The rheeform leadership has changed. Michelle Rhee was once the cover girl for test-and-punish reform, and now it is Campbell Brown. The telegenic Brown used to read the news on television but now she has taken Rhee’s place in the reformy firmament. Since she launched her career as an education expert with an op-ed attacking the teachers’ union in New York City for protecting sexual predators, Brown has become increasingly active in the world of education punditry. She received $4 million from various billionaires to launch a news site called “The 74,” which was supposed to refer to the number of school-age children in the United States. However, there are 50 million school-age children, but then why quibble? Brown organized candidate debates for both parties last fall. Three Republicans showed up, and no Democrats. Yesterday, she moderated a panel at the Harvard Graduate School of Education at a symposium on poverty and schooling.
Now Brown, having established her bona fides as an expert on education, has prepared a memo for the next president.
Unfortunately her memo begins with a false statement. She starts by saying that 2/3 of American students in eighth grade are “below grade level” in reading and math. Apparently she refers to the National Assessment of Education Progress, the only national assessment of student skills. She confuses NAEP proficiency, a specific achievement level, with grade level.
To begin with, “grade level” is a median. Fifty percent are always above grade level, and fifty percent are always below.
But the NAEP achievement levels do not measure “grade level.” They are defined in the NAEP reports thus: “basic” represents partial mastery of skills; “proficiency” represents mastery; “advanced” represents extraordinary performance. “Below basic” is very poor performance.
Here are the definitions on the NAEP website:
Achievement Level Policy Definitions
Basic
Partial mastery of prerequisite knowledge and skills that are fundamental for proficient work at each grade.
Proficient
Solid academic performance for each grade assessed. Students reaching this level have demonstrated competency over challenging subject matter, including subject-matter knowledge, application of such knowledge to real-world situations, and analytical skills appropriate to the subject matter.
Advanced
Superior performance.
Here is a statement on the U.S. Department of Education (National Center for Education Statistics) website:
https://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/studies/statemapping/faq.aspx
The statement, “Proficient is not synonymous with grade-level performance.”
The NAEP website says that the Governing Board thinks that the goal should be “proficient,” not “basic,” but the reality is that these achievement levels have been in place since 1992, and in no state or district has 100% of students ever achieved NAEP proficiency. In only one state, Massachusetts, has as much as 50% of students reached proficiency. If you believe, as Campbell Brown and the NAGB board does, that 100% of students should reach proficiency, then you believe that somewhere there is a baseball team that never loses a game, or an entire school district in which all children get grades of all As. It has never happened, not even in the wealthiest, most successful schools and districts. When elephants can fly, that is when “all” students will reach NAEP proficiency. Be it noted that the standard (the passing mark or cut score) for the Common Core tests is aligned with NAEP proficient, which is why 65-70% of students consistently “fail.”
I was a member of the National Assessment Governing Board for seven years. I read questions before they were administered to samples of students across the nation and in every state. The greatest number of students are scored as “basic,” which I consider to be the equivalent of a B or C. Those who register as “proficient” are the equivalent of an A performance. Advanced is for superstars. Typically, only 5-10% of students are “advanced.” About a third are proficient or advanced. The remaining 65% are basic or below basic. (These are my definitions, not the government’s or the NAGB board.)
To expect that most students will score the equivalent of an A is nonsensical.
Ms. Brown has been engaged in a Twitter debate with Tom Loveless of the Brookings Institution. Loveless, a real expert with years of teaching experience (elementary school) and a doctorate, has been studying and writing about NAEP and student performance for many years. He chastised Brown on Twitter for saying that 2/3 of students are “below grade level.” He encouraged her to check her facts, because he assumed that her journalistic background had taught her to do so. Carol Burris, director of the Network for Public Education, and veteran educator, jumped into the exchange.
Just yesterday, Brown responded with this comment:
Campbell Brown @campbell_brown
@carolburris @tomloveless99 this is why parents dont listen to u. U play semantics while 2/3 kids arent where they should be. I call BS
Since Brown thinks that NAEP proficiency is the same as “grade level,” she would profit by reading this report on the meaning of NAEP achievement levels. It gives a good overview of them and points out that they do not refer to grade levels. The report also usefully reviews the numerous critiques of the achievement levels, by experts who consider them “fundamentally flawed” and an inaccurate measure of student achievement.
I can only hope that Ms. Brown, education expert, gets a quick tutorial about what NAEP achievement levels are.
And I invite her to take the NAEP eighth-grade test, composed of released questions in reading and math, and release her scores. In a supervised setting, of course. I think she will be surprised. I will be interested to see if she is “proficient,” since she believes that anyone who is not proficient is a failure.
They really have to make up their minds on the NAEP. Duncan used it to prove ed reforms were WORKING, until it went down, then we needed more market-based reforms.
I don’t know what this is, but I’m pretty sure it isn’t “science”.
If it goes UP market-based ed reform is working and if it goes down we need to accelerate market-based ed reform? How exactly do we evaluate market-based ed reform? It’s great either way.
Market based reform provides the incentive for charter schools to rid themselves of expensive pupils. That is what the market DEMANDS to be successful.
I wish the people claiming they support market based reforms were actually asked by the media why they think that will work.
There is no money to be made in education except in educating the cheapest kids. That is the market-based reforms that these people are promoting. Education is a public good because we are committed to educating everyone. That’s why reforms are actually harming more kids than they help. And making more people rich.
If these “reformers” and their billionaire buddies had controlled FDR the way they do Obama, we would see private corporations getting rich by providing electricity, phone service, and water in cities where they had free access to publicly built infrastructure. And meanwhile the rural areas would still be living in the dark ages.
People don’t understand that you can’t privatize a public good when it is a service that is cheaper to provide to some citizens than to others.
The market is actually promoting more separate and unequal education for poor students the market has decided are the “leftovers.”
I hope you are saving your comment NYC public school parent. You describe very well why a free market based education system cannot and will not serve all children.
After attending the U of P graduation ceremonies I am convinced that American education is not in as dire condition as told by the media. It is they who have created the image of the dumb, selfish, greedy American student. I witnessed a diverse group of 22 year olds who completed four rigorous years at a top tier school! Many are off for a gap year of giving back before moving on to their serious adult life.
The University of Pennsylvania is one of 7 members of the Consortium for Policy Research in Education. CPRE is funded by Pearson, Gates, Goldman Sachs, etc. The founder of CPRE, the President of Columbia Teachers College, was the subject of an article titled, “Students Urge President to Cut Ties with Pearson”. The book of Univ. of Penn. professor, Duckworth, about resilience, was the topic of a prior Ravitch post.
I love you Diane!! You make the term “”Feel the Burn” come to life!!!! Poor Ms. Campbell is clueless…….It’s funny how individuals who don’t have children in public schools and never attended one themselves have so much to say about what goes on in them……
Campbell Brown is below sea level — and still sinking.
I think it’s time once again to strike up the band
“Reform Parade”
(parody of Willson Meredith – Seventy Six Trombones, from “The Music Man”))
Seventy-six Campbell Browns led Reform Parade
With a hundred and ten charter-schools close at hand.
They were followed by rows and rows
Of the wolves-in-sheepy clothes,
The cream of ev’ry famous scam.
Seventy-six Campbell Browns caught the morning shows
With a hundred and ten public schools closed behind
There were more than a thousand Rhees
Springing up like weeds
There were schemes of ev’ry shape and kind.
There were chetty-picking VAMstudies and Gates platoons
Blundering, Blundering all along the way.
Double-billed baloneyums and big buffoons,
Each buffoon having his big, fat say!
There were fifty foolish Canons of Reformery
Blundering, Blundering louder than before
Teacher nets of ev’ry size
And reformers who’d improvise
To game the passing student score
Seventy-six Campbell Browns hit the TV shows,
While a hundred and ten public-schools blazed away.
To the rhythm of Test! Test! Test!
All the kids began to wretch,
And they’re wretching still right today!
Please join me while I sing “Reform Parade”
It is galling to me as an educator when someone decides they can be “an education expert” after spending exactly 0 years teaching in a real classroom with real students and real parents and real standards. I’ve spent 14 years as an educator and while I am pretty good at my job, and even though I actually possess a teaching credential, a Masters in Education, and a PhD in Education, I know there are always new things for me to learn and I can always improve my practice.
Campbell Brown may be a smart lady and she may have an education. However, just because someone has been inside a school building for 12 years (as a student), that does not make them an expert on what it means to educate. It does not convey the joy, the sadness, the pantheon of emotions that go along with seeing these little ones every day struggle with issues no child should have to struggle with.
Sounds like a Lake Woebegone problem. “Welcome to Lake Wobegon, where all the women are strong, all the men are good-looking, and all the children are above average.” – Garrison Keillor quotes
I think the biggest question is why the media keeps presenting her as an expert at all. It’s as if the late Jerry Falwell started being quoted constantly as an education expert and his views about the problems in higher education taken seriously (“we need mandatory religious requirements at every state university”) because having billions to fund Liberty University made him an expert.
She is a complete fraud gussied up with many tens of millions of dollars, so she can say what she wants. But the fact that she is invited to these events and give any credibility is all on the people who organize these events. They have made her an expert despise her having no expertise whatsoever, but certainly is in the pocket of people with money. And in this environment, that seems to be all that is needed.
Money talks. Harvard should be ashamed.
She represents the “know it all, know nothing” elites that run reform. She is a mouthpiece for their biased, baseless statements. She is a corporate shill.
Harvard has no shame.
No real scholars either — at least not in the departments of education, economics or in the business school.
And the legitimate scholars in other departments just turn a blind eye to what their clown colleagues are doing.
This is my personal favorite example of how ed reform can’t fail, it can only BE failed:
“In 2013, reading and math scores edged up nationally to new highs for fourth and eighth graders. It is particularly heartening that reading scores for eighth graders are up, after remaining relatively flat for the last decade.
“Achievement among the largest minority group in our nation’s public schools—Hispanic students—is also up since 2011. And higher-achieving students as a whole are making more progress in reading and math than in recent years.
“While progress on the NAEP continues to vary among the states, all eight states that had implemented the state-crafted Common Core State Standards at the time of the 2013 NAEP assessment showed improvement in at least one of the Reading and/or Mathematics assessments from 2009 to 2013—and none of the eight states had a decline in scores.
In 2013 the scores went UP because of the Common Core, and then in 2015 they went DOWN because of the Common Core.
I mean, come on. Campbell Brown is one thing- clearly she has an agenda- but this is the Sec of Ed for the whole US! He sounds exactly like them! Can we maybe get someone in DC who hasn’t swallowed this whole agenda whole?
If only she and other reformers would take her own advice from the video “… should spend time in a classroom as a teacher…”
“NYC public school parent
May 18, 2016 at 9:26 am
Market based reform provides the incentive for charter schools to rid themselves of expensive pupils. That is what the market DEMANDS to be successful.”
I just think they discredit the whole notion of these scores by using them like this. It is bewildering and the idea that parents, non-experts, can rely upon this is ludicrous.
Ohio changes it’s measure every 15 minutes, apparently depending upon which ed reform lobbyist visited last. I can’t compare anything year to year, even if I wanted to.
Thank you for this instructive rebuttal, Diane. You should add a category to your archives and file this one under Debunk.
People think the spin is bad now, wait until ed reformers get their wish and the whole system is privatized.
Schools advertise now in Ohio. The online charters are garbage and they advertise THE MOST. They use this sketchy “parent satisfaction” number they generate themselves. There is no way to evaluate these claims. None.
It will get worse. Wait until they get their wish and it’s Starbucks competing with Dunk’in Donuts. Whatever small faith people had remaining in getting some kind of actual information out of an entity that calls itself “public” will be gone.
The recklessness with which they unleashed this still shocks me. Just NO consideration of any downside.
I suspect the idea is not to privatize the whole system, because you need an underfunded public school to be the dumping ground for the students that “the market” wants no part in educating.
But perhaps you are right and in Ohio, that dumping ground will be the on-line charters. I’m sure there will always be one ready to make tens of millions of dollars for 2 years work, after which they can be “shut down” for poor performance and give a new on line charter the 2-year license to get rich from pretending to teach the unwanted kids. Walking away with a cool $30 or $50 million for 2 years work is well worth being embarrassed at your “failure” and I’m sure the “market” will find someone willing to absorb that shame in exchanging for making enough money in those 2 years to be rich for the rest of their lives.
Here’s the thing: Campbell Brown will probably have a stronger influence on the likely Clinton Administration (with John King as Sec. of Ed….make no mistake) than, lets say, the AFT under Weingarten, or any entity on the anti-Ed. reform side.
(and Weingarten “endorsed” Clinton embarrassingly early…..idiot!….hahahahahahaha)
This is the only real thing to think about. And no, we aren’t going to convince the new administration with out stunning studies and arguments that are cogent, logical, and based on real research. We don’t win just by being right. Its about creating an pressure and noise that is not able to be ignored. Right now, Campbell Brown and her side of the argument are the ones making the irresistible pressure and noise. Pressure and noise (dominant narrative) always trumps being right. Always.
The only “noise” Campbell Brown is making comes from waving money at politicians. Unfortunately, under the Obama administration, that is all that is needed. Those people expect very high paying jobs in the future, and they need the billionaire “reformers” to hire them to screw over the poorest kids in exchange for being well-paid.
I wonder how much it takes to look the other way at the kids being forced out of charter schools by their best friend who has the chutzpah to proclaim that over 20% of those low-income, almost always African-American children are 6 year old violent hellions who are unworthy of a charter school education? I always wonder how the SUNY Charter Institute board members live with themselves, but I guess knowing that billionaires “like you, really like you” goes a very long way toward rationalizing that those kids deserve only the worst. As long as you help a few, you can pretend that the ones you are INTENTIONALLY harming are worthless and deserve everything they get.
Yes NYSTeacher! It seems to me that the school reform movement develops and implements policy from a national and state level, while those who support public schools really respond from within the local community or district.
The grass roots nature of the response to the privatizing of education is less organized nationally. There is, as you put it, no irresistible pressure and noise generated by the many, many of us who are harmed by corporate reform. While our agendas as educators and community members might be aligned, our fights are in reaction to policies put in place miles above.
Where is the national response to the narrative that American schools are failing, and it’s the teachers fault?
Whatever disclaimers it may make in the footnotes or FAQs, NAEP itself is more responsible than anyone else for creating the impression that student scores should be viewed as grades on “the nation’s report card.” NAEP is also responsible for making proficiency scores the headline grade on the nation’s report card, and promoting the idea that Americans should be very concerned that that only 33% (or whatever) of students are “proficient.”
Considering NAEP suffers all the inherent errors, falsehoods and psychometric (sibling of psychometry) fudges that render any conclusions COMPLETELY INVALID, why the hell does anyone participate in the mental masturbation that is discussing the results??
The results mean absolutely nothing or as Noel Wilson points out they are “vain and illusory”.
But heaven forbid that one of the sacred cows of “modern” educational malpractices-educational standards and standardized testing be questioned. It needs to be slaughtered and rendered to prevent the disease from spreading further.
You’re right, FLERP
The fact that they emphasize “proficiency” on their “report card” says it all.
It’s a little like producing a report card and saying that only 0.0001% of the students are performing math at the Albert Level*
which sounds pretty bad (especially since your uncle Albert is such an idiot), until you read the fine print and realize that it means “at or above the level of Albert Einstein.”
FLERP,
The adoption of proficiency levels was done when Checker Finn of the Thomas B. Fordham foundation was chair of the NAEP governing board. He said that the scale scores were not sufficiently understood by the public. Congress approved the achievement levels conditionally and never approved them finally. Numerous studies, including one done by the National Academy of Sciences, criticized the achievement levels. It is strange, and I say this as a former member of the board, that the board continues to say that proficiency should be the goal for ALL students, since it is now certain that most children cannot reach that goal (except in Massachusetts, where 50% reached proficiency). Why should we turn education upside down with an unattainable goal?
If you are a reformer, you must believe two contradictory things at the same time:
Public school teachers are failing their kids, because there are some kids who aren’t learning what they should be learning.
Charter school students are failing their teachers, because they are to blame for not learning and “got to go”.
If you believe that, you can get a very nice paying job, compliments of the billionaires who believe that reform is only as good as keeping their taxes low requires.
“Why should we turn education upside down with an unattainable goal?”
Well, why not?
Shouldn’t be so hard to do when the malpractices that one is using are COMPLETELY INVALID leading to spurious and delusional results at best that have no basis whatsoever in reality.
So when one is dealing with ‘irreality’ one might as well turn education upside down as it may end up right side up one day by sheer chance.
Verrrrry long post about Campbell Brown.
My longest ever, I believe.
Skip it if you like.
In February, some drama played out with
Campbell Brown getting testy with
both veteran L.A. Times education reporter
Howard Blume and also LAUSD School Board
President Steve Zimmer. It played out
on Twitter, of all places, and was quite
entertaining.
(Campbell and all of us should
be careful of tweeting when you’re
angry. You say things that can be taken
back and/or make you look stupid…
all of this now being are forever
in the public domain.)
Anyway, there was another potential Parent
Trigger takeover brewing at a certain
LAUSD school, 20th Street
Elementary School.
L.A. School Report, since it had just been
taken over by Campbell Brown and THE 74,
was now just another mouthpiece of the
school privatization industry, (whereas before
there had a least been slight attempts at
balance in its coverage, though it had
an overall pro-corporate ed reform
slant.)
Well, since it was now operated by the school
privatization industry, THE 74 had … surprise,
surprise … inside info on this Parent Trigger
situation at a certain LAUSD school.
Well, just prior to this, the L.A. Times Howard
Blume wrote a story about THE 74’s takeover
of the L.A. School Report, and included voices
critical of this and THE 74 in general. It
mentions some, but not all of its funders.
Those critical of THE 74, included
LAUSD School Board President Steve
Zimmer, an opponent of corporate education
eform.
Fuming over this article, Campbell tweeted
that THE 74 had beaten the L.A. Times
to the other story of the Parent Trigger situation.
— with an actual story. … Campbell’s tweet
was sort of a an “In your face, Howard!”
reply to the Blume’s earlier article that
revealed her donors.
The fact of the matter, however, was that the
L.A. Times’ Howard Blume, was indeed
the FIRST TWO TWEET about this on
Twitter, thought not the first with an
actual story.
Sort of a draw on the whole “who got the scoop?” battle
Well, Campbell, sounding like … oh … I dunno … an
stuck-up adolescent high school girl out of a John Hughes
movie, kind of lost it on Twitter.
She had this back and forth on Twitter with the L.A.,
Times’ Howard Blume — a journalist with over two decades
covering the LAUSD schools beat: (and one LAUSD teacher
joins in .. more on that after this exchange)
————————————————
CAMPBELL BROWN: “.@LAschoolreport beats
@LATimes on important parent trigger story –
maybe that’s why @howardblume is so obsessed
xo http://laschoolreport.com/parent-trigger-tries-takeover-at-south-central-lausd-school-again/#.VrP4BBlANHg.twitter …
HOWARD BLUME: “@campbell_brown
“To be clear: I posted tweets breaking that story.
But I’m sure there will be days when LASR gets to things first.”
CAMPBELL BROWN: “@howardblume You know
how to tweet? How modern of you! Keep it up —
your union supporters are counting on you.”
DANIEL JOCZ: “@campbell_brown @howardblume
Is belonging to a union a bad thing?”
CAMPBELL BROWN: “@joczproductions @howardblume
“Of course not. this is about one reporters extremely biased
coverage.”
MathDoris @MathDoris 15h15 hours ago
@campbell_brown @joczproductions @howardblume
“Wow!”
HOWARD BLUME: “”@campbell_brown Looks like
LATimes posted on that story 2 hrs before LASR,
but good competition makes all better. Welcome to LA.”
—————————-
The teacher injecting his two cents is Daniel Jocz,
the California “Teacher of the Year”, and one of
five finalists for the “National Teacher of the Year,”
and was recently honored at the White House,
I believe.
This has been covered extensively, but Ms. Brown,
with all her vast knowledge of the education scene,
seemed unaware of his renown, nor was Jocz
story covered by Brown’s THE 74.
Could that be because Jocz teaches AT A TRADITIONAL
PUBLIC SCHOOL in LAUSD? And that Campbell
“there-are-not-two-sides-when-covering-education”
Brown won’t ever cover stories that
are positive towards traditional public schools?
Had Jocz been a teacher at one of LAUSD’s private sector
charter schools — Green Dot, Aspire, PUC, Alliance, Celerity,
Synergy, Goethe International, etc. — you know damn
well Ms. Brown and THE 74 would have been salivating
on their keyboards and they wrote and posted such a
story.
The gall and irony of Campbell “not-two-sides” Brown
wagging her finger at Blume, for “extremely biased
coverage” is quite breathtaking. (and quite cleverly
illustrated by the black pot ‘n kettle cartoon that
“Math Doris” interjected.)
Now, Success Academy charter schools have been
embroiled in scandals since last October … AND
CAMPBELL BROWN HAS NOT WRITTEN
ONE WORD ABOUT THEM. … yet she has
the gall to accuse Howard Blume of being
one-sided.
Howard Blume is “extremely biased”?
For Campbell Brown to say that … well …
It’s hard to imagine someone with a greater
lack of self-awarenss, or a greater blindness
to one’s own hypocrisy.
Now why do I keep referring to her as
Campbell “Not-two-sides” Brown? Well,
those are her words.
Here’s the opening article of THE 74, where
Campbell Brown states its mission:
“I have learned that not every story has two sides.
And I will not allow for false equivalency when
a child’s future is being compromised, regardless
of the vitriol it provokes.”
How can someone purporting to be a journalist say
something so transparently idiotic as that?
Here’s that quote in context:
https://www.the74million.org/article/campbell-brown-journalism-advocacy-and-why-not-every-story-has-two-sides
Okay. That’s just great.
In Campbell’s mind, there’s only one side
that’s right — Campbell Brown’s, and the
school privatization billionaires that are
funding her … they’re “for the children”.
The other side — teacher unions, parents who
want to keep democratic governance of schools —
well they’re just wrong, wrong, wrong …
they’re “not for the children.”
To bolster this point, revisit EDUSHYSTER’s
expose of THE 74’s bias just beforeTHE 74 just
went on-line?
A prominent (unnamed) reporter interviewed for
a job with Campbell’s THE 74, then reported back
to Edushyster the astonishing conversation she had
while interviewing.
One of Campbell’s functionaries told the reporter
applying to work there that THE 74’s reporters —
including her, should she get hired — would be
barred from doing any reporting that was critical
of charter schools, or of school privatization, and
that any charter school scandals — even those that
that hit the mainstream media and became national
stories — must be ignored as well.
Here’s that story:
http://edushyster.com/will-the-74-investigate-charter-scandals/
Well, that’s basically what’s happened. Regarding the
recent scandals with Eva Moskowitz & Success Academy,
scandals that got national coverage on PBS and elsewhere …
as far as Campbell Brown, THE 74 and — in Ms. Lyuton’s
words — as far as “the 74’s roster of smart, veteran
journalists” areconcerned, it’s like the Success Academy
scandals never even happened.
They wrote not one word about all of that.
This is like back with the old Soviet news outlet TASS.
Well, we can now expect the same thing with LA School Report.
Another thing you notice is that in Edushyster’s article is
that the operation that’s running THE 74 is the “Mercury”
P.R. group, the same group that Walmart uses in its
suppression of any budding unionism in its stores. Mercury
operatives even pretended to be journalists at an
anti-Walmart rally in Los Angeles’ Chinatown.
Mercury is also in charge of PR for … wait for it …
Eli Broad’s “Great Public Schools Now” plan to
convert half of LAUSD school to privately managed
charter schools.
So Mercury is running L.A. School Report —
controlling 100% of its content — where it will
report on Eli Broad’s “Great Public Schools Now”
privatization plan, which Mercury is also doing P.R.
for.
WTF???!!!!
In the now infamous exchange between Howard Blume
and Campbell Brown, Brown references how Blume
is “so obsessed with” Campbell & her site THE 74’s
takeover of the L.A School Report.
What is she talking about?
Well, I guess, in Campbell’s mind, writing one article
qualifies as being “so obsessed with” something.
THAT’S ALL BLUME WROTE ABOUT CAMPBELL
AND THE 74 … ONE SINGLE ARTICLE.
Somewhat surprisingly, Howard Blume wrote this article
that included many prominent people critical of THE 74,
and its takeover of L.A. School Report.
Indeed, when Blume and L.A. Times weighed in,
they actually made some sense — believe it or not:
http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-seventy-four-takes-over-school-report-20160201-story.html
———————
L.A. TIMES: “(THE 74)’s entry into Los Angeles has
alarmed union leaders and some supporters of traditional
public education. They say it could undermine trust in the
reporting of education controversies.”
———————
Ya think???!!!
What’s great — and what certainly enraged Campbell, leading
to her Twitter meltdown — is that Blume gives the roll
call of “THE 74’s big-money, school privatization backers
(but not all of them), putting a lie to Campbell’s claim
that it’s a grassroots organization of poor black
and brown parents banding together to improve
education:
———————
L.A. TIMES: “The group’s funders include a roster of
charter school supporters, such as the Walton Family
Foundation, the Doris & Donald Fisher Fund and
Bloomberg Philanthropies.
“Critics call the Seventy Four an advocacy effort on
behalf of a pro-charter school, anti-union agenda. The
organization, critics say, uses opinion pieces and
reported stories to promote charter schools and to
find fault with traditional campuses and teachers
unions.”
———————
THE 74 denies this, of course:
———————
L.A. TIMES: “Not so, said (THE 74’s) co-founder
and Chief Executive Romy Drucker.
“ ‘We try to highlight what’s working,’ Drucker said.
‘Part of the mission also is highlighting what’s broken
and needs to be fixed and highlighting the solutions.
“No type of effective school is favored; no type of
ineffective school is spared,’ said Drucker, who had
been a top New York City schools official under
former Chancellor Joel Klein.”
———————
Really, Ms. Drucker?
Then how come “THE 74” HASN’T SAID A G**-D**N
WORD ABOUT THE SCANDALS THAT HAVE
EMBROILED EVA MOSKOWITZ’ SUCCESS ACADEMY
CHARTER SCHOOLS SINCE LAST OCTOBER?
This is a story that got national coverage from both
the networks, and from PBS, which broke the story
wide open … yet to THE 74, it was as if it never happened.
Could that be because… oh I don’t know … Campbell
Brown sits on the Board of Directors for the Success
Academy charter school chain?
No, perish the thought.
I mean, here’s Campbell Brown, the top dog at THE 74,
speaking at SUCCESS ACADEMY’s SPRING BENEFIT:
Does anyone with any sense think that the woman giving
this speech could possibly cover the SUCCESS ACADEMY
schools fairly, or with an open mind to covering any of
SUCCESS ACADEMY’s failings?
( 01:36 – )
CAMPBELL BROWN: ” … I’m a soldier in Eva’s Army. …
the accomplishments of Eva and the team that makes (the
SUCCESS ACADEMY schools) possible. It amazes me
that anyone would dare try to put a chokehold on the most
exciting, innovative things happening in public education
right now. … there is no compromise possible. …
” .. ”
“I’m sorry. Both sides do not have merit, and when
the lives of children are literally hanging in the balance,
you can’t play referee. If we want to do what he know
is right, what we know is truly right, then we have not
choice, and there is no compromise possible.
“Even if we try to assume the best motives all
around (for everyone, on both sides) … if we believe
that our charter schools are what’s best for kids,
then any attempt to stop them, or put limits on them,
is a limit on that good influence, and why would we
ever accept a compromise like that?”
“… ”
“It’s not a complicated problem. There’s no middle
ground. … Mayor DiBlasio has to choose
between making a comfortable interest group
(CODE for “teachers unions”, JACK) more
comfortable, or being a true force for good
in the lives of New York City’s children …
he can protect ‘the status quo’, or he can
protect the public interest, but he can’t do
both.”
——————
I can’t transcribe any more of specious tripe. I’m
about to vomit on my keyboard.
How can you claim to be “soldier in Eva’s army”,
yet still claim that you cover Eva’s schools fairly,
or are open to reporting on any failings in Eva’s
schools?
Really Campbell? That’s the black-and-white truth
as you see it? Any attempt to criticize or call into
question the privatization of public schools is a
failure “to protect the public interest.”?
And her lackey Romy Drucker can tell the L.A. TIMES
with a straight face that THE 74 is fair and balanced,
and is equally open to stories critical of all groups of
schools, including charters?
Campbell Brown claims to care about children?
(WARNING: long digression about Success
Academy, where Campbell Brown sits on the
Board… if you want to see Campbell
going after LAUSD School Board Steve
Zimmer on Twitter, go the end of this post.)
What about the children of the kids on the
“Got-to-Go List: at one of the Success Academy
schools? The ones who were targeted
and removed from those schools?
What about Faida Geidi’s child?
What about Shanice Givens’ child?
Don’t they matter?
OMG! I found the video of the Geidi and Givens
confronting Eva at the forum on January 22, 2016,
and it’s more intense than I thought.
Indeed, this is an instant classic in the whole
corporate reform movement, and the fight against it.
It’s either HERE:
http://nyls.mediasite.com/mediasite/Play/a383f1d9713a49c49cddb999e631de8d1d?playFrom=3383&autoStart=true
OR HERE:
http://www.citylandnyc.org/complete-video-the-131st-citylaw-breakfast-with-eva-moskowitz/
“COMPLETE VIDEO: The 131st
NYC City Law Breakfast with Eva Moskowitz.
“On Friday January 22, 2016, the Center for New York City
Law at New York Law School hosted the 131st City Law Breakfast.
The event speaker was SUCCESS Academy’s Eva Moskowitz.”
The “Perry Mason Moment” of the forum starts here at about 41:58.
Watch how the moderator Ross Sandler, a New York City Law
School professor moderating this event, goes to bat for Eva
when Eva is criticized. Earlier, at the beginning of this video,
his introduction to Eva was so fawning and gushing you may
think that he was describing Mother Teresa of Calcutta.
Later, Eva faces the heat from an angry Success Academy
parent, who asks if Eva had ever apologized to parents whose
children were harmed by being placed on the infamous
“Got-to-Go List,
After Eva says she has indeed apologized, this parent,
Shanice Givens, points out to everyone in the room
that Eva just lied. She’s one of those parents, and Eva
never apologized to her.
Hell is then unleashed … from Givens toward Eva…
and then from moderator Ross Sandler towards Givens.
This is some truly riveting footage — an instant classic in the whole corporate education reform controversy.
http://nyls.mediasite.com/mediasite/Play/a383f1d9713a49c49cddb999e631de8d1d?playFrom=3383&autoStart=true
OR HERE:
http://www.citylandnyc.org/complete-video-the-131st-citylaw-breakfast-with-eva-moskowitz/
TRANSCRIPT —
( 41:58 – 43:03 )
———————–
PARENT SHANICE EVANS: “Good morning, Eva. How are you?”
EVA: “Good morning.”
PARENT SHANICE EVANS: “Hi. You didn’t shed
any light on the ‘Got-to-Go List.’ Uhmm… I just want to
know. Did you privately or publicly apologize to the any
of parents that were affected by it?”
EVA: “There’s been an enormous amount of coverage. I
see Kate Taylor (the NY Times writer who penned
the Got-to-Go List article) in the audience. There
were two stories on it, and yes, I … I did (apologize).
“The (Got-to-Got) list existed for three days. As soon as
it came to our attention — which was within about 24 hours
of it being produced — the principal was brought into the
school and severely reprimanded for his actions. I have
personally have done many parent meetings at Fort Greene
(Success Academy School) … uhh … because of that
mistake.”
PARENT SHANICE EVANS: “Hello. Sorry. I just wanted to
say. My name is Shanice Givens- ”
MODERATOR ROSS SANDLER: “Wait, wait.”
PARENT SHANICE EVANS: ”And my son was
‘Number Three’ on the list.”
MODERATOR ROSS SANDLER: “May I- ?”
PARENT SHANICE EVANS: “My son was’ Number
Three’ (on the Got-to-Go List) and I NEVER got an
apology from Ms. Eva.”
MODERATOR ROSS SANDLER: “May I ask you to be courteous?”
PARENT SHANICE EVANS: “I just want to say that she just said that she – ”
MODERATOR ROSS SANDLER: (turning away from Given to the other mic)
“We’re on this side now.”
PARENT SHANICE EVANS: ” – publicly said something, and she
NEVER said ANYTHING to me. My son was ‘Number Three.’ ”
MODERATOR ROSS SANDLER: “Madame -”
PARENT SHANICE EVANS: (to Eva) “And you said that you
‘loved children so much’ ?
“Yet you STILL allow Mr. (Candido) Brown to teach?”
MODERATOR ROSS SANDLER: (to some technician)
“Turn her microphone off!”
PARENT SHANICE EVANS: “He has wronged sixteen children and -”
(Given’s MIC CUTS OFF)
MODERATOR ROSS SANDLER: “This is not the place.
This is an academic institution. We’re having a conversation.
We’re going to this side (the other microphone) now.”
—————–
There’s a whole mess o’ wrong goin’ on here.
I don’t get the rationale of “This is an academic institution.” as
justification for silencing this woman, and killing her mic.
Shouldn’t an academic institution be a place for vigorous
debate where all sides are allowed to offer their opinions?
To be accurate, Sandler should have said, “This is an
academic institution in which only those who, like me,
heap unqualified praise upon Ms. Moskowitz, will be
allowed to speak.”
Immediately following this, a well-dressed pro-Success
Academy parent — Thomas Lopez Pierre (sp?) mentioning
in his remarks that he’s a candidate for NYC City Council —
starts off with gushing praise for Eva and what Success
Academy has done for his son. He even spouts the
“My son was trapped in a failing school” line.
In contrast to the parent criticizing Eva, Ross Sandler
lets Pierre (sp?) run at the mouth while Pierre effusively
praises Eva & Success Academy.
Standing beside Eva, Sandler nods and smiles as if to say, “Now, that’s more like it.”
However, that same parent, in mid-speech, then surprises
everyone, and does a total 180. He goes on the same attack
as Givens for Eva’s exclusive admission and expulsion policies.
The moderator Ross Sandler again intervenes.
( 43:57 – 44:04 )
———————–
THOMAS LOPEZ PIERRE: (polite tone) “With that said, I’m
a critic of you, Ms. Moskowitz. And here’s the reason why.
You have failed to provide every public school student who
wants to attend Success the opportunity, and until you are
able to serve ALL of the kids who want to get into your
wonderful charter school, Success will not be a ‘success.’
Thank you. ” (walks away from the mic)
EVA (clearly frazzled): “Thank you. I do have a lot of critics,
and it comes from a variety of places … and that’s … uhh …
part of the … wonderfulness … of New York- ”
The douchey moderator Sandler swings into action again, saying,
MODERATOR ROSS SANDLER: (visibly irritated)
“Let me just step in a second. This is an academic institution, and
decorum is required of everybody, and I have no doubt that
everyone n this room will honor that.”
————-
The angry parents are not yet through with Eva.
Remember Fatima Gehdi, the parent who’s upset at Eva who, as part of Eva’s retaliation against Gehdi, illegally released Gehdi’s son’s private discipline records to the press?
Well, she got in her licks, too … at 49:05
http://nyls.mediasite.com/mediasite/Play/a383f1d9713a49c49cddb999e631de8d1d?playFrom=3383&autoStart=true
or
http://www.citylandnyc.org/complete-video-the-131st-citylaw-breakfast-with-eva-moskowitz/
I don’t have time to transcribe this, so just watch Gehdi yourself (at 49:05): (this is what provoked Eva’s “customer service” comment)
Watch how, again, the moderator Sandler tries but fails to silence this parent.
Here’s moderator Ross Sandler in a nutshell …
“When praising Eva, you can talk all you want.
“When criticizing Eva, you are showing ‘bad decorum’
and must be shut up, or have your mic turned off.”
——————————-
*** CAMPBELL BROWN GOES AFTER
LAUSD SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT ON
TWITTER:
Catty Campbell apparently couldn’t let up
in her Twitter tantrums.
She implied that Howard Blume — with decades on the LAUSD education beat — is “not an actual reporter”, saying that finally, “actual reporters”, those from THE 74, will now be covering LAUSD.
Wow, things are getting “so high school” now, I
expect to hear a bell ring an minute:
Here’s another tweet from Catty Campbell. It’s sort of a
two-fer-one, snarking at Howard and LAUSD School
Board president Steve Zimmer simultaneously, accusing
the L.A. Times Howard Blume of not being “an actual
reporter”:
———————
———————
CAMPBELL BROWN: “LAUSD school board
member @lausd_zimmer expresses anger over
being covered by actual reporters.”
#parody @howardblume http://fw.to/uZNA15F”
———-
Steve’s not just a member; he’s the President of the
LAUSD School Board.
Campbell’s definition of “actual reporters” are the
ones who — according the EDUSHYSTER
expose — are the ones who are banned from
writing anything critical of school privatization,
or of charter schools, even if such a scandal
becomes a major and or national story.
Jack, I always appreciate a long post! (I’m guilty of posting long ones myself).
I just have one correction. Campbell Brown’s “The 74” DID post a piece about Success Academy recently.
It was by blonde tv host Cat Greenleaf, explaining that in the very same school with the teacher who treated the African-American girl from the homeless shelter with such disdain, her 7 year old child is treated in the manner in which a white, affluent parent expects her child to be treated. So no need to worry that kids are being mistreated. Here is what happens if you are the son of an affluent tv celebrity (as published in The 74):
“…we’ve been blown away by the exhaustive consideration he gets from the entire staff to reach him, and teach him, where he is. Once they figured out his optimal learning style, they swiftly adapted so he could progress along with his peers.
I’ve been especially moved to see how his teachers handle adjustments with minimal disruption to the class, which keeps Primo from feeling like the “bad kid” when he needs some extra support.”
Wow, funny how none of the African-American moms treated as if they were trash by Ross Sandler in the video you mention think that the Success Academy teachers were “adapting” to their own child’s learning style. Funny how those moms that Ross Sandler found so distasteful learned that their children’s “adjustments” are of course, characterized by Eva Moskowitz as a horribly violent child acting out who deserves to be suspended. At age 6.
Of course, maybe if those moms were blonde tv hosts with sons named “Primo”, their sons would have been treated in manner designed to teach the kid instead of get him out of the school as fast as they could. And Ross Sandler would have given those moms the respect he obviously doesn’t think is necessary when a mother is African-American and not famous enough to matter.
(Also, thanks for posting part of my comment there!)
We know Jack that you have a secret crush on the Souper Brown!
Jack: your comments didn’t seem very long at all.
And you did what the edubullies of rheephorm fear and hate the most—
Over and over again you let them speak for themselves.
Which is exactly why they will attack you for being unfair…
😏
Catty Campbell is at it again. She utterly despises Trump, but in a tweet today, she puts him on a par with … Diane Ravitch:
————————————–
Campbell Brown Verified account
@campbell_brown
Campbell Brown Retweeted Chad Aldeman
“Sadly in the age of @realDonaldTrump and @DianeRavitch, this is what passes for discourse.”
————————————-
Campbell Brown hates Dr. Ravitch almost as much as she hates Trump.
Then, later she still refused to acknowledge or admit she got the whole NAEP Proficient DOES NOT EQUAL grade level
Earlier Campbell called this criticism of her to be just “semantics”, and saying “I call BS.”
The latest is someone Tom Loveless trying to get her back to substance:
——————
Tom Loveless @tomloveless99 2h2 hours ago
@ChadAldeman @DianeRavitch @campbell_brown
“Let’s stick to substance. Brown is promoting the myth that proficient on NAEP = grade level. Nope.”
———————
Campbell replies that it’s “not her intent” to confront the substance of his post, and states that the whole thing is “a toxic conversation” that is “not for me.”
——————–
Campbell Brown Verified account
@campbell_brown
.@tomloveless99 “Not my intent Tom. I should have been more precise & I apologize. But participating in this toxic conversation is not for me.”
——————————————–
Yeah, of course she wouldn’t want to participate in such a conversation as she has just been caught making statements of utter cluelessness regarding what constitutes the myth of “grade level.”
The reason she and the other corporate reformers push this nonsense that exaggerates or downright lies — the the 2/3rds of kids are failing to make “grade level” — about how bad our public schools are is simply this:
There’s no point in reforming (read: privatizing) something that already works, or works better than the doomsayers claim it does, or works well enough that it can be improved without utterly destroying the whole current system, and replacing it with something else, in this case a totally privatized school system.
“But the NAEP achievement levels do not measure “grade level.”
Quite correct Diane! Not only that but they “measure” absolutely nothing as there is no standard of measurement, no measuring device calibrated against that standard and no person trained in the usage of said but non-existent measuring device.
Whenever I read NAEP, for some reason I think about Snape, the son of a witch from Harry Potter.
SomeDAM Poet: just in from the usual unconfirmed sources—
“Snape” and “NAEP” will NOT be on the next round of high-stakes standardized tests aligned with the Common Core State Standards.
Another magical moment lost along with countless vomit bags accompanying those test-to-punish instruments.
😏
Cheer up, with the way the Clinton/Trump polls are shaping up (nearly a dead heat, with Clinton’s unfavorability still rising), we can be cautiously optimistic about a President Trump with Campbell Brown as his chief adviser.
Harvard likes her. Makes her look important and qualified. Harvard has become a shill for propagandists, in addition to adding its own faculty to the roster of propagandists intent on glorifying a market-based educational system.
The Academic Dean of the Harvard Graduate School of Education, chairs Aspen’s “Senior Congressional Education Staff Network”, which is funded by Gates. “The prior chair is now president of Achieve Inc.”
David Koch is on the Aspen Institute Board.
The Aspen Institute is totally beholden to the reformsters.
I was invited to debate Wendy Kopp a few years ago. Talk about a lion’s den! The whole reformer glitterati were there, including Arne. The chair of the board at Aspen is or was Walter Isaacson, who was also the chair of the board of TFA.
Even the Harvard President acts as a shill when she gives the opening remarks at such a gathering.
Harvard has some really top notch people, which makes this sort of stuff all the more puzzling.
Why do the legitimate scholars tolerate the nonsense that regularly comes out of the Departments of Education and Economics and Business School? (and sometimes Kennedy School of Government)
I would think they would care because it reflects poorly on Harvard.
Thanks for revealing Campbell’s Flaw:
If a person makes vacuous remarks on the same subject often enough, and they are broadcast widely enough, that person becomes an expert.
Well said, Fred Smith. “Campbell’s Flaw”
The 74, is a link at Gen Next Foundation. Julian Assange researched the Gen Next Foundation for his chapter, “Google Is Not What It Appears.
I’m not a fan of Cambell Brown or traders of snake oil. I doubt her traction or
social relevance is the product of “wit” (one needs the wit to recognize). Who
does she “touch”, and WHY?
Defining WHO is qualified to educate, or enter the power/knowledge discourse
doesn’t seem to retroactively turn on the light, for former students(now parents),
nor does showcasing the metrics of “improvement”.
I may be as blind as a fool can be, but I can see identity politics and test scores
won’t keep the “demons” at bay, they ARE the DEMONS.
Check out The 74 for yourself- it’s all rah-rah cheerleading charter and vouchers and doom and gloom for public schools.
That’s if public schools are mentioned at all- most ed reform sites omit public schools completely.
They’re so far in the bubble they don’t even see the bias.
The worst part is it’s indistinguishable from the Obama Administration.
https://twitter.com/the74
Here’s a former Obama Administration staffer turned Gates employee:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/peter-cunningham/why-both-political-partie_b_10023868.html
Read that and try to find something positive about public schools. It’s all scolding and stern warnings about failing schools, and it begins with a paragraph promoting charters vouchers.
This was the US Department of Ed under President Obama! It’s privatization propaganda. It’s outright ANTI public schools. This passes for “even-handed” in DC circles apparently.
Our schools don’t stand a chance with this gang in charge.
Taking aside Diane’s continued, mystifying commentary on Campbell’s appearance, Diane apparently can’t take the time to actually read “The 74″ web site to understand the name of the organization.
Ravitch writes… “The 74,” which was supposed to refer to the number of school-age children in the United States. However, there are 50 million school-age children, but then why quibble?”
Well I quibble because The 74 clearly states in its mission statement that this number refers to the number of kids in US under age of 18. Yes, Diane, even the children that attend non-public school are students.
Got it, Stefan. Campbell speaks on behalf of all children, not just the school age ones, when she runs down the public schools that the great majority attend. What exactly is her goal?
I thought 74 was the number of VAMbones in her band.
Nonsense, Diane. If you read the site instead of just reflexively carping about it and using Campbell’s name to draw attention to your own agenda, you’d see that there is a rich balance of stories. Those stories are meant to help inform the public about what is going on inside schools — good, bad and otherwise. Don’t we want parents to know about what’s happening?
Stefan
Your BS comments do not come close to matching Campbell the Clown’s divisive and incendiary diatribes against public school teachers, our unions, and our hard earned and much needed due process rights. Why don’t you cut and paste some of the positive things SHE has to say about public education from “The 74” and post them here. And I suppose she cobbled together the $4 million needed to start her latest propaganda machine selling baked goods in public school atriums.
Yes, I think we should continue to bury our heads in the sand, only cheerlead an education system that has gone from the pride of the world to mediocre at best, and doom millions of children for decades to come. Is public education working for some? Absolutely? Is it working for all? Not even remotely.
Stefan,
That was a very inadequate answer. Are some children doing poorly in school? Yes. Do charters want those children? No.
I asked what The 74 and Campbell Brown were doing to help public schools, which enroll 85-90% or children.
Your answer: nothing. Nothing at all.
Why? Because you want to destroy a fundamental democratic institution.
Are you experienced in education? No, other than your work for StudentsFirst and DFER.
Are you an education scholar? No.
It seems you despise the very idea of public education.
I am sorry for you.
The sneer, the jeer and the smear.
When pressed, that’s all the rheephormsters have got.
And no one, repeat no one, can do more harm to them than they do to themselves.
For a prescient analysis of Rheephormish: George Orwell’s “Politics and the English Language” (1946).
Link: http://www.npr.org/blogs/ombudsman/Politics_and_the_English_Language-1.pdf
I provide just this small bit to encourage others to read the whole piece:
[start]
The great enemy of clear language is insincerity. When there is a gap between one’s real and one’s declared aims, one turns as it were instinctively to long words and exhausted idioms, like a cuttlefish spurting out ink.
[end]
😎
In luv, Stefan??
Stefan Friedman, I presume:
“During his career Stefan has worked for dozens of corporate and non-profit clients including AT&T, The Genting Group, Coca-Cola, Microsoft, Democrats for Education Reform, StudentsFirst, The Rockefeller Foundation, The New York Public Library and Independence USA (Bloomberg PAC).”
http://edjustice.org/about/board-directors-advisory-board/
No educational background at all.
“Stefan maintains relationships from his journalistic past with numerous reporters across all sectors and can tap into these relationships to quickly place stories, deliver off-the-record intelligence and keep a close eye on the news of the day.”
Schill says,
“an education system that has gone from the pride of the world to mediocre at best”
We have been railing against the FAILURE of test-and-punish reform here for years. If indeed there has been a downturn, look in the mirror Stef, it’s you and your ilk that created and promoted a narrow test-based curriculum – and it has backfired. Fifteen years of focusing on The Test, and now you own the FAILURE. Yet the best you can do is call for more of the same.
Diane
You really have to stop “using Campbell Brown’s name to draw attention to your own agenda.”
…although it is understandable, given that your blog only has 26 million hits and Campbell Brown’s has a whopping 74*
(*not million, just 74 — most of whom were paid to visit)
I am put in mind of an anti-government-expert comment made by a savvy journalist who called what we now have in the United States an “Expert Industrial Complex.” Who made this silly woman an EXPERT?
Campbell the Clown got handed a $4 million soap box from her puppet masters. But don’t blame her; she could claim that she produced cold fusion in a mason jar on her kitchen table. Blame anyone and everyone that pays attention to the bullshit that she spews.
Here’s a question: Why on earth is the Harvard School of Education allowing Campbell Brown to moderate a panel for them? I think Harvard might need to start following your blog, Diane.
This is such a great explanation. Thank you. I admit that I have often wondered why the NAEP powers that be stick with the “proficient” terminology. It causes so much confusion, and the way they use it seems to be contrary to the commonly accepted meaning if the word. Continuing to use this term feeds right into the mission of those trying to paint our schools as failures. I wish the NAEP would use language and terms that are more intuitive and commonly understood.
“I wish the NAEP would use language and terms that are more intuitive and commonly understood.”
Wouldn’t make a bit of difference. The results of NAEP, no matter what they are called, are bogus, invalid, illusory, fictitious, preposterous and a sham like all other results of standardized testing. Any discussion of the results is nothing more than mental masturbation producing nothing of substance with which to continue said discussion.
Bravo
I’m certainly not going to take sides here, yet I’m curious about your thoughts on the current level of functional literacy from our students? Can the numbers being published such as http://www.begintoread.com/research/literacystatistics.html be trusted?
No!
That site has a lot to sell so it is in their interest to “juke the stats” to present a “reality” for which they have “solutions” (for a price, eh).
Functional literacy cannot be taught in school. Functional literacy is a dependent on a lifetime of accrued language skills. It is formed by the books that our parents read to us, the stories our grandparents recounted, conversations at the dinner table, the places we visited, the shows we watched, trips to museums and the theatre, the radio stations and music we have been exposed to, and is highly correlated to the education level of our parents, our friends, our relatives, and our neighbors. It is a lifetime of enriching experiences that produce this so-called functional literacy. Growing up deprived of rich language based experiences makes the skill of decoding words almost moot. In the Pearson grade 8 ELA test this spring, one passage included the phrase, “chateau in France”. I thought to myself, there are many impoverished schools in NYS where this phrase had no meaning to the poor, functionally illiterate students taking the test, and then there are those schools where the 8th grade test takers had vacationed in one the summer before.
Two of the most vacuous and ill-defined terms in educational jargon:
1), Functional literacy. 2), Grade-level.
They taste great but the more closely one looks at them, less and less filling…
😏
So…all that being said (thank you for your insight), the teachers in my community (Bentonville, AR) are supporting the idea, children are not being properly read to at home at that prime age range (4-6) thus affecting their reading capacity regardless of how its quantified by outside authorities? So it safe to assume any validity in that accounting?
I think Ms. Ravitch has struck gold for all of us who have been mired in testing discontent since forever … “And I invite her to take the NAEP eighth-grade test, composed of released questions in reading and math, and release her scores.”
That, in some way, shape, or form, should be the incessant demand for everyone of these educational interlopers who thinks that their personal epiphany is sufficient for camera mugging and pompous pontificating.
And there should be the identical demand that legislators … who seem so certain of the own educational certitude … to sit for these elementary level exams and have the results held up fro public scrutiny just as they demand of teachers.
Demand the same for the big-brain lords of commerce … like Lord Gates and the Earl of Hastings of Netflix … to pull up a chair and bubble their way into the testing Hall of Fame . for all to see.
Demand that these governmental czars like Secretary Duncan and King and Commissioner Elia of NY sit for these exams … in the public light just as out children do … and reveal their genius to us all.
I think this reform would gain a thick coat of cobwebs in a very short time. And lots of egos would be much thinner, too.
Denis Ian
Hey Campbell Brown:
Are you really education expert? What level of education that your expertise is in?
We dare you to take eighth-grade test in the supervised environment with all true educators from this forum. And we double dare you to publish your test result of the proficiency of being an education expert.
Most of all, we triple dare you to engage a debate with our President of Network for Public Education, Dr. Ravitch in order to express your expertise in fraudulence.
Are you very afraid of taking eighth-grade test? Back2basic
The Harvard “Schools & Poverty” symposium is now on YouTube. My respect for Harvard has dropped like a rock
Watch how Harvard’s rep (the president? The Ed. Dept Chair?) introduces Brown and celebrating her site THE 74 as if it was a legitimate news organization, and not a lame-ass propaganda org for billiionaires and Wall Street-ers out to profit from the privatization of schools, and the elimination of democratic control of schools:
Watching this is like immersing yourself into a corporate education reform septic tank. It’s not for the faint-hearted. You’ll love the woman talking about “genomes”.
Your facts are compelling… but in a world where Donald Trump is a Presidential candidate for a major party it is clear that facts don’t matter… Mr. Trump, like Ms. Campbell, would dismiss them as “semantics”…
I hope you are not advocating Ms. Brown, and Mr. Trump, should go unchallenged.Even if the facts are ignored, facts still remain the facts…
Doesn’t CB remind you of Ann Coulter? And they are both Trumpish.
I hope one day CB is just as irrelevant. Mostly people feel sorry for Ann Coulter these days, and I can’t imagine it’s much of a life hanging out with the people who are true believers and adore every word she utters.
Years ago, I and some colleagues were forced (during paid school hours) to attend “professional development” about our students and testing. The moderator opened with the following question: “What percent of your students do you expect to score above the 50th percentile?” on a given standardized test. My colleagues and I looked at each other, thinking that, surely, this was a “trick” question as the answer was, of course, 50%. Silly us. For when my friend raised her hand and said, “50%,” she was immediately chastised by the moderator. It seems (and this was said explicitly) that our standards were horribly low. In fact, we were to expect that 100% of our students would score above the 50th percentile, and the fact that we did not was why our students did not score in such a way.
Bravo Bravo