Archives for the month of: January, 2018

 

Like Vietnam, Cambodia has a thriving capitalist economy. The streets are clogged with traffic. There are small shops everywhere. Cranes suggest a building boom. Motorized bikes, motorcycles, Tuk-tuks (motorized rickshaws) and cars of every kind fill the streets. Traffic lights are in short supply. I have seen McDonald’s, KFC, and other US chains. Many signs are printed in English, including street signs. It is hot, about 90 degrees.

This morning, we went by Tuk-Tuk to the Royal Palace. I have tweeted many of the photos. We have seen beautiful buildings, countless Buddhas, bejeweled Buddhas, glorious grounds.

Although Pol Pot emptied the entire city of Phnom Penh, he left the Royal Palace and its grounds untouched.

His fanatical plan utterly failed, though he and his regime murdered about 1/3 of the populace.

Phnom Penh is larger than ever, and it is booming.

The longer I am here, the more I sense the underlying cultural animosity between Vietnamese and Cambodians. Each reminds us of the depredations of the other. In the National Museum here, there is a map showing the original dimensions of the Khemer Empire, which included present-day Thailand, Laos, and a large part of Vietnam.

Tomorrow we visit the killing fields museum.

It is hard to imagine the atrocities that occurred here, not so long ago.

in case you are wondering, the name of the ship on which we are traveling is the Mekong Navigator. The cruise line company is Uniworld. They do a great job. My brother is a cruise agent, and he insisted we go with them. He was right. We are a group of eight friends, six of whom are retired educators.

 

 

The ship docked in Phnom Penh last night.

Leaving now to tour city.

Amazing it is thriving after Pol Pot’s genocide and effort to return to 11th century agrarian society.

We will survive our current national nightmare. Pales next to Cambodia.

Perspective.

 

 

 

An earlier decision in Ct aimed to redesign the state’s education system was thrown out by the highest court as overreach.

http://www.courant.com/news/connecticut/hc-news-ccjef-education-ruling-20180117-story.html

 

 

Thomas Ultican has put his research skills to work while reviewing the depredations of the corporate reform organization’s intent on destroying public education.

In this post, he analyzes the origins of TNTP, The New Teacher Project, a spin-off of Teach for America led initially by Michelle Rhee.

TNTP is a cash cow for ambitious reformers. It advances its self-interest by attacking experienced teachers.

TNPT is an integral part of the privatization movement. It ignores genuine scholarship and undermines teacher professionalism.

“TNTP is important for the DPE movement. It produces papers that undermine teacher professionalism and it works to circumvent proven teacher training led by universities. It also works to gain control of pedagogy in a way that narrows curriculum. Why? It is all about cutting costs and business transactions. It does not improve the quality of education in America; it harms it.”

 

John Oliver explores the seamy side of unregulated, unsupervised charter schools.

The charter school idea sounds good. They say they will “save” poor children from “failing public schools.” They say they will be “innovative” because of their autonomy. It is easy to make promises but hard to deliver on promises when 25 years have gone by without the miracle that was expected.

Supporters of public education have found it difficult to break through to the general public about the purpose of public schools (citizenship, not test scores), about the fact that charters select students and toss out the ones they don’t want, about the fact that charters drain students and resources from public schools.

John Oliver’s video about charter schools has been viewed more than 8 million times. That is the kind of public advocacy that the billionaires have not been able to buy.

 

 

Jersey Jazzman celebrates the end of the horrible Chris Christie administration. Christie was openly hostile to teachers and public schools. It’s over!

Christie loved charter schools and made a habit of belittling teachers.

For example, he writes,

“Allow me a few personal thoughts:

“Eight years ago, I started this blog in direct response to what I and many other teachers around the state perceived as a climate of teacher bashing brought on by New Jersey’s governor, Chris Christie.

“Today is Christie’s last day as governor. Somehow, we teachers survived.

“I’m only being a little hyperbolic when I say this. When I look back on Christie’s two terms, I see both a series of policies and a set of attitudes that were — and are — a threat to the teaching profession in New Jersey.

“- The value of our modest pensions and health care benefits (which are less generous than those found in the private sector) continues to erode, and current retirees have lost their cost-of-living-increases. We were already paying a wage penalty for choosing to become teachers. Now, Christie’s appointees want us to give up even more of our compensation, even as pension fund managers collect outrageously high fees.

“- New Jersey teachers are subject to an innumerate, illogical evaluation system that uses arbitrary weights of error-prone measures of “growth” that appear to be significantly biased. In short, NJDOE under Chris Christie has created an unvalidated mess of a teacher evaluation system that wastes time and money.

“- Despite these serious problems with NJ’s evaluation system, Christie has worked for years to undermine tenure and other workplace protections for teachers — which happen to also be protections for taxpayers and students.

“- Christie has demeaned the professionalism of educators by consistently appointing people into leadership positions who have neither the experience, the qualifications, nor the track records necessary for success.

“- Christie has promoted the expansion of charter schools, which hire less-experienced teachers at lower pay than hosting public district schools. Many of these charters have serious issues with accountability and transparency, yet Christie enthusiastically supports them. Christie’s administration has also turned a blind eye toward charters that clearly do not enroll the same types of students as their hosting public district schools. He has also actively promoted policies that disproportionately affect teachers of color through pubic school “renewal” and charter school expansion.

“- Perhaps most important: Christie has tarnished New Jersey’s legacy as a leader in school funding reform by promoting inequitable, inadequate school funding schemes and repeatedly ignoring the state’s own law regarding school funding.

“Add to all this Christie’s bullying, preening, sneering, dismissive, sexist attitude toward teachers — no, not just their unions, but teachers themselves.”

Read it all.

 

A new study conducted jointly by the National Superintendents Roundtable and the Horace Mann League concludes that the benchmarks used for Common Core assessments are wildly unrealistic.
The press release states:
“Study finds most students in most nations cannot clear the bar set by Common Core or NAEP benchmarks Washington, DC, January 17 – A detailed report released today concludes that the vast majority of students in most countries cannot demonstrate proficiency as defined by one of America’s most common educational tests. The authors of the analysis suggest the U.S. has established benchmarks that are neither useful nor credible. In their report How High the Bar?, the National Superintendents Roundtable and Horace Mann League linked the performance of foreign students on international tests of reading, mathematics, and science to the proficiency benchmarks of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), the United States’ longest continuing assessment of students. They also examined major assessments related to the Common Core. The report notes that very few students in most nations would clear the NAEP proficiency bar the U.S. has set for itself in reading, math, and science:
 In no nation do a majority of students meet the NAEP Proficient benchmark in Grade 4 reading.
 Just three nations have 50 percent or more of their students meeting the Proficient benchmark in Grade 8 math (Singapore, Republic of Korea, and Japan).
 Only one nation has 50 percent or more of its students meeting the Proficient benchmark in Grade 8 science (Singapore).
“Many criticize public schools because only about one third of our students are deemed to be ‘proficient’ on NAEP assessments,” says Dr. James Harvey, executive director of the National Superintendents Roundtable. “But even in Singapore—always highly successful on international assessments—just 39 percent of fourth-graders clear NAEP’s proficiency benchmark.”
“Citing the U.S. Department of Education’s own records, the report criticizes the National Assessment Governing Board, which sets policy for NAEP, for misusing the term “Proficient.” The term does not mean what many assume it to mean: performing at grade level. Nor does it mean proficient as most people understand the term, according to Department officials.
“Misuse of the term has confused the public and defeated the valuable purpose of assessment, which is to gain useful insights into school performance,” says Jack McKay, director of the Horace Mann League.
“Far from failing, the U.S. ranked fifth among the world’s 40 largest and wealthiest nations in Grade 4 reading at the NAEP Proficient benchmark. Singapore, the Russian Federation, Finland, and England ranked ahead. The research behind How High the Bar? compared NAEP to two international assessments known as the Progress on International Literacy Survey (PIRLS) and Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS). Benchmarks also used for Common Core and college-and-career readiness
“The report indicates that in 2015, 43 states used tests to evaluate learning related to the Common Core. They include tests associated with the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC) and the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Career (PARCC), as well as tests developed by individual states.
“Many have adopted benchmarks similar to NAEP’s, labeling them as “career and college readiness” standards. When Common Core assessments are aligned with NAEP’s benchmark of Proficient, state test results are also likely to contribute to a narrative of public school failure, conclude the report authors.
“Controversy in setting standards The report also criticizes the speed by which the National Assessment Governing Board adopted the benchmarks. The National Superintendents Roundtable and Horace Mann League call on NAEP to redefine its basic terminology, and to include a disclaimer in all of its publications reaffirming Congressional insistence that the benchmarks should be used cautiously and on a trial basis.
“The report also encourages school leaders to educate communities about the flaws with the term Proficient and how school systems abroad would perform if held to the same standard. “This report doesn’t endorse an anti-testing agenda or seek to lower standards. We believe in assessment,” says Harvey. “But in the words of a Turkish proverb, no matter how far you have gone down the wrong road, turn back.”
“The statistical analysis of How High the Bar? was performed by Emre Gönülates of Michigan State University. About the sponsors The National Superintendents Roundtable (superintendentsforum.org) is a community of school superintendents who learn, discuss and meet regularly with worldwide experts, sharing best practices and leading for the future. The Horace Mann League (hmleague.org) is an association of educators committed to the principles of public education. Its members believe the U.S. public school system is an indispensable agency for strengthening democracy and a vital, dynamic influence in American life. National Superintendents Roundtable Contact: Horace Mann League Contact: Rhenda Meiser Jack McKay (206) 465-9532, rhenda@rhendameiser.com (360) 821-9877, jmckay@hmleague.org”
Download the press release here.
Download the executive summary here.
Download the full report here.

A new blogger, a teacher in Detroit who has taught in both charter and public schools, ponders here why it is so hard to desegregate the public schools in Detroit.

Detroit has lots of segregated schools and lots of choice.

He notes:

“Thus, a problem with school of choice is that many White parents simply remove their children from schools with increasingly Black student populations, either taking them to Whiter public school districts Whiter charter schools, or Whiter private schools. Regardless if this is the intention, the result is the same: students are losing out on the valuable opportunity to learn next to students that don’t look like them.”

 

The news media have given ample attention to the story of the married couple who chained their 13 children to their bedsteads and starved them. One child escaped and called authorities. The parents registered their home of enslavement as a “home school.” 

Needless to say, there was neither teaching nor learning, just two parents abusing their unfortunate children.

What would Betsy DeVos say? Trust the parents. They made their choice. The parents know best. I recall when John White, the state superintendent of Louisiana said the same thing. Trust the parents.

“The private school had a welcoming name. The principal was scientifically minded. But the Sandcastle Day School was a nightmare for the six students enrolled there.

“David A. Turpin created the school inside his nondescript stucco home southeast of Los Angeles. But the only ones enrolled there were the six of his 13 children who were school age. And what took place inside was not teaching but torture, the authorities said, after they raided the house over the weekend and found a horrifying scene of emaciated children chained to furniture. The putrid smell overwhelmed them.

“By creating such a school of horrors, Mr. Turpin had kept the authorities at bay. His children were never seen by teachers or counselors. Their absences never raised suspicions. On Tuesday, state and local officials were on the defensive as they tried to explain how such things could have occurred in a private school the state had sanctioned.

“Mr. Turpin, 56, and his wife, Louise A. Turpin, 49, were arrested on nine counts of torture and child endangerment after one of their daughters escaped from the home out a window before dawn and called the police on a deactivated cellphone that only allowed her to dial 911. The girl, 17, showed the police photos to corroborate her story. Once the authorities entered the disheveled home, they found the Turpins’ 12 other children, ages 2 to 29. They were so malnourished that the older ones looked years younger.

“I can’t begin to imagine the pain and suffering that they have endured,” Mayor Michael Vargas of Perris said of the siblings. “This is a very happy and tight, hard-working family community.”

“How a family that some described as normal just a few years ago had seemingly unraveled so severely, nobody seemed to know…

“Before Sunday, there was no indication that any authority had ever set foot in the home. Riverside County’s child protective services never received reports of abuse. And the State Department of Education said it had registered the school, but had never been inside.

The case raises questions about whether the state may be too lenient in its approach to home schooling and whether it should have been monitoring Mr. Turpin more closely. In California, almost anyone can open a private school by filing an affidavit with the state. California is one of 14 states that ask parents only to register to create a home school, and in 11 other states, including Texas, parents are not required to submit any documentation at all.

“The California Department of Education said it was sickened by the tragedy and was investigating what had occurred. The department registers private schools, but “does not approve, monitor, inspect, or oversee” them, said Bill Ainsworth, a department spokesman.

“Assemblywoman Susan Eggman, a Democrat from Stockton, Calif., and a social worker who teaches at California State University, Sacramento, said that she would support legislation to monitor such schools.

“The state has a responsibility to make sure there is at least an annual inspection,” she said. “If we’re not going to uphold educational standards, then for the love of God the least we can do is uphold health and safety standards. We need to do everything we can for vulnerable minors before it becomes anything this tragic.”

Please, if you are a journalist, ask Betsy DeVos about how home schools and private schools should be regulated.

 

 

A group of westerners including Mark Zuckerberg, Bill Gates, the World Bank, and Pearson invested in Bridge International Academies to supply schooling for a fee and a profit in poor countries.

It has met resistance from teachers’ unions, civic organizations, and not yet made a profit.

Now Uganda is likely to shut down the BIA schools. 

Profit even more unlikely.