Archives for the month of: May, 2018

Bill Black, a specialist in white-collar crime, discusses Betsy DeVos’ plan to dismantle the U.S. Department of Education team investigating fraud at those predatory for-profit colleges and to staff the Department with veterans of the institutions under investigation. Like many people, I have described her actions as “putting the fox in charge of the henhouse.” Black says it is far worse than that. The right metaphor, he says, is putting the vampire in charge of the blood bank. What is happening now is not just a policy dispute; it is a deliberate program to protect institutional behavior that should be treated as criminal fraud. The victims are college students who are poor and middle-class, who have every right to expect that the government will protect them against fraud, not enable the fraud.

This is only a part of the interview. Open the link and read the rest.

GREGORY WILPERT: It’s The Real News Network. I’m Greg Wilpert, coming to you from Quito, Ecuador. The U.S. Department of Education, under the leadership of Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, is halting investigations into fraudulent practices of for-profit colleges, according to a report that the New York Times released last Sunday. The Obama administration’s Education Department had placed a special team in charge of investigating false advertising, deceptive recruitment practices, and false job placement claims at for-profit colleges. One of the most prominent investigations was the DeVry Education Group, recently renamed Adtalem Global Education, which is one of the largest for-profit educational companies in the world, with nearly two billion dollars in annual revenues.

Joining me to analyze the consequences of abandoning these investigations into for-profit colleges is Bill Black. Bill is a white-collar criminologist, former financial regulator, and associate professor of economics and law at the University of Missouri, Kansas City. He’s also the author of the book, The Best Way to Rob a Bank Is to Own One. Thanks for joining us again, Bill.

BILL BLACK: Thank you.

GREGORY WILPERT: So, one interesting aspect of the story is that Education Secretary, Betsy DeVos, hired several people from for-profit education institutions to work in the Department of Education. These include Robert Eitel, her senior counselor, Diane Auer Jones, a senior advisor on post-secondary education, and Carlos Muñiz, as the department’s general counsel. What’s going on here? Shouldn’t these appointments be considered conflict of interest and ring all kinds of ethics bills?

BILL BLACK: So first, ten seconds of personal privilege to welcome into the world, three hours ago, Heidi Weaver, our new granddaughter. Second, I made the easiest prediction of my life, after Trump was elected, that Warren Harding and Ulysses Grant could rest easy in the history books because there would no longer be a debate about the most corrupt administration in U.S. history. It would clearly be the Trump administration. There’s been a lot of focus on Scott Pruitt over at the EPA, in terms of corruption. But Betsy DeVos is giving him a consistent run for the money, just more under the radar.

So, here’s the background. First, out of the great financial crisis of 2008, one of the extraordinary things was that the most devastated people, in terms of loss of wealth, were not folks without college degrees, but actually folks with college degrees, who were either Latinx or Black. If you were Latinx, your average loss of wealth during the financial crisis, if you had a college degree, was nearly eighty percent. And it was roughly sixty percent if you were Black. That reversed the pattern for whites, where if you had a college degree, your percentage loss of wealth was lower than whites who had no college degree.

Now, part of that, of course, is the mortgage markets- being put into predatory mortgages at the worst possible time, at the peak of the bubble. But another thing, major thing, in terms of Blacks and Latinos, is that they are- disproportionately, they go to for-profit universities. And for-profit universities, characteristically- and this isn’t just recently, this goes back to World War II era, just after World War II when for-profit colleges first became a substantial deal.

And here’s the triple-whammy you get. One, they are much more expensive than regular universities. Two, you get a- statistically, a much, much worse education. That means your prospects in terms of jobs are far worse. And third, you’re left in massive debt because of the combination of the first two things. So that, instead of being the route to success, it is, as those overall statistics I cited, been an enormously good way of losing extraordinary amount of wealth between the mortgage markets and these for-profit universities.

So, long before the Obama administration came in, people have been writing about the really high incidents of fraud in these for-profit universities. The GAO actually sent undercover investigators that pretended to be people applying for college, which is, of course, really easy to send in testers of that kind. In every single case- so, I think they send them into the eight largest. In every single case, the supposed student was induced to do something that would be a false representation, which is to say, a crime.

In three of the eight cases, at least, the college counselor for the for-profit university consciously, expressly told them to lie and how to lie. Subsequent investigations under the Obama administration have documented the widespread layers of fraud, and for-profit universities have finally begun to experience what they should, which is that it’s very difficult- it’s more difficult to con people, and the government was finally cracking down. And that was- the problem was finally being reduced, and indeed there was some remedy at the federal level.

Because, after all, these are students had been induced by fraud to get into situations where they were literally driven bankrupt by the combination of expenses, debts, and limited increased employment prospects. And as viewers will, I hope, remember, the Republicans changed the bankruptcy laws so that student debt is not dischargeable in bankruptcy. So this, you know, is a cloud that stays over your entire life if it forces you into bankruptcy, from which you make never economically recover.

So, finally there was some recognition at the federal level that it was completely inappropriate to allow these entities to drive you bankrupt through what had been fraudulent misrepresentations to the students. And all for-profit universities live- I mean, and I mean almost totally live on federal grants to the students for education. Without those federal grants, no major chain of for-profit universities could exist. So, we’re really subsidizing all of these fraudulent entities through federal grants. And you would think an administration that A, promised to drain the swamp, and B, to stop these kind of rip-offs of the public sector, would crack down. But of course, none of us is surprised at this point to learn that it’s exactly the opposite.

The metaphor usually used is that DeVos has put the fox in charge of the chicken coop. But it’s really more- the way these for-profit universities operate, it’s more like you would put the vampires in charge of the blood bank, because they are basically sopping up the lifeblood of middle and working-class, and even poor people, through this device of the for-profit fraudulent rip-offs. And Betsy DeVos is now ensuring that the vampires can do this with absolute impunity from the laws.

Kentucky House Republican Leader Jonathan Shell lost to math teacher R. Travis Brenda from Berea in the Republican primary.

Brenda opposed the legislature’s efforts to dismantle teachers’ pensions.

Dan Patrick sees the flurry of school shootings as a symptom of America’s moral rot, not a consequence of having 300 million guns around. Maybe if we prayed more, there would be fewer shootings. Tell that to the good folks at the First Baptist Church in Sutherland Springs, Texas, that got shot up last November. Twenty-six people died for no reason. They were praying. They were God-fearing citizens trying to live good lives.

Dan Patrick thinks that the solution to school shootings is to have fewer doors.

Dan Patrick despises public schools. He has been trying to get voucher legislation passed so that every student can go to a religious school, but the Legislature has not agreed with him.

Just listen to the drivel that comes out of him, and you will wonder if we live on the same planet.

He makes me embarrassed to be a Texan.

This is the weekly round up of testing news from FairTest, which has been fighting the misuse of standardized testing since 1973:

The message from parents, students, educators and community leaders could not be clearer: the path to educational progress requires reducing testing and eliminating high stakes. Policy-makers in many jurisdictions are starting to listen and implement real assessment reforms. Keep the pressure on!

Florida Kindergarten “Readiness” Testing Is Part of War on Youngest Children
http://curmudgucation.blogspot.com/2018/05/fl-continuing-war-on-littles.html
Florida Increase in Exit Exam Alternative Cut Scores Could Reduce Graduation Rate
https://www.news4jax.com/education/higher-test-score-standards-could-lead-to-drop-in-graduation-rates

Georgia Parent Offers Advice for Gates and Zuckerberg on How to Really Improve Education
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2018/05/16/a-parent-writes-to-gates-and-zuckerberg-you-asked-for-advice-on-education-heres-mine

Louisiana Adding Up the Costs of State-Mandated Testing

Louisiana to Spend at Least $75M on Five Years of PARCC-ish LEAP 2025 Testing

Maine High School Test Scores Are Not Good Predictors of Undergraduate (and Life) Success

Dist. 207 SAT Scores Good, But Not Indicative Of Life After Graduation

Massachusetts School Receivership Is the Ultimate Test-Score Misuse

Massachusetts Debunking Claims About Automated Scoring of Essay Tests
https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2018/05/21/mass-ponders-hiring-computer-grade-mcas-essays-what-could-wrong/D7fX11PReUWzVsAAdqC1qN/story.html

Michigan Don’t Punish Schools with Poor Readers, Invest in The

Nancy Flanagan: Don’t Punish Schools or Kids if Johnny Can’t Read; Invest in Them

Mississippi Licensing Test Cut-Off Score a Barrier to Entry for Aspiring Teachers
https://www.clarionledger.com/story/news/2018/05/16/certification-tests-barrier-some-aspiring-mississippi-teachers/586518002/

New Mexico Teachers, School Officials Seek to Block K-3 Testing and Retention Plan
http://www.santafenewmexican.com/news/education/teachers-school-officials-urge-state-to-halt-proposed-reading-intervention/article_c29da3ee-514b-5307-b304-34178a49be83.html
http://krwg.org/post/new-mexico-ped-k-3-testing-and-retention-plan-illegal-and-hurts-children

New York Test-Based Teacher Evaluation Is a Ghastly Mistake That Will Not Die
https://www.lohud.com/story/opinion/perspective/2018/05/17/ny-teacher-evaluation-system/608665002/

North Carolina School Board Wrestles Over Role of “Irrelevant” Tests
http://www.thepilot.com/news/moore-county-school-district-wrestles-with-testing-s-importance/article_d54e2c12-588d-11e8-b46e-d3a2f9e5227a.html

Tennessee New Testing Company Owns Old One That Fouled Up
https://www.chalkbeat.org/posts/tn/2018/05/15/tnreadys-new-testing-company-also-owns-the-old-one/

Texas Thousands of Test Takers Plagued By Computer Exam Glitches Again
https://www.mystatesman.com/news/local-education/thousands-staar-test-takers-plagued-glitches-again/V84LVmYua6k7rEx1eF3r9O/
Texas Special Ed. Students Most Impacted by Testing Foul Ups
https://www.texastribune.org/2018/05/16/glitches-texas-staar-standardized-test-special-ed-students/
Texas Why Do Tests Dominate Education
http://www.oaoa.com/editorial/letters_to_editor/article_f81bd896-5a29-11e8-9f8c-0b19ca5d1f54.html

Utah More Standardization and Testing Is Not the Cure for Education Problems
https://www.deseretnews.com/article/900019114/op-ed-a-crystal-clear-and-lofty-goal-for-utahs-education.html

Wyoming School Board Resists Directive to Test Youngest School Children
https://www.kpvi.com/news/national_news/state-superintendent-natrona-county-school-board-talk-testing-but-make/article_14aee93e-e533-5c0f-9063-9fe1684cc29a.html

University Admissions Why Hampshire College Refuses to Consider ACT/SAT Scores
http://ashokau.org/innovations/mission-driven-admissions-2018-awardee/
University Admissions Tests May Become Optional for Law School Acceptance
http://www.postbulletin.com/news/business/admission-tests-may-become-optional-at-law-schools/article_1edfb525-12a3-5c02-8978-8f299f08d7be.html

Worst Reading Test-Based Rankings for Teacher-Prep Programs Are Bunk
http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/teacherbeat/2018/05/teacher-prep_rankings_that_use_student_test_scores_not_reliable_study.html

Bob Schaeffer, Public Education Director
FairTest: National Center for Fair & Open Testing
office- (239) 395-6773 fax- (239) 395-6779
mobile- (239) 699-0468
web- http://www.fairtest.org

Do not normalize school shootings as an everyday occurrence caused by too many doors, video games, Ritalin, or other inconsequential things.

CNN reports that the U.S. rate of school shootings far outpaces all other major industrialized nations combined.

“There have been at least 288 school shootings in the United States since January 1, 2009.

“That’s 57 times as many shootings as the other six G7 countries combined.”

See the graph.

At some point, the politicians will have to see that the problem is not theoretical. It is not Ritalin or video games or abortion or something else.

It is too many guns, easily obtained, easily accessible. Available to any teen who is depressed or angry or has a grudge. Instead of settling scores with a fist fight, he comes to school and kills people.

Recently The Century Foundation issued a report about charter schools that are “diverse by design.” The report was intended to show that charters are capable of producing integration (more than public schools) because of their “flexibility.”

The report from this liberal think tank was funded by the Walton Family Foundation, a far-right, anti-union entity that spends $200 million every year on charter schools and so has a huge incentive to sell them, especially to liberals, who might otherwise be dubious about the non-union aspect of privatization by charter schools. (More than 90% of charters are non-union and rely on temp teachers from TFA, which is generously funded by the Waltons).

But as Julian Vasquez Heilig points out in this post, TCF found only 125 charters that were “diverse by design” in a charter universe of nearly 6,000 schools. That is about 2% of the charters examined for the report.

What is the point? He thinks that the report calls attention to the charters’ lack of interest in racial integration and unintentionally makes the opposite point from the one it thinks it is making.

Larry Cuban is usually skeptical about technology but he visited Sal Khan’s experimental schools and came away impressed.

He compared them to John Dewey’s Lab School at the University of Chicago, where age-grading was abandoned and teachers had autonomy.

See here and here.

He concludes with what might be considered a caveat:

The tradition of challenging the dominant structure of the age-graded school and its “grammar of schooling” continues to this day with micro-schools in Silicon Valley and elsewhere illustrating anew that such reforms to the traditional “machinery of instruction” have resided, for the most part, in private schools where tuition runs high and students bring many economic and social advantages school. In a profound way, the high cost of these private schools and the resources available to their founders in experienced teachers, aides, technologies, space, and materials show clearly the prior conditions necessary not only to operate such schools in public venues but also what is needed to contest the prevailing “grammar of schooling.”

Larry Lee is running for school board in Montgomery, Alabama, on the Republican line. I hope that many people vote for him and elect him. He is passionate about improving schools for all children. He is very well qualified to serve on the school board and would be a champion for students and teachers.

The school board election is June 5.

Larry Lee is a native of Alabama who is dedicated to helping public schools. Larry headed a rural education group and traveled the state to identify high-performing public schools where principals, teachers, and parents in rural schools are doing their best to help their children get a good education despite meager resources.

Since he announced his candidacy, Larry has been harshly criticized by some key figures in the Republican Party.

Larry believes in public schools. That’s where the kids are. Larry knows that charters and vouchers don’t solve the problems of the children or the schools.

The campaign to stop Larry Lee turned vicious. In the closing days of the campaign, he was called a racist. Larry Lee cited his deep support in the black community, and he denounced the charges as “more trash.”

Behind the attacks on Larry is the Business Council of Alabama, which supports privatization of public schools.

Larry wrote,

“There is a battle going on for the heart and soul of our public schools. And really for the heart and soul of Alabama.

“So that battle has now landed on District 2 of the Montgomery School Board. A few square miles of east Montgomery are now a microcosm of what is taking place from Bayou La Batre to Bridgeport and from Smith’s Station to York.

“Last night I sat in a packed auditorium of a Montgomery elementary school while the 5th grade performed their own version of a Broadway musical. It was delightful. Mamas and daddies clapped and took pictures and beamed when Johnny or Mary had a featured part.

“This was Alabama at its best. This is what public schools are all about. About teachers who work tirelessly to teach some very awkward young man how to “dance” or some shy young lady to step to a microphone and recite lines with 500 pair of eyes staring at her. It’s about the PTA giving the principal a check for $25,000 to be used to make her school better.

“It’s about the smell of popcorn and five-year old little sister squirming on the floor at the front of the room while big sister sings and dances.

“I know that. It’s sad that others don’t. That instead, they think a school board election is only about bending others to their own will.

“I am glad the battle continues.”

Larry Lee is the real thing. He is running for the school board to fight for better schools. I hope the people of his district elect him to stand up for their children and their public schools.

If you wish to donate to Larry’s campaign, here is the link. He would be grateful for a donation of any size. It is time the children have an advocate on the school board.

Susan Edelman, reporter at the New York Post, often gets scoops, and this one is a doozy.

Several principals have been accused of sexual harassment. Some have caused the city to pay out hundreds of thousands of dollars for their misconduct, but they are seldom punished. Instead they are reassigned to headquarters with their pay and pension intact.

When Shaunte Penniston complained that her principal was making sexual demands, the city Department of Education not only failed to investigate, she alleged, but immediately notified the principal — who promptly had her fired.

The teacher then filed a lawsuit, which has dragged on in court for five years, the city fighting it at every step. But even if Penniston wins her case, it’s too late for the DOE to punish her alleged tormentor, Antonio K’tori. Under state law, educators with tenure cannot be brought up on disciplinary charges more than three years after their alleged misconduct.

“It’s a system that gives predators a platform and access to victims,” Penniston told The Post. “Nothing is done, and there are protections for perpetrators.”

The loophole helps explain why principals have kept their six-figure DOE jobs despite multiple sex-harassment complaints and millions of dollars in taxpayer-funded settlements paid to accusers.

“It’s a terrible burden on the teachers who are complaining, and a terrible burden on taxpayers, because we have to pay large amounts to settle these cases — and then the salaries of the principals in perpetuity,” said education advocate Leonie Haimson.

In a shocking example, the city paid a total $830,000 to settle five lawsuits — including four for sexual harassment and retaliation — against Howard Kwait, principal of John Bowne HS in Flushing, Queens. One assistant principal claimed he asked her and female colleagues for threesomes, rubbed against her and offered her oral sex as a reward if she could produce a high graduation rate.

After The Post asked about the mounting payments, new Chancellor Richard Carranza removed Kwait from the school and “reassigned” him to an unspecified office where he won’t manage anyone, officials said.

But Kwait will still collect his $156,671 salary, get contractual raises and accumulate pension credits.

The DOE said it can’t discipline or terminate Kwait because the three-year statute of limitation for bringing charges against him has expired.

Activist Leonie Haimson blasts the Department of Education’s inaction here.

She writes that it is DOE policy to report accusations of sexual harassment to the principals, even when they are the one accused, and they fire or harass the accuser.

“DOE chronically ignores teachers’ claims and instead informs the principals of their accusations, who then retaliate by firing them or making their lives miserable. In one horrible case that Sue [Edelman]describes, the principal of PS 15 in Queens Antonio K’tori was protected by District 29 Superintendent Lenon Murray, who himself was subsequently accused of sexual harassment. Earlier, several young girls were molested by a teacher at PS 15, who is now in jail. The girls won a $16 million jury award against the city, with the parents blaming DOE and the K’tori for “negligent supervision.”

“Yet even now, after teacher Shaunte Pennington filed a civil lawsuit against K’tori in court, who fired her after she reported harassment starting in 2012, the DOE has delayed doing anything for so long about her complaints that the three year statute of limitations has lapsed and he can’t be dismissed.”

Watch this powerful 2-minute video, in which civil rights leader Jitu Brown tells the dramatic story of the Dyett hunger strike in Chicago, which lasted 34 days and compelled the city to keep Dyett open and invest $16 Million in the new Dyett.

Jitu Brown leads the Journey for Justice, which is leading a national campaign to stop school closings, privatization, and charter schools. They are fighting to create thousands of community schools.

This video was created by videographers Michael Elliot and Kemala Karmen. It was funded by the Network for Public Education.