This is a remarkable editorial that appears in the Los Angeles Times, of all places. The headline tells a story we did not expect to read on this newspaper’s editorial page:
Gates Foundation failures show philanthropists shouldn’t be setting America’s public school agenda
Read that again. Slowly.
The editorial recaps the serial failures of the Gates Foundation in education: Small high schools (abandoned); evaluating teachers by test scores (not yet abandoned but clearly a failure, as witnessed by the disasterous, costly experience in Hillsborough County, Florida); Common Core (not abandoned, but facing a massive public rejection).
But it’s not all bad, says the editorial:
It was a remarkable admission for a foundation that had often acted as though it did have all the answers. Today, the Gates Foundation is clearly rethinking its bust-the-walls-down strategy on education — as it should. And so should the politicians and policymakers, from the federal level to the local, who have given the educational wishes of Bill and Melinda Gates and other well-meaning philanthropists and foundations too much sway in recent years over how schools are run.
That’s not to say wealthy reformers have nothing to offer public schools. They’ve funded some outstanding charter schools for low-income students. They’ve helped bring healthcare to schools. They’ve funded arts programs.
This is not the whole story, of course. They have funded a movement to privatize public education, which drains resources and the students the charters want from public schools, leaving them in worse shape for the vast majority of students. And they have insisted on high-stakes testing, thus leading schools to eliminate or curtail their arts programs. As for healthcare in the schools, there should be more of it, but it should not depend on philanthropic largesse. Two children in the Philadelphia public schools died because the school nurses were cut back to only two days a week, and there were no philanthropists filling the gap.
Knowing how destructive the venture philanthropists have been–not only Gates, but also Eli Broad and the Walton Family, and a dozen or two other big philanthropies–one could wish that they would fund healthcare and arts programs, and perhaps experimental schools that demonstrated what public schools with ample resources could accomplish.
Still we must be grateful when the Los Angeles Times writes words like these:
Philanthropists are not generally education experts, and even if they hire scholars and experts, public officials shouldn’t be allowing them to set the policy agenda for the nation’s public schools. The Gates experience teaches once again that educational silver bullets are in short supply and that some educational trends live only a little longer than mayflies.
Allowing Bill Gates or Eli Broad or the Walton Family to set the nation’s education is not only unwise, it is undemocratic. The schools belong to the public, not to the 1%.
Since the editorial mentioned Bill Gates’ devout belief that teachers could be evaluated by the test scores of their students, it is appropriate to recall that the Los Angeles Times was the first newspaper in the nation to publish ratings for teachers based on test scores; it even had hopes of winning a Pulitzer Prize for this ugly intervention by non-educators who thought that teaching could be reduced to a number and splashed in headlines. Let us never forget Rigoberto Ruelas, a fifth-grade teacher who committed suicide shortly after the evaluations were published by the Los Angeles Times, and he was declared by the Times to be among the “least effective” teachers. There followed a heated debate about the methodology used by the Times to rate teachers. That was before the American Statistical Association warned against using test scores to evaluate individual teachers. But the Los Angeles Times was taking Gates’ lead and running with it. It was not worth the life of this good man.

And let us also remember that although Gates may have declared small high schools a failure, they still exist and inmost cases continue to fail because the underlying issues of poverty, resources, attracting a maintaining a talented teacher force of career teachers, have never been resolved.
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Enrollments matter. A critical mass of students is required in order to offer a full spectrum of courses.
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And sports. So many kids who have a curtailed chance to excel in society still find their way through sports scholarships….scholarships which are now being so cavalierly lost to the small/charter school movement.
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Small school fever brought the death of many of our city’s large, traditional all-services high schools. Where poor students of color traditionally attended, the money offered by test-score “reform” quickly invaded and divided students and neighborhoods….with a lucrative regentrification to follow.
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Saints Alive!
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Lets not forget his push in vaccines and now agriculture. GMOs and Africa.
http://www.gatesfoundation.org/What-We-Do/Global-Development/Agricultural-Development
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He should stop pretending to have a clue about education. He can’t buy wisdom, and he doesn’t know where to purchase clues. He’s just a fraud with money, though a big name in a field he thinks is more closely related to education than it is.
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“Loss of a good man”. That can’t be, because Melinda Gates said in an interview, published by the international magazine, Vanity Fair, that, if she made one person breathe more easily, then, her life was worthwhile. And, Vanity Fair didn’t follow up with any questions.
For redemption, Vanity Fair should interview the family of Rigoberto Ruelas.
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I do not apologize for the length of this posting.
An article in the LATIMES. “Teacher’s suicide shocks school” with the subtitle “Rigoberto Ruelas, a fifth-grade teacher at Miramonte Elementary in South L.A., was hailed as a caring teacher.”
[start]
As a teacher in an impoverished, gang-ridden area of South Los Angeles, Rigoberto Ruelas always reached out to the toughest kids. He would tutor them on weekends and after school, visit their homes, encourage them to aim high and go to college.
The fifth-grade teacher at Miramonte Elementary School was so passionate about his mission that, school authorities say, he had near perfect attendance in 14 years on the job.
So when Ruelas, 39, failed to show up for work last week, his colleagues instantly began to worry. And their worst fears were confirmed Sunday morning. In the Big Tujunga Canyon area of the Angeles National Forest, a search-and-rescue team with the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department discovered Ruelas’ body in a ravine about 100 feet below a nearby bridge.
The Los Angeles County Coroner determined he had committed suicide.
Ruelas’ death stunned Miramonte students, teachers and parents. Many left hand-written notes, flowers, candles and white balloons at an impromptu memorial. By evening, dozens gathered to light candles, sing Spanish-language hymns and recite the Rosary. Ruelas’ family, too, came to the school and slowly walked along the memorial wall, thanking parents and reading the messages.
Ruelas did not leave a suicide note, authorities said, and it remained unclear why he took his life.
Teachers union President A.J. Duffy said his staff was told by Ruelas’ family that the teacher was depressed about his score on a teacher-rating database posted by The Times on its website. The newspaper analyzed seven years of student test scores in English and math to determine how much students’ performance improved under about 6,000 third- through fifth-grade teachers. Based on The Times’ findings, Ruelas was rated “average” in his ability to raise students’ English scores and “less effective” in his ability to raise math scores. Overall, he was rated slightly “less effective” than his peers.
“Despite The Times’ analysis, and all other measures, this was a really good teacher,” said Duffy, who called on the newspaper to take down the database. Many parents also asked that Ruelas’ page on The Times’ website be taken down.
Ruelas’ brother, Alejandro Ruelas, told The Times that the family is boycotting the newspaper and would not comment.
The Times said it extends “our sympathy to his family, students, friends and colleagues,” Nancy Sullivan, Times vice-president of communications, said in a statement.
The newspaper published the database, she said, “because it bears directly on the performance of public employees who provide an important service, and in the belief that parents and the public have a right to judge the data for themselves.”
Miramonte Principal Martin Sandoval described Ruelas, a South Gate native, as a caring teacher who loved the outdoors. For the teachers and staff, he organized volleyball games at the beach, hiking trips and bonfires, said Carmen Jimenez, 24, a Miramonte nurse assistant.
“He was a very happy individual,” Sandoval said. “He grew up in this community and he felt a desire and need to help this community.”
Andromeda Palma, a 13-year-old eighth-grader, stopped by after school to leave a balloon at the memorial. She said she used to struggle at math, but he taught her to succeed and not to give up.
“He told me it is not about where you are from but if you don’t go to school you are nothing in this world,” she said with tears in her eyes. “Now I am doing real good because of him.”
Sandoval said like all teachers, Ruelas apparently felt pressure to perform well. “Things that were happening in the district, budget cuts, testing, seem to put us all under the microscope,” Sandoval said.
[end]
Link: http://articles.latimes.com/2010/sep/28/local/la-me-south-gate-teacher-20100928
RIP, Rigoberto Ruelas.
😎
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Thanks for the post. It is an indictment of Bill Gates and his cronies and minions.
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Thank you for posting that KrazyTA. No apologies necessary for the length of it. I know I cried when it happened, and reading that made me cry again for this poor man. How many of us have ever felt the same way that he did, due to any number of negative factors such as teacher evaluation scores and bully administrators? These absurd things we have to go through, just because we love kids and want to help them learn and succeed in whatever they want to do.
Before that, I had thought the firing of all the teachers in that Rhode Island school was us teachers “hitting bottom” in this reform movement, but then this happened, and now I believe it was this man’s death.
Diane offers a lot of hope here on her blog, as do you KrazyTA and Dienne and Laura and Mercedes and SomeDAM Poet and Chiara and others. Without you all, I would likely have quit teaching and gone back to my previous profession.
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The people at the LA Times are directly responsible for the death of Rigoberto Ruelas.
They are not journalists.
They are scum.
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Has the LA Times published anything about the retailer of schools-in-a-box, a business owned by Bill Gates, Mark Z-berg, Pearson,…(Bridge International Academies)?
An internet search didn’t turn it up. The LA Times- last with news and insight.
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He has used our students and teachers as guinea pigs. All of his plans stem from Gates’ bias and his own personal agenda. None of his proposals are evidence based. That he has bought his way into a decision making role is a testimony to the problems of big money in government. Billionaires should not be able to insert themselves into policies that should be dealt with through proper democratic channels. Nobody elected Bill Gates to office.
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It isn’t him, though. There are people we hire to run “the nations public school agenda”. The question isn’t Bill Gates- he exists, he has opinions, he has a giant stack of cash to mold education. The question is why are lawmakers ALLOWING him to do this?
They’re not children. They have agency and free will and a grant of power. That they have chosen to give that power to Bill Gates is 100% on them.
All Gates did was pick it up. Who gave it to him? He’s not knocking them down and stealing their rightful role. They were more than happy to hand it to him.
He’s the pull. There’s supposed to be a push back. Instead we have “agnostics”, people who think they’re neutral mediators between the public interest and billionaires.
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As far as I know, Michelle Rhee (OK, OK, stop laughing) was the first so-called reformer to claim that they were “agnostic” about charter schools, but that is just a transparent dodge to misdirect people from their actions, which are “All charters, all the time.”
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Ohioans can’t even get an “agnostic”, for the role of State Superintendent. Each time a charter school sycophant, is anointed to run public schools, it is a desecration of the Republic.
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Campaign reform would be a good start.
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I think that the criticisms of the Gates Foundation may be calculated to leave the local Broad Foundation untouched, also the Walton family and on down the line.
I think that ESSA is retaining the worst of this era’s policies and that foundations are already looking at new ways to meddle with education without giving up the Gates-led initiatives. One of the most important and easily overlooked is the successful organization of many foundations in to networks so they could have a “collective impact” on policies and events at different tiers of action: local regional, national, international.
If there is a new contender for this kind of power. It is the Clinton Foundation where heads of state, an international constellation of hugely wealthy and influential people (including movie stars) gather to “solve problems.” This year, Bill Gates (not Melinda) is included in a powerful cohort of the movers and shakers that the Clinton Foundation convenes, wines and dines, and mobilizes for action.
As an illustration of the reach and interlocking directorates of foundation, corporate, and state power, look at the attention being given to pay-for success contracts and social impact bonds to address social problems, including education.
Also notice how the meme of college and career readiness–forged by corporate interests in the USA, promoted by Gates as part of the Common Core–has migrated into a topic of interest to the Clinton Foundation.
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Excellent insight….thank you Laura. I agree.
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“philanthropists shouldn’t be setting America’s public school agenda”
I read that and thought, the LA Times really said that about Broad? Who let that slip?
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No where in the editorial is Eli Broad mentioned by name…the writer(s) directs the opinion purely to Gates, although at the end of the opinion, using generic language, they state “philanthropists are not educators”….so the Times does not take any direct aim at Broad and his Academy to train CEOs of schools, charters, to use business models to achieve their goals.
Perhaps the nationwide failures of many administrators (as with Deasy, Yang, Hill, Byrd-Bennet, etc.) of the close to 3,000 grads of the Broad Academy, of those Superintendents who are actually being investigated by the FBI and the SEC for various frauds and malfeasances, has finally sunk in and the Times is back tracking before more indictments appear.
Perhaps they have finally recognized the nationwide failures of PARCC and the testing fiascos of the business model of Common Core.
Perhaps there is a ‘slap down’ going on behind the scenes between Eli and Bill.
Perhaps it has to do with Eli’s plan, known as Great Public Schools Now, to take over another 50% of LAUSD public schools to charterize them….which would certainly be the death knell for the District.
Perhaps it is Eli’s way of forcing LAUSD into bankruptcy, and Gates objected. Who knows?
This paper has a long history of taking both input and cash from Broad (and input from Riordan, Villaraigosa, Ben Austin, et al)…and they have continually, for years, given Eli his money’s worth in support of charter schools.
Until, and unless, they write an editorial specifically disengaging from Broad and his cohorts, I take a measured and somewhat jaundiced view of all this. I have grown up in LA and attended public schools from elementary through graduate school, and spent my over 45 year academic career in public policy focused on education issues, and have read the LA Times every day since I was 12. ..so I think I am quite grounded in my reserved opinion on how/why this snippet of potential media manipulation might have been fostered.
Hopefully, one day, we will find out what is truly behind this editorial. In the best possible world, the new Tribune administration policies might have dumped Eli and his tainted cash, and his biased opinions.Let’s hear from both the papers’ LA and Chicago administration about why they decided to write this editorial critical of Gates…and only by extension, maybe, all philanthropists. So they include Eli Broad and the Waltons in that group????
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Piggybacking on this intelligent thread… The editorial seemed to me, while a generally positive criticism of high stakes testing, to be a praising of charter schools. I’m not the most thorough researcher, knowledgeable historian, or powerful writer here, but I am a critical thinker. And with my critical thinking and healthy skepticism of anything published by the LA Times editorial board, I must say this: During this election season, let’s all keep the pressure on our elected and running-to-be-elected people. Unless laws regulating charters and the misuse of technology are being enacted, let’s not play nice with the billionaire class or their millionaire supporters. Criticism of Gates is wholly welcome, but as long as the Broad “Academy” still exists, we still have a serious problem.
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I view this as a positive development.
It means one billionaire (Broad) is going after another (Gates)
We can fully expect a Gates counter attack on Broad — a “broadside”, if you will.
Better to have the billionaires battling one another than teaming up on the rest of us.
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It would be great, Poet, if you were right, but I don’t believe Broad is going after Gates.
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For Bill’s next get together:
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If Bill and Melinda Gates retired tomorrow, we’d still have Eli Broad and the Walton heirs.
The billionaires aren’t the problem. The political leaders who are captured by the billionaires are the problem. This didn’t just “happen”. Certain specific people in government let it happen and they did that knowingly and deliberately.
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Soooooooooooo TRUE!!!!!!!!
Bill’s meet and greet in DC:
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Chiara…the billionaires ARE the political leaders. Those we think we elect to lead the country have become merely their puppets.
Does any vote count for much of anything in this climate of huge money calling all the shots? My governor, Jerry Brown, won’t even let an anti-Citizens United ballot measure to be on the November ballot.
If Eli says to Villagraigosa, ‘dance baby, dance’….Tony does a ‘quick step’…it is all about money and vast deception.
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Billionaires are not smart just because they are wealthy. See another example of the extremist far-right Koch funded school sinking in a cesspool of corruption:
http://westpalmbeat.blog.palmbeachpost.com/2016/05/27/oxbridge-ceo-out-after-koch-investigation/
So much for Koch’s dream of a school “run by students, not teachers, unions, or principals.”
Gates, Koch, Broad, the Waltons, et al. have hubris and privilege but no expertise on schools and teaching.
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ross posted the LA article at http://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/Gates-Foundation-failures-in-Best_Web_OpEds-American-Schools_Public-Assets-To-Private-Wealth_Public-Education_Public-Education-160602-739.html#comment599911
with a comment that links to this site.
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Does the LA Times have reporters? If so, meeting minutes, from the Gates-funded Aspen, “Senior Congressional Education Staff Network” might be interesting. A look at who the “experts” were, that met with “key Congressional staff”, in the “structured safe space”, would show the public, rather the forum was non-ideological, or not.
Opt out movement people included or, shut out?
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Agreed. Because that’s the inequity. They’re really buying access.
Have YOU met with “key congressional staff”? Yeah, me neither.
The exchanging bags of campaign cash is just the most obvious influence. There’s a whole range.
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Like the prospect of revolving door jobs?
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We elect members of congress, but they follow the money. That is how they have hijacked public education policy.
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“well-meaning philanthropists and foundations”. Total BS!!!! Their “foundation” and other “nonprofit” work indicates NOTHING about philanthropy at all. They’d rather donate all these funds to these front groups as 501c3 and c4 groups to get the tax write off because it’s easier to pay this rather than the big hit on their fortunes. As a result, these donated monies carry conditional strings, hence “weaponized philanthropy” and that’s what’s destroying public education.
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Next idea, the S-CCRBAP ?
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I think Mr. Gates is more than willing to let go of any “good intentions” he may have had, seeing how many of his products have gained a foothold.
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Did a BAT sneak in the newspaper printing press and insert that great headline and article? I just don’t believe the editors would write or publish that and jeopardize their own paychecks like that.
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This is what the Gates Foundation considers “collaboration” between charter and public schools:
“The compacts are the Gates Foundation’s latest strategy in a long quest to improve access to high-quality K-12 education. At the core of the foundation’s facilities strategy are new financing mechanisms to catalyze private financing for public education, strengthening not only the emerging networks of high-performing charter schools, but the resource-strapped public school districts that serve the same communities. In addition to grants, the foundation has provided capital to finance charter school construction on public property and even in former district schools. The compact also obligates charter schools to help the district with teacher training and curriculum and the district to make resources available equitably.”
So all the money goes to charter schools and in return the (few) remaining public schools get the magical charter school secret sauce on teacher training.
These are the kind of awesome deals your lawmakers not only allow, but encourage.
There is no benefit for public schools, at all. That’s what qualifies as a “compromise” in ed reform. They promote this blatant favoritism and market manipulation while calling themselves “agnostics”. Please. We’re not idiots.
http://k12education.gatesfoundation.org/2016/05/stanford-social-innovation-review-private-financing-for-public-education/
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This is another form of extortion by Gates. When resource depleted public schools are near the tipping point, get them to cry “uncle.” and then you can make a deal with the public school. Of course, the public never gets to vote on the new arrangement. This sounds more like tactics by the mob than a “philanthropist.”
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Chiara. This one quote needs to be widely circulated and it merits a full response from everyone in the media.
Thanks for your diligence in getting these sources into this and other blogs. This is the blunt version of the agenda too rarely publicized. It is the mirror image of policies in USDE and still hardwired into ESSA. So now the charter schools with TFA’s are the source of wisdom for teacher eduction?
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Ah so…here is the buried editorial sentence that justifies Gates by the writers of the LA Times who continue to support Common Core..
“Financial support for Common Core isn’t a bad thing. When the standards are implemented well, which isn’t easy, they ought to develop better reading, writing and thinking skills”.
Sezs who? Certainly not most public school teachers.
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Standards can be a good. High stakes, annual testing with data fishing are the problems. Eliminate annual testing and I could be a — cough, choke — Common Core fan.
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Chiara;;;Anyone who does not realize that the government is bought, is living in a bubble.
Even on NPR there was a piece about dark money. I can’t find the excellent Moyer’s show on dark money, but this says it all… do watch. And Atlantic Magazine did a whole issue on what is happening to our people as the billionaire class rig the system.
Dark money is NOT the zillions flowing into the actual coffers of legislators and judges, it is the undeclared money that goes to hire the lobbyists that represent the billionaire class — NOT YOU or the people! That is how this happens:
This is a good one.
http://billmoyers.com/story/going-offshore-2016-election-campaign-disappearing-money-opportunistic-candidates/
And since 60 people own more wealth than 3.2 billion, they will get their way with this:
http://international.sueddeutsche.de/post/143690739565/ttippapiere
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Gates-funded New Schools Venture Fund’s goal, “To develop charter management organizations that produce a diverse supply of different brands on a large scale.”
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Gates is going after public schools the same way he went after anyone he saw as a potential competitor. He wants what he wants and he intends to get it by whatever means necessary. Good catch, Chiara.
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I wonder what punishment Gates will inflict on the LA Times now. No more advertising for Microsoft products? Peter Thiel’s assault on Gawker proves “Thou Shalt Not Cross a Billionaire”.
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With the disaster of Windows 10, and how MS is bullying the public to use/buy it, and even installing it without approval of the computer owner, the corporate culture seems to continue Gates’ views, even if he no longer runs the company.
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Gates hand-picked the current CEO of Microsoft, so it’s no surprise that the guy would share his world view — on business practices and even expectations about women ( who are, among other things, supposed to keep their opinions about pay raises to themselves — according to Nadella, of course)
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Gates is not just wrong about education.
He’s also wrong about another subject that he regularly pontificates on: climate change.
And just as his wrongness on education has negative effects, so does his wrongness on issues related to climate change.
As Joe Romm says in
Why Bill Gates’ Math Error About Climate Change Matters
//end quote
Gates should stick to the only thing he seems to be good at: producing crappy software.
Leave education and climate change to people with a clue, which he is clearly lacking
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Bill Gates- “Impatient Opportunist”
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I think it is interesting that the headline didn’t skewer Eli Broad instead. Did I read right that philanthropists have funded art? Is that a misprint?
Scratch my head.
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The LA Times editorial board does not criticize Eli Broad. I live a few blocks from his evil mansion, even closer than is the Times office. I can feel Broad’s haughty anger at public employees. I’m sure they can too. Smells like champagne and caviar with a side of overuse of water for lawns and pools during droughts. Bill Gates is on the other hand removed by a thousand miles from the LAT.
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Boy this brings back memories of 2010.
What a big change from LA Times in 2010.
Let’s take a sroll down Memory Lane to the 2010 article accompanying the posting of thousands of teachers VAM scores:
http://articles.latimes.com/2010/aug/14/local/la-me-teachers-value-20100815
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L.A. Times in 2010:
“Though the government spends billions of dollars every year on education, relatively little of the money has gone to figuring out which teachers are effective and why.
“Seeking to shed light on the problem, The Times obtained seven years of math and English test scores from the Los Angeles Unified School District and used the information to estimate the effectiveness of L.A. teachers — something the district could do but has not.
“The Times used a statistical approach known as value-added analysis, which rates teachers based on their students’ progress on standardized tests from year to year. Each student’s performance is compared with his or her own in past years, which largely controls for outside influences often blamed for academic failure: poverty, prior learning and other factors.
“Though controversial among teachers and others, the method has been increasingly embraced by education leaders and policymakers across the country, including the Obama administration.
“In coming months, The Times will publish a series of articles and a database analyzing individual teachers’ effectiveness in the nation’s second-largest school district — the first time, experts say, such information has been made public anywhere in the country.
“This article examines the performance of more than 6,000 third- through fifth-grade teachers for whom reliable data were available.”
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(When it comes to teacher quality, the LATimes argues, years of experience, grad degrees, or on-going professional development… none of that matters as to whether a teacher is of high quality or not.)
————————————–
“Many of the factors commonly assumed to be important to teachers’ effectiveness were not. Although teachers are paid more for experience, education and training, none of this had much bearing on whether they improved their students’ performance.
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(Oh, and when it comes to students, poverty doesn’t matter either, nor does being a second-language learner)
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“Other studies of the district have found that students’ race, wealth, English proficiency or previous achievement level played little role in whether their teacher was effective.”
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(And here’s more .
.. in the current system, teachers have a job for life, where actual performance on the job means nothing, with teacher evaluation involves nothing more than brief, pre-announced visits —- total lies, by the way, as any LAUSD teacher will tell you —- and is therefore worthless.
… and in support of all this, they quote TNTP, or course.
To remedy all of this, of course, VAM is the solution.)
————————————–
“Nationally, the vast majority who seek tenure get it after a few years on the job, practically ensuring a position for life. After that, pay and job protections depend mostly on seniority, not performance.
“Teachers have long been evaluated based on brief, pre-announced visits by principals who offer a confidential and subjective assessment of their skills. How much students are learning is rarely taken into account, and more than 90% of educators receive a passing grade, according to a survey of 12 districts in four states by the New Teacher Project, a New York-based nonprofit.
“Almost all sides in the debate over public education agree that the evaluation system is broken. The dispute centers on how to fix it.
“Value-added analysis offers a rigorous approach. In essence, a student’s past performance on tests is used to project his or her future results. The difference between the prediction and the student’s actual performance after a year is the “value” that the teacher added or subtracted.”
————————————–
(And the Times hopes and predicts that VAM will be adopted system-wide in LAUSD by 2013, and the insistence that it should have been adopted years earlier.
UTLA, at the time led by Warren Fletcher (2011-2014), stopped all that… thank Jesus.)
————————————–
“Prompted by federal education grants, California and several other states are now proposing to make value-added a significant component of teacher evaluations. If the money comes through, Los Angeles schools will have to rely on the data for at least 30% of a teacher’s evaluation by 2013.
“The Times found that the district could have acted far earlier. In the last decade, district researchers have sporadically used value-added analysis to evaluate charter schools and study after-school programs. Administrators balked at using the data to study individual teachers, however, despite encouragement from the district’s own experts.
“In a 2006 report, for instance, L.A. Unified researchers concluded that the approach was ‘feasible and valid’ and held ‘great promise” for improving instruction. But district officials did not take action, fearful of picking a fight with the teachers union in the midst of contract negotiations, according to former district officials.
“In an interview last week, A.J. Duffy, president of United Teachers Los Angeles, was adamant that value-added should not be used to evaluate teachers, citing concerns about its reliance on test scores and its tendency to encourage ‘teaching to the test.’ But Duffy said the data could provide useful feedback.
” ‘I’m not opposed to standardized tests as one means to helping teachers look at what’s happening in their classrooms,’ he said.”
————————————–
(And let’s not forget the great work of the LAUSD teacher effectiveness “task force” made up of corporate reformers that Gates and Broad paid to embed in the upper echelons of LAUSD management. Vergara attorney and proponent Ted Mitchell even makes an appearance.)
———————————–
“A task force created by the Los Angeles school board to promote teacher effectiveness raised the issue in April, urging the use of value-added scores as one measure of performance.
“The task force chairman, Ted Mitchell, said the changes were long overdue.
” ‘I think it’s simply a failure of will,’ said Mitchell, who also heads the State Board of Education.”
” … ”
“As the district was appointing the task force and seeking federal dollars, some enterprising principals in L.A. schools began making back-of-the-envelope assessments of teachers using raw test scores.
“One clear lesson so far: Finding the least effective teachers is only the first step in a long process.”
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(And VAM will help parents who are now “in the dark” about teacher quality, too. VAM will “empower them to demand a good teacher” for their child.
VAM will also “keep teachers on their toes.”
Not mentioned here is how VAM helped keep LAUSD teacher Rigoberto Ruelas “on his toes” . Shortly after this was published, several thusly “empowerd” parents of Rigoberto Rueles’ students read his VAM score on the LATimes “Grading the Teachers” database and then demanded their children be removed from his class.
He grew so despondent that he jumped off a bridge.)
————————————–
“For now, parents remain mostly in the dark.
“Even the most involved mothers and fathers have little means of judging instructors other than through classroom visits and parking lot chatter. Others don’t even have time for that.”
“Without reliable information, it comes down to trust. Which instructor a child gets is usually decided behind closed doors by principals and teachers, whose criteria vary widely.
” ‘Mi niño, all his teachers are good,’ said Maura Merino, whose son Valentin Cruz was in the fifth-grade class of John Smith, the low-performing Broadous teacher, last school year. ‘He never had a problem. Everything is OK.’
“Merino said it’s hard for her to tell the difference between teachers because she doesn’t speak English. If she knew her son was assigned to a struggling teacher,
” ‘I wouldn’t know what to do,’ she said, speaking in Spanish. ‘But I would try to get him to the best.’
“In a conversation after school one day, several Broadous teachers, including Aguilar and Smith, said parents should have the chance to see how teachers measure up.
“They ‘might be more empowered to demand a good teacher,’ said teacher Eidy Hemmati. And it might keep teachers ‘on their toes a little bit more,’ Smith said.
“But many others say it would be impossible to accommodate every parent’s desire for the best teacher, and publicizing disparities would only turn one educator against the other.
“Broadous Principal Stannis Steinbeck refused even to discuss the differences among her instructors, hinting at the tensions that might arise on staff.”
” ‘Our teachers think they’re all effective,’ she said.”
L.A. teacher ratings: L.A. Times analysis rates teachers’ effectiveness
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Bill Gates IS OBSOLETE.
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“Faded Gates”
William Gates is obsolete
A house with broken windows
Behind the gates on dead-end street
Where no one anymore goes
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SomeDAM Poet, I love it!
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“The Charge of the Gates Brigade” (based on “The Charge of the Light Brigade”, by Alfred, Lord Tennyson)
Half a wit, half a wit,
Half a wit onward,
All in the Valley of Dumb
Bill and Mel foundered
“Forward, the Gates Brigade!
Charge for the schools!” he said.
Into the Valley of Dumb
Bill and Mel foundered
II
“Forward, the Gates Brigade!”
Was there a man dismayed?
Not though the Coleman knew
Someone had blundered.
Theirs not to make reply,
Theirs not to reason why,
Theirs but to do and lie.
Into the Valley of Dumb
Bill and Mel foundered
III
Teachers to right of them,
Teachers to left of them,
Teachers in front of them
Volleyed and thundered;
Stormed at with fact and stat,
Boldly they tuned out that,
Into the Ravitch jaws,
Into the mouth of cat
Bill and Mel foundered
IV
Flashed all their BS bare,
Dashed was their savoir faire
VAMming the teachers there,
Charging an army, while
All the world wondered.
Plunged in with mir’s-n-smoke
Valiantly went for broke;
Cluelessly rushin’
Reeled from reality’s stroke
Shattered and sundered.
VAMming attack, for naught,
Bill and Mel foundered
V
Teachers to right of them,
Teachers to left of them,
Teachers behind them
Volleyed and thundered;
Stormed at with fact and stat,
While Bill and Mel chewed fat
They that had fought the BAT
Came through the Ravitch jaws,
Back from the mouth of cat,
All that was left in end:
Bill and Mel foundered
VI
When can their glory fade?
O the wild charge they made!
All the world wondered.
Honour the charge they made!
Honour the Gates Brigade,
Bill and Mel foundered
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Reblogged this on stopcommoncorenys and commented:
T h i s.
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If Bill Gates really cared he would create more jobs in inner cities. He would pay his employees a decent working wage. He would create centers for homeless and mentally ill. He would donate monies for animal spaying and neutering programs. Create inner city youth organizations. This asshat is worth almost 80 billion dollars…yet we have food pantrys in the US looking for donations….this guy is getting on my last nerve.
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Gates is in it for the fame and glory.
He wants to be remembered as someone who did something extraordinary like “saved America”, not as someone who gave some money to some soup kitchens.
Unfortunately, he has failed every one of his grand schemes and if he still plans to do something extraordinary, he’d better do it fast because from recent pictures, he looks very sick — like he won’t last much longer.
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The first crack in the Gates’ armor was their association with John Deasy, quasi-Ph,D,. LA School District Superintendent. Deasy’s past was shady enough to have alerted anyone that something was not quite right, yet the Gates relied on his “expertise” for quite a long time. Further, they seem to have a rather close association with the Clintons/Clinton Foundation. I’ve been a lifelong Democrat so this isn’t a right-wing smear, but there is enough suspicion surrounding Bill/Hill that spreads to Bill and Melinda. Also, the Gates’ investments in Nigerian Oil Extraction is another question. Does anyone anymore try to erase the appearance of conflict of interest?
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Wow, hopefully Gates gets his act together and faces this promptly
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I know that in schools some students get easier tests than other students in the same classes comparing this to social sites like Facebook where when you sign in the user is sent to different social post pages every time SO the student gets an easier test will go higher and the harder test takers most of the time are not.
Lets not make Bill more criminal lets see if his testing has to be the only way for students to go thru school. Example student 1 tests are easy in the same class as student2’s this is the way Bill wants it forever? No Bill stop this testing and let every student take the same test. Now 1 more wager why not cosign your testing first and see how many students go to this kind of school RDARW
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