Philip Lanoue, superintendent of the Clarke County public schools, wrote a strong column opposing Governor Nathan Deal’s plan to takeover “low-performing” schools. Deal wants to copy Tennessee’s faltering “Achievement School District,” which has shown no progress in the past four years. Why anyone would copy a failed model is puzzling.
Lanoue cites several reasons for opposing the state takeovers, the most fundamental being the elimination of local control of schools. He may not have known when he wrote this article that elimination of local control is
He writes:
The Opportunity School District superintendent will have final decision-making authority over all aspects of the school, which would no longer be under the control of local superintendents and school boards. This is in direct contrast to current governance structures in public and charter schools, which require checks and balances through board governance models. In addition, the superintendent would have sole authority to select schools that qualify as “failing” schools. This does not align with the current movement to have more local control, as the selection of schools does not require any level of input by the State Board of Education, local boards of education, local school districts, governance entities or communities. The current budget for this program includes 3 percent administrative costs, and is concerning in this time when public education budgets are already suffering.
Here in Athens-Clarke County, a governance model based on democracy is a cornerstone of how we operate — as it is across the state. To take away democratic principles is monumental and allows Georgia communities to be stripped of their identities as having primary responsibility of educating their children. To impact schools and communities, we must take a collaborative and comprehensive approach to reform centered on the creation of dynamic learning environments strongly joined with quality early literacy; physical and mental health care; and positive and safe home and school environments. In a time where collaboration is the key to systemic change, simply changing governance as the key to reform has a greater result of creating divisions — not unity.
Educators, school boards and local school communities have the ultimate responsibility for providing engaging learning environments that ensure all students achieve. To change the Georgia Constitution to take away that responsibility will fragment communities across the state, and sets a very dangerous precedent for future decisions in educating all Georgia students.

Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Education.
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“Current legislation requires school districts to select a reform model to improve performance by choosing to become either a Charter System or Investing in Educational Excellence (IE2) System, or to choose to label themselves as a Status Quo system. ”
Good Lord. You would think they would be embarrassed with that CLEAR preference in the language. Are these lawmakers or charter school marketing people? It’s a rhetorical question. I know there is now no meaningful difference between the two groups.
I hope they also said that they are “agnostics”. That’s the magic word that makes the obvious bias disappear.
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Governor Deal’s plan to usurp the authority of parents, teachers, and boards is the exact definition of government over reach, and just as much an example of government being used as a sock puppet by those who are completely unqualified to have any say in how America’s children are educated.
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Tennessee has the Achievement School District.
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Dat Guy,
Thank you. I fixed it.
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And do homeowners pay taxes that directly benefit their local school district?
If so, that is an excellent example of taxation without representation.
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http://atlantaprogressivenews.com/2015/08/11/aps-board-prepares-for-osd-declines-to-oppose-state-takeovers/
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It is worth to repeat Dr. Philip Lanoue’s wisdom on how to achieve NCLB”
[start quote]
To impact schools and communities,
We must take a collaborative and comprehensive approach to reform centered on:
a) The creation of dynamic learning environments strongly joined with quality early literacy;
b) Physical and mental health care; and
c) Positive and safe home and school environments.
In a time where collaboration is the key to systemic change, SIMPLY CHANGING GOVERNANCE as the key to reform has a greater result of CREATING DIVISION — not unity.
Educators, school boards and local school communities have the ultimate responsibility for providing ENGAGING LEARNING environments that ENSURE ALL STUDENT ACHIEVE.
[end quote]
If business tycoons truly care for national education, then please DO as per Dr. P. Lanoue’s accurate PROTOCOL on how to provide engaging learning environments.
1) Stabilize working conditions for all parents = Positive and safe home and school environments.
2) Promote body and mind improvement = Physical and mental health care = no fear, no stress, no invalid testing scheme.
3) Preserve democratic spirit = quality early literacy
In short, Face Book owner has offered Newark this chance, but politician ruined it.
Life is a continuing learning process. Nobody is asinine, or genius. There are people who have been reincarnating and realizing the law of impermanence. Also, there are people who love sufferance for GREED, LUST, and EGO like moth to the light.
Historically, educators are the general in cultivation of civility like the general in battle field.
Win or lose is not as important as cultivating people to treasure their democratic freedom at the cost of their lives, careers, and own happiness. Nothing is free in this material world, even a smile that will take a lot of care and love to have.
Please watch a movie “”KUNDO”” on Netflix to think of year 1834 in Korea as of year 2002 in USA regarding the partnership between governance and business. Back2basic
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The legal architect for this losing policy has resigned but not before getting an closer to 6 figure salary to ‘advise’ the Atlanta Public Schools on how best to fight this very incursion. Nice job transition- public ed mercenary comes to mind.
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“public ed mercenary”
Precisely!
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