Archives for category: Alabama

In a recent post, I criticized Alabama for setting goals based on race, ethnicity, and disability status. I said it was unAmerican. Our goal as a society is equality of educational opportunity. There is something repulsive, to me at least, in saying that schools will set targets based on the color of children’s skin, their parents’ income, or other factors. We know that not all kids will end up at the same point by the end of each year, but we should not predetermine what we expect. I think the goal should be to treat each child as a unique human being and be sure they have the opportunity and resources they need to get a sound education.

But I must apologize to Alabama. Other states have similar race-based, ethnicity-based, disability-based goals.

Apparently they do this to satisfy the requirements of the federal government, either NCLB or the Obama waivers.

Why is the government setting targets for test scores? A standardized test should be used–if at all–diagnostically, to identify what kind of extra help students need. Instead, states are trapped in stale NCLB thinking. It hasn’t worked for 12 years. Why expect that tinkering will fix what is inherently wrong?

Stop measuring with a broken stick. Standardized tests are one indicator. Turning them into the be-all and end-all of schooling is wrong. It corrupts education. It causes otherwise thoughtful people to expect more of the tests than they can deliver. We need better goals than test scores. By relying on them so much, we sacrifice qualities that matter far more and debase schooling.

This is accountability run amok. This is the kind of policy that should be openly discussed and debated. We cannot allow it to be institutionalized and made permanent. It is an embarrassment to our democracy.

I am posting this on the 4th of July because it is about one of the most offensive state policies I have seen in many years.

According to the Tuscaloosa News, Alabama has created “Plan 2020,” which sets different goals and academic accountability standards based on race, disability, and economic status. This is in contrast to the unrealistic goals of No Child Left Behind, which demanded that all children reach “proficient” on state tests.

These are the percentages of third-graders expected to pass math in their subgroups for 2013 are:

 93.6 percent of Asian/Pacific Islander students.

 91.5 percent of white students.

 90.3 percent of American Indian students.

 89.4 percent of multiracial students.

 85.5 percent of Hispanic students.

 82.6 percent of students in poverty.

 79.6 percent of English language-learner students.

 79 percent of black students.

 61.7 percent of special needs students.

The response of parents who were quoted in the article was eloquent and pointed:

Some parents and community activists say Plan 2020’s “race-based” standards unfairly set low expectations for black, Hispanic, English language-learner, impoverished and special needs students.

“I think having a low bar means they can just pass them on,” said Tim Robinson, the father of two black children who attend Alberta Elementary and Englewood Elementary. “I think it’s dumbing our race down and preparing our boys for prison.

“The teachers aren’t even going to teach all of them anymore. Not the black boys and girls. And if we sit by and let this happen, it’s on us.”

Andrea Alston, the mother of a black student with special needs who’s transferring from Central High School to Pleasant Grove High School, said she knew about Plan 2020 but had heard nothing about the plan’s accountability standards by subgroup. She said school systems should have notified parents of the change.

“If this was of value and interest to the parents, why didn’t local school boards tell this to the parents?” she said. “Plan 2020 says it’s going to close the achievement gap and every student is going to graduate, but how is this going to benefit that?”

Nirmala Erevelles, the mother of a Woodland Forrest Elementary student who is of mixed race, said she doesn’t think the new accountability system is fair.

“I’m not sure what’s the science behind this,” she said. “The science of knowing that only a certain percentage of black kids or other kids are going to pass this. Evaluation measures should be individualized to kids’ needs, strengths and weaknesses. Standardized tests don’t do that, and using another type of standardized test won’t necessarily take care of kids’ needs.”

The last parent is exactly right. “What’s the science behind this?” Why are standardized tests being used this way? There is no science behind it. Every child is a unique individual. Every child deserves equality of educational opportunity.

Plan 2020 is accountability run amok. Tests should be used diagnostically, to provide the support that children and teachers need.

The state of Alabama should ditch the race-based, economic-based, disability-based goals and focus instead on one central American idea: Equality of educational opportunity for every child.

Alison Grizzle was chosen as Alabama Teacher of the Year.

Read this article and watch the video and you will see why.

She teaches math at P.D. Jackson-Olin High School in Birmingham.

She is a National Board Certified Teacher.

Her school did not make AYP.

The punitive, no-brain law called No Child Left Behind claims another victim.

NCLB is the Death Star of American education.

The sooner this killer law dies, the sooner our schools will be free to educate again.

And when it dies of its massive flaws, its insatiable desire to crush schools, Race to the Top should go too.

Larry Lee travels the back roads of Alabama and sees the daily miracles in rural schools, where principals, teachers, and communities work together to support their children and their under-resourced public schools. These schools are the anchor of their community.

Lately, Alabama has been besieged by out-of-state organizations who knock Alabama schools, trying to create a demand for privatization.

Larry Lee says don’t buy it. Despite annual cuts, Alabama schools are making steady progress.

In fact, Alabama has a higher graduation rate than Florida, which allegedly is a model.

Larry Lee is an Alabama native who cares about public schools. He has a particular interest in rural schools and community schools. He is a member of the board of the Network for Public Education. This is his analysis of the recently passed “Alabama Accountability Act,” which enacted tax credits and is a stealth voucher plan.

Larry Lee writes:

Have you ever made a promise you knew you couldn’t keep? I sure did every time mama took a switch to me. “I promise, I promise I won’t ever do it again,” I hollered as I tried to dance out of her reach.

Unfortunately when you strip all the rhetoric away, when you cast aside all the pleadings that “this is for the children” and when you look at the starkness of the numbers, you see that this is what our legislature did when they passed the Alabama Accountability Act.

They made a promise they cannot keep. Whether this was intentional or just inept doesn’t much matter at this moment. HB 84 was passed by the Alabama House and Senate and signed into law on March 14, 2013 by Governor Bentley.

As they said, it is what it is. A promise that cannot be kept.

On page 13, line 13, the new law says:

“For tax years beginning on and after January 1, 2013, an Alabama income tax credit is made available to the parent of a student enrolled in or assigned to attend a failing school to help offset the coast of transferring the student to a non-failing public school or nonpublic school of the parent’s choice.”

It further states in the same paragraph:

“If income taxes owed by the parent are less than the total credit allowed under this subsection, the taxpayer shall be entitled to a refund or rebate, as the case may be, equal to the balance of the unused credit with respect to that taxable year.”

My math says there are 89,087 students in “failing schools” in Alabama. This means we have promised to give a tax credit or rebate check of about $3,500 to each of these students. That’s a liability of more than $311 million.

While some guesstimate that only 10 percent of these kids will apply for the money, they may need to take off their rose-colored glasses. A close look at Montgomery County shows what I mean.

There are 21 schools on the “failing” list in Montgomery with 14,511 students. Of these, 86 percent receive free and reduced lunches, a substantially higher rate than those in non-failing schools.

But here’s the rub. There is no way for the existing non-failing public schools to accommodate even a small portion of these kids. However, the law says the rebate, “is made available”. It does not say “may be available under certain circumstances.”

There are seven public high schools in Montgomery. Three, with a total of 4,848 students, are failing. Three are magnet schools that have stiff entrance exams. So the failing high school students have only one public school option, Carver High with 1,385 students. They’re going to add nearly 200 classrooms and 200 new teachers to take all these students? Highly unlikely.

What about these kids going to private schools? For one thing, how many poverty families can send their kids to a private school, even with a $3,500 rebate since tuition is far more than $3,500? And can private schools in Montgomery absorb 14,511 additional students?

Or do we just hold a lottery to see who gets into a school where there is some space and who gets the $3,500 rebate? Surely since we’re dead set against gambling we would never do this. (Even though the truth is that in some places in Alabama we already hold lotteries to see which kids get to go to pre-kindergarten.)

Of course there are plans for a scholarship fund to help students get into private schools. Let’s say 10 percent of the Montgomery students can get into private schools (1,451 students); at $5,000 per scholarship, that’s more than $7 million for just this one school system.

But forget all this guessing on numbers and go back to the law and the promise that each child in a failing school in Alabama is worth approximately $3,500. Common sense tells me that a single mother who takes advantage of free lunches for her school age kids is also going to apply to get $3,500 for each of them. And she’ll find plenty of tax preparers who will be glad to help her–for a cut of the rebate.

But wait, if her kids don’t move to a non-failing school is this then tax fraud? Is it her fault the local school can’t find space for her children in qualified schools? Is it her fault some lawmakers made a promise they could not keep?

One might even ask: is it the mother perpetrating the fraud, or is it the state of Alabama?

Larry Lee led the study, Lessons Learned from Rural Schools, and is a long-time advocate for public education who frequently writes about education issues. larrylee33@knology.net

Larry Lee, an Alabama native and a member of the board of the Network for Public Education, has a great idea.

He decided that the best way to demonstrate the foolishness of the Alabama Accountability Act was to translate it into terms every Alabama reader would understand. He wrote a satire in which he urged accountability for high school football coaches. He said that the failure of high school football teams was a major scandal.

He strongly recommended that coaches be held accountable. Some 13% of teams won one game or less last season. This, he writes, is unacceptable.

“The fact that more than 10 percent of our teams are incompetent is a statewide embarrassment. Obviously, too many coaches are not working hard enough and too many student-athletes are unworthy of being called such.”

A reader did some sleuthing when presented earlier with the question of who was paying for an ad buy of at least $18,000 to support the Alabama Accountability Act:

He writes:

Oh, what a tangled web we weave…

So, alabamaaccountability.com/ is owned by Domains by Proxy LLC, a company that has already been identified as engaging in troubling activities (in particular in the political domain, seehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domains_by_Proxy)

The organizations featured on Alabama Accountability’s website as “supporters” are Heritage Foundation, the Alabama Policy Institute, and The Business Council of Alabama. We already know enough about Hertitage – and hope someone around here from Alabama might chime in. The Alabama Policy Institute is lead by Gary Palmer, who is a self-described founding director of the State Policy Network – a subsidiary of ALEC. Their policy director, Cameron Smith, most recently worked for Rep. Jeff Sessions (R-AL). Alabama Policy Network likes charters, vouchers, anti-union, and public funding for religious school.

In the article, two board members of Alabama Accountablity are mentioned, Kate Anderson and Ashley Newman. Is this the same Ashley Newman who is on the Board of Directors of Reform Alabama (http://reformalabama.org/about-us/board-of-directors/)? This org supports charter schools, merit pay for teachers, and teacher ed accountability based on teacher “performance.” And is Kate Anderson the same one profiled here http://yellowhammerpolitics.com/blog/power-influence-whos-next/ as someone who raised $5.7M for GOP candidates?

Inquiring minds want to know….

Somebody put up at least $18,000 to run ads supporting the so-called Alabama Accountability Act.

A newly formed group called the Foundation for Accountability in Education spent the money but won’t disclose the donors, nor are they legally required to.

The act was rushed through by GOP legislators who had been negotiating with Democrats on a different bill. The at publicans pulled a bait and switch and passed a bill without bothering to show it to the members of the minority party.

The law establishes tax credits for private and parochial schools, effectively creating vouchers.

For the backers of corporate reform in New York and California, $18,000 is chump change. It usually costs them more.

EduShyster has developed a list of 10 signs of a real, true Transphormer. You know, the ones who are so motivated to arrange the lives of other people’s children that they can’t wait to get their parents’ okay. The ones who are so gripped by a sense of urgency that they feel called to close schools in poor communities and fire the staff without a moment’s delay, even though the students and parents beg them not to do it.

The Republicans in Alabama are not usually thought of as the guardians of minority children, the poor, and oppressed. Last week, they slipped through a bill that allows tax credits for private and religious schools. The cover story is that it is “for the children.” The reality is that it is intended to destroy public education and support privatization.

Here is the story of how it happened.

Michelle Rhee’s StudentsFirst hailed the secretive legislation.