Archives for the month of: January, 2017

This is pathetic. House Democrats formed a caucus to support public schools. To date, it has only 11 members. One of them, Jared Polis of Colorado, is one of the biggest supporters of charter schools in Congress. He started two charter schools himself. His family sold the Blue Mountain e-card business for $500 million. He is a favorite of DFER. A couple of years ago, Polis called me “an evil woman” on Twitter because of my advocacy for public schools.

 

Surely there must be more than 11 elected representatives in the House who support public schools.

People across the country have found a constructive way to protest the anti-abortion views of the Trump-Pence administration. They are sending donations to Planned Parenthood and doing it in Mike Pence’s name. It is important to remember that Planned Parenthood is an important provider of women’s health services. The Republicans intend to defund Planned Patenthood.

 

The donations are, of course, ironic since Pence is an extreme anti-abortion, anti-LGBTQ evangelical Catholic. The new VP-elect has effectively led the GOP’s war on Planned Parenthood and completely defunded the women’s health organization in his home state of Indiana.

 

“I long for the day that Roe v. Wade is sent to the ash heap of history, when we move past the broken hearts and the broken lives of the past 38 years,” Pence said in 2011.

 

Well, count on women to reply to Pence’s scary anti-female rhetoric with some humor, wit and activism.

 

Artist Bethany Cosentino posted a genius screenshot to Instagram. “You can make a donation to Planned Parenthood in Mike Pence’s name and he’ll receive the certificate of the donation,” the post reads.

 

The post includes the address at the Indiana state house where Pence will receive notification of the gifts in his name to an organization he abhors.

Andre Agassi is in the charter school business with his partner Bobby Turner, and they are building and opening charters across the nation. Agassi and Turner raised $750 million for their for-profit venture.

 

Meanwhile, back in Las Vegas, Agassi’s flagship charter school is one of the lowest performing schools in Nevada, and it will be taken over by Democracy Prep Charter School, based in New York City.

 

Agassi should sell tennis rackets and get out of the school racket.

Do you want to know what is wrong with American education? Look no further than Philadelphia. The city public schools have been a plaything for the city’s rich and powerful. The students are mainly black and poor. The schools are underfunded. Charter schools are thriving. Public schools have been closed to make way for privately managed charters. The city schools have not had democratic control of years. It is run by a School Reform Commission appointed by the governor and the mayor. The SRC does not have a clue about how to “reform” the schools.

 

Consequence: The city’s public schools have eight full-time librarians for 220 schools and 134,000 students. 

 

As Philadelphia school budgets have shrunk, librarians have grown rarer, almost to the point of extinction. In 1991, the school system employed 176 certified librarians. Now, the librarians are only at Anderson, Elkin, Greenberg, Penn Alexander, Roosevelt, and Sullivan elementaries and Central and South Philadelphia High Schools.

 

In addition to the librarian-staffed libraries, 13 libraries are kept open by 128 volunteers from the West Philadelphia Alliance for Children, according to the district.

 

What a disgrace for the nation’s fifth largest city!

 

When I went to the Houston public schools in the 1950s, my public schools had fully staffed libraries. Are we poorer now than then?


A major legal blow was struck against charter schools in Louisiana, as a state court ruled they cannot be funded with money intended for public schools, unless they were authorized by districts. Such schools are not public schools.

 

“Louisiana’s funding of certain types of charter schools hit a snag following a ruling Monday from a state 1st Circuit Court of Appeal panel that, in a 3-2 decision, ruled unconstitutional the Louisiana Department of Education and the state Board of Elementary and Secondary Education’s support such schools with local and state tax dollars.

 

“Monday’s ruling overturns the May 2015 decision from Baton Rouge state District Judge Wilson Fields, who originally heard the arguments for the lawsuit from Louisiana Association of Educators against BESE and the Department of Education. A separate lawsuit from the Iberville Parish School Board over funding of a Type 2 charter school in that parish was consolidated with the case.

 

“This is a significant victory in defending the right of every child in Louisiana to attend a quality public school,” LAE President Debbie Meaux said in a written statement. “It is crucial for the state to adequately fund the institutions where the vast majority of Louisiana’s students learn, and a majority of Louisiana’s students learn in public school classrooms.”

 

“Caroline Roemer Shirley, executive director of the Louisiana Association of Public Charter Schools, expressed “extreme disappointment” in Monday’s decision, promising an appeal to the state’s highest court.

 

“We feel there were a lot of politics at play here,” she said Monday. “We joined the case on behalf of the Type 2 charter schools we represent. And we always considered it would be a very important case that would be heard before the (Louisiana) Supreme Court.”

 

“State Education Superintendent John White, in a written statement, said, “This is one step in a process that has always been headed to the Supreme Court. This lawsuit is only about money. It disregards the rights of parents to choose the schools that are best for their unique children. We look forward to presenting the matter at the next level.

 

“The plaintiffs asked Wilson to block the state’s funding to 33 BESE-authorized charter schools, including seven in East Baton Rouge Parish, a half-dozen in Orleans Parish, three in Lafayette Parish and two in Jefferson Parish, through a permanent injunction.

 

“Wilson, however, deemed the state’s use of state Minimum Foundation Program funding to operate certain charter schools was OK since Type 2 charters approved by BESE fall within the state constitution’s definition of public schools.

 

“Type 2 charter schools are self-governed public schools independent of existing public school districts. They must obtain BESE’s approval to operate after an application and review process and can draw students from across the state.

 

“A majority of the five-member panel of 1st Circuit judges who heard LAE’s appeal to Wilson’s ruling disagreed with the lower-court judge.

 

“Judges John Michael Guidry and Jewel “Duke” Welch joined in Judge Wayne Ray Chutz’s opinion that Type 2 charter schools aren’t entitled to MFP funding because they don’t meet the definition of public schools clearly defined in the Louisiana Constitution. Judge Guy Holdridge offered a dissent that was supported by Chief Judge Vanessa Whipple.

 

“Charter school supporters note that such schools can operate without much of the red tape associated with traditional public schools.

 

“The LAE suit claims the state improperly spends $60 million a year for two types of charter schools that are not entitled to the state aid from the MFP, arguing that BESE-authorized charter schools don’t qualify as “city and parish school systems,” which the state constitution requires be provided with MFP funds.

 

“Guidry made many of the same arguments in the majority’s ruling Monday, citing precedent was established in the Louisiana Federation of Teachers’ 2012 successful challenge of the state’s expanded voucher program, which sought to give students at poor academically preforming public schools the option to apply for state aid to attend private or parochial schools.

 

“The case distinguishes between ‘public schools’ and ‘nonpublic schools’ and concludes that MFP funds cannot be diverted to nonpublic schools,” Guidry wrote. “The court in Louisiana Federation of Teachers recognized that nonpublic schools are not owned or operated by ‘parish and city school systems.’ ”

 

“So, while the New Type 2 charter schools may be subject to the same requirements as public schools and may not necessarily be considered ‘private’ schools, they clearly do not meet the constitutional definition of ‘public schools’,” Guidry added.”

 

 

 

 


For the past twenty years, the New York Times has fawned over charter schools. Not in its reporting but in its editorials.

 

In its editorial about the Senate’s rush to confirm Betsy DeVos, the Times acknowledges that charters are not a cure for education problems.

 

“Beyond erasing concerns about her many possible financial conflicts, Ms. DeVos also faces a big challenge in explaining the damage she’s done to public education in her home state, Michigan. She has poured money into charter schools advocacy, winning legislative changes that have reduced oversight and accountability. About 80 percent of the charter schools in Michigan are operated by for-profit companies, far higher than anywhere else. She has also argued for shutting down Detroit public schools, with the system turned over to charters or taxpayer money given out as vouchers for private schools. In that city, charter schools often perform no better than traditional schools, and sometimes worse.”

 

The Times has gone up a steep learning curve on this topic. Now if only the editorial writers can continue to understand that school choice is not a cure for low-performing students, not even a band-aid. As voters in Massachusetts showed last November, when they rejected a proposal to expand the number of charters, the main effect of charters is to drain resources from existing schools. Slicing up the education budget into multiple sectors impoverishes them all and enriches only the corporations that operate charters.

 

 

Using the Media to Move Your Message(s) – Strategic Communications for Assessment Reformers

 
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Tonight!

CNN reported that Monica Crowley plagiarized large sections of her best-selling 2012 book, mostly from other conservative writers. Trump selected Crowley as communications director for national security.

 

“The review of Crowley’s June 2012 book, “What The (Bleep) Just Happened,” found upwards of 50 examples of plagiarism from numerous sources, including the copying with minor changes of news articles, other columnists, think tanks, and Wikipedia. The New York Times bestseller, published by the HarperCollins imprint Broadside Books, contains no notes or bibliography.
Crowley did not return a request for comment. A spokesperson for HarperCollins told CNN on Sunday: “We have no comment at this time. We are looking into the matter.”

 
“Crowley, a syndicated radio host, columnist, and, until recently, a Fox News contributor, will serve as Trump’s senior director of strategic communications for the National Security Council.”

 

 

This is a video that you should watch, no matter whom you voted for. 

 

When you watch it, think about Trump tweeting about Arnold Schwarzenegger’s ratings on “The Celebrity Apprentice.” Think about his tweets about Meryl Streep. Think about his many other tweets.

 

After you watch it, post your reaction here.

Ed Patru, Friend of– and Mouthpiece for– Betsy DeVos

 

Mercedes Schneider noticed a strange phenomenon: whenever a news reporter went in search of a friendly comment about Betsy DeVos, for balance, the quote almost always came from the same person: Ed Patru, speaking on behalf of “Friends of Betsy DeVos.”

 

She he searched the Internet but could find no such organization. She searched for Mr. Patru and discovered he is a paid PR guy.

 

Ed Patru is the Friends of Betsy DeVos. Does she have any friends who are not paid to be her friend? We.. there’s Campbell Brown, but she gets DeVos money too.