Archives for category: Michigan

A comment on the blog about the state of public education in Michigan:

I am a retired high school English teacher in Michigan. After I retired I served 8 years on our board of education. I retired in 2000 and have a son, daughter and daughter-in-law in the teaching profession.

What has happened in Michigan since I retired is appalling. Our teachers are being demoralized, our school aid fund has been raided to give tax breaks to big business, tenure is gone, and evaluations are being based on test scores. Benefits have been reduced for teachers and right to work is in play.

Our legislators believe the EAA which has taken over some schools in Detroit should be expanded when it hasn’t even been in effect for year and so far doesn’t have a good track record.

The latest I have read is that there in now contemplation to raid the school aid fund again to pay for roads. There is also word that teacher pay will be tied to student performance.

Governor Snyder sends his child to a private school where small class sizes exist, many types of classes are offered and standardized testing is not an issue.

Dick DeVos and the Mackinac Center along with Michelle Rhee seem to have a big influence on our governor and right wing legislators. We need a great deal of help in our state to restore public education to what it once was.

Cyber schools, charter schools and private takeover will destroy our state if we don’t start electing people who can turn it around. I told my son that “this too shall pass,”, but I worry daily.

In the previous post, I noted that the emergency manager in Detroit was instructed to “blow up” the district.

In the other districts controlled by emergency managers–Muskegon Heights and Highland Park–the emergency managers closed down public education and handed the buildings and students over to for-profit operators.

This article in Education Week brings out important facts.

1. “African-Americans make up 88 percent of the students in the Muskegon Heights system, and 98 percent of the Highland Park system’s enrollment.”

2. The emergency managers picked two for-profit operators whose record is unimpressive:

“And critics of the strategy say that neither Mosaica Education nor the Leona Group has an impressive record of turning around low-performing schools.

“We think that there’s a huge opportunity closed when the state steps in and decides to intervene in a place like Highland Park and Muskegon Heights,” said Amber Arellano, the executive director of the Education Trust-Midwest, an education policy and advocacy group in Royal Oak, Mich.

“Our concern is that, based on what we know about those operators,” she continued, “it would appear as if [this] opportunity may be wasted … because those are two of the lowest-performing charter operators in Michigan.”

Read that last line again: “…those are two of the lowest-performing charter operators in Michigan.”

3. “Some experts point out that Mosaica students nationally do not show as much academic growth as students from similar socioeconomic backgrounds in regular public schools.”

What more do you need to know?

Detroit’s Emergency Manager Roy Roberts announced he was stepping down. But then he said something utterly astonishing. He said that when he took the job, his instructions were to “blow up” the district.

He didn’t say who told him to destroy the district.

Interesting that all of the districts in Michigan that have emergency managers are predominantly African American: Detroit. Muskegon Heights. Highland Park. And the district that went broke this week: Buena Vista.

The state feels no responsibility for supporting and maintaining these districts. Is it because they are powerless in a state run by the far-right? The governor would never dare to play these tricks on a majority white district.

In little Buena Vista, Michigan, the schools have been decimated by budget cuts and declining enrollments. Faced with the threat of bankruptcy, the teachers offered to work for free. The district laid them all off and is closing the schools.

Who says that Americans don’t care about education? Maybe Governor Snyder will send in an emergency manager to give the children to a for-profit charter chain that will rehire the teachers and cut their pay and benefits.

The schools close officially on Tuesday, which is Teacher Appreciation Day.

Nancy Flanagan, retired NBCT, has written a brilliant post about Governor Rick Snyder’s secret project called the Skunk Works. The goal of the project was to invent a brand-new cheap-cheap-cheap school called a “Value School.” Sort of like a discount store where you get a product that looks like the real thing, but it is a cheap copy.

Now that the Skunk Works is out in the open, people are stunned that the group consisted of entrepreneurs and software developers. The only teacher quit the group when he saw where it was going. Can you have education without teachers? It’s cheap but is it good education?

And the last line of her article is right on.

Members of Governor Rick Snyder’s administration have been meeting in secret since December with like-minded allies from far-right think tanks, hoping to develop a quasi-voucher in a state where the Constitution bans vouchers.

Thanks to publicity about the project, its future meetings will be held in public or at least have some public oversight.

Their goal, apparently, is to come up with a “value” school, with fewer teachers to save money. It will be the Michigan Model: Cheap education for the masses. Not better education, just cheap education.

Suppose you were governor of Michigan and you really truly hated public education. Suppose you thought of public schools not as a beloved community institution, but as a government monopoly that must be smashed. Suppose you believe that the free market always knows best.

Suppose further that your earnest desire to get rid of public education was blocked by the state constitution.

Why, you would do exactly what Michigan Governor Rick Snyder is doing. You would have some of your top aides work with a reactionary “think tank” and come up with bold ideas to circumvent the state constitution.

You would say the project was private, and not subject to state open meetings laws. You would hope to rush the new ideas into law while your party controls the legislature.

Does it smell bad? Dors it smell like a skunk? So what. Call the project Skunk Works to mock your powerless critics.

Democratic procedures? That’s for chumps.

Education Trust, a Washington public policy group, recently prepared a report about education reform in Michigan. A reader asked me to review it, and I turned to William Mathis of the National Education Policy Center to write an analysis.

Now, given that Governor Rick Snyder is working with an external group to defund public education, these recommendations must be seen in the light of a governor and a legislature that will do whatever they can to outsource funding and education to private entrepreneurs.

Here is Mathis’ take on the Education Trust report:

“Invest in What Works: An Education Road Map for Michigan Leaders.”
EdTrust Midwest

 

                  In a new report by The Education Trust – Midwest, the authors spell out what they describe as a “common sense” agenda for the reform of Michigan schools. They set forth a six part program – one with which most reasonable people would agree. However, since the proposal is at a high level of abstraction, the devil is in how the details get worked-out. For example, the report calls for a more adequate funding system as well as for a better accountability system. Will policy-makers adopt a better funding scheme or will they adopt a harsher accountability system?

                  This 20 page report is heavy on photographs, charts, borders and boxes. The reader would be well advised to check their supply of color ink cartridges before printing. Instead of research (which gets a vague nod in places), the report supports its recommendations by state and district level anecdotes.

                  The paper sets up the problem in the time-honored and much used “Nation at Risk” format, which can be summarized as “Ain’t it awful!!!” The problems with Michigan education are catalogued using NAEP and state testing results. As can be predicted, the charts are cherry-picked to show Michigan as the lowest performing of the selected comparison states.

                  As contrasted with other reports in this expanding genre, the report surprisingly lays the blame for this mediocrity on an unusual source:

“Michigan’s primary strategy has been to expand school choice by allowing charter and virtual schools to proliferate, regardless of quality. Michigan has largely counted on choice to dramatically raise achievement – and that strategy hasn’t paid off.” (p. 4)

The report then presents four pages illustrating that the charter and virtual schools have received heavy public emoluments but have simply not delivered on their promises.

Having laid the ground-work, the report then sets forth its six point program.

The first is a “sustained focus on implementation and quality.” True to the “common sense” motif, few would disagree that reforms need long-term and sustained support. Many would lay a good part of the short-comings of NCLB to such a lack of support.

The second is “effective teaching and school leadership.” Again, few would disagree. State leaders are said to have failed to step up to the plate. The authors are undoubtedly correct when they note that districts lack the resources or expertise to carry-out teacher improvement systems. Does this mean test-based evaluation systems? There is an allusion to such a system in the text and the anecdotes but the reader is left adrift on this point. They dodge the issue.

The third is “rigorous college and career-ready leadership.” Although parroting the federal line, the authors recognize that “adoption of these policies is not enough.” Support systems to make this a reality are not in place.

Fourth is “improve school accountability and support.” At some point, the education policy community will become weary of the now meaningless, chest-thumping phrase, “held accountable.” While a school evaluation system is certainly a universal requirement, repeating the empty mantra does not provide useful insight. Recognizing the need for school improvement capacity, the authors do say the schools need “support for improvement based in research and proven expertise, rather than wishful thinking.”

Fifth is to ”revise school funding formulas.” The authors raise the funding adequacy issue particularly for the neediest children. Since 2008 (and the recession) the question of financial adequacy has been eclipsed by the mentality that accountability systems will solve all problems. In fact, some pseudo-research from right wing think-tanks say schools have enough funds (The money matters argument was effectively resolved by 1995 but that doesn’t keep it from resurfacing).  The authors are to be commended for raising this vital point.

The final point is “strengthen relationships with parents and communities.” This point can be found on just about anybody’s list. It seems to be a requirement of all task force reports to bow in this direction.  How this is to be done is left basically unanswered.

If taken in the whole, the “road map” could be quite helpful. Although supported by anecdotes rather than research, many of the points enjoy a strong research foundation. Particularly unusual for the genre, EdTrust Midwest is to be commended for (1) pointing out the shortcomings of charter and virtual schools, (2) highlighting the call for adequate funding particularly for the neediest children, and (3) consistently noting that the school improvement agenda has not been adequately supported.

While applauding the authors for highlighting these findings, the danger of this report (or of any such report) is that, like the report itself, it can be cherry-picked by policymakers to support pre-existing political opinions. This is a danger of reports and recommendations at such high levels of abstraction.

William J. Mathis

National Education Policy Center

April 23, 2013

A secret group commissioned by reactionary elements in Michigan crafted a plan to voucherize education funding. The plan will be submitted to Governor Snyder. Note that the purpose of the plan is not to provide better education, but to cut costs.

The article describes the plan as “reform,” but as usual, the real intent of this treat eggy is to abandon public education. When the privatizers say “the money should follow the child,” what tpthey mean is that the funding should go anywhere: to religious schools, private schools, cyber schools, for-profit vendors. That way, they drain essential funding from public schools, which will lose programs and staff, this facilitating the growth of the private sector.

Michigan is debating the Common Core, which it already agreed to adopt.

The curious thing in the debate and in the article is the repeated claim by “experts” that the Common Core will fix all the disparities and problems in American education. It will close the gap between low-perming and high-performing students and lift the performance of American students to the top on international tests.

What is the evidence for their views? How do they know? The standards have been imposed without any test of their value, their feasibility, or their consequences for real-live students. No one actually knows how they will work. What we do know is that full implementation will cost billions of dollars. States are buying new technology and new materials for Common Core even as they are laying off teachers, guidance counselors and librarians.

Will anyone remember these promises of Utopia a decade from now? Who will be accountable if they are wrong?

Can higher, more rigorous standards substitute for the massive disinvestment in education that is occurring in state after state?