Bill Koch, one of the famous billionaire Koch brothers, decided he wanted to open a great high school, an example for the nation. He created Oxbridge Academy in West Palm Beach, Florida, where the sky was the limit in terms of spending.
He recruited the chief financial officer of the U.S. Naval Academy as its headmaster by offering him a financial package worth more than $1 million a year.
Koch’s goal was excellence:
That’s the aim of Oxbridge Academy, whose roster of teachers and administrators recruited from around the country aspires to the highest of academic ambitions for their 580 students, who populate a sprawling West Palm Beach campus and engage in extracurricular activities that range from horseback riding to sailing and flight simulation and boast a football team that rarely loses.
Tuition is $31,500 a year, though many students receive financial aid as part of Chairman Bill Koch’s desire to maintain a diverse student body elevated, as his industrialist father was decades ago, by the generosity of others. Koch, a Palm Beach energy industry billionaire, antiquities collector and America’s Cup winner, founded the West Pam Beach high school in 2011 and estimates he has invested $75 million to $100 million to make Oxbridge one of the finest in the nation.
But curtained behind the wooded grounds and low-slung buildings at Military Trail and Community Drive, say past and present employees, exists a working environment led by President and CEO Robert C. Parsons that’s fraught with firings, high turnover, accusations of sexual harassment and an emphasis tilting from academics to athletics….
What worries employees is the frequency of firings, the swiftness of departures and absence of explanation. One day a colleague is there and the next, gone.
That has been the pattern, not with just teachers but high-level administrators with top credentials, who came attracted by the excitement of creating an innovative, high-powered school only to find themselves out the door, sometimes in a matter of months.
Neen Hunt, for example, came before the school’s opening, to organize operations as academics chief. Hunt, a Phi Beta Kappa, cum laude graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, had earned a Master of Arts in Education and a Doctorate from the Harvard Graduate School of Education. She came to Oxbridge from New York’s prestigious Calhoun School, where she was head of school.
She was gone before the first day of class….
Of the inaugural group of 17 teachers that started in fall 2011, many who Hunt recruited from around the country, eight were told in February 2012 their contracts wouldn’t be renewed but that they were expected to finish the term.
“It was such a horrible atmosphere and so unprofessional,” said one instructor who wasn’t fired. “They wanted me to come back but there was no way I was going to let my career be ruined by those people. The atmosphere felt evil and very controlling. It was one of the most disturbing places I have ever worked in under the guise of being an educational environment. It was shocking.”
When interviewed, Bill Koch said the high turnover didn’t bother him, because he works under the Jack Welch philosophy that the bottom 10 percent should be fired every year. Apparently, he didn’t notice that more than the bottom 10 percent were leaving every year.
Koch is now paying for an investigative team to get to the bottom of numerous allegations. Several top officials have been placed on paid leave, including the employee who was a whistle-blower.
Staff turnover has been amazingly high, considering the seemingly idyllic working conditions:
Mark Bodnar, the school’s former second-in-command, said he left the stress of working in that environment to hike trails in Arizona. He estimated that more than 120 people have been fired or quit, some after having left prestigious schools and moving their families cross-country to work at Oxbridge. Another source put the number at 135, including part-timers.
The school’s public relations manager, Carey O’Donnell, said that from 2011 to now, 96 employees left, 34 of them fired.
In the past two or three months, the school’s treasurer/chief financial officer, an accountant who was out on family leave and its baseball coach were fired and its security director demoted to security guard, according to current employees.
Be sure to read the comments on the original story in the Palm Beach Post. Some are from current or former employees.
When a reporter from the New York Times called to ask me about this story, in preparation for writing about it, I said that at least Bill Koch is paying for implementing his ideas instead of expecting the public to pay for them, as Bill Gates, Eli Broad, the Walton family, John Arnold, and many other billionaires are doing. Wouldn’t it be great if all of them opened their own private schools and tried out their educational ideas using their own money, instead of imposing them on other people’s children and demanding public support?

If there’s an education angle to the life and death of Muhammad Ali, you should post something about it, although it is difficult to write anything brief about perhaps the most interesting and important celebrity America will ever know.
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Ali transcends all. No education angle to pay homage to “the greatest of all time” and an inspiration to so many.
From the article:
“Cassius Marcellus Clay Jr. was born in Louisville on Jan. 17, 1942, into a family of strivers that included teachers, musicians and craftsmen. For all his ambition and willingness to work hard, education — public and segregated — eluded him. The only subjects in which he received satisfactory grades were art and gym, his high school reported years later. Already an amateur boxing champion, he graduated 376th in a class of 391.”
One more reason to stop stigmatizing young children as “failures” in school.
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Perhaps also a reason to reflect on the importance of art and gym.
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FLERP!:
“Perhaps also a reason to reflect on the importance of art and gym.”
Outstanding!
😎
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“the aim of Oxbridge Academy, whose roster of teachers and administrators recruited from around the country aspires to the highest of academic ambitions for their 580 students”
The “highest academic ambitions” must certainly include Common Core standards in math and ELA!
No mention of student PARRC scores?
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Takeaway: it’s okay to throw money at a school if it’s (a) billionaire money, (b) for private education; and (c) if there’s no public oversight or accountability.
If the Koch brothers supported a modest increase in funding of schools by taxpayer dollars—instead of trying to destroy public education—they may be surprised at how much better are the results: more equity, less graft and corruption.
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While Bill Koch is brothers with the most known Koch brothers Charles and David, he is not part of Koch Industries and I don’t think he’s a billionaire, merely a megamillionaire (practically in the poor house, ahem). He and eldest brother Fred have had a falling out and legal disputes with Charles and David which preceded their leaving Koch Industries. While Bill did fund Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign, I don’t think he’s quite as odious as his brothers as far as using his money for political influence. He has donated a chunk of change to developing wind power in Nantucket. Not to say that I want to be his best friend, but at least he’s not quite as slimy as his brothers. I’d rather he stayed out of education, but at least he developed a private school, not a publicly funded charter.
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I saw a story on the Kochs from PBS. According to them Charles and David conspired against Fred to push him out. That is probably why Fred invested in wind turbines to flip his oil loving brothers the bird.
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Well, no. From the linked article:
“. . . a new private high school financed by billionaire energy titan Bill Koch.
“But Koch, founder of Oxbow Carbon in West Palm Beach and one of the world’s richest men, can be very persuasive. You don’t become No. 316 on the 2010 Forbes list of billionaires with a net worth of $3.4 billion by taking ‘no’ for an answer.”
“I didn’t want an academic to run the school,” Koch said firmly. “Putting an academic in charge of a school is like putting a brain surgeon in charge of a hospital. You’ll ruin both the hospital and the brain surgeon.”
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I’ve got stories of sexual harassment in the charter school sector that would make one’s blood boil. I gleaned these stories in talking with former charter teachers who, the first job offer they could get, jumped ship to work in LAUSD’s traditional public schools and then receive the warm, protective embrace of union representation.
Oh, how I would love to name names and schools. .. but I won’t … for now, that is.
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This goes into my “Top Five” of “The 100 Most Idiotic Things Ever Said About Education”:
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“I didn’t want an academic to run the school. Putting an academic in charge of a school is like putting a brain surgeon in charge of a hospital. You’ll ruin both the hospital and the brain surgeon.”
Bill Koch (billionaire and non-academic who has never worked in a school in any capacity.)
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Here’s one I spotted last month, and put in the same:
“Top Five Most Idiotic Things Ever Said About Education.”
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“As chancellor, I am looking for educators who are willing to say:
” ‘Despite the fact that these kids didn’t eat breakfast this morning, despite the fact that nobody helped them with their homework last night, despite the fact that there is no quiet place in the house to do homework, and despite the fact that no one at home went to bed at a decent hour, and that they have a cavity in their tooth so bad you can see their gums when they open their mouth, IT IS STILL MY RESPONSIBILITY TO MAKE SURE THAT THESE KIDS ARE ACHIEVING AT THE HIGHEST LEVEL.’ ”
—- Michelle Rhee, from her 2008 address to the Washington, D.C public school teachers.
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It’s from here:
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Here’s more of Rhee’s claims, and the writer’s mentioning that there’s no proof to her claims:
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“Rhee knows it can be done; she says she did it as a novice teacher. Fresh out of Cornell University, she joined Teach for America _ a private, non-profit Peace Corps of sorts for would-be teachers _ and was placed in one of Baltimore‘s poorest schools. After a disastrous first year, she says, she brought her students from the depths to the heights on national standardized tests. There are, however, no records to prove it — a lack Rhee and others acknowledged at her confirmation hearing.”
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In the real world, when you’re under consideration for a job, and you’re caught lying and fabricating one of your biggest resume’s bullet points, you usually don’t get the job.
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Throughout the article Bill Koch is described as a billionaire: “Koch, a Palm Beach energy industry billionaire, antiquities collector…..” Oxbridge is a “mashup” (from the article) of Oxford and Cambridge. Hey, what about Yalevard, Harnell, Princelumbia, Brownmouth or MITsylvania? The atmosphere of this golden ghetto is positively Kafkaesque and Orwellian. It’s not a benign dictatorship, it’s a malignant personal dictatorship run at the whim of the head of the school.
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From the description of teachers who taught there, it sounds more like Oxyoke
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Or maybe “Kochsyoke”
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http://www.mypalmbeachpost.com/news/news/tales-of-sexism-high-turnover-prompt-probe-at-koch/nrD53/
“Also put on paid leave was bookstore manager Ulle Boshko, 45, who alleged in a federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission complaint in February that she was demoted from comptroller to bookshop manager because she refused (School CEO) Parson’s advances. ‘The comments were all the time,’ she said.
“A complaint she filed with the school in August 2015, alleging sexual harassment, a hostile working environment and retaliation, was dismissed as ‘not supported’ in October by the same law firm Koch has assigned to the new investigation, Fisher & Phillips LLP of Fort Lauderdale.”
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Let’s unpack this one:
1) Parsons allegedly sexually harasses female Comptroller, who refuses these advances;
2) Parsons demotes her — a major demotion —- to bookstore manager, whereupon she charges that this move is just Parsons is retaliating because she wouldn’t … you know;
3) Koch hires (and pays) an outside law firm to investigate and determine whether there’s any validity to the allegations;
4) the outside law firm, again the one paid for by Koch, concludes that the allegations are completely false.
Now that’s a shocker! Who would ever have expected that?
It’s kind of like when Caveon’s investigation of cheating in Washington, D.C. schools — a probe authorized by and paid for by Michelle Rhee — concluded no cheating took place.
You get what you pay for.
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There are four Koch brothers. Bill is probably not the most destructive of the four when it comes to public education. After the father died, who made his fortune working for Stalin in Russia to develop the Soviet’s oil fields, the four brother fought in court for a decade to see who would end up ruling over the families oil industry in the United States and Canada. David and Charles won that family war, and Bill took a buy out of several billion. Correct me if I’m wrong, but I think it was David and Charles who launched ALEC.
Bill even blew the whistle on David and Charles for stealing oil from American Indian reservations.
I researched and wrote about the four Koch brothers here:
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Koch brothers – are their parents brother and sister? Wouldn’t that explain their faces? Must be nice to be born into a fortune. I can’t imagine what these ego maniacs would have done if they had to start from nothing. Idle hands are the devil’s playground, indeed. Did their dad say “let me introduce you to my wife and my sister….HERE she is” ?
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Meh. Long ago I taught in a private academy sharing many of the features described here– just subtract “Koch” and “millions”. It may be unreasonable to extrapolate from my anecdotal experience, and yet… When you’ve got an administration characterized by an uneasy alliance between former military & excellent academics… & a “post-grad” football team that helps keep the place afloat w/ top players trying to get their academics up to college-entrance level… And dorms(!)… it would take a genius staff to restrain the sort of bad behavior that’s baked into such an arrgt. I’m w/ Diane on this one: at least they’re experimenting on their own dime.
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