Archives for the year of: 2015

The Network for Public Education Action Fund endorses Lee Barrios for the State Board of Elementary and Secondary Education. In the last election to this board, out-of-state billionaires captured the board for privatization measures. Help Lee (and our other candidates) restore the Board as the guardian of public education.

She is a champion for children and public schools.

Barrios retired from teaching in 2010 and became a full-time advocate, working to protect public education in her home state. Barrios has a long list of qualifications for a seat on BESE. She is a retired National Board Certified Teacher with a Masters Degree in Secondary Education; a founding member of the Coalition for Louisiana Public Education, which represents classroom teachers; the Information Coordinator for Save Our Schools – LA; and she was a founding member of the Parent Coalition for Student Privacy, which worked to expose inBloom around the country.

Her opponent is James Garvey, who is running for his third term on BESE. He is a part of the board majority that supports charter schools, high stakes testing, vouchers, Common Core, VAM, and controversial Louisiana state superintendent John White. Garvey has well over $200,000 in his campaign coffers. Garvey entered the race with almost $160,000 left over from his previous campaign, and another $40,000 has been donated to his current campaign by four Political Action Committees (PACs) formed by the Louisiana Association of Business and Industry.

Barrios is well aware that she is up against powerful, moneyed interests, and has a clear sense of how dangerous market-based education reform is to the cause of public education.

Please help elect Lee Barrios to this important post.

John Thompson, historian and teacher, wonders why the Gates Foundation is so slow to recognize the failure of his teacher evaluation initiative and mitigate the damage he has done to so many teachers who were unjustly fired. Here is the case of Tulsa:

I don’t speak billionaire-ese, but Bill Gates’s 15th-anniversary presentation on his foundation’s education investments seemed to be inching towards a non-apology, concession of sorts. The weird concept of using test score growth to hold individual educators accountable was apparently born behind closed doors; the seed was supposedly planted by an economist and a bureaucrat who wowed Gates with their claim that test scores could be used in a statistical model that would drive the making of better teachers. Apparently, Gates was not briefed on the overwhelming body of social science that argued against this hypothesis as a real-world policy.

Gates apparently was unaware that so-called value-added models (VAMs) were “junk science,” at least in terms of evaluating individuals, and they weren’t intended to make a direct educational contribution to school improvement. He might not have fully understood that VAMs were a political club to intimidate teachers and unions into accepting market-driven reforms.

The value-added portion of teacher evaluations was no different than “Waiting for Superman,” the teacher-bashing propaganda film promoted by Gates. Corporate reformers used top-dollar public relations campaigns and testing regimes to treat educators like the metaphoric mule – busting us upside the head in order to get our attention.

Now, Gates says, “The early days almost went too well for us. … There was adoption, everything seemed to be on track. … We didn’t realize the issue would be confounded with what is the appropriate role of the federal and state government, we didn’t think it would be confounded with questions about are there too many tests” and other controversies.

Gates complains that school reform is harder than his global health initiatives because “when we come up with a new malaria vaccine, nobody votes to undo our malaria vaccine. (emphasis mine) Gates, however, would have never tried to invent a malaria vaccine without consulting with doctors and scientists, would he? Even if the goal is creating his vaccine, it would have been subject to objective evaluation using the scientific method. So, unlike his teacher evaluations, his vaccines aren’t rejected because they haven’t been an expensive failure.

I’ve spent a lot of time – probably too much – analyzing the ways that the quantitative portions of teacher evaluations are invalid and unreliable for the purposes sought by the Gates Foundation, and trying to communicate with Gates scholars. To their credit, Gates-funded reformers typically acknowledged that they promoted the test-driven part of evaluations while being unaware of the way that schools actually function. In private conversations, I hear that many Gates people now know they were wrong to ignore warnings by social scientists against his VAMs for individuals. They often voice disappointment and regret for their hurried overreach. But, they refuse to admit that it was a bad idea to start down the VAM brick-up-the-side-of-the-teachers’-heads road.

My sense is that a primary issue, today, is the Billionaires Boys Club’s egos, and reformers won’t pull the plug on the high stakes testing until Gates et. al allow them to do so. The recent Bill Gates speech nods in that direction, but it shows that he still hopes to stay the course because … ???

Gates now says, “Because of its complexity, the relationship to management, how labor is one, you can introduce a system … and people say, ‘No, we’d rather have no system at all, completely leave us alone.’” While acknowledging that the mass rejection of his evaluations is “a real possibility,” he still wants to “nurture these systems and get it so there’s critical mass” of systems that implement the Gates policies the way that he wants them to be implemented.

As explained by Lyndsey Layton in the Washington Post, Gates said that “too many school systems are using teacher evaluations as merely a tool for personnel decisions, not helping teachers get better. … ‘Many systems today are about hiring and firing, not a tool for learning.'” He says “the danger is that teachers will reject evaluations altogether,” and “if we don’t get this right … (there will be) cases where teachers prefer to get no feedback at all, which is what they had a decade ago.”

The big problem with imposing Gates’s ill-informed opinion on schools was foreshadowed by his language. After more than 2/3rds of states were coerced into enshrining his risky and untested policies into law, the foundation’s Measures of Effective Teaching (MET) belatedly concluded that effective teaching can be measured. (emphasis mine) Of, course, that is irrelevant for policy purposes. The question they should have asked was how will those measurements be used? Will they undermine the effectiveness of the majority of teachers? Will VAMs drive good teachers out of urban districts, as they also encourage teach-to-the-test malpractice?

I was in the room for several low-level discussions in 2009 and 2010 when Oklahoma was basically coerced into adopting the federal Gates/Obama agenda. I don’t believe I encountered a single educator – then or subsequently – who has classroom experience and who favored the quantitative portion of the system.

We had no choice but to accept the Teacher and Leader Effectiveness system (TLE) which essentially imposed the Colorado teacher evaluation law on Oklahoma. Teachers and administrators recognized the danger of adopting the test-driven portion of the model that could not control for the essential factor of peer pressure. It was inherently biased against teachers in high-poverty schools, with large numbers of special education students and English Language Learners, and magnet schools where students’ scores have less room to grow. And, the idea that Common Core or any college-readiness curriculum could be adopted while holding individuals accountable for test score growth was obviously nutty!

Gates and Arne Duncan gave educators an offer we couldn’t refuse. The best we could do would be to kick the value-added can down the road. After other states found themselves bogged down in lawsuits and as it proved to be impossible to fund a program that would cost 2% of the entire school budget, we hoped the TLE’s quantitative portion would be quietly abandoned.

Oklahoma’s Teacher and Leader Effectiveness Commission is now asking the questions that Gates and Arne Duncan should have asked years ago. The Tulsa World’s Andrea Eger reports that State Superintendent Joy Hofmeister “questioned whether the state can even afford the scheme (the quantitative portion of the TLE). Secondly, she said she doesn’t want to undermine the success of the statewide system for qualitative measures of public school educators.”

Similarly, Senator John Ford, the local sponsor of the TLE legislation, is asking the question that Gates should now consider. I strongly believe Ford was misinformed when he was originally told that TLE-type evaluations weren’t “designed as a ‘gotcha’ system.” But, I’m impressed by the senator’s statement, “Things have changed. We have learned. … We are truly learning, and I don’t think we’re there yet.”

On the other hand, the one Oklahoma district which tried to remain on schedule in implementing the TLE is Tulsa which, of course, received a Gates Foundation “teacher quality” grant. The World’s Eger notes that it “has been credited for helping the district release hundreds of ineffective teachers and identify many more to receive additional support and training.”

Tulsa’s administrator who oversees evaluations, Jana Burk, echoes Gates’s spin, “We don’t want quantitative measures to be the fear factor of bringing somebody’s (evaluation) score down …Principal feedback and support and decision-making is ultimately the foundation, but those quantitative measures need to inform principals’ next steps with teachers and certainly are supposed to be drivers of improvement and reflection, not a hammer of adverse employment decisions in and of themselves.”

So, the Tulsa TLE is a tool for getting rid of hundreds of teachers, i.e “a tool for personnel decisions.” Those released teachers may or may not have been deemed ineffective under the quantitative portion of the TLE, and they may or may not be ineffective in the real world. Perhaps, in some schools, the value-added portion can be a tool that doesn’t interfere with the qualitative portion of the TLE but, in many or most schools, they will be the death of the beneficial part of the evaluation system.

I hope the commission will ask some follow-up questions. Just a couple of months ago, Tulsa’s struggle to find and keep teachers was in the headlines. Despite $28 million of edu-philanthropy in the last seven years, Tulsa’s student performance seems to lag behind that of Oklahoma City, where we face bigger challenges with less money. Moreover, Tulsa was the epicenter of Oklahoma’s Opt Out movement, where two highly respected teachers sacrificed their jobs to protest the excessive testing. Since Tulsa was ranked 6th in the nation in terms of receiving Gates Foundation grants, why haven’t the Gates’s millions worked?

Tulsa’s dubious record should now be studied in an effort to verify Gates’s claim that his measures can be implemented constructively. We should ask how many “ineffective” teachers have been subject to termination due to their failure to meet test score targets? Conversely, how many were flagged by the qualitative portion? How many “exited” teachers were actually ineffective and how many were good and effective teachers who were fed up with the system? Also, how many educators believe that feedback driven by those quantitative measures is actually better than traditional professional development?

Whether we are talking about Gates’s teacher training or his malaria vaccine, if they work then they won’t be rejected. Why won’t Gates look objectively at the evidence about the failure of the quantitative portions of teacher evaluations, and the damage they cause?

I hesitate to post this editorial because it is such flimsy propaganda.

Two weeks ago, the charters in New York City held a mass rally of parents and students to demand more charters for their corporate boards. Now, teachers from the charter schools will hold their own rally. Will they dare to mention the high churn of charter teachers? Surely no one will acknowledge, as the New York Post does not, that the turnover rate of charter teachers is staggeringly high. Will they rally for a 40-hour work week? Not likely, since they have no union. They rally now, but in two-three years,  most will be gone.

Mike Klonsky notes that Arne Duncan is paving the way for his return to Chicago by ladling out millions to charter schools. 
Remember when Rahm Emanuel closed 50 schools in one day because they were under enrolled?  It turns out that charter schools are also under enrolled, but that’s no reason to stop opening more of them!

“Just as Arne Duncan was announcing his retirement and his plans to return to Chicago to “spend more time with his family,” he dropped another $8M in fed dollars on pal Mike Milkie’s Noble charter school chain. This on top of another $42.2M coming to IL with the lion’s share going to Noble and Lawndale Educational and Regional Network.
“Milkie says Noble (which I lovingly call the Billionaires; Charter Network) needs the money in order to open 8 new schools to meet the growing demand and shorten its “waitlist.” But the Raise Your Hand parents group just made a few phone calls and found out that at least 5 Noble schools can’t fill the seats they have. They wonder, “Where’s the waitlist?”
“RYH asks some great questions:
‘Why is the charter community rallying for more schools when there are plenty of openings in existing charter schools across Chicago, including Noble, and CPS’ enrollment has been declining for years, down roughly 14,000 students just since 2012? RYH found last year that there are over 12,000 open seats in charters across Chicago. How and why are taxpayers expected to fund eight new schools when there are plenty of open seats in Noble schools right now?'”

State Rep. Ed Delany, a member of the House Ways and Means Committee in Indiana, requested a report in the state of K-12 education in the state. Indiana now has four separate sectors: traditional public schools, charter schools, online schools, and voucher schools. He discovered that the budget of the traditional public schools, which enroll 94% of the state’s students, have suffered a budget cut of $3 billion since 2009. 

Education report summarizes damage caused by less money, more chaos for schools
For immediate release:

Oct. 19, 2015

 
INDIANAPOLIS – Below are remarks given today by State Rep. Ed DeLaney (D-Indianapolis) to the Interim Study Committee on Education Issues. It covers the subject of education funding in the state of Indiana and its impact on teacher shortages in our state.

“Is Indiana policy designed to attract people to the teaching profession?”

As a member of the Indiana House Ways & Means Committee, I always am concerned with what our state budget does to fund education and the signals we send when we adopt those budgets.

I am deeply concerned that we are signaling a decline in support of our state’s traditional public schools, which serve nearly 94 percent of our students.

As a result of my growing concern, I asked the Legislative Services Agency to analyze how we have allocated funds to education overall and specifically how we have supported traditional schools, charter school, virtual charter schools and the voucher program. You have all received a copy of the July 14, 2015 report. The first two pages set out the funding history for each of the four programs and the third page sets out our overall level of support for education as a whole.

What do these numbers tell us?

The General Assembly now controls the funding of four distinct forms of publicly-funded schools: traditional schools (school corporations), charter schools, virtual charter schools, and schools accepting vouchers. I requested that LSA track the funding of these four pathways over the period from FY 2007 through FY 2015. Remember that this period largely overlaps the growth phase of charters and the start of vouchers. It also overlaps the period of the Great Recession and the end of using property taxes to fund teaching. I have made the LSA memorandum publicly available at http://indianahousedemocrats.org/teacher-shortage, so everyone is free to analyze this data on their own. This report focuses on the State as a whole, not individual districts or schools.

What do we learn from this report?

From FY 2009 through FY 2015, state-directed funding for traditional schools fell by a total of considerably more than $3 billion and has yet to return to FY 2009 levels. (See the revenue line on p. 3 of the LSA report). Note that some of this shortfall was made up by the limited federal stimulus program.

During the same period, the cumulative support for charter schools rose by more than $539 million. Virtual charter funding rose from nothing to over $50 million a year with the total for the period totaling more than $133 million. Voucher support went from nothing to over $113 million a year with a cumulative increase of some $248 million. Thus, the three new recipients of public funds gained $920 million dollars in support over the period.
All of this activity has caused a small shift in attendance for the period from FY 2009 to FY 2015. Traditional school attendance fell from 987,000 to 952,000 over the period. The charters had a growth in attendance from 16,500 to some 25,000. Virtual charters went from zero to 8,400. Vouchers went from supporting no students to supporting some 29,000. Note that the total attendance for all types combined rose modestly from 1,003,000 to 1,015,000.

Despite the attendance shifts within the four categories of publicly funded education, 93.9 percent of our publicly funded students presently are still in traditional schools. One may ask what message the General Assembly is sending when it cuts funding for 93.9 percent of our students and dramatically raises funding for the remaining 6 percent. I have two charts showing the changes in funding from a baseline of 2009.

I believe that these charts and the LSA report show a dramatic drop in education funding and a shift of emphasis and funds from the 94 percent of our students in traditional schools. I believe that the public and especially aspiring teachers sense this shift. They have reacted.

The data referred to above is statewide. In addition, I have looked to other public sources to get an idea of how this impacts teachers and school corporations. I am posting references at http://indianahousedemocrats.org/teacher-shortage. Using these you can learn a great deal about teacher age, teacher pay, rates of retirement, and other information tied to particular districts.

Here are a few key data points I learned that impact schools and teachers:

INPRS, the state pension organization, has a wealth of information on our teachers. The Demographic Assumptions used in our pension system tell us that some 35 percent of new teachers don’t enter a second year as teachers. These may be connected to the fact that the pay increase from year one to year two has fallen.

INPRS advises that the average years of teaching have fallen steadily from 2007 to 2015, declining from 15.6 years of service to 14.1 years. Over the same period, the number of active teachers in the pension system fell from 75,833 to 68,734. Of this lower number, some 10,400 are expected to retire over the next five years. They will need replacements.
What are the conclusions that can be drawn from this data?

Our state has cut support for K-12 education.

It has diverted money to three new experiments. I believe this has been dispiriting to future teachers and confusing to the public.

We seem to forget that people rely on institutions when choosing a job. What institution can the new teacher look to? The General Assembly and its budget? A charter school with an unelected board or a for-profit operator? A school corporation that is subject to the whims of the Legislature on issues of pay, testing, financial support and access to property tax revenue?

I for one hope that this committee will start to rebuild our central educational institution, the school corporations. I also hope that we will put a moratorium on new educational experiments while we examine what less money and more chaos has accomplished.

U.S. Senators and Representatives return to Capitol Hill in Washington, DC this week after their early fall recess. High on the Congressional agenda, along with funding federal programs and leadership fights, are the final steps to overhaul the discredited “No Child Left Behind” law. Make sure your elected officials know that you want real assessment reform, not more failed policies. Meanwhile, the testing resistance movement continues to raise issues and win victories in many states across the nation.

National Tell Congress: End Federal Test-and-Punish Policies Now
http://www.fairtest.org/tell-congress-keep-federal-accountability-mandates
National Time to Move On From Evaluating Teachers by Student Test Scores
http://www.realcleareducation.com/articles/2015/10/13/its_time_to_move_on_from_using_student_growth_in_evaluating_teachers_1232.html
National U.S. Schools Would Benefit From Less Testing, More Equitable Funding
http://neatoday.org/2015/10/09/u-s-public-schools-could-benefit-from-less-test-taking-and-more-equitable-funding-says-finnish-educator-pasi-sahlberg/

California Incorporating Social and Emotional Learning Into School Accountability

Incorporating social-emotional learning into school accountability

Florida Teachers Raise Concerns About Flawed State Assessment System
http://www.wjhg.com/home/headlines/School-Board-2-Failed-Audits-and-More-FSA-Complaints–332588162.html
Florida League of Women Voters Says “Time to Focus on Teaching, Not Testing”
http://capitalsoup.com/2015/10/14/opinion-time-to-focus-on-teaching-not-testing/

Idaho Rethinking High-Stakes Testing
http://magicvalley.com/news/local/idaho-common-core-re-thinking-the-high-stakes-achievement-test/article_2c8fe740-1569-5949-85e5-45908193d8dc.html

Illinois To Fix Teacher Shortages, First Understand Role of Testing in Causing Them
http://blogs.edweek.org/teachers/teaching_ahead/2015/10/fix-teacher-shortages-by-first-understanding-them.html

Indiana Report Raises Questions About Fairness of State Exams
http://www.wthr.com/story/30262268/questions-arise-over-fairness-of-istep-tests
Indiana Test Score Delay Is a Matter of Fairness
http://www.jconline.com/story/opinion/2015/10/16/op-ed-istep-delays-matter-fairness/74064308/

Maryland Teachers Question Time, Money Devoted to Standardized Exams
http://www.wbal.com/article/125101/21/teachers-question-standardized-tests

Massachusetts PARCC Exam No Better Than Current State Test
http://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2015/10/14/parcc-better-than-mcas-measuring-college-readiness-study-shows/bjAY4kGD6oqZWVfTaMRzGL/story.html
Massachusetts State Faces Testing Showdown
http://commonwealthmagazine.org/education/core-debate/

New Jersey Another Test Looms for PARCC
http://www.app.com/story/opinion/editorials/2015/10/15/parcc-nj-proficiency-levels/73979290/

New York NYC OptOut Launches New Web Site With Great Information for Parents
http://www.optoutnyc.com/
New York 144 School Boards Adopt Resolution Against High-Stakes Testing
http://www.pressrepublican.com/news/local_news/city-school-considers-exam-resolution/article_2993d29c-3b82-58b9-b36a-2bcc1f0b3f05.html

Ohio New State Test Will Use Questions Cannibalized From Arizona, Florida and Utah
http://www.cleveland.com/metro/index.ssf/2015/10/ohios_new_state_tests_in_2016.html

Oklahoma State Ed Super Questions Cost, Effectiveness of Test-Based Teacher Evaluation System
http://www.tulsaworld.com/news/education/state-superintendent-questions-cost-effectiveness-of-changing-teacher-evaluation-system/article_970c67da-f3d5-5bd8-ac80-f7593a8d3e43.html

Oregon School Ratings Suspended for One Year
http://www.statesmanjournal.com/story/news/education/2015/10/15/state-ratings-schools-paused-one-year/73988596/
Oregon Moving Testing Target Doesn’t Best Serve Students
http://www.argusobserver.com/opinion/moving-target-of-testing-doesn-t-best-serve-students/article_e1b553f6-74f9-11e5-b068-fb984ad235d2.html

Pennsylvania Student Test Scores: Arbitrary Assessments Strongly Linked to Family Income
http://www.mcall.com/opinion/letters/mc-pssa-scores-wealth-performance-kearney-20151015-story.html

Texas Lawmaker Takes State to Task for Testing Fixation
http://www.12newsnow.com/story/30274760/state-lawmaker-takes-texas-to-task-over-staar-test
Texas In Response to Parents’ Pressure State Shortens Tests for Young Children
http://www.mystatesman.com/news/news/wimberley-based-group-wins-shorter-staar-for-young/nn4gs/

Utah State Testing Policy Can Make You Dizzy
http://www.deseretnews.com/article/865638929/Utahs-testing-laws-can-make-you-dizzy.html?pg=all
Utah Standardized Exams Are Counter-Productive
http://news.hjnews.com/logan_hj/standardized-tests-counterproductive/article_d036a14a-793d-5825-b0fb-f17413057bba.html

Virginia State Education Department Overhauls School Accountability System
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/education/wp/2015/10/09/virginia-revises-state-accountability-system/?wprss=rss_education

ACT/SAT More Colleges Dropping Admissions Tests
http://www.richmondregister.com/news/more-colleges-dropping-admissions-tests/article_0afc23ca-75ae-11e5-ac60-4f960efeae18.html
ACT/SAT FairTest Database of 850 Test-Optional and Test-Flexible Colleges, Universities
http://www.fairtest.org/university/optional

Bob Schaeffer, Public Education Director
FairTest: National Center for Fair & Open Testing
office- (239) 395-6773 fax- (239) 395-6779
mobile- (239) 699-0468
web- http://www.fairtest.org

Phyllis Bush is a member of the Board of the Network for Public Education. She is a retired teacher and a passionate fighter for better public schools. She is one of the leaders of the Northeast Indiana Friends of Public Education. She has been outraged again and again by the actions of the Governor and the Legislature that demean public school teachers and show preference for charters, vouchers, and inexperienced teachers.

There was a hearing in Indianapolis to explore why there is a teacher shortage. Phyllis drove there with friends to testify, but the hearing lasted so long that there was no time to hear the public.

This is the letter that Phyllis sent to the Board of NPE:
FYI—six of us from Fort Wayne drove to Indianapolis yesterday to speak at the hearing about the teacher shortage. I figured that there would be at least an hour of “expert” testimony before there would be public comment. However, our “drunk with power” committee chairs decided that we needed even more expert testimony—five and a half hours more. To be fair, there were some members of the committee who pushed back, but because they are in the minority, their views were dismissed as well

I just emailed this to the members of the interim study commission. I was so wired when I got home last night that I couldn’t sleep, and when I finally did get to sleep, I was awakened by a leg cramp—and now I am even more livid about how Kruse and Behning wasted the time of the 40 plus would be speakers—most of whom did not stick around to talk because it got so late. The hearing ended at 8:40 last night.

I hope things are going better in your part of the world.

Phyllis (mad as hell and ready to smack someone upside the head)

Dear Senator ______

Because of the structure of the interim session yesterday, we were unable to stay for the whole marathon hearing. I spoke with Rep. Smith, who then spoke with Sen. Kruse about the length of the hearing. Since there were no assurances of when we might possibly be able to speak and since the “experts” were still testifying at 5:30, our group of six people (who care about public education) decided to leave.
I hope that in the future the Chairs of these committees will be mindful of the fact that many people who wish to have their voices heard come from other parts of the state at their own expense and on their own time. While I realize that it is important to have “expert” testimony (especially paid out of state experts), it seems disrespectful not to pencil in time to listen to the voices Hoosier taxpayers and Hoosier voters.

Thank you,

Phyllis A. Bush
I left a copy of my testimony with Rep. Smith, but just in case you didn’t receive a copy, here it is.
My Testimony for Today’s Hearing
PHYLLIS BUSH·MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2015
Public education is so important; that is why I keep driving to Indianapolis to testify about various and sundry education issues. Sometimes it seems futile, but I won’t give up. If I don’t speak out when I see the consequences of misguided educational policies that are so fundamentally wrong, then I am complicit in the damage done to public education. Having said that, I will continue to speak out against what seems to be a legislatively orchestrated attempt to destroy public education. I’m tenacious by nature, so I’m in to stay. I’m in until Public Education is made whole.
Given the current teacher scapegoat climate both in Indiana and in the nation, it doesn’t take rocket science to figure out why there is a teacher shortage. When our legislators and policy makers continuously demean and disrespect teachers, is it any wonder that teachers are leaving the profession faster than rats leave a sinking ship? Is it any wonder that young teachers would not want to stay in a profession where there is little chance for a salary increase based on spurious and often inaccurate data? Is it any wonder that good teachers don’t want to continue spending a great share of their time preparing kids for tests and teaching to the test? Is it any wonder that they don’t want to carry out state mandates which they know are instructionally inappropriate?
If we are to look for the causes of this supposed teacher shortage, the finger should point directly at the feet of government officials in this state and across the nation who have scapegoated, demeaned, and devalued the teaching profession.
When people are belittled or told that they are worthless or inadequate, when the expectations are inappropriate and punitive, when the opportunities for expressing views are stifled, there is a toxic mixture of factors which border on abuse.
How many new teachers will be drawn to a profession where there is no respect, where there are few rights, and where they are viewed with the same lack of respect as minimum wage workers are?
Maybe this committee is asking the wrong questions.
Is there really a shortage of teachers or is it that teachers have fled the profession because of untenable working conditions?
Superintendent Glenda Ritz and her Blue Ribbon Commission have made a list of suggestions which target teacher retention and recruitment, and their list sounds much like what teachers have been asking for since the so-called reforms of Mitch Daniels and Tony Bennett. Our organization, the Northeast Indiana Friends of Public Education, is ready and willing to help by offering concrete suggestions.
Rather than discussing whether or not there is a teaching shortage, perhaps this committee needs to be discussing what is our legislature planning to do to repair the damage that has been done before it is too late?

I get the impression, reading Peter Greene’s latest post, that he doesn’t think Eva Moskowitz deserves an apology from John Merrow or PBS.

He says she has created an empire of her own, and she can’t brook any criticism.

Success Academy works for some kids, but not for all kids. That is, if you think that the ultimate measure of a school is test scores, she has them. Public schools are supposed to work for all kids. Granted, there are magnet schools and special schools, but there are supposed to be public schools where no one is turned away, no one is counseled out.

Eva says that the little boy–age 5 or 6–was a very bad behavior problem. Peter–and many readers of this blog–think that he couldn’t handle the pressure.

Peter finds documentation for everything John Merrow said about attrition rates.

Moskowitz also demands a retraction for the reporting of a high attrition rate, claiming, “Our attrition rate is actually lower than the average for either district or charter schools.” This is an exceptionally ballsy claim. You can look at these charts from Democracy Builders, a pro-charter group in NYC, showing that for eighty-eight students starting in third grade, Success ends up with thirty-one in eighth grade. In 2014, the Daily News reported that the first graduating class at Harlem Success was just thirty-two of the original seventy-three– and despite their awesome test scores, none of them qualified on the entrance exam for the top high schools in the city.

Maybe those kids were just a bad fit for Eva’s academy.

Colorado public television Brian Malone’s documentary about the “reform”movement, called “Education, Inc.” The showing was followed by a debate, involving pro- and anti- views. 

This is a huge breakthrough, first, because Brian was able to bring the issue to a public audience. And second, because Colorado is a major stronghold of the “reform” movement. Senator Michael Bennett, former superintendent of the Denver schools, is a favorite of DFER (the hedge funders and equity investors), which is a source of funding for privatization. At every election, whether state or local, out of state money pours in to assure reformster control. Colorado also has one of the worst, most punitive educator evaluations in the nation, thanks to State Senator Michael Johnston (ex-TFA).

The panel discussing Brian’s film included Brian, the president of the Independence Institute (ALEC), the vice-president of the Colorado Education Association, the leader of a pro-school choice group, and a reporter from “Chalkbeat.” 

Here is the link to the program, which is the debate about it. To learn more about Brian’s excellent film, go to his website. 

Edincmovie.com

By the way, it was funded by Brian Malone.

Merryl Tisch, Chancellor of the New York Board of Regents, denounced Governor Andrew Cuomo’s education policymaking via the budget process. Under the New York State Constitution, the Regents are in charge of education policy. That is their role. But last spring, Governor Cuomo imposed a new teacher evaluation plan as part of the state budget.


State Board of Regents chancellor Merryl Tisch Monday spoke out Monday against the new teacher evaluation system backed by Gov. Andrew Cuomo, saying she doesn’t think education policy should be written into legislation or be part of the budget process.

“Our forefathers and mothers were very clever in how they designed the system in New York State, creating a state policy board that was separate from the executive branch,” Tisch told hundreds of school board members, educators and advocates at a panel discussion at annual New York State School Boards Association conference in Manhattan.

“I think now it’s going to be really hard to convince a lot of people who are up for election to go in and reopen the law that they really would kind of like to put behind them,” she said.