Archives for category: Louisiana

Louisiana is expanding the number of students attending voucher schools to 8,000, despite a court ruling that it is unconstitutional to take money from the dedicated public school fund for non-public schools.

Bobby Jindal thinks either that the law doesn’t mean him or that he knows more than the courts and can ignore their rulings. (L ‘etat c’est moi.)

Which schools get vouchers?

New Living Word got the most. It won an additional 117 vouchers, bringing its total to 214.

A Reuters article described the top voucher school as follows:

“The school willing to accept the most voucher students — 314 — is New Living Word in Ruston, which has a top-ranked basketball team but no library. Students spend most of the day watching TVs in bare-bones classrooms. Each lesson consists of an instructional DVD that intersperses Biblical verses with subjects such chemistry or composition.” It did not receive 314 vouchers last year.

Plus:

“Family Christian Academy will increase from 43 to 104 while Claiborne Christian Academy will increase from 23 to 32. Northeast Louisiana Baptist School will increase from 19 to 20, Old Bethel Christian Academy from 20 to 25, Our Lady of Fatima from 40 to 59, Prevailing Faith Christian Academy from fewer than 10 to 17, Quest School from fewer than 10 to 12 and St. Frederick High School from 11 to 14.”

Crazy Crawfish explains why the Louisiana legislature decided not to repeal its “Science Education Act,” which permits the teaching of New Earth Creationism in public school science classes. It seems that a member of the legislature was healed by a witch doctor so he blocked efforts to repeal the law.

As Crazy Crawfish points out, it’s not all bad:

“Well, on the plus side, at least now Louisiana can start teaching kids how to be certified witch doctors early on in their public school careers. Since none of ouy kids will understand real biology that might be the best we can get for a while. Now all I need to do is corner the “magic bones” market and I bet I could make a killing selling those as school supplies at Walmart next Fall. . .”

Crazy Crawfish reblogged the story from another great Louisiana blogger called CenLamar. I swear these brilliant Louisiana bloggers will bring bring down the Jindal era of meanness and foolishness. They are so doggone good at exposing the official scams, hoaxes, and deceptions, and doing it Louisiana-style. The phonies don’t have a chance.

The legislature in Louisiana is turning a cold shoulder to Governor Bobby Jindal’s plans to demoralize teachers and dismantle public education. The bills that sailed through last year, when Jindal was riding high, are in trouble now.

Only Stand for Children, once thought of as a civil rights group, insists on firing teachers faster and somehow finding great teachers to replace them .

Mike Deshotels is an experienced Louisiana educator and currently a blogger about education in his state. His blog is called Louisiana Educator.

He read a blog by Andy Smarick on the Education Next website and found it superficial and inaccurate. Smarick has worked for various Republican administrations and conservative think tanks and once served on the board of a KIPP school. Smarick would like to see public education turned over to the private sector.

Deshotels says that Smarick is wrong to use the Recovery School District as a model. It is actually a failing district. The most amazing feature of the RSD is that so many people, like Smarick, believe the hype and spin about it.

He explains the facts about the RSD here:

“A blog by Andy Smarick in Education Next describing the Louisiana Recovery School District as a good model for the new Tennessee Achievement School District has to be a joke. Either that or Smarick is one of the most misinformed education commentators I have ever seen. I live in Louisiana and I have watched the operation of the Louisiana RSD, and I find that Smarick is totally wrong on almost every point he tries to make. I feel compelled to point out a few of his misstatements.

Smarick likens the current education reform movement to a big Play. He claims that the formation of the Louisiana Recovery School District was the “high point” in the play of education reform. If that’s the case then the play is going to be a flop!

Here are the facts: The RSD in New Orleans was allowed to take over a broad cross section of schools including schools that were performing just below the state average at the time. Many of the students captured by the RSD in the takeover were pretty good students with parents who supported them properly. Many others were minimally supported by their parents and community.

Out of the 70 or so schools formed by the RSD in New Orleans, only a few succeeded in recruiting the most motivated students. All the rest continued to be low performers. But the cheerleaders for the RSD, like Smarick, only talk about the few schools that have done slightly above average by using now well known selection and culling techniques. So using the state grading scale (which is seriously flawed but which was pushed by the reformers Smarick has praised) only 5 schools in the New Orleans RSD are now rated as “B”. There are no “A”s in the RSD. There are only three “C”’s and all the rest D or F. In fact 87% of the RSD New Orleans schools at last count were rated D or F, with the F’s predominating. But it gets worse.

Soon after taking over the bulk of New Orleans schools the Recovery District started taking over low performing schools in Baton Rouge, Shreveport and a couple of rural Parishes. Those have been run by the RSD for 5 years now. All of them are now rated F and on average are doing worse than before they were taken over. They are performing so poorly that the State has taken them over from their charter operators and no longer releases the letter grades for most of them, using the excuse that it would be premature to publish their letter grades because they are in the process of being reorganized. By the way, that’s also how the state covers up the poor performance of some of the New Orleans schools.

Smarick makes the assertion that the RSD is not really run by the state, but just answers to the state. He could not be further from the truth. In fact, except for the small handful of charters in New Orleans that were able to cream the best students, all of the other charters and direct run RSD schools are totally controlled by the state. The state has now built such a large bureaucracy to run the RSD in the Baton Rouge area, that it has taken over a whole school building to house their administrators. But that was no problem since the parents had withdrawn so many of the students that the RSD ended up with a vacant building that originally belonged to the local school board. Now the parents in Baton Rouge are running a petition to have the building returned to the East Baton Rouge school system which has experienced major growth through transfers back from the RSD.

It would be very sad if the Tennessee Achievement District were to follow the example of the Louisiana Recovery District. It is also sad that Smarick is allowed to publish his totally inaccurate analysis.

Michael Deshotels

Since Bobby Jindal and his loyal henchman John White started their war against Louisiana’s public schools and their teachers, the judicial system has proved to be the best line of defense for defenders of the public interest.

Jindal’s two major pieces of legislation were declared unconstitutional by the courts. One ruled that it was illegal to take money away from public school funding to pay for vouchers or private vendors (called “course choice”). Another declared the omnibus anti-teacher law unconstitutional on procedural grounds.

Thus far, the legislature appears less willing to bow to Jindal’s demands to renew his vendetta, maybe because his poll ratings have dropped into the 30s.

Here, Mercedes Schneider describes the multiple lawsuits filed against John White and the Louisiana Department of Education.

White simply won’t release the data that researchers use to analyze school performance (without student names) yet is more than willing to share confidential student data with inBloom, the Gates-Murdoch collaboration.

As usual, Schneider nails the key issues.

Dayne Sherman is going to a rally at the state capitol in Baton Rouge on April 30.

The people of Louisiana are waking up to Jindal’s war against the common weal.

Now, says Sherman, even the Legislature is turning against Jindal.

Four big issues stir public antipathy:

First, we have to repeal the tax give-aways passed under Jindal. Rep. Jerome “Dee” Richard (I-Thibodaux) has a bill to do this very thing. We now give away an extra 2 billion dollars a year since Jindal took office. This is unsustainable, immoral, and just plain crazy. Make no mistake, if we don’t address the tax credits and corporate welfare, our state is toast.

Second, the federal Medicaid expansion has to begin sooner rather than later. According to the Department of Health and Hospitals, the expansion of Medicaid will grant 577,000 Louisiana citizens insurance coverage. 

What if we don’t accept the Medicaid expansion? Your local hospital will struggle or fail, and the state will be in the red for decades to come.

Third, we have to stop selling the state piece by piece. We can’t keep giving away state assets at fire sale prices to plug budget holes. It’s ridiculous, downright goofy.

Fourth, higher education must be fully funded in Fiscal Year 2014. Colleges and universities have been cut $625 million since 2008. More cuts are planned for next year. It has to stop now or we will hamstring the Louisiana economy and harm our children.

Sherman should have added a fifth point: Jindal’s effort to privatize public education and intimidate teachers must stop.

Louisiana educators have joined in unison to endorse a bill to permit parents in failing charter schools to return their school to public control.

Two-thirds or more of the Recovery School District charters are graded D or F.

This is a bold recognition that charter schools are not a silver bullet. They are most successful when they exclude the neediest children.

Hey, folks, could we agree to stop using the term “parent trigger?” After Newtown, it is an obscenity.

Mercedes Schneider provides an update on the evolving drama in Louisiana: Did John White pull Louisiana data out of the Gates-funded, Murdoch-created project called inBloom?

Did the state board of education approve the agreement?

How many other data-sharing agreements did John White enter into?

Did the state board know where he was sending the children’s data?

Bobby Jindal’s most anti-teacher legislation was struck down as unconstitutional last fall on procedural grounds. It included too many subjects.

Jindal assumed he could ram through his proposals again but this year was different. The House shelved his bills.

Is the destructive Jindal machine losing steam?

Has reactionary reform run its course in Louisiana?

Mercedes Schneider tries to figure out what John White did or did not do in relation to Louisiana’s agreement to share confidential student data with the Gates-Murdoch inBloom project. It appears that the state board of education never knew about this arrangement and that it was a secret deal made by John White.

Is there some kind of secret government-corporate group that makes these deals about students without bothering to inform democratically elected officials?