly became a dividing line.
The school board backed McCormack’s plan for Common Core and more frequent testing; a large number of residents pushed back against the quarterly tests, forming a group called Montclair Cares About Schools (MCAS). The parents held public forums and collected signatures for petitions.
But then things took a bizarre turn:
A few days before the first quarterlies were to be given, things went completely off the rails. Emails began circulating that some of the tests had been found on an internet scavenger site, GoBookie, which robotically scoops up and sells documents without authorization.
The news traveled quickly. The board called an emergency meeting to initiate an investigation, not just into the source of the released tests, but also into “other incidents of conduct that may be contrary to the board’s best interest.”
The board began issuing subpoenas. It sought one board member’s private emails and phone records, and warned teachers not “to destroy any emails or documents related to the investigation.” It even went after anonymous critics on local social media sites, issuing subpoenas for their internet addresses so the critics could be questioned.
The American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey stepped in and told the board their subpoenas were a gross violation of free speech rights. Still, the board pressed its investigation through months of turmoil and mounting legal fees. Finally, a state agency quietly confirmed that the tests had been posted online in error. The furor was fueled by a mistake, not an act of sabotage.
The episode dealt a serious blow to the board’s credibility. It also reflected the distorted priorities of corporate reform. As LynNell Hancock, journalism professor and grandmother of a 5th grader, wrote on Valerie Strauss’ education blog: “This is a Montclair I hardly recognize. It’s not the children, the quality of the schools or the town’s democratic values that have changed. It’s a paradigm shift in school leadership, a top-down technocratic approach that narrows its focus to “fixing” schools by employing business strategies—more testing, more administrators, limited interference by the public or the teacher union.”
As matters heated up, with charges and countercharges, Superintendent McCormack abruptly resigned to accept another job.
But the avengers of corporate reform did not give up in their battle for control.
Mark Naison wrote this week:
In Montclair NJ, a strong coalition of parents and educators has resisted, and pushed back corporate reform. This in the very town where so many of the national ed deformers live.
After a two year struggle, the Broad Academy Superintendent resigned, leaving behind an $11.5 million dollar deficit. Within a week, the mayor, the President of the Montclair Teachers Association and the Board of School Estimate resolved the budget crisis with little loss to staff positions. And by the end of the year, we enjoyed a 48% opt out rate on the PARCC, a new pro-public education interim Superintendent and Board of Education. Education may be back in the hands of educators.
But in this town where national reform luminaries live, they have not swallowed defeat gracefully.
With substantial funding, they formed Montclair Kids First and hired Shavar Jeffries, who ran for mayor in Newark and lost on a pro-charter platform, as their lawyer. Jeffries went to work bringing ethics charges against a progressive town councilman, relying upon the Open Records Act to extract emails of key progressive board members, principals and the President of the teachers union and FOILed more than 1000 of Michelle Fine’s emails over two years.
Watch out, hide the kids. MCAS and CUNY are coming after Montclair Schools!
MKF (and the MSW laundered emails on their blog) came looking for the union(s); external funding; a national game-plan; a proxy relationship to Diane Ravitch. They found no money or funding, just parents and a community organizing to save public schools from the tentacles of reforms. These are the tired tactics education reformers use: They live in a world of opposition files created for their critics. They throw money to fund their reforms; they throw money to silence their opponents. But when they find nothing, they resort to tactics like this—their latest propaganda piece, a movie version of private emails.
But propaganda can be a tricky thing. MSW posts are no more accurate now than they were before they had access to private emails, full of misattributions and ideas out of context. Expensive glossy MKF mailers bring on the tired reform narrative of failing schools only to be corrected by parents and school officials; and their recent propaganda film has popped up, like a jack in the box clown, above Michelle Fine’s many wonderful talks on race, justice, and privatization of education—an unintended counterpoint to their silly video. And if MCAS weren’t enough, they now claim CUNY is after Montclair Schools! Cue up the eerie music and dial up your paranoia. Enjoy the sounds and images of desperate reformers looking for your support.
Video
https://youtu.be/Q7uBr7TnCQM
The description of her destructive tenure was eerily similar to my own district’s decimation at the hands of a Broad-trained superintendent. We are now in the hands of an actual educator, as interim superintendent, and we’ve closed most of the budget gaps with bare bones budgeting for 3 years.
But we are far from recovered and the damage done by the disruption will take years to heal and I’m not sure if the trust will ever be possible again, from teachers, from parents, from students, or from the public.
I often wonder if that wasn’t the whole purpose of this fiasco.
Wow… just wow…
If the pattern holds, those responsible are going to scrub the critical comments, then disable the entire COMMENTS section, so I’m moving some of them here:
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4michelina 3 days ago:
Ridiculous and desperate attempt at character assassination. As if you attacked her with a water gun. Just stop it. You’re embarrassing yourselves.
· 7
TheCablebill 3 days ago:
Stop the presses! Correspondent is blunt in private email! If not for the offensive invasion of privacy that leaves me feeling voyeuristic, I would find this pathetic clip hysterically funny. Instead, it’s only slightly funny. You need to get some plastic dinosaurs to go with the music. If you’re going to be campy, do it right!
· 3
Dan Chadwick 3 days ago:
That’s disgusting how you would go through someone’s private emails and post them on a YouTube. It’s pretty disgusting that people would do that to others who are trying to help our school district.
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Julie Borst 3 days ago:
I’m curious what CUNY lawyers think of your attack on them. BTW, WHO ARE YOU? Her emails didn’t magically appear. Someone filed a Freedom of Information Act request to a PUBLIC university, where she works. That’s the only reason whoever you are has these quotes…which say very little about anything. She’s pissed off at the corporate take over of our schools. She is most definitely not alone in that sentiment.
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Beth Rubin 2 days ago:
Pathetic attempt to slander someone we are lucky to have fighting for educational justice in our town.
1
Ned Camuso 3 days ago:
I have seen lots of garbage on YouTube, but this the stupidest garbage to date.
· 2
Julia Rubin 3 days ago:
If this banal nonsense is the worst thing that the Montclair corporate education deformers (aka Montclair Kids First) could find in the thousands of personal emails that they hired Lowestein Sandler to force from CUNY, then Michelle has been leading a very clean life. What is much more telling is that the corporate deformers are willing to use such low-life tactics and to launch more and more personal attacks. They seem to be getting increasingly desperate as their cause slips away, and they lack the moral conscience or good sense to stop themselves.
Read more
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Daniel Buckley 1 day
ago:
I agree with Dr. Fine.
The emails are boring.
I would, however, like to thank MKF for spending hours and hours digging through thousands of emails to prove just how boring and inconsequential they are.
I will say that her post from February was remarkably prescient. Penny, Frankel and the Talent Supervisor is gone, Clarke is back as a Principal, and we have an interim Super who seems to be a really straight shooter.
Read more
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tiamonique 1 day ago:
Truly pathetic! I really hope this garbage does not pop up when my kids are on YouTube.
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Dave Herman 3 days ago:
Felice Duffer, or who ever you are, you are truly pathetic. You guys keep digging yourselves a bigger hole. Your ideas on education have been rejected by Montclair. But since you can’t win an argument on the issues, you resort to ugly personal attacks that have no merit. No go away with some dignity. Videos like this and other attacks against champions of real education are only hurting your cause. I put your chances of winning the next municipal election at 0.0, thank goodness.
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Claire Potter 2 days ago:
This is just ridiculous. I actually know Michelle, and I know something about the Montclair school, and these so called quotes are so out of context I have no idea what they even mean. Why not actually work on education rather than posting silly videos?
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David Chapin 1 day ago:
Destroyer? Divider? Hater? This name-calling reflects on the clumsy maker of this video, but fails entirely to comprehend the fabulous Michelle Fine!
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PlanetAndydotcom 1 day ago (edited):
I remember my first Windows Movie Maker projects…so exciting. Felice, your organization’s ability to see into the future is what’s most impressive about this video….at 1:05 you have identified an email that Dr. Fine will send on 9/25/15. That’s so cool.
https://creativesystemsthinking.wordpress.com/2015/06/13/fraud-at-the-heart-of-current-education-reform/
Read more
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Justin A 3 days ago:
Wtf?
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smoghat 15 hours ago:
Who are you people and how much did you pay to target me with this video? I am disturbed and angry by your invasion of my privacy.
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qby33 Montclair 2 days ago:
Who would have thought CUNY would be OK with a professor doing this in Montclair on their email? I always looked up to Michelle, but those racial strategies are scary. I don’t believe it, so I read the emails. Wow.
Michelle Fine goes in front and show how professors, as other people can, and should engage in societal issues. Her emails are, as she says, boring and very human. I think of no other final interpretation of this video than that it strengthens my impression of Professor Fines academic and societal engagement – and that US educational politics are really, really hard…..to children and to parents!
May Montclair stay strong and hold off the barbarians at the gate! This story is a testimony to savvy parents that know how to fight back against the dirty dealings of the reformers. They did it with truth and perseverance, and it didn’t hurt that the reformers shot themselves in the foot. While not every community has such a stellar group of parents, they do have the power to organize, resist oppression and fight lies with facts. While not every community can afford a lawyer, is there a legal advising group that can tell parents what documents to request under public information rights?
This is interesting:
“He chose Cami Anderson, a former Teach For America (TFA) executive who had also worked at New Leaders for New Schools, a kind of TFA for principals founded by Jon Schnur. Schnur later joined the Obama administration, where he was a primary architect of the Race to the Top. He also helped promote Arne Duncan as secretary of education…”
I’m always struck by how this club is really small, considering their national reach. It’s the same names over and over and over again.
Chiara,
I think there are just a few hundred of them and they keep trading places and promoting one another
The reality of self-proclaimed “education reform”:
It’s not WHAT you know but WHO you know.
Really! And it works itself out at our expense in a rheeally Johnsonally sort of way…
😎
Hey CT parallel towns to Montclair NJ, this could be in the future of Avon, Westport, Wilton, Ridgefield, or — yes — even Greenwich. Your schools are great. But you have wealthy “reformers” living next-door to you who love your top-rated high school and lovely elementaries. What is causing contention in Montclair is that clash. “Reformers” think your prized schools could be even better with more testing and “rigor.” Beware.
If we become our enemy, we are becoming North Korea. Subpoenas of private communications of people with a different view? Next, Reformers will be wearing arm bands and goosestepping.
I’ve just been sampling some of the YouTube interviews with Professor Fine, and discovered that her opposition to corporate education reform and school privatization is but a small part of her activism. Her overall focus is on social justice in general, covering a whole range of social justice issues. She comes off as principled, knowledgeable, and genuinely sincere in what she says and does. As a result, both this cheap shot video trashing her (ABOVE, the focus of this thread) and its anonymous, McCarthy-like creators come off as even more reprehensible and loathsome.
Thus, there’s a silver lining to this video’s existence on YouTube.
If anything, the video hurts the cause of corporate reformers. For the video’s anonymous creators, the target audience are presumably those folks who — prior to watching it — are neutral, on-the-fence, not yet informed, or perhaps even supportive of corporate reform. However, instead winning over that target audience to back corporate reform, it will likely have the opposite effect, motivating them to respond with utter disgust, and then throw in with Professor Fine, and other opponents of corporate education reform. Thankfully, those responsible are probably too obtuse, too narrow-minded, and too irrationally devoted to their neo-liberal ideology to realize how counter-productive the video is.
That said, here’s one video where she opposes school closings… or rather school closings executed by corporate reformers, where the motives for doing so and outcomes are ignoble:
Perhaps to win back the people that the original attack video alienated, its creators are trying a different approach to woo support from the Montclair community.
First, here’s the video again:
The corporate reform astroturf “Montclair Kids First” group — the presumed creators of that video — today announced that they are arranging for free in-home wi-fi to disadvantaged familes, in their effort to “close the achievement gap” among Montclair students.
http://www.montclairkidsfirst.org/statements–testimonials/mkf-announces-initiative-aimed-at-serving-montclair-kids
It’s an attempt to win… or rather… to “buy” the hearts and minds of the community, and ally itself with Montclair’s various existing community organizations:
MONTCLAIR KIDS FIRST:
“Over the summer months, MKF will proactively outreach various community organizations, local religious leaders and Montclair School District leadership in hopes of building additional partnerships around this initiative. If the introduction and implementation of the program is successful, MKF hopes to develop and grow the program to sponsor computers and other learning tools and devices to all economically disadvantaged students in Montclair. ”
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Hopefully, the good people of Montclair will be able to see through this transparent attempt to manipulate them. In Los Angeles, for example, similar efforts to manufacture and — let’s just say it again — “buy” community support have had a negligible impact, especially after both the funders and the funders’ motives were exposed.
Thank you, Jack, for posting the youtube interview with Professor Fine. I agree with your assessment of her. She really does have some interesting things to say.
As a fellow CUNY professor, I’m VERY proud to have Michelle Fine as a colleague! The attempt to portray her as the embodiment of evil for — what — exercising her right of free speech? is absolutely astonishing. It reveals the seamy, loathsome nature of deformers, whose own preferred method of buying corrupt politicians I suppose they consider a more moral course of behavior than her forthright verbal denunciations of their lies!
Those of us who favor honest, robust debate of fundamental questions like the role of free public education in a democracy are in for a long fight against those who resort to glossy propaganda, AstroTurf organizations and bizarre, twisted legal maneuvers like foiling private emails to win support for their bankrupt ideas.
We need a toolkit for communities that are under assault from the privatizers. There should be some resources for regular people that want to organize to fight off the corporations. Very few communities are like Monclair with well connected people on both sides of the issue. It is generally corporate wealth and power against a poor community like New Orleans. It would be helpful to have a blueprint or suggestions on where to go, what to do, how to gain allies and media attention.
Retired teacher, right you are. My wife and I have a kind of activist home base with Change the Stakes, which in turn links to a lot of other grass roots organizations in our state (New York) and nationally; I’ll check in with our friends there to see what they know about such a toolkit. Our group and national ones like United Opt Out have provided a lot of materials for parents, teachers and local communities to use to resist run-away testing, but as Karen Lewis has pointed out, deformers have no end of schemes and huge financial resources to implement them. No doubt when high-stakes testing and the Common Core go down, other efforts at control will follow — so comprehensive approaches to re-democratizing public education are desperately needed.
The other day someone wrote that Dr. Ravtich should lead a nationwide teacher’s strike. This, the looking for the teacher’s union’s input in the e mails” should show why this may not be a great idea.
HOWEVER, that does NOT mean that there should not BE a national uprising by teachers, not the teacher’s unions per se, but by teachers themselves. Teachers unions leadership MIGHT be tricky for the above reasons but only when enough people, citizens, parents and teachers scream and scream loudly will this nonsense be stopped. Sadly that is what it has taken in the past for groups to claim their rights but it never came easily.
In my home state of West Virginia the coal miners stood their ground against the National Guard and some died for the right to collectively bargain and better their lives. Many went to prison. Many were permanently injured. Many lost everything. The suffering was great and the goons hired by the owners took their toll alongside the state and federal troops that were firing upon United States citizens.
But they won, eventually. They lost much, including indentured servitude, owing their soul to the company store, being paid in scrip instead of cash, dangerous working conditions, lack of health care, etc.
They gained control of their lives and their dignity, pride, and rights as citizens of the United States of America.
It is my hope that teachers will one day realize that we too need to be willing to sacrifice some things in order to save our schools and our profession, all in service of our nation’s children.
If you are interested, watch the documentary The Battle of Blair Mountain to see what it was like for the coal miners fighting to organize and unionize. They are my heroes. They weren’t perfect and they had issues with prejudice and ignorance but they ultimately fought and won better working conditions for everyone.
Chris, they won better working conditions for everyone — that are now fast eroding and will soon be gone if we don’t recapture their spirit.
Thanks for the beautiful post. I’m only in the middle class because my impoverished grandfather got a union factory job after the war — exactly the kind that barely exists any more.
Thank you Diane for bringing this to the attention of many. It’s unfortunate what has happened in our community. MKF have targeted Michelle and another wonderful memeber of our community Sean Spiller. It’s ashame what they are getting away with. Sending glossy fliers to people’s mailboxes saying our schools are failing. Spending an absorbent amount of money on a fancy lawyer to FOIA people’s emails. Those emails have now been distorted in this shameful video. Has anyone mentioned that Don Katz is part of MKF? He promised to fund them as soon as his wife was off the BOE. I see that he has kept his word. Big money can do damage, but I’m hopefull the Montclair people will rally and see through this nasty, hateful garbage.
Thank you Diane, and thank you Michelle, and thank you to all the teachers who work in our Montclair Public Schools! Let’s keep Montclair the beacon of Progressive leadership that it has always been. Bob Russo, Deputy Mayor and MSU adjunct public administration professor
It doesn’t take long observing the so-called reformers to see that, despite the smarmy, insipid rhetoric about children, these are nasty people going about a fundamentally nasty business.
Dear Godzilla maker wanna bees; Just saw your Michelle Fine video with my son. We were lamenting what a waste of [allegedly–a word that must make you salivate] education and money your parents gave you. Are they proud that you spend your life digging through the piles of people’s lives, looking for nuggets of potentially distortable comments [even if out of context or not even theirs to begin with]? It is a shame that resources are wasted doing this.Try making a living creating a better world for all people, and really learn about a person prior to embarking on a garbage hunt. We did. Now my son wants me to find him a Michelle Fine tee shirt.