Archives for category: Gates Foundation, Bill Gates

As regular readers know, Mercedes Schneider is one of my favorite bloggers. I love her keen mind, her smart research, her deep experience as a teacher, and her ability to explain complicated issues. She also has a great heart. She is an original.

I think this was one of the first, maybe the very first post of hers, that I put on my blog. It is one of her best. It explains that one man bought and paid for The Common Core: Bill Gates. She wrote this in 2013, before that endeavor became radioactive. Why did Gates want the Common Core? He believes that everything should be standardized. That is the way computers work. That is the way markets work.

This is an oldie but goody.

 

In 2014, Bill Gates spoke to the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards and called on teachers to defend the Common Core standards. The article notes that Gates had given the organization at least $5 million since 2010.

 

My favorite part of the speech is when he compared standardization in education to the value of standardized electrical outlets.

 

Lyndsey Layton reported for the Washington Post on the speech:

 

Standardization is especially important to allow for innovation in the classroom, said Gates, who used an analogy of electrical outlets.

 

“If you have 50 different plug types, appliances wouldn’t be available and would be very expensive,” he said. But once an electric outlet becomes standardized, many companies can design appliances and competition ensues, creating variety and better prices for consumers, he said.

 

If states use common academic standards, the quality of classroom materials and professional development will improve, Gates said. Much of that material will be digital tools that are personalized to the student, he said. “To get this innovation out, common standards will be helpful,” he said.

 

Now if children were toasters or microwave ovens, Gates would be right. Every toaster needs standard electrical current and outlets.

 

But if every child is different, then standardization makes no sense.

 

I don’t want to hurt Bill Gates’ feelings by saying this, but I think he is making a very bad analogy.

 

 

Joanne Barkan has written several brilliant essays about the billionaires who use their philanthropies to undermine democracy and public education.

This is one of her best.

She writes:

“For a dozen years, big philanthropy has been funding a massive crusade to remake public education for low-income and minority children in the image of the private sector. If schools were run like businesses competing in the market—so the argument goes—the achievement gap that separates poor and minority students from middle-class and affluent students would disappear. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation, and the Walton Family Foundation have taken the lead, but other mega-foundations have joined in to underwrite the self-proclaimed “education reform movement.” Some of them are the Laura and John Arnold, Anschutz, Annie E. Casey, Michael and Susan Dell, William and Flora Hewlett, and Joyce foundations.

“Each year big philanthropy channels about $1 billion to “ed reform.” This might look like a drop in the bucket compared to the $525 billion or so that taxpayers spend on K–12 education annually. But discretionary spending—spending beyond what covers ordinary running costs—is where policy is shaped and changed. The mega-foundations use their grants as leverage: they give money to grantees who agree to adopt the foundations’ pet policies. Resource-starved states and school districts feel compelled to say yes to millions of dollars even when many strings are attached or they consider the policies unwise. They are often in desperate straits.

“Most critiques of big philanthropy’s current role in public education focus on the poor quality of the reforms and their negative effects on schooling—on who controls schools, how classroom time is spent, how learning is measured, and how teachers and principals are evaluated. The harsh criticism is justified. But to examine the effect of big philanthropy’s ed-reform work on democracy and civil society requires a different focus. Have the voices of “stakeholders”—students, their parents and families, educators, and citizens who support public education—been strengthened or weakened? Has their involvement in public decision-making increased or decreased? Has their grassroots activity been encouraged or stifled? Are politicians more or less responsive to them? Is the press more or less free to inform them? According to these measures, big philanthropy’s involvement has undoubtedly undermined democracy and civil society.

“The best way to show this is to describe how mega-foundations actually operate on the ground and how the public has responded. What follows are reports on a surreptitious campaign to generate support for a foundation’s teaching reforms, a project to create bogus grassroots activity to increase the number of privately managed charter schools, the effort to exert influence by making grant money contingent on a specific person remaining in a specific public office, and the practice of paying the salaries of public officials hired to implement ed reforms.

“You Can’t Fool All of the People All of the Time

“The combination of aggressive style, controversial programs, and abundant money has led some mega-foundations into the world of “astroturfing.” This is political activity designed to appear unsolicited and rooted in a local community without actually being so. Well-financed astroturfing suffocates authentic grassroots activity by defining an issue and occupying the space for organizing. In addition, when astroturfers confront grassroots opposition, the astroturfers have an overwhelming advantage because of their resources. Sometimes, however, a backlash flares up when community members realize that paid outsiders are behind a supposedly local campaign.”

Barkan describes the Parent Trigger Law, which was financed by billionaires to enable low-income parents to take control of their schools and turn it over to a charter operator. The money was used to send organizers into low-income communities, create discord, and persuade parents to sign petitions. “The process was bound to divide communities, and it was open to abuse and outside manipulation. But most important, the law destroyed the democratic nature of public education. This year’s parents don’t have the right to close down a public school or give it away to a private company any more than this year’s users of a public park can decide to pave it over or name a private company to run it with tax dollars (see Diane Ravitch, Reign of Error, 2013). Voters—directly or through their elected officials—decide on and pay for public institutions in a democracy.”

In retrospect, Parent Trigger was a bust. Seven years and many millions of dollars later, only one or two schools were charterized. And there have been no studies of whether it made a difference. The billionaires did get a hardworking Mexican-American principal fired, and almost every member of her staff left with her in protest. What a waste.

Barkan writes that the most grievous misdeed of the billionaires is their assault on democracy. If they can’t get what they want through normal channels, they use their resources to buy what they want.

“Philanthropies risk losing their tax-exempt status if they donate directly to candidates for public office, so some foundations have tried other ways to ensure they have the people they want in key posts.

“The Los Angeles–based Broad Foundation stipulated in the contract for a $430,000 grant to New Jersey’s Board of Education that Governor Chris Christie remain in office. As the Star-Ledger reported (December 13, 2012), the Newark-based Education Law Center had forced the release of the contract through the state’s Open Public Records Act. For the center’s executive director, David Sciarra, “It is a foundation driving public educational policy that should be set by the Legislature.” The Broad Foundation’s senior communications director responded, “[W]e consider the presence of strong leaders to be important when we hand over our dollars.”

“The foundation sector will fight reform ferociously—as it has in the past. When asked to forgo some influence or contribute more in taxes, the altruistic impulse stalls.

“The keep-Chris-Christie clause was not the first time a staffing prerequisite was discovered in a grant contract with a public entity. In 2010 Washington, D.C. schools chancellor Michelle Rhee negotiated promises for $64.5 million in grants from the Broad, Walton, Robertson, and Arnold foundations. Rhee planned to use part of the money to finance a proposed five-year, 21.6 percent increase in teachers’ base salary. In exchange she demanded that the union give her more control over evaluating and firing teachers and allow bonus pay for teachers who raised student test scores.

“In March 2010 the foundations sent separate letters to Rhee stating that they reserved the right to withdraw their money if she left. They also required that the teachers ratify the proposed contract (Washington Post, April 28, 2010). Critics challenged not only the heavy-handed intrusion into an acrimonious contract negotiation but also the legality of the stipulation on Rhee: hadn’t she negotiated a grant deal that served her own employment interests? The teachers ratified the contract, but the extremely unpopular Rhee resigned in October 2010 after Mayor Adrian Fenty, who had hired her, lost the Democratic mayoral primary. By that time, much of the grant money had been spent, and the new schools chancellor kept Rhee’s policies.

“Private foundations have used another tactic to exert influence on the Los Angeles Unified School District: they paid the salaries of more than a dozen senior staffers. According to the Los Angeles Times (December 16, 2009), the privately financed “public” employees worked on such ed-reform projects as new systems to evaluate teachers and collect immense amounts of data on students. Much of the money came from the Wasserman Foundation ($4.4 million) and the Walton Family Foundation ($1.2 million); Ford and Hewlett made smaller grants. The Broad Foundation covered the $160,000 salary of Matt Hill to run the district’s Public School Choice program, which turned so-called low-performing and new schools over to private operators. Hill had worked in Black & Decker’s business development group before he went through one of the Broad Foundation’s uncertified programs to train new education administrators. A Times editorial on January 12, 2010 asked, sensibly, “At what point do financial gifts begin reshaping public decision-making to fit a private agenda?…Even the best-intentioned gifts have a way of shifting behavior. Educators and the public, not individual philanthropists, should set the agenda for schools.”

The Plutocrats want to abolish public control of public education. They have sponsored one failed “reform” after another.

They never learn.

 

 

in 2008-09, Bill Gates agreed to finance the creation, development, and implementation of Common Core standards. Why? He loves standardization. Estimates for his spending on the Common Core range from $200 Million to $2 Billion.

Most states adopted it, lured by the chance to win funding from Arne Duncan’s Race to the Top (states had to adopt the Common Core to be eligible to compete for a slice of $5 Billion in federal awards). But the backlash from every direction was so intense that most of the adopters renamed it, revised it, distanced themselves.

Bill Gates has never given up on the Core. He recently plopped a wee bit of money into a new effort to revive Common Core Testing. 

Under Duncan, the U.S. Department of Education spent $360 million to create two Testing consortia. The Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium and the  Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers.

“Only five of the original 24 states involved in the PARCC consortium are still using members. They include Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New Mexico and the District of Columbia. Louisana uses a hybrid of PARCC and another test.

“The other testing group, the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC) has seen massive attrition as well. The SBAC used to have 30 members.” SBAC is down to 12 full members.

Mercedes Schneider digs deeper into Bill Gates and his failing obsession here. 

Give it up, Bill. It’s over. It’s done. Stick a fork in it.

 

Laura Chapman sees the latest Gates plan for school reform as yet another effort by Gates to control and remake public education for his own gratification. She describes his plan for “networks” as another stab at philanthrogovernance.

She writes:


I think that the Gates initiatives announced in several venues and examined by Kevin Welner of the National Education Policy Center are really more of the same old effort by Bill Gates to establish philanthrogovernance as a national norm. Gates wants to micromanage and standardize education. He is not alone. In fact, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is almost always joined by other foundations in so-called “collective impact” efforts.

Gates has said he wants to invest in more than one “Network for School Improvement” defined as “a group of secondary schools working both collectively and individually with an intermediary to use a continuous improvement process to improve student outcomes through tackling problems of the same kind across the network.”

From Gates’ examples, “an intermediary” turns out to be any non-governmental agency that can enlist the cooperation of school officials, especially superintendents, in outsourcing major decisions about school policies and practices to other agencies, including universities, consultants of all kinds, and others in a tangled web of sometime dubious deals and partnerships a plenty.

Consider his models for future funding. One is the “California Office to Reform Education” known as CORE. CORE is a non-governmental administrative office set up to receive private funding, then put that money into schemes that will standardize practices in eight California districts. CORE’s bait 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, and SD Bechtel, Jr, (Stephen Becktel Fund). Add the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation which alone has sent over $7.6 million to CORE.

The superintendent’s 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. CORE lives on.

Worst of all: CORE Districts have agreed to expand testing. In addition to student test scores, attendance and the like, the new metrics include results from dubious surveys from students, teachers, parents, and non-teaching staff.

Then all of these metrics are hashed and mashed into ratings of schools and those ratings are fed directly from the CORE district to the website GreatSchools. That 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. Find the other funders at the website. The 2013 CORE District MOU can be seen on page 189 of this document: https://www2.ed.gov/policy/eseaflex/approved-requests/corerequestfullredacted.pdf

Gates also thinks that “LIFT Education Tennessee ”is an exemplary network. In this case, superintendents who were willing to accept outside management of their work helped to create LIFT. LIFT is an umbrella organization of 12 geographically separated districts ranging in size from four schools to 221 schools, that work together “on common problems of practice.” The website shows what this means: Participants in the network push the Common Core and use criteria for effective Common Core teaching adapted from the Student Achievement Partners Instructional Practice Guide Version 1.4 – revised 8/1/16. See https://lifteducationtn.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/LIFT-Instructional-Practice-Guide-K-5-Literacy.pdf

Gates also thinks Chicago’s Network for College Success is exemplary. This network is supported by 13 foundations, and it has six “partners.” Some partners are local and not surprising (e.g., Chicago Public Schools and University of Chicago Consortium on School Research). Others deserve some scrutiny. For example, Targeted Leadership Consulting is an executive coaching consultancy located in California and Hawaii. A Denver-based consultancy called The School Reform Initiative offers three tiers of services from consultants who are ready ”to develop our core practices within your educational setting.” Another partner is the Reading Apprenticeship at WestEd, a combination of online and on-site strategies for teaching reading developed with a SEED grant from USDE, and priced by WestEd at $3,500 per participant for a combination of outside coaching on “close reading” (as in the Common Core), but with greater attention to developing content knowledge.

Partners proliferate. Another “partner” is the To&Through Project which seems to be an administrative umbrella and fiscal manager for two other partners. One is the Urban Education Institute’s “UChicago Impact,” the producer of a 100-item online “5Essentials School Improvement Survey” of teachers, students, and parents. The survey results are said to predict “school success” through research-tested diagnostic analysis.

Schools find reports from their surveys on the web along with recommended strategies for improvement. One remedial strategy is writing SMART goals (specific, measurable, achievable, results-focused, and time-bound). SMART goals are a vintage 1980s corporate management technique attributed to George T. Doran, a consultant and former Director of Corporate Planning for the Spokane Washington Water Power Company. Here are the UChicago Impact survey questions (now required in Illinois, and marketed elsewhere). http://help.5-essentials.org/customer/en/portal/articles/800770-illinois-5essentials-survey-questions.

There is one more partner in the layers of Chicago networks that Gates admires: the Network for College Success (NCS), housed at the University of Chicago School of Social Service Administration. Among other activities, NCS has a Freshman OnTrack Toolkit, and provides To&Through training institutes to all Chicago public high schools. The aim is to get ninth graders on track for college.

According to NCS, a student in Chicago is considered On Track if he or she has accumulated five full credits (ten semester credits) by the end of ninth grade (freshman year) and has no more than one semester F in a core subject (English, math, science, or social science). Additional criteria are no suspensions and low or no absence. This tool kit was funded by the Carnegie Corporation of New York, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, and Spencer Foundation. In my judgment, the toolkit is a proxy for a dedicated team of school counselors assigned to ninth graders. The meaning of college-ready is totally disconnected from encouraging students to think about a major for college and how that might influence the courses you should take in high school. Don’t be a ninth grader who dreams of studying the arts in college. Studies in the arts do not count in this scheme. https://ncs.uchicago.edu/sites/ncs.uchicago.edu/files/uploads/toolsets/NCS_FOT_Toolkit_URAD_SetA_0.pdf

The To&Through Project project is funded at least $30K by contributions from eleven sources, all deep pocket family foundations in Chicago, along with Boeing Company.

Gates wants to normalize philanthrogovernance especially of a kind that imports corporate management schemes into schools. Gates is determined to undermine the public governance of schools at the state, local, district, and school levels. He is really fond of enlisting superintendents who are willing to outsource school and district governance. Only one signature and the deal is done. Long before Trump, Gates mastered the art of deal.

Retired teacher Christine Langhoff reports that Boston parents are organizing to fight the new assault on public schools.”Unified enrollment” and the Gates Compact are both intended to confuse parents and put charter schools on an equal footing.

She writes:


Parents called a meeting on Sunday afternoon, organized on FaceBook, and with a few hours’ notice, some 150 people were in attendance. A previously scheduled School Committee hearing strected to 7 hours on Wednesday, as an overfilled meeting room spilled out into adjacent corridors with parents and teachers (many who are also parents) giving voice to their anger. The various excuses coming from the mayor and the superintendent’s offices have pacified no one.

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Here’s a parent’s report: https://schoolyardnews.com/parents-say-no-to-new-start-times-at-marathon-school-committee-meeting-e9489b794c94

Behind all of this is the Gates-funded Boston Compact, which seeks Unified Enrollment that would put charter and Catholic schools on the form parents must use for enrollment in public schools, and seems to be a piece of the transportation issue given as a rationale for all these schedule changes.

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ODfIL1gGu8DiHan87MPE2azE6IM3ynSN/view

Thomas Birmingham is credited in the lore of ed reform as the legislator who put Massachusetts on the shining path to glory with his 1993 legislation. It gave more state money to public schools, and grew out of a lawsuit about equity. It also allowed the first charters to open in the state. Now Birmingham is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Pioneer Institute, which is a proponent of directing public money to charters and religious schools. On Friday, Birmingham published an article in a Boston Catholic paper proposing that Catholic schools receive public money. He claims that because the Blaine Amendment was founded on anti-Catholic bigotry of the 1850’s, it should be overturned.

https://www.thebostonpilot.com/opinion/article.asp?ID=181036

Remember, the Catholic Church in Boston not only failed to protect children from sexual abuse at the hands of its pedophile priests, but in a conspiracy that led all the way to the Cardinal, they hid the truth, allowing rape and abuse to continue as they moved offenders from one parish to another. Perhaps in an era where Betsy DeVos seeks to destroy that wall between church and state in our public schools, it seems an opportune moment to push for public funding of Catholic education. The #MeToo movement ought to be a reminder that it is not.

Kevin Welner of the National Education Policy Center has written a thoughtful (and optimistic) commentary on the Gates Foundation’s latest big bet on reforming education. The new one will invest $1.7 billion in networks of schools in big cities, in the hopes that they can work together to solve common problems.

Welner, K. (2017). Might the New Gates Education Initiative Close Opportunity Gaps? Boulder, CO: National Education Policy Center. Retrieved [date] from http://nepc.colorado.edu/publication/bmgf.

Welner notes that the previous big initiatives of the Gates Foundation failed, although he believes that Gates was too quick to pull the plug on the small schools initiative in 2008, into which he had poured $2 billion. Gates bet another $2 billion on the Common Core, and that was sunk by backlash from right and left and in any case, has made no notable difference. Gates poured untold millions into his plan for teacher evaluation (MET), but it failed because it relied too much on test scores.

Welner says that Bill Gates and the foundation he owns suffer from certain blind spots: First, he believes in free markets and choice, and he ends up pouring hundreds of millions into charters with little to show for it; second, he believes in data, and that belief has been costly without producing better schools; third, he believes in the transformative power of technology, forgetting that technology is only a tool, whose value is determined by how wisely it is used.

Last, Welner worries that Gates does not pay enough attention to the out of school factors that have a far greater impact on student learning that teachers and schools, including poverty and racism. These are the factors that mediate opportunity to learn. Without addressing those factors, none of the others will make much difference.

Welner is cautiously optimistic that the new initiative might pay more attention to opportunity to learn issues than any of Gates’ other investments.

But he notes with concern that Gates continues to fund charters, data, technology, and testing. He continues to believe that somewhere over the rainbow is a magical key to innovation. He continues to believe in standardization.

It seems to me that Kevin Welner bends over backwards to give Gates the benefit of the doubt. With his well-established track record of failure, it is hard to believe he has learned anything. But let’s keep hoping for the best.

Laura Chapman writes:

“E4E requires teachers to sign a “pledge” that endorses VAM as a component of their evaluation. I do not understand why anyone would sign a pledge to any organization that billionaires fund. This is a variant of the infamous Gates Compact that called for school districts run by elected officials and with public accountability to sign a memorandum of understanding (MOU) that would allow charter schools, privately run and often by out of state franchises, to use resources they did not pay for, occupy public school buildings, avoid the full costs of a district services such as those providing food and transportation. The charters were supposed to share their “best practices” with the district. The E4E pledge and the Gates compact are duping teachers and leaders of district in the same way…with contract-like arrangements totally out of bounds of professional work ing education.

“Imagine a hospital or medical practice that signed a ledge or a “compact” to prescribe only the drugs/treatments that a billionaire donor wanted, and under conditions where those drugs/treatments were known to be toxic for parents and the medical personnel.

“I am reminded of the pledge that I had to sign to be employed in Florida, mid-century last. The document asked if I had every been a member of the Communist Party or a member of one of the groups labelled “communist sympathizers”–with the list on legal paper, both sides, two pages two columns.

“I think the E4E pledge is intended to function much like a loyalty oath, but now it is one aspect of market-based thinking. It also draws on the actual and implied threats in a non-compete clause in some employment contracts.

“There is probably nothing that E4E can do to legally enforce compliance with the terms of the pledge–a pledge of loyalty to an agenda set by the billionaires. The whole point is to use teachers as marketers for the bad ideas of E4E and make them accomplices in their own demise.

“If you sign the pledge, you confirm that you are easy prey. Do not be duped or used.”

Bill Gates has a big new idea. He has gotten together with a few other big-time philanthropists and created a pool of $500 Million, with which they plan to solve the really big problems in health, education, and economic opportunity. They call their collaboration “Co-Impact.” One of the collaborators is Jeff Skoll, who was one of the producers of the public school-bashing hitjob “Waiting for Superman.”

Emily Talmage is not happy about what’s coming from this group. She sees it as yet another attempt by the super-elites to impose their will on the rest of us, who lack their money and power.

Let us stipulate: no one elected a Bill Gates and his friends to remake social policy. Sure, Trump is busy dismantling and shredding social policy, but who put Bill in charge? One thing we can say about the richest man in America: Every one of his interventions into American education has failed. There is no reason to believe he has learned anything from the slow collapse of VAM and the catastrophe of Common Core. To the contrary, he is still propping CCSS up with new millions, although it’s very name is mud.

Emily writes:

“Gates is one giant, gnarly tree in an dark, overgrown forest of private “givers” who are dead-set on remaking our nation into something reminiscent of a feudalistic society.

“I say it’s time to investigate the whole rotten system that’s allowing this to happen.

“Seriously, folks. This just can’t be okay.”

Bill Gates plunked down $80 Million to buy 25,000 acres in Arizona to build a model city.

It will incorporate his ideas about how the world ought to be.

It is less than an hour from Phoenix.

He will call it Belmont.

470 acres will be set aside for public schools. I wonder which charters will be invited to run those “public schools.”

The big unanswered question: Will he live there?

Or is this just another opportunity to try out a bold idea that he had on the treadmill one morning?