Cami Anderson was appointed by Givernor Chris Christie to run the Newark school district. Following much turmoil and disruption, she became a target of parent protests. After being insulted at a meeting of the city’s powerless board, she stopped attending board meetings.
This past weekend, Anderson resurfaced to declare herself on the side of the plaintiffs in the Vergara case who are trying to strip teachers of due process rights (aka tenure). She declared she was a “huge” supporter of unions and due process, but sided with those who seek to eliminate both.
Her article appeared not surprisingly in the anti-union Wall Street Journal.
She writes:
“An appeal is under way of the landmark 2014 Vergara v. California ruling in favor of nine public-school students who courageously challenged state laws they said deprived them of a quality education. The ruling by a Los Angeles County Superior Court judge struck down California’s teacher tenure, dismissal and “last in, first out” layoff laws on grounds that they violate the equal protection clause of the state constitution and “disproportionately affect poor and/or minority students.”
“Opening arguments in the appeal, which began Feb. 25, had me reflecting on the disheartening lessons I learned regarding teacher’s contracts and labor laws during the five years I served as superintendent of New York City’s Alternative High Schools and Programs (District 79).
“In 2006 my team and I were charged with improving the lives and academic outcomes of some of our city’s most at-risk young people. About 30,000 students ages 16 to 21, most from low-income families of color, attended our education programs in drug-treatment centers, juvenile detention, in jail on Rikers Island or in the basements of high schools. From the start it was clear that many of these resilient and brilliant young people—trapped in what some call the “school-to-prison pipeline”—had limitless potential, if only they had caring, quality educators
“Not long into my term, however, the ugly reality of the dysfunctional systems working against our students hit me. Far from setting the high expectations our students needed to beat the odds, many teachers and staff reinforced our students’ deepest self-doubts. The young people who needed the best, most motivated educators sat downwind of policies that meant they too often got the least-effective educators.
“At the time, most teachers attained tenure after three years in New York. In District 79, most teachers had attained tenure decades before I became superintendent. (Under California’s now-unconstitutional tenure law, teachers achieve tenure even more quickly: 18 months or less.) Annual performance evaluations are supposed to ensure ongoing quality among tenured teachers, but all too often the system fails. In New York 99% of teachers receive “effective” ratings while fewer than 40% of high-schoolers graduate college-ready. Union and management officials admit in private that the results of teacher evaluations have little to do with reality.
“Even worse, teachers engaging in egregious conduct, like showing up late 40 times in a single year, physically assaulting a child, or falsifying records (actual examples), incurred no consequences—unless we spent over $100,000 and up to two years to revoke their tenure. Even then, a slow and broken arbitration system could order the teacher back into the classroom due to technicalities.
“More shocking, if a teacher is merely incompetent and delivering mediocre lessons, the process is twice as long and costly, even though, as evidence in Vergara v. California established, the damage to students is equally as devastating.
“Statutes forcing us to retain tenured educators regardless of quality also prevented us from adapting staffing to meet evolving student needs. For example, if we wanted to hire a new, highly motivated person with alternative-high-school experience to teach computer code, the job security of the tenured “teacher of plumbing” or “elevator operator” prevented us—even if the unneeded teacher was mediocre or worse.
“As a huge believer in unions, due process and collective bargaining, I agonized seeing union staff zealously defend a tenure system that essentially traded students’ futures for jobs at all costs. Quality-blind tenure systems for teachers have a devastating impact on students and on the teachers who want most to make a difference.
“The incredible work of some dedicated educators was overshadowed by far too many who lamented that our students were unreachable and regularly told me students were best served with low-level work sheets and mindless busy work. When I arrived at District 79 in 2006, it was the exception, rather than the rule, to observe a teacher conducting lessons that actively engaged students.
“Meanwhile, our district employed nearly a dozen “principals” and “vice principals” who did not serve in any formal leadership capacity. Lawyers had negotiated settlements to place them “off the radar” rather than attempt to navigate the byzantine tenure-revocation process. Caring teachers were often discouraged and driven to become less effective or leave the district. People were quick to tell me there was nothing I could do about it because of labor laws and practices—and that asking questions made you a target.
“Despite the painful effects of a broken tenure system on our district, over five years, we made tremendous strides through better mental-health services, smarter curricula to close academic gaps, and individualized plans for students coming out of incarceration. Courageous staff and union leaders bucked the status quo and put the interests of students over the interests of adults. Unfortunately, the unnecessary obstacles we had to tackle to attain these results demoralized many dedicated educators, confronted daily by the overall lack of quality personnel.
“Over and over, I saw the issue at the heart of the Vergara case play out in my district—the worst educators serving children in the toughest circumstances, in part because these students and their families had limited ways to fight back. Why should doing the right thing require nine brave students to sue the state, as we’ve seen in California, or “rule-breaking” educators and union leaders, like I knew in District 79, to defend students’ rights to quality instruction? Shouldn’t public policy that puts students first be the status quo?”
What she doesn’t mention in her article is that the Vergara trial did not show any damage to the plaintiffs. One of the accused teachers was Pasadena’s “teacher of the year.” Two of the student plaintiffs were enrolled in charter schools, where none of their teachers had tenure. Some of the other teachers did not have tenure.
The complaints seem to be as much about legislation, statutes, as union contracts.
I do not doubt that there are problems with some contracts, but her examples are not even close to fair-minded, not constructive…but perfect fodder for the Wall Street Journal. Not much news there about the greedy unions of fire fighters, police officers, first responders, social service workers who are also (regrettably) not eager to defend teacher unions.
Laura H. Chapman: well put.
And another example of how self-proclaimed “education reformers” are most merciless in turning Rheeality Distortion Fields on themselves.
They can’t self-correct because, apparently, they are in self-delusion mode right from the beginning.
For a tiny example: has the Great One Herself ever acknowledged her profound inability to do something as simple as attend meetings where everyone doesn’t praise her? To answer critics directly, one-to-one? To actually defend her words and actions to those that can rebut her specious claims based on first-hand experience? If she couldn’t stand the heat she should have gotten out of the education kitchen—which is precisely what she didn’t do! Evidently, being effective at her admin job was not nearly as important as finding that space, away from all those critics, where she could enjoy thinking happy thoughts about herself.
Perhaps I am exaggerating here, but I don’t think she could last long in her dream school and classroom and age group—a $ucce$$ Academy room with six-year-olds—because she just doesn’t make a “good fit” for rheephorm “rigor” and “grit.” To the time out corner!
😱
All of the above, of course, makes her an expert on everything to do with best educational and management practices.
Rheeally! And she can do it all in the most Johnsonally sort of ways too…
Or so she thinks…
Thank you for your comments.
😎
In the rare cases I have come across one of these supposedly incompetent and lazy teachers, I have seen a principal who completely enables it by refusing to do what needs to be done to document problems. I have seen some principals willing to do so and in almost all cases the teacher retires. Not disappears to another school where apparent the terrible principal doesn’t care about incompetent teachers. But leaves the profession. Although if they haven’t reached retirement age, I imagine many of them can get a job with some cut rate charter school somewhere.
Where was the principal in this school that Cami Anderson taught? Or was she the principal? And is there some rule that a teacher is allowed to teach any way he wants even if the principal asks for a different method? Or was the principal just afraid to cross the teacher and become unpopular?
Since when do unions absolve principals of any oversight?
Wow, how many principals have you observed? Sounds like a lot.
You all need to ensure that the union is YOUR union and not like the legislature, as Liz Warren describes it… people who are there to do the bidding of those higher up, and to do their own thing… as they have been doing for over a decade now.
I don’t know if anyone actually reads what I write here, about the assault on teachers in the nineties when the EIC
Click to access eic-oct_11.pdf
took out over one hundred thousand veteran teachers, by enabling the principals to say and do anything they wish.
As we have seen, when ‘everyone is doing it’ and there is not a shred of accountability, the principals are enabled and can do as they wish. Randi herself saw what the Manhattan Bureau chief Ivan Tiger allowed the principals, to do (yeah more than one tried to evict me from the school which I helped to make famous in NYC) .
All of you today, who are helpless when a principal does his thing is because this happened and the union contract was ignored. it is here on my desk, and the grievance procedures that are printed there were never followed for me and the tens of thousands of teachers in NYC who vanished under the top-down assault.
http://www.perdaily.com/2011/01/lausd-et-al-a-national-scandal-of-enormous-proportions-by-susan-lee-schwartz-part-1.html
I have put up Lorna Stremcha’s story many times, because the bullying that she endured is THE example of what happens when THERE IS No ACCOUNTABILITY under the law.
The union is the legal legs of us teachers. They allowed it. They allow it still, and VAM helps them.
Here it is again, for those of you who missed it, because it demonstrates what happens when a ‘donaldtrump’ personality gets to run a school, and he can punch any teacher in the mouth…or set her up to be assaulted, physically or emotionally.
Since when, you ask?
I began to teach in 1963, and have known some fabulous principals.
BY the eighties, I witnessed too many of the ones that inhabited that position cozying up to higher-ups. Two, were absolutely incompetent.
I have known some wonderful principals in my early career, but by 1988 the war on public schools had begun with the assault on the classroom practitioner, as Loran Stremcha (MONTANA) expanse in her book “Bravery, Bullies & Blowhards” DON’T MISS ThIS ONE
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/background-information-bravery-bullies-blowhards-lorna-stremcha
BY 1992, the harassment began for me, and many of the tenured teachers in NYC. The website for NYC Teachers drowned in stories where principals were out of control, meaning there was not a shred of accountability from the unions.
http://www.perdaily.com/2011/01/lausd-et-al-a-national-scandal-of-enormous-proportions-by-susan-lee-schwartz-part-1.html
NYC is the largest district of the 15,880 and when the tenured teachers were removed en masse, so this happened http://vimeo.com/41994760
With the success of the assault on tenured teachers in NYC, the EIC went on to the 2nd largest district, LAUSD, and gave the principals ‘carte blanch’ and ten thousand teachers bit the dust.
http://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/FINALLY-TARGETED-TEACHERS-in-Best_Web_OpEds-Agenda_America_Corporate_Corruption-150708-830.html#comment553842
newest https://dianeravitch.net/2015/08/09/los-angeles-broad-walton-plan-major-expansion-of-privatization/
There were 4 principals at the helm at East Side Middle School, from1990 when the school opened, until I was put in the rubber room, and never saw my fabulous classroom again. Each of them were unethical critters who did the bidding of the superintendent, who, in turn, got her orders from above.
Like the legislators in our Congress (the macrocosm of our culture) who (as Liz Warren explains) are there to do anything they are told by their sponsors who get them elected, the chancellors, superintendents and principals answer NOT to parents or teachers, and are in all too many cases “lord of a fiefdom” where teachers are serfs. THAT metaphor BTW, was told to me by the Manhattan Bureau chief of the UFT, Ivan Tiger when I came to tell him , that first time, of the outrageous behavior of the FIRST principle at ESMS.
He, of course did nothing to help, me, and when the 3rd dictator came after me with charges of corporal punishment, he sat on his hands….until my attorney filed a 4 million dollar lawsuit. Randi herself, knows the story, as she came to my rescue, and he, did not lose his job, or his pension, but was quietly moved to Albany until his retirement.
Teachers that he failed lost everything.
So, don’t get me started on principals…
NYC Parent:
Good point. I have an acquaintance at who teaches at Galileo High, a San Francisco public school, who tells me that three of his tenured colleagues were removed by a diligent principal. Perhaps Galileo readers can confirm or deny this.
Cami doesn’t talk about all the good teachers who would be canned by bad principals were tenure to disappear –canceling out any gains for students by firing the duds.
Also, she laments some teachers’ mediocre lessons, but, for heaven’s sake, doesn’t she see the ubiquitous MANDATED mediocrity, beginning with NCLB test prep and continuing with Common Core’s various untested and often ghastly incarnations (e.g. EngageNY)? Rule of thumb: teachers’ original lessons are often so-so, but almost all off-the-shelf curricula imposed by administrators are worse (see Lucy Calkins’ Units of Study).
I sure hope she get no rights and has no severance someday-out in the cold for her
One of the things Cami says here epitomizes one of the pernicious aspects of corporate education reform:
“Over and over, I saw the issue at the heart of the Vergara case play out in my district—the worst educators serving children in the toughest circumstances, in part because these students and their families had limited ways to fight back.”
Read that again.
It’s falsely claiming that there’s this ongoing war being waged between students/parents on one side, and the “worst teachers” on the other. The teachers are vicious bullies and the parents/students are their victims “with limited ways to fight back.”
By simply stating this is the reality of things (when it’s not… yet), they hope to make it a self-fulfilling prophecy. “If we keep saying that this is what’s going on, then hopefully it will lead to that happening for real.”
Such specious rhetoric turns hope into hate. It’s based on the premise that we have to turn one group of stakeholders against another, viciously blaming and scapegoating one group. This is the fundamental premise of Parent Revolution and the Parent Trigger.
Indeed, inciting parents & students to hate / attack teachers is one of the linchpins, or foundational supports of corporate reformers’ premeditated disruption of schools as a stepping stone to corporate takeover and busting the teachers union.
It’s a pretty sick and dysfunctional tactic, deliberately so.
Here’s an example of this from Michelle Rhee’s time running the Washington, D.C. schools.
Check out this video about Hart Middle School, a Washington, D.C. school during the reign of Michelle Rhee. A new Rhee disciple principal took over. She was a former elementary school teacher. She had no experience in administration, nor in middle schools. She was young, 34-35. I’ll let one of the teacher tell how, acting on Rhee’s marching orders, this idiot principal employed the whole “turn-parents/students-against-the-teachers” strategy:
03:00 – 03:19
03:00 – 03:19
MALE TEACHER:
“Her (the principal’s) whole manner, her whole demeanor derived from … it was kind of Rhee-like in that that she had an outright disdain for the teachers and the other adults really, who worked at the school. Given all of this, the first few weeks of the year was just madness.”
This MALE TEACHER gives an accounting of that “BACK TO SCHOOL NIGHT” event:
03:36 – 05:33
03:36 – 05:33 (transcript skips around to parts about
driving a wedge between teachers and parents/students)
MALE TEACHER: “This was supposed to be everybody’s opportunity to meet each other, to talk about our shared focus and goals for the school year… so we (the teachers) are all milling around, welcoming parents…
“‘And the new principal comes in and her remark is:
” ‘Welcome… I’m “The Hip-Hop Principal” … Parents and students, I just want to let you know that it’s US (parents/students)… AGAINST all the adults here, including THE TEACHERS,” (she then points over at the teachers standing together)
FEMALE TEACHER: “That one incident began to cultivate to a climate that ‘it’s us (principal/students/parents) against you (the teachers).’ It did not help with discipline issues. It exacerbated discipline problems, and things were way out of control.”
MALE TEACHER: “It had gotten so bad, in terms of control of the school, that teachers were calling 911 from their classrooms … there were daily assaults on teachers … because the principal herself was antagonistic towards teachers, that carried over to the young people.”
FEMALE TEACHER: “… She (the principal) wanted to build a relationship with parents by putting a wedge between parents and teachers. I don’t think she saw that the parents, the teachers and the students, and the entire community was the support services she would need she would need to lead (the school).”
05:40 – 06:26
05:40 – 06:26
MALE TEACHER: ‘Chancellors Rhee’s giant failure at Hart, and perhaps this extrapolates (to all of D.C. Schools)… was a total lack of regard for the teachers who were there, who had an institutional memory… and for the community that has to buy in…
“What happened with the Chancellor was that she set up a dichotomy of US (Rhee / students/ parents) against THEM (the teachers), as opposed to ALL of us together. And, had she really listened to all of those parents, there could have been the kind of change in that community that would have been the kind of thing that should have been celebrated.”
CAMI ANDERSON: “Courageous staff and union leaders bucked the status quo and put the interests of students over the interests of adults. Unfortunately, the unnecessary obstacles we had to tackle to attain these results demoralized many dedicated educators, confronted daily by the overall lack of quality personnel.”
Naturally, Cami is a TFA alumna. Like many of fellow TFA alumni, she is seen here spouting the whole “adult interests” vs “children’s interets” false dichotomy. Whom are you for? The adults or the kids? Because you can only be for one of those two groups.
This thinking goes like this:
A gain for adults (teachers) is always a loss for children(students)
… AND …
a gain for children(students) is always a loss — a good one — for adults (teachers).
Well, here’s another TFA alumnus, LAUSD School Board President Steve Zimmer with a takedown of what Zimmer calls this “incredibly deceptive political construct” and “a lie.”
If’s from an interview in JEWISH JOURNAL:
http://www.jewishjournal.com/education/article/lausd_board_president_steve_zimmer_talks_about_getting_back_to_basics
————————————————
JEWISH JOURNAL: “It seems like a lot of the dialogue relating to LAUSD pits teacher against student. If something is good for students, then it’s bad for teachers, and vice versa.”
STEVE ZIMMER: “How it’s said in my world is whether you have ‘a kid agenda’ or ‘an adult agenda.’ That is an incredibly deceptive political construct. Anybody who has spent their career in public school knows that’s a lie. When you’re supporting teachers, you’re supporting kids. When you create a better environment for learning, you’re supporting kids and everyone who works with them.
“That lie — kids versus adults — that lie is a subterfuge about what part of the reform movement is about, which is eviscerating or lessening the influence of public sector unions. A lot of that is focused on teacher unions. Teacher unions are teachers. I’ve been very critical of my own union and the union I consider to be an ally. [But] there’s a difference between being critical of different policies of a labor union, and believing that unions should not exist.
“And a lot of money that fuels the charter and reform movement is by people who believe teacher unions should not exist.”
(then later)
STEVE ZIMMER: “I’m actually very proud we have some of the highest-performing charters in the country. It takes a lot for me to not renew or to close down an existing charter. But at the point we’re at, a new charter has to be compelling. It has to offer something we don’t have right now, and that is a high bar. I am unapologetic about it.
“I believe in choice, but I am very, very wary. I am very cognizant of the damage that competition (from charter expansion) has done to our schools. And we became obsessed with data instead of being data-informed. When a system becomes so obsessed with competition that they view children through their potential to score versus their overall humanity, the dehumanization of that public school system is not something that is attractive to parents, is not something that is warm and inviting. And our public schools, to my great regret, have become test score-obsessed. A lot of charter schools have, too.”
Two responses hit me. One about is our standardized score obsession. Any school whose emphasizes scores first, automatically puts students and curricula second. The second comment is about our love affair with “choice.” Is Mr. Zimmer aware that large public systems offer far more options than charters ever could? If we really want options for students, public systems by their sheer numbers offer many choices that charters will never be able to duplicate. In charters the choice is often would you like to attend a school where the students look like your or the one where they don’t look like you? In the selective charters, it is often the school that has the choice, not the student.
It’s always about those “incompetent” older tenured (and top of the pay scale) teachers taking the spot of those young eager (bottom of the pay scale due to lack of experience) beginning or temporary teachers (TFA).
Forgive me for wanting a veteran master teacher working with my own children and not one of those newbes who just lack the skills necessary to diagnose and implement strategies to assist the students in actual learning (especially if they have deficiencies due to language barriers, emotional or learning disabilities, or lack of soft skills which keep them from being fully involved in the learning process). Even if those beginning teachers stick it out and eventually become an asset to the school district, those first few yeas are simply a matter of survival (see Harry Wong). They are definitely not the ones who should be working with the most disadvantaged (unless they are working alongside a knowledgable coworker).
What we need are educationally experienced city Superintendents who are familiar with the issues facing urban populations and not political appointees who are susceptible to any new fad which will make a buck for their supporters. Luckily, superintendents do not qualify for tenure and if they are incompetent (an fairly common occurance) they can be bought out (a pricey act benefiting the individual which the taxpayer ultimately assumes).
What amazes me is that these incompetent superintendents castigated by the community and paid to leave by the school board simply get another job in another state school district in spite of their questionable work history.
I’m still waiting for a court case against this travesty in education.
“if a teacher is merely incompetent and delivering mediocre lessons”
Mediocre’s actually pretty decent for someone who’s incompetent.
I think Cami’s point was that as long as you have a robotic script to follow, any person who walks in the door can be deemed at least ‘mediocre’. As long as they work long hours for low wages, demand little in the way of benefits, and are willing to do all that is necessary to get rid of the children who can’t be taught with the script.
A union teacher would just get in the way of that.
“For example, if we wanted to hire a new, highly motivated person with alternative-high-school experience to teach computer code, the job security of the tenured “teacher of plumbing” or “elevator operator” prevented us—even if the unneeded teacher was mediocre or worse.”
Because no one needs plumbers, right. I thought we were pretending ed reformers had respect for skilled trades?
She knows “coding” is just a different skilled trade, doesn’t she, or does she think “coding” is a magical money machine? I love the comparison between the icky, old-fashioned plumber and the “highly motivated coder!”
What Cami actually means is this:
“If I want to hire my friend’s daughter who has never taught a day in her life but once worked in a web design place and knows a bit about programming to teach computer code, why should an experienced “teacher of plumbing” not be fired? Why should a student learn plumbing skills? Once they are paid $500,000 a year like I am then can just hire out plumbers for all their needs.”
She wasn’t insulted. A mother correctly pointed out that she wanted the same for her African American child as Cami would want for her African American child. Cami felt insulted because how dare that mother equate herself with Cami.
Anderson is a soulless woman who put kids in danger over and over again and doesn’t deserve to be heard.
Speakin g of Vegara
http://www.perdaily.com/2014/06/lausds-treacherous-road-from-reed-to-vergara–its-never-been-about-students-just-money.html
As for Cami, she is a serial liar.
I have been writing about MENDACITY, at Oped, where I recently said this about liars and con-men …oops con-WOmen.
The extremists in our media and government have turned lying into an art
http://billmoyers.com/story/how-the-media-enabled-donald-trump-by-destroying-politics-first/
so it is no surprise that a serial liar wants to be president. The media destroyed politics and created Trump, says Moyers, AND Liz Warren nails how the GOP created this extreme liar
and she ain’t the only one LOL!
Krugman talked about the big “CON,’ of the GOP, how these serial liars the crazies and the conmen invented a ‘donaldtrump’ and they did!
http://all-len-all.com/paul-krugman-republicans-are-running-a-con-game-on-america/
Well, Cami, down here on the local landscape, at the very bottom which is the classroom floor, the con-men you love, stomp on the people, and ruin lives— teachers and children— even as they take over the country’s future citizens… and no one sees you lies… but US, here where teachers talk!
What is her job now? Is she a full-time anti-labor advocate and who pays her?
For people who want to fire all the middle-aged employees and replace them with cheaper young people, aren’t these folks entering their forties by now themselves?
I can’t wait until all the public schools are gone and all the labor unions are eradicated.
Then poverty will be solved, along with all US economic problems.
“In New York 99% of teachers receive “effective” ratings while fewer than 40% of high-schoolers graduate college-ready.”
So, this statement somehow implies that since 99% of teachers are “effective” that more than 40% of students should graduate college-ready, but since less than 40% of students are college-ready it implies that 99% of teachers aren’t really effective? LMFAO!!!
I can’t believe these are the type of people leading many of our schools and districts. In fact, my principal was trained to be “data-driven”. I did my best to teach my students while providing ample resources for them, but I couldn’t control what students did out of my class (homework, studying for tests, etc). My principal, for example, at one point told me that my students’ grades were a direct reflection of me and my teaching (I had around a 35% failure rate, on average, teaching in the inner city). At that point I was exhausted from dealing with all of this data junk and “reforms”, so I told her that she was wrong and that my STUDENTS’ grades were a direct reflection of my STUDENTS! As a teacher, I did everything I could to help my students be successful. This conversation didn’t go very well, but someone had to say it. Oops, that person was me – lol!
My principals wanted me to water down material, teach to the test, and ensure that no more than 10% failed. One of my administrators even told me that the district had an “unwritten 15% rule”, where no more than 15% of students could fail. I said, what if 30 percent of your students didn’t complete 90% of the assignments and/or had severe attendance issues (20+ days absent) despite the fact that I had every system in place to support these students? The admin said, “no more than 15%”. I said, “No way! You’ll have to go into my grade book and change the grades yourself then. I refuse to be part of the problem”.
I am so glad I did this. No regrets. I’m not teaching anymore, unfortunately, but it worked out because this is not the climate I wanted to teach in. As many of us know, this unfortunately is an example of less than 1% of the things we had to deal with as it relates to “education reform”.
“In New York 99% of teachers receive “effective” ratings while fewer than 40% of high-schoolers graduate college-ready.” Justification for forcing teacher evals into a stacked ranking system.
The notion of forcing failure is a prime example of Anderson’s arrogance. She-who-must-not -be questioned is a winner in the eyes of the 1% but she couldn’t hold the attention of 60 middle schoolers for 5 seconds. When you think you’re god there’s no need for accountability.
This same process is being imposed on university colleges of education by InTASC. To become accredited by InTASC class grades must be distributed along a normal bell curve. InTnTASC refuses to allow for a writing, editing, and revision process that is critical for developing reflective teaching. Most of our assignments are written analyses of research & applied projects that students revise & submit often prior to a final grade. Setting up conditions for students to succeed is so 20th century.
The system is rigged…read my other comments here!
One of my favorite takedowns of Cami by Jersey Jazzman
http://jerseyjazzman.blogspot.com/2014/03/this-is-your-brain-on-tfa.html
Nothing like equating the plight of kids in poverty to an college crew team who doesn’t get the same travel perks as the football team.
Wow! What drugs are she on?
” if only they had caring, quality educators”
Like there is some giant pool waiting to be tapped if only they could oust the placeholder slackers….riiiiiggghhhttt……
Quality/Caring means to Scami inexperienced TFA reading from scripts, working in charters 12 hours a day, quickly and easily burned out, revolving door of personnel who won’t ask questions or fight for the children.
Scami left Newark with her tail between her legs; but she’ll say she was a victor. She participated in illegal back door deals (Pink Hula Hoop) and spent many lunches alone in a bar sipping wine on company time. She signed onto the One Newark app that continues to wreak havoc on Newark children/students and parents, neighborhoods, etc., and she did nothing constructive in Newark. How well did the charters do? Is it easy to shut down an entire k-8 school and reopen with k-1 graders? Yes, much easier than teaching the entire student body k-8. What happened to the 2-8 graders? WHO CARES? Scami and Christie and Hespe and even Cerf didn’t/don’t care.
Scami Anderson will go down in history as a loser turd. A big fat lying loser turd.
The WSJ readers may not know
•Anderson, as a huge supporter of … due process, had about 10 cases firing tenured teachers overturned; many because she tried to apply pilot-year evaluations of the new evaluation system when it had not yet become valid. I’d like to know what the legal fees for NPS were. The NJ DoE Commissioners during her time in Newark, Cerf and Hespe, both have law degrees.
•Anderson’s Renew Schools turn-around effort to fire/replace principals & faculty at 8 NPS schools did not show improved test performance after two years. See Feb ’15 and Dec ’14 reports by googling afsa.admin.org Renew Schools Newark NJ.
Cami Anderson’s attempting her comeback. She was interviewed for March 10 TNTP blog by Heather Barondess. The timing may be interesting as the investigation into lead in NPS water continues. Apparently lead levels were also dangerous during 2013-14 school year when Anderson spent many school days attending conferences out West.
Cami Anderson must have missed the story about what happens without tenure in charter schools.
The “model” teacher gets the promotions because she does the administration’s bidding and is really really good at making the “got to go” students feel misery until they leave. (FYI, apparently, that Cobble Hill school has one of the highest relative attrition rates in the network.)
The teachers that have the interests of the students over the interests of the corporation bring it to the attention of the higher – ups and need to find new jobs.
In Cami’s world, all teachers’ jobs would be at the mercy of a private organization whose goals (promoting the CEO’s profile, profit) are far different than how to best to educate all children.
Wow. Maybe she should worry about the pipes and led exposure among the children in the Newark schools and less about trying to take down unions and make a name for herself?
Sometimes I wonder what world these reformers live in. From the way Anderson writes, it sounds like there is a legion of great teachers banging at the gate to get into the classroom. There isn’t. Teacher recruitment and retention has become a serious issue in our country. At my school, several classes are “taught” by long term substitutes untrained in the classes subject matter. The reality is that it is the corporate reformers who drive great teachers out of the classroom. They have better things to do than suffer in silence. They are just too dumb to realize it, too greedy to care, or maybe both.
I have a doctorate. I love teaching. I spend countless hours outside of class preparing for class, grading, and keeping update on the research literature about teaching. I even run my own LMS server since my school has no such service available to me. I spend untold sums on my students. None of this deters me from teaching, but I don’t know how much longer I can keep at it: the constant mandates imposed on me as if I am some rank amateur who knows nothing about teaching, the endless stream of paperwork to make sure I’ve documented everything and collected every piece of “data” possible, the incessant test prepping that I am forced to teach that has killed the joy in the classroom.
This is why you should proofread first.
“The reality is that it is the corporate reformers who drive great teachers out of the classroom. They have better things to do than suffer in silence. They are just too dumb to realize it, too greedy to care, or maybe both.”
The reality is that it is the corporate reformers who drive great teachers out of the classroom. These teachers have better things to do than suffer in silence. The corporate reformers are just too dumb to realize it, too greedy to care, or maybe both.
Well said.
The reason that they can do this to you, impose the mandates is because her is what they did to me and over one hundred thousand teachers in our nation. This is the root cause, the hidden story of the abuse of Americans who happened to be teachers.
It worked, so they went not to VAM.
http://www.perdaily.com/2011/01/lausd-et-al-a-national-scandal-of-enormous-proportions-by-susan-lee-schwartz-part-1.html
YES. You called it. The reformers have out-an-out “killed the joy.” 😦