ProPublica writes about the abuses that occur in certain for-profit schools designed especially for difficult children. The very concept of a public school that operates for profit is absurd, because every dollar from taxpayers is meant for the children, the teachers, and the schools, not investors. But this article is specifically about a for-profit chain for difficult students.
An alternative school for sixth- through 12th-graders with behavioral or academic problems, Paramount occupied a low-slung, brick and concrete building on a dead-end road in hard-luck Reading, Pennsylvania, a city whose streets are littered with signs advertising bail bondsmen, pay-day lenders, and pawn shops. Camelot Education, the for-profit company that ran Paramount under a contract with the Reading school district, maintained a set of strict protocols: No jewelry, book bags, or using the water fountain or bathroom without permission. Just as it still does at dozens of schools, the company deployed a small platoon of “behavioral specialists” and “team leaders”: typically large men whose job was partly to enforce the rules.
Over six months in 2013 and 2014, about a half-dozen parents, students and community members at Paramount Academy — billed as a “therapeutic” day program — complained of abusive behavior by the school’s staff. One mother heard that staff restrained students by “excessive force” and bruised the arms of a female student, according to email exchanges between Camelot and the district. Another mother, Sharon Pacharis, said she visited the school to complain about manhandling and was told, “That’s just what we do.” Camelot’s own written reports to the district documented one incident in which a teenager was scratched and another in which a bathroom wall was damaged. Both resulted from “holds” — likely a reference to Camelot’s protocol for restraining students during a physical encounter.
Camelot tended to blame the students in its weekly reports to the district, calling them “out of control”; school officials referred several to police. It was, after all, a place partly for students whom the district had deemed too disruptive for a traditional school setting.
But an incident on April 24, 2014, abruptly shifted the focus to Camelot’s staff.
Ismael Seals, a behavioral specialist, walked into a classroom with several loud and boisterous students and commanded them to “shut the fuck up,” decreeing that the next one who talked would get body-slammed through the door, according to a subsequent criminal complaint. Moments later, Seals fulfilled his promise. After 17-year-old Corey Mack asked and received permission from his teacher, Teresa Bivens, to get up to sharpen his pencil, Seals pushed him repeatedly against a door and then shoved him into the hall, where a school surveillance camera recorded most of the rest of the incident. Seals, 6 feet 4 inches tall and 280 pounds, lifted Mack, 5 feet 8 inches tall and about 160 pounds, by his shirt and swung him into the wall headfirst, later pinning him to the ground as other staff members arrived, according to court documents.
Mack later showed a string of bruises and scratches on his back to a program director at a center for children with behavioral and mental health challenges. The program director called a juvenile probation official, who contacted the police.
Reached by telephone last fall, Corey Mack struggled to remember the details of his altercation with Seals, including what he had said just before the behavioral specialist shoved him, and the precise sequence of events. But he was clear on the essential point: “He beat me up,” Mack said.
Is this what taxpayers support? They should not.
DeVos should be challenged. For profit schools should be prohibited, not subsidized by taxpayers.

This just in from EdWeek: Betsy DeVos Emphasizes School Choice, Flexibility to State Board Members. The Education Secretary told those at a legislative conference that “common sense doesn’t win out in Washington” and that the Education Department “has created roadblocks for states in the past.”
http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/state_edwatch/2017/03/betsy_devos_emphasizes_choice_and_state_flexibility_at_nasbe_conference.html?cmp=soceml-twfdbltz-ewnow
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Citizens should fight any attempt to supplant community participation and leadership in public education. This has always led to some commission or appointed person whose goal is to suppress democratic participation. The result is generally privatization, no better results, and a refusal to look at evidence.
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Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Education and commented:
Remember Eva’s charter philosophy, “NO NONSENSE”.
I’ve worked in an alternative school, this is not how they are run.
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The fact that DeVos and company refuse to consider the mountain of evidence staring them in the face points to their reprehensible goals of privatization of public education at any cost. These people are dangerous!
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It is not just DeVos. Evidence does not matter to anyone in the Trump administration, hence the promotion of alt-facts, fake news, and attacks on the press, especially investigative journalists.
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Evidence does not matter — period.
Not just to this administration, but to the last either (or the one before that) which quite literally bullied and abused millions of students, teachers and parents with standardized testing, VAM and the rest.
The mental and physical abuse they inflicted makes the incident described in the article pale in comparison.
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I think it gets much harder to follow the money with ESSA. The “alternate providers” will be lining up to cash in. Think of the “tutors with computers” under NCLB on steroids.
They’ll all have a product to sell to state legislators and there will be crazed lobbying to get on the “approved provider” list.
They will be shoving so much commercial garbage into public schools your head will spin. It’s billions of dollars. DeVos promoting any and all “online learning” alone is a goldmine.
Talk to any of the kids in public schools who are taking these online classes instead of live classes. They know it’s garbage. They’re taking them because it’s easier to get credits in required courses. They admit this and it isn’t the good students who are doing this- it’s the MOST vulnerable students, whose parents either don’t care or don’t know any better.
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Money with few strings attached, what could go wrong? I predict a corporate feeding frenzy followed by missing funds. The losers will be the poor students that will be subjected to cyber garbage instead of actual direct service from trained professional teachers as was required under Title 1.
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Polis (DEM) Introduces a Bill to Expand Successful Charter School.
Polis owns 2 charter schools. His parents are the founders of Blue Mountain Press.
DeVoodoo must like Polis.
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Yvonne,
Polis is a big charter supporter. His parents owned the Blue Mountain card company, an electronic greeting card company. I read on google that they sold it for $500 million.
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It’s literally all they do. If they’re not working on charter schools they’re working on vouchers. They spend 90% of their time in DC on 10% of schools and NONE of them are public schools.
Public schools are unfashionable among the Best and Brightest.
If you want DC support for a school put “charter” in the name. It’s magical.
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History has already shown that places like this don’t work-too much staff freedom when staff are not qualified educators. Florida and kids buried behind a “boys reform” school come to mind. It took years to prove that abuse happened thete and to uncover, literally, those boys who were killed in the process of “reform.”
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DeVos promoted vouchers again today:
“says 25 states have some sort of choice program, any of which could serve as models for a federal school choice initiative.”
It’s The US Department of Private Schools now. She deliberately excludes public schools from these campaign speeches.
It’s a shame. Tens of thousands of public employees in DC and not one of them works for kids who go to public schools. It’s like they’re wearing a scarlet letter or something.
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“Sen. Murphy: pres. budget is catastrophic for public schools. Radical downsizing.”
But Democrats will do nothing, because they’re absolutely lousy advocates for kids who are in public schools.
It’s such baloney that they even care. The entire DC discussion is on vouchers. These people couldn’t find a public school with a map.
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Here is part of a letter that I just received from Senator Joe Donnelly (D) from Indiana concerning funding.
…….
The lessons that are learned in classrooms across Indiana provide our children with the foundation they will need to have a bright future. As you may know, the primary source of federal funding for K-12 education is the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA, P.L. 89-10), which was most recently reauthorized and amended by the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA, P.L.114-95). Federal funding levels for education are determined annually by Congress.
On December 9, 2016, short-term funding legislation passed the Senate by a vote of 63 to 36, with my support, and was signed into law by the President (P.L. 114-254). The legislation funds the federal government at existing funding levels through April 28, 2017. This includes funding for Title I grants to local education agencies, Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) Part B grants to states, and Head Start.
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