The NEA recounts the story told by Amanda Ciede, a mother of a child with special-needs in Malden, Massachusetts. She signed up her five-year-old son for a charter school. His experience was a disaster. He was repeatedly suspended. When his mother realized the harm inflicted on him by constant negative reinforcement, she withdrew him and enrolled him in the neighborhood public school where he is getting the services he needs as well as regular consultations between family and teachers. She is now working to defeat Question 2, which would increase the number of charters in Massachusetts.
The mother said:
“He never felt like he could succeed. He was always being told no and you have to stay in your seat,” said Ceide. “When you’re constantly being told no, as a five-year-old, you’re not getting the positive reinforcement you need to feel successful and that you’re a good person.”
In Massachusetts, charter schools are not legally required to hire licensed teachers or anyone formally trained in early, secondary, or special education. Ceide believes the school was not equipped to adequately educate and nurture her son.
“It went from him not staying in his seat to him screaming at the top of his lungs because he doesn’t know what else to do,” said Ceide. “He was being put into a small room, the ‘time-out room’, and he’d be screaming and clawing the space. Then he’d get suspended.”
Certain charter schools in Massachusetts are notorious for their high suspension rates:
The average suspension rate for schools is Massachusetts is 2.9 percent. However, at several charter schools within the state, the rate is much higher, and suspensions are disproportionately directed at disabled and minority students.
For example, the Roxbury Preparatory Charter suspended 40 percent of its students last year, including 57.8 percent of students with disabilities and 43.5 percent of black students. The City on a Hill Charter School in New Bedford suspended 35.4 percent of its students, including 50 percent of students with disabilities and 52.9 percent of black students.
(Secretary of Education John King was one of the founders of Roxbury Preparatory Charter, where he was co-director for five years and developed its curriculum and rules of behavior. He subsequently joined Uncommon Schools, one of the nation’s “no excuses” charter chains, which is noted for its strict discipline.)

Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Education.
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The charter industry has decided to give its all to push forward their agenda in Massachusetts. Yesterday, it turned out that DFER has funneled some $200,000 to a state senate race to defeat the long term incumbent, Patricia Jehlen, who is a staunch supporter of our public schools. Taking a page from Zepher Teachout, Jehlen challenged not her nominal opponent but rather Liam Kerr of DFER. He accepted. The showdown is today at noon.
https://t.co/OgBiWnRLGP
https://t.co/QYEjT3srRh
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Did you watch it? What’d you think? I found especially appealing the way the Senator was genuinely bemused and befuddled when asked about those who fund her. Apparently doesn’t pay a huge amount of attention to that. Nice to see! I remain a fan of hers despite disagreements on this particular issue.
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George Orwell, “1984”, and Aldous Huxley, “Brave New World”, both thought they were writing about a dark dystopian future caused by government tyranny. What they didn’t know at the time was that this dystopian future would be caused by autocratic billionaires and corporate CEOs buying the government and then unleashing the horror of tyranny.
Bill Gates, the Koch brothers, Eli Broad, the Walmart Walton family, etc. are the World Controllers Huxley warns about.
A few key elements in The World State Huxley writes about:
> Educating children by the hypnopaedic process, which provides each with appropriate subconscious messages to mould the child’s self-image appropriate to their caste.
> Discouragement of critical thinking. The lower castes are bred for low intelligence and conditioned not to think; in the upper castes, this is achieved by conditioning and social taboos. “High” culture has ceased to exist; serious literature is banned as subversive, as is scientific thinking and experimentation. The only cultural element mentioned, movies with added tactile sensations, deal in pure sensation.
>Discouragement of individual action and initiative.
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Exactly, Lloyd.
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In CA, our local charter high school has slashed the number of counselors and instructors by 2/3. Parents are told that perhaps their children would be better off in the public school district, which has better resources for special ed. Blatant discrimination, but there is no oversight.
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