Secretary of Education John King refuses to believe that the new federal law restricts his ability to control U.S. education. Today he released regulations that would threaten the federal funding of teacher education programs if their graduates teach low-scoring students.
Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, blasted King’s overreach and poor judgment
AFT’s Weingarten on Teacher Preparation Programs Regulations
“WASHINGTON—Statement from American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten on the Department of Education’s final regulations for teacher preparation programs.
“It is, quite simply, ludicrous to propose evaluating teacher preparation programs based on the performance of the students taught by a program’s graduates. Frankly, the only conceivable reason the department would release regulations so out of sync with the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) and President Obama’s own call to reduce high-stakes testing is that they are simply checking off their bucket list of outstanding issues before the end of their term.
“The final regulations could harm students who would benefit the most from consistent, high-quality standards for teacher preparation programs. The regulations will create enormous difficulty for teacher prep programs and place an unnecessary burden on institutions and states, which are also in the process of implementing ESSA.
“Instead of designing a system to support and improve teacher prep programs, the regulations build on the now-rejected high-stakes testing system established under NCLB and greatly expanded under this administration’s Race to the Top and waiver programs. It’s stunning that the department would evaluate teaching colleges based on the academic performance of the students of their graduates when ESSA—enacted by large bipartisan majorities in both the House and Senate last December—prohibited the department from requiring school districts to do that kind of teacher evaluation.
“Teacher prep programs need to help ensure that teachers are ready to engage their students in powerful learning and creating an environment that is conducive to learning. These regulations will not help achieve that goal. These regulations do not address ways to help the current status of the teaching profession: the shortages, the lack of diversity or the high turnover.
“While the department has made minor tweaks, the flawed framework remains the same. The regulations will punish teacher prep programs whose graduates go on to teach in our highest-needs schools, most often those with high concentrations of students who live in poverty and English language learners—the exact opposite strategy of what we need. As we brought up in January 2015—in our comments to the department’s proposal— if programs are rated as the department proposes, teacher prep schools will have incentive to steer graduates away from assignments in our toughest schools, and that will only make matters worse.
“If we want to get it right, we should look to countries like Finland, where prospective teachers receive extensive training in their subject matter and teaching strategies combined with clinical training. Finland has no alternative prep programs. Programs are highly selective and free of cost; their graduates go on to work in supportive, professional environments with strong unions, fair pay and benefits, and without high-stakes testing.”
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After paying close attention to this blog for the last few years, I can’t help but get the feeling that we’re being played for suckers. There’s more to this than the statement and it doesn’t make me feel good.
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Yes, it’s to be expected that the so-called reformers would play us for chumps, for that’s clearly what they think teachers are, but the situation is orders of magnitude more toxic when our union “leaders” do likewise, as, in this case, releasing an empty press release intended to deceive and misdirect the rank and file.
The time to do something about this was when King was promoted to DC after his short and disastrous tenure in NY, but needless to say, Weingarten said nothing when this arrogant hypocritical fraud was nominated.
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“Today he released regulations that would threaten the federal funding of teacher education programs if their graduates teach low-scoring students.”
Within a year, they will talk about all other profs, not just those in education departments. If a student of mine ends up working for VolksWagen, and he screws up the emission control software, I will get a pay cut.
I wonder what the college version of VAM is going to be. I got a hint today: I received an email today from the Gates foundation asking me to inform them about how I use technology in my classroom.
Dear Mate Wierdl,
The use of technology to support teaching and learning is transforming today’s higher education experience for students, faculty and institutional leaders. With funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, we seek to understand the digital learning practices at your institution and collect your perspectives on the potential impacts of instructional technology use to help achieve your course and institutional goals.
The FAQ may have a directly relevant to the extension of the King proposal to punish all profs.
Q: Is there a sponsor for the study?
A: Yes, The Postsecondary Success team at The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has funded the effort to undertake and share this research with the field. The goal of the Postsecondary Success strategy is to ensure that more students complete education after high school that helps them support themselves, engage in their communities, and achieve their dreams.
So the Gates foundation wants to find ways to “ensure” high graduations rates. Therefore my bet is on the college VAM using graduation rates as primary ingredient, but will scientifically mix in dozens of other crucial ingredients, like the usage of 21st century digital technology, to look more thorough about ensuring quality education.
I bet $100 that some statisticians are already working on the formula.
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“I bet $100 that some statisticians are already working on the formula.”
I bet $100 that some economist is already working on the formula. I believe some major statistical organizations have already weighed in on the pontifications of some economists bloviating on fields beyond their own.
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Randi endorsed Hillary long before it was necessary. I hope she at least got an assurance from Hillary that John King will not be held over, and that Hillary will listen to Randi and follow the recommendations laid out by Randi in this piece. Hillary must be elected, obviously, but I am not optimistic that Hillary will overhaul the DOE after 8 years of disastrous Obama education policy.
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Yes, Hillary must be elected, because teachers say so even though they are aware she will do nothing for education that President Barack Obama hasn’t already done. Vote Trump for actual change. You’ll be better off.
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Trump for change?
It’s highly doubtful that the “change” would be good for public education, much less the country.
The only thing Trump cares about is himself.
You have outed yourself, Harlan.
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I think Congress should act and impeach King. They have the power to impeach federal officials, and it has happened before, more than 60 times and a third led to full impeachments.
If you click the link, scroll down to the section with this heading: The House’s Role
http://history.house.gov/Institution/Origins-Development/Impeachment/
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Our Congress is complicit. They won’t impeach one the boys.
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It’s depressing for me to say this, but I agree with you.
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The DOE should be abolished. What is the reason/need for it?
The government should stop giving money to further charter schools and defund TFA.
Period.
Perhaps our next president will take care of this.
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Only if our next President is Trump. Dilemma isn’t it? Enjoy the Klinton Kool Aid.
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Good luck with that, Harlan. Trump is self-inflicted burned toast.
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IIRC, Harlan, you are a very Christian man. If so, how can you endorse Trump. I thought the Republican Party was all about family values.
And Trump’s ed policy is essentially nothing more than a charter giveaway. Not a fan of Hillary but your precious culture war based party is so off the rails that it’s left too many people ruling it out.
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Yes, Harlan, the “Klinton Kool-Aid” is unappetizing and not likely to go down well, but the Trump brew is positively vile.
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Organizations might do wonderful things with the right leadership. I’m well aware of how things could be very different today had Arne Duncan and his skewed views not been appointed to the DOE. Change is possible when leadership is in tune with reality; I’ve seen it in my lifetime.
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Why the wonder? This cannot be much of a jolt.
This has been the hallmark of Big Government for a long while now … and it has come about for a single reason: control.
It’s compatible with all of the other edicts and executive orders we’ve endured as this government morphs into a sinister and disturbing
poltergeist never envisioned by the authors of our Constitution.
We are smothered in regulations, rules, guidelines, and do’s and don’t’s. This latest lurch to regiment teacher prep programs is John King’s inevitable coup de grace for any residual indepence. It completes the federal castration of the teaching profession … leaving classroom eunuchs to carry out these maniac reforms.
Now all educational participants … principals, students, teachers, and those who prepare the teachers … march to the identical dirge that drones and drones and groans and groans. It is the disconsolate melody of joylessness.
John King has been involved in educational ruin since he appeared on the scene. His debris still litters the NY landscape … and now he is scarring the national scene … and solidifying the worst elements of the reform-mania.
For his final act, King is choking off the last vestige of teacher autonomy by strangling teacher prep programs that blasphemously insist that teachers are the most crucial element in the learning process. That had to be expunged. Removed. And rejected.
So, federal control is nearly complete. Teacher autonomy has been crushed and educational preparation is now under federal directives. Testing has been installed as the dominating feature of 21st Century education … replacing teachers. Kiosk education is just around the bend.
It’s all in place, and every parent, child, and teacher will soon know their place … and not much more.
Education will morph into a humming, self-propelled pursuit … a self-driving effort joy-sticked by federal puppeteers who have usurped the entire public school system … and who will soon be in pursuit of homeschoolers … and parochial and private schools.
It’s taken many years for the fog to lift … and for the new educational order to reveal itself fully. But now we all see what’s become of a very successful school system once it is bondaged by federal domination.
The federal government is now our educational master … and John King its overseer.
All that’s left to ask is … Where is our Moses?
Denis Ian
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I saw an interview with Tim Kaine’s wife today on CNN who is the former Virginia Secretary of Education and her role in the campaign is meeting with educators and education policy. Curious what this means? I know Virginia has pretty strict regulation on standards and did not adopt the common core and charters there are run by the local school board and are part of the district.
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VA DOES have Common Core aligned standards. They lie just like all the rest that have rebranded Common Core.
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Time to STARVE THE BEAST
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How do you starve the beast, brackenkaren?
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