The Broad Foundation, elected by no one, has been experimenting on the Oakland, California, public schools for a decade or more. Its goal is to get rid of all democratic governance and privatize all the schools. It has not closed the achievement gap or reached any of its goals.
Oakland public school parent Jane Nylund describes the reform plan in Oakland (whose last Superintendent Antwan Wilson bailed out after adding administrative bloat and became chancellor of the D.C. schools, then resigned in D.C. after trying to transfer his daughter into a coveted school, violating the lottery plan he authored.)
Nylund writes:
“It is with disappointment, but not surprise, to find out that our community is still being used as a mouthpiece via CRPE [Center for Reinventing Public Education] and other reform groups, to come up with a narrative that will make it more palatable to sell school closure to the public. This narrative, which is being communicated to the public via the Blueprint committee, is lockstep with the plans that CRPE and others have put in place to continue the expansion of charter schools in Oakland and elsewhere in the Bay Area. If there was any doubt as to what the grand plan is, you can read all about it in this report. CRPE makes no effort to hide it, but it’s still a major disappointment to once again find that our community is being used as “engagement” pawns in the charter expansion game.
“From Center for Reinventing Public Education:
https://www.crpe.org/publications/slowdown-bay-area-charter-school-growth-causes-solutions
[It says:] “Ultimately, the growth of charters will be fundamentally constrained as long as districts fail to consolidate or close underenrolled district schools. Serious attention needs to go into developing a strategy that requires or incentivizes these actions and provides political backing to district and board officials who are trying to make these adjustments.” [End quote]
“High level: the Bay Area is saturated with charters, there aren’t any more reasonably priced facilities, so what is a charter operator to do? The added complication in Oakland is its “toxic local politics.” Meaning, this community won’t go down the primrose path willingly, so the district has to sugarcoat it. A lot.
“Step 1-Come up with a survey that isn’t really a survey. It’s a way to steer respondents into answering questions that favor school closure/consolidation
“I read it and was amazed by the complete lack of any sort of objectivity. This “survey” needs to be called out for what it is-a method to “engage” an unsuspecting public for buy-in to justify more disruption in the district to close/consolidate schools. It is not a real survey; it’s full of biased, leading questions-who wouldn’t want safe, supported schools? But then, once the data is collected and put out in the media, the district uses that completely biased information to justify their decisions. “Well, it’s not our fault we closed your school and opened a charter in its place-it’s what you said you wanted on the survey”. If the district’s plan is to disrupt the district even more than they have in the past, then they need to own that decision and stop using the public this way. It’s unconscionable, but it seems that is the usual method.
“Slide 8 is my favorite. Respondents were asked several questions about changing school sizes/consolidation; the questions didn’t get much support. But, just to make sure that the district could turn those non-supporters into supporters, they added a survey choice “Potentially support based on the outcomes of local engagement”. To the respondent, that’s a definite maybe-or-maybe-not response, but the district captures the “potential support” as actual support, combines the two positive numbers together, and lo and behold, now everyone supports school closure/consolidation, even the non-supporters. It’s all good! And these numbers will be repeated over, and over, and over….
“Slide 16 is another good one. It concerns sizes of elementary schools. There is this random quote on the slide that has nothing to do with the data presented on the slide:
“OUSD does not perform better than the identified peers with minority students using 2017 CA School Dashboard data”
“Meaning what? The subliminal message is that OUSD doesn’t do a good job having these smaller elementary schools/classes (shown on the slide), so we don’t need them. Terrible example of overreach and causation which doesn’t exist. Don’t fall for it.
“Step 2-Use a Broad-trained employee to create an enrollment model
“I know, right? This isn’t going to end well.
“Step 3-Use data to generate a list of “peer” districts that will determine some kind of random school size target, with no thought as to whether those sizes are what works for Oakland
“Generate a benchmark? This one is so far out there in terms of random data crunching that I don’t know where to begin. For starters, the peer list did not include West Contra Costa, a local district that is nearly a perfect match to our own. The fact that West Contra Costa didn’t make the list makes me question the criteria was used to generate it. Again, keep you eyes on the target and your seat backs and tray tables in the full and upright position. So someone pulls together a peer list of schools (LA Unified? With 400,000+ students? Not our peer) and comes up with some sort of average school size that OUSD should meet. Why? If logic dictates, then it goes without saying that these peer districts must be full service districts with wraparound services. Remember, that’s what’s being sold to the community. Reach the size of the peer district, and that’s what you will have.
“Wrong. In small type, the author does concur that “The above is based only on peer benchmarking; peers may or may not have quality community schools.”
“Again, go back to the quote at the beginning of the message. Does CRPE say anything about full service community schools? No, of course not. It’s about charter expansion and getting tasty real estate by the Lake. It’s always been about that.
“Turn this entire exercise on its head. Maybe those peer districts want to have full services. Maybe they want smaller class sizes like we have in Oakland. But due to all kinds of constraints, like funding, they can’t have these things. So why would OUSD want to match these peer districts? LA Unified and San Diego Unified are both going broke. Oh, right, so is OUSD.
“Step 4-Use inappropriate districts in your peer list to make it look like Oakland doesn’t perform as well as its “peers”, and therefore it’s okay to have larger class sizes, just like their “peers”
“Don’t use districts like SF Unified as a peer. They might be our neighbor, but their FRPL is around 56%. OUSD is about 74%. Not the same. But adding wealthier districts to the peer list creates the narrative that Oakland doesn’t perform as well as their peers (with the bigger schools/class sizes). Wealth generates higher test scores.
“An analogy would be, “Well, we give all of our Oakland kids breakfast but only half the kids in a wealthier district get breakfast. Our kids don’t seem to be performing better than those other kids, so therefore we should take our kids’ breakfast away.” Seriously.
“Step 5-Come up with a breakeven enrollment model that uses teachers’ salaries as variable costs. Huh?
“I’m not an accountant, but I do have an MBA. I was taught that generally salaries are considered fixed costs, at least in the short run. Teachers don’t get paid by the hour, or by how any widgets they make. They get paid the same whether they teach ten kids or thirty. Variable costs are things like books and food. So what’s up with using a model that treats teachers like books or food?
“Well, turns out there is a model for that very concept. It comes from the Friedman Foundation, another ed reform group which espouses Milton Friedman’s dream of sending kids to private schools through vouchers. In order to justify the cost of using a voucher (and thus taking that money away from public schools), the group has espoused the idea that teachers themselves are, in fact, a short term variable cost of doing business, and not fixed. Like supplies or pizza workers. In other words, Friedman’s model assumes that we have a ready supply of teachers of all sorts, experienced, certified, that we can tap into and hire and lay off at will at any time. It also assumes that all that hiring/firing in no way will cause any kind of disruption and impact to learning. Oh, and it won’t increase class size, either. Maybe in some other parallel universe. So by treating teachers as variable costs, the Friedman group can now advocate for a larger dollar amount of the voucher by claiming that the voucher covers only the variable cost portion of educating the child. Which according to them, includes books, food, and teachers. If they left the teacher portion out of that voucher, it would be a lot smaller.
“If teachers’ salaries were treated as variable costs in the breakeven calculation, I have to question the entire validity of the model. Maybe the answer would be the same, but it’s difficult for me to accept cost assumptions pattered after a reform group that wants to take my tax dollars (and yours) and give it to a student to attend a school that teaches that man and dinosaurs lived together. That’s just not cool with me.
“Step 6-deal with community pushback by dangling a carrot, that really turns out to be a stick
What to do when you need to convince the community that a bad idea is really a good idea? Easy. Use their emotional buy-in to support full-service community schools. And then, gently explain to them that in order to provide these services, we must close schools. That’s exactly what the survey did. Then, as if by magic, millions of dollars will appear that the district will use thoughtfully and responsibly to fund these programs. That is the predetermined outcome that the survey was after, and that’s what they got. Sounds great, right?
“Right, only it’s magical thinking. See CRPE quote at the beginning of this email if you’re not convinced. Closing schools does one thing: allows another charter to move into the building (gotta have more!). The last 19 school closures resulted in 15 charters opening. OUSD enrollment drops (think charter expansion), millions of dollars leave the district, and all those purported savings go up in smoke. No money for programs. Not going to happen. But, CRPE gets what it wants, as do the local charter operators, who by their own admission, desperately want to expand. Because we don’t have enough schools as it is. Or do we? Hey, it’s the free market at its finest. What could possibly go wrong?”

“Portfolio districts” are all the rage in ed reform now.
I think they know the (national) ed reform “brand” is damaged so they have to brand more locally. If they fragment the orgs they’re a smaller target for local opposition.
It’s the exact same ideas, funding and people though.
I don’t live in an area they’re privatizing- they don’t have the numbers they need to launch a privatized sector here- but I always wonder what it’s like to be a PUBLIC school family in one of these cities. It’s so abundantly clear that public schools are ed reform’s last priority. It must be awful to be designated the “default” schools, the safety net schools, the unfashionable sector.
If you read across ed reform the omission of public school families really jumps out. They’ll cover one of their cities and the entire conversation will consist of charter and private school families. This is in cities where as many as 70% of families still use the public schools!
That’s political capture. That’s what it looks like. It never makes sense looking from the outside in because it’s not “sense” or “facts”-it’s a belief system. They don’t notice that they offer absolutely nothing of value to public school families because it’s such an echo chamber that public school families don’t exist in that world. We are The System to ed reformers, The Default, The Status Quo. It never occurs to them that this battle they are waging against public schools includes children IN public schools.
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Good GAWD.
http://smallbusiness.chron.com/differences-between-advertising-marketing-branding-23337.html
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DeVos spent another work day promoting vouchers this week:
Betsy DeVos
@BetsyDeVosED
Feb 23
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Thank you for the conversation on how we can expand education freedom to all students across America
I guess I’m confused why the federal government spends 90% of their time on the 5% of students in the US who attend private schools.
Is it because they all attended private schools and send their kids to private schools?
They drop by our schools only in the case of catastrophe. A mass shooting or the opioid epidemic.
I hope they don’t think our kids spend 6 hours a day on violence and drug abuse. That’s the ed reform stereotype of public school students. It’s not reality.
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She’s a DITZ and she and her “people” are vultures.
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Thank you, Jane Nylund, for paying attention and working to expose the Cult of Charters. Cut through the PR and you see they have no secret sauce other than excluding difficult students (though I have to admit a few have made better curriculum choices than many public schools, and I appreciate their willingness to question the taboo on discipline. But there’s no reason public schools can’t make these fixes themselves).
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The acronym CRPE was spelled wrong. It should be CRAP.
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I simply love that name, Center for Reinventing Public Schools. It’s inspired me to open my own group, the Center for Reinventing the Wheel. The current model of wheel is outmoded. Circles are like a hundred years old. Challenge the status quo by giving people Choice. Would you rather drive on squares or triangles? (I’m an expert on shapes because I’m rich.)
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I mixed up their name. It’s CRPE, not CRPS. I’m sooo sooorry, billionaire twits.
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The public now being taught to believe in dissonance, to believe in hype, to believe in lies, also being taught to believe in middle class/poor self-annihilation: “…a narrative that will make it more palatable to sell school closure to the public.”
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Unbelievable. Apparently Students in public schools must be crammed together to create overcrowding so charters can have free real estate. What a great, totally unselfish solution to this manufactured “crisis.”
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Wah, wah… charter industry whining that the untrammelled free-market agenda isn’t working for them anymore, they’ve encountered that darned thing that happens to new-product purveyors when they finally saturate the market; they stop growing. Even after convincing legislators to lower barriers of quality, monitoring, accountability! Now they’ve run up against market barriers, what to do.
Now, if they were real widget-mfrs– not ‘private delivery of public goods [on the public dime, sharing the same pool of resources]’– they’d have a stable of diversified products to keep them afloat while the bullpen of ‘new improved school models’ warms up, ready to churn the market & keep those same buyers trading up. They do try… too bad the ed field is so stodgy, all customers really want is same-old same-old: smaller classes, great teachers, quality curriculum close to home. Bells & whistles purporting to deliver same [but not] don’t cut it when customers can just trade back to old model.
Time to start funding legislation that will force a bigger market by fiat, & keep the squeeze on that annoying competitor ‘the old model’!
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Oakland has had a Brodie Superintendent, but I think that the Broad Foundation has had less influence of policies in Oakland and other large districts that a non-governmental organization preemptively taking control of “accountability and data” in major California districts, including Oakland.
The takeover has been engineered by the “California Office to Reform Education” known as CORE. CORE is a non-governmental administrative office set up to receive private funding, and put that money into schemes that will standardize practices in eight California districts. CORE persuaded the superintendents of Fresno, Garden Grove, Long Beach, Los Angeles, Oakland, Sacramento, San Francisco and Santa Ana to sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) that they would standardize their practices and have a common assessment. CORE operates with funding from these foundations: Stuart, William & Flora Hewlett, SD Bechtel, Jr, (Stephen Becktel Fund). Add the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation which alone has sent over $7.6 million to the CORE Districts.
The initial bait for signing the CORE District MOU was the prospect of being exempt from Race to the Top accountability, and dodging some oversight by the California Board of Education.The 2013 CORE District MOU can be seen on page 189 of this document: https://www2.ed.gov/policy/eseaflex/approved-requests/corerequestfullredacted.pdf
Worst of all: CORE Districts agreed to expand testing. In addition to student test scores, attendance and the like, the new metrics include results from dubious school climate surveys from students, teachers, parents, and non-teaching staff. Add the newer Social-emotional surveys being used as if tests, in the absence of any evidence of reliability and validity. These scores are added to all of the required metrics for performance on Common Core tests and graduation rates–then hashed and mashed into ratings of schools.
Those schools ratings are fed directly to the website GreatSchools This website sells school data to Zillow, aiding the practice of redlining. The Gates Foundation has sent over $9.3 million to fund the operation the GreatSchools marketing website.
In October 2017, the Gates Foundation announced it would “invest” close to $1.7 billion over the next five years on initiatives, among these building networks of schools. The PR for the announcement cited California’s CORE Districts, which the announcement totally misrepresents as: “a group of school districts that banded together in 2010 to help each other implement the Common Core and more effective teacher training programs.”
The announcement also cited Lift Education in Tennessee,”which brings together superintendents from rural and urban districts across the state to collaborate on best practices.”
“We believe this kind of approach — where groups of schools have the flexibility to propose the set of approaches they want — will lead to more impactful and durable systemic change that is attractive enough to be widely adopted by other schools.”
What Gates is doing is not much different from creating those crazy maps of congressional districts, gluing some of those together with some money, and pre-empting local school board action by getting “buy in” from superintendents.
The superintendents seem to be quite willing to take what amounts to a bribe from the Gates Foundation to turnover local control of their districts. Some may have been given some authority to do that from the school board.
Make no mistake, the Press release says the Gates Foundation is not interested in working with the superintendents, school boards, or administrators of schools. Rather, “Working with chosen , the foundation eventually will begin looking at specific schools to participate in its networking effort.”
The intermediaries will all be hired hands of the Gates Foundation. Our schools are public institutions not created for the self-indulgence of billionaires, like Gates, who seems to be incapable of respecting educators, citizens who pay for schools, elected school boards and other who’ve the courage to say no to his money. He tried changing whole districts like Hillsborough, Co Florida and failed miserably. Now he wants to scale up, picking this and that district and schools within them and calling that a “collaborative network.”
DO NOT continue to buy into the Gates agenda. He wants your data. He wants the right to replace public schools with his pitiful vision of corporatized education, teachers and students micro-managed by data-driven decisions, everyone working under the shadow of his flawed expectation for endless and continuous improvement…and the rest. Say No.
https://www.usnews.com/news/education-news/articles/2017-10-19/gates-foundation-pledges-17-billion-to-k-12-education-will-focus-on-building-school-networks
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Thanks for the info about CORE; I knew about it, but was not aware of the scope of its influence. Since 2003, when the district was taken over by the state for financial mismanagement, OUSD has had 4 Broad superintendents. That, combined with a school board bought by outside dark money via GO Public Schools, another local ed reform group that support charters, has resulted in a perfect storm of churn, disruption, and continued financial chaos. Those who continue to support our public schools are working hard to right the ship, but it still is a battle and the community is frustrated over the lack of local control regarding charters opening.
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