Archives for category: Networkfor Public Education Action Fund

The Network for Public Education Action Fund was divided during the presidential primaries and made no endorsement. It is divided no more. In a contest between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, our choice is clear. We support Hillary Clinton.

http://npeaction.org/2016/10/01/npe-action-endorses-hillary-rodham-clinton-president/

The Network for Public Education Action (NPE Action) endorses Hillary Rodham Clinton for President of the United States. NPE Action is not aligned with Ms. Clinton on all educational issues, however, all members of the NPE Action Board strongly agree that the election of Donald Trump would have disastrous consequences for public education.

“Although we did not endorse a candidate during the primary season, we are united in our belief that Ms. Clinton is a far better choice for President than Mr. Trump,” stated NPE Action Executive Director, Carol Burris. “By his choice of education advisors, as well as his continued reference to public schools as “government schools,” there is no doubt that Trump would attempt to privatize our nation’s public education system. Ms. Clinton, in contrast, speaks of the importance of a strong and vibrant public school system. While we may disagree with some of her positions on how to improve public schools, unlike Mr. Trump, the destruction of public education is not her objective.”

NPE Action President and co-founder, education historian, Diane Ravitch, agrees. “I enthusiastically support Hillary Clinton because she is the most experienced and most knowledgeable candidate; the alternative is unthinkable. Donald Trump would destroy public education, one of the essential institutions of our democracy. With Hillary as President, we can hope for the best; with Trump, we can expect the worst.“

Prior to the conventions, NPE Action submitted a position paper to both the Republican and Democratic platform committees. The Board of NPE Action was heartened to see many of those ideas incorporated into the final draft of the Democratic platform. If Ms. Clinton is elected, NPE Action will lobby for an end to high-stakes testing, a moratorium on new charters, and for regulations to end charter abuses and ensure transparency. We will also demand a commitment to community schools that are democratically governed so that parents—especially parents of color—have voice in how their children are educated.

Co-founder and treasurer of the organization, Anthony Cody, summed up NPE Action’s endorsement of Clinton this way. “Supporters of public education have a clear choice in November, between a candidate sworn to destroy it, and one whom we may pressure to do right by our schools. I hope others will join us in supporting Hillary Clinton. Just as important, we need to continue to build the grassroots movement for democratically controlled, equitable and excellent schools for all our children.”

The NPE Action Fund endorsed Drew Franklin for D.C. City Council!

NPE Action is the c(4) political action arm of the Network for Public Education, which is authorized to make political endorsements.

Franklin, a writer and Occupy Wall Street activist, explains his support for education as follows:

“I am committed to community control of public schools in DC, which is home to some of the country’s most extreme racial inequities in education. Ten years of corporate reform has only made the situation worse. It’s time for teachers and the communities they serve to reclaim the promise of public school systems-of-right. My platform calls for an end to mayoral control of DC’s public and charter school systems, a total moratorium on public school closures, and alternatives to high-stakes standardized testing. I believe experienced teachers are the experts when it comes to determining what students need to grow and thrive in the classroom, and that quality education is best achieved through collaboration rather than privatization. You cannot fire your way to good schools.”

Denisha Jones is an Assistant Professor in the School of Education at Howard University. She is an administrator for the BATs and United Opt Out, and regularly exposes the dangers of privatizing public education. She has the following to say about Drew.

“Drew Franklin understands the dangers of allowing big money to corrupt public education. He will not accept campaign funds from corporate education reformers and he understand that public education is a human right and not a tool for big business.”

Drew believes that it is important that families and communities have a say in the governance of public schools.

“I am opposed to mayoral control of public schools and believe public accountability is only possible through democratically elected school boards and participatory community organizations.”

Drew will face off against his opponent incumbent, David Grosso, in the November 8th election.

The Network for Public Education Action Fund has launched a series of initiatives with our allies to keep up the fight against privatization and high-stakes testing.

Join the Stop ALEC protests in Indianapolis from July 27-29. ALEC is one of the leading rightwing forces promoting the destruction of public education. It writes model legislation that is used by its 2,000 members who are state legislators. It favors charters, vouchers, virtual charter schools, and any choice other than public schools. It fights unions. It fights teacher credentialing.

Learn about our allies who led the effort to amend the Democratic platform.

Keep up the fight against the distortion of the ESSA regulations, which John King intends to use to revive the punishments of NCLB.

Join your friends and take stand against the monetization of education!

Learn about NPE’s new grassroots initiative to bring together allies at the local, state, and national levels. Join us and help build our movement.

The Network for Public Education released a statement drafted by its executive director Carol Burris and approved by the board.

This week we have been shocked and horrified ​by the shootings of Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge, and Philando Castile in Minneapolis by police. The Network for Public Education sends our deepest condolences to their families and friends. We strongly condemn the racial profiling and disparate justice that culminates in violence against Black Americans.

Our​ deep sympathies also go to the families and friends of Lorne Ahrens, Michael Smith, Michael Krol, Patrick Zamarripa and Brent Thompson, the police officers who lost their lives protecting those engaged in a peaceful march–killed by a gunman with a deliberate agenda of violent vengeance against the police​.
At this weekend’s Save our Schools March in Washington D.C.​, Reverend Doctor William Barber, II reminded us that we must show our children how we work together to solve the injustice, violence and conflicts that confront our nation.

He said, “Each shot was heard around the world and each shot inflicted more wounds on our nation’s soul….and if you are a true human being, you are outraged at the death of anybody. We must choose to do better, we must choose to be more human. We must choose to be more loving and more just.”

As an advocacy group that seeks equitable educational opportunities for all children, The Network for Public Education​ joins with those demanding justice, and ​those who stand for non-violence and peaceful advocacy.
Our children cannot learn when they live in a state of fear and despair. We must educate our students to fight and change these systems. We need to support them to lead all of us to a better world. ​

Reverend Barber’s speech begins at minute 10:00. You can hear it in its entirety here.

Many of the photos from our Network for Public Education annual conference in Raleigh are now posted on the website.

 

Please open the link and see the people who are fighting to keep  public schools public!

The Network for Public Education has two organizations.

 

One is tax-deductible and non-political. That is the Network for Public Education, which advocates for public schools and teachers and against high-stakes testing and privatization by research and conferences. NPE is recognized by the IRS as a c(3) organization.

 

The other is the Network for Public Education Action Fund, which engages in political action. NPE Action endorses candidates and actively supports political efforts to advance our agenda of free public education for all and better education for all. NPE Action Fund is recognized by the IRS as a c(4), meaning that it is not tax-deductible.

 

Both funds need your support.

 

At our annual conference a few weeks ago, we have announced the creation of memberships for the NPE Action Fund. This will give us the resources to help candidates who fight for better education for all. Please consider becoming a member and supporting our advocacy for children and real education.

 

BE A PART OF THE ACTION!

 

The following statement was issued as a press release and sent to Scott Kirby, President of American Airlines:

 

For Immediate Release: April 18, 2016

 

Media Contact:

 

Carol Burris 718-577-3276 cburris@networkforpubliceducation.org

 

The Network for Public ​Education (NPE) expresses its outrage about American Airlines’ decision to remove the Reverend Dr. William Barber II from a late night flight from DC to Raleigh. Reverend Barber was removed after a passenger seated behind him made hostile comments.

 

Reverend Barber is one of the nation’s most eminent civil rights leaders. He is the president of the North Carolina NAACP and founder of the Moral Mondays movement, which leads protests in support of equality and justice. He should have received the same courteous treatment that all passengers expect.

 

As it happens, he was flying to Raleigh to address our annual convention on Saturday morning. When he arrived late, he did not mention what had happened to him. He spoke eloquently about the necessity of eliminating racism and establishing justice for all.

 

We call upon American Airlines to issue an official apology to Rev. Barber, reimbursement for any expenses he incurred as a consequence of this unfortunate incident, and to award him Elite Platinum status so he can be sure of being treated with dignity in the future by the staff of American Airlines.

 

Diane Ravitch, P​resident of NPE, said, “There is little doubt in my view that Reverend Barber was taken off the flight through no fault of his own but because he is a black man. Had I been in his place, I as a white woman would not have been kicked off the flight. American Airlines should show their regrets by apologizing to him and protecting him from future actions of this kind, which reflect poorly on the judgment of AA’s staff at Washington Reagan Airport.”

 

​Ravitch sent a letter to the President of American Airlines today insisting that Reverend Barber be given the above consideration. ​

 

The Network for Public Education has now held three national conferences. The first was in Austin, Texas; the second in Chicago; and the 2016 conference just concluded in Raleigh, North Carolina.

 

About 500 activists, mostly teachers, but also principals, administrators, school board members, parents, and even representatives of the Newark Student Union were there. Most of the best-known education bloggers were there. I haven’t done a count but we had representation from nearly every state, including people who flew in from California, Washington, Oregon, New Mexico, Arizona, and Nebraska.

 

Every one of these conferences has been exciting. It is exciting to meet the people you know online but have never met face to face. It is exciting to be surrounded with people who share your beliefs and values. It is exciting to know that you are not alone. There was a sense of collegiality and camaraderie that occasionally felt like joy, just plain joy.

 

The speakers were outstanding. Reverend Barber brought the audience to its feet repeatedly. He is a grand preacher and orator. We even had call and response going. Phil LaNoue, the National Superintendent of the Year, talked about what really mattered most in schools, and he talked about children and their social and emotional needs, not their test scores. Bob Herbert brought a keen perspective to the role of education in a changing economy. Jesse Hagopian of Seattle and Karren Harper Royal of New Orleans engaged in a discussion of the issues that concern NPE members most: privatization, high-stakes testing, and the struggle to improve education under adverse conditions.

 

In times, all the keynote speeches will be posted, as well as several of the panels. Here is Reverend Barber’s speech. 

 

In addition to excellent general presentations, there were nearly 50 workshops. Many could have been general sessions by themselves. It was an embarrassment of riches that we all could share. The hardest part was deciding which workshops to attend. I enjoyed Jitu Brown’s workshop on state takeovers, where speakers documented that takeovers lead to privatization, that they inevitably are targeted at black and brown communities, and that 96% of the students whose schools are closed are African American. Jitu pointed out that the closure of a school precipates the closure of the local police station, the grocery store, and other community amenities, robbing the community of basic necessities. I also enjoyed hearing the Texas Pastors for Children, whose work has stopped vouchers in Texas; they reach out to fellow clergy in rural communities and advance the principal that “we do not need Caesar’s gold to advance God’s work.” I am crazy about Pastor Charles Foster Jones.

 

I expect we will hear from the many bloggers who were there.

 

Every year we ask ourselves how we can possibly top this year’s conference. We did it. And we will do it again next year.

 

Next year, the conference will be held on the West Coast. Stay tuned.

Steven Singer, who teaches in Pennsylvania, wrote about the exciting first day of the Network for Public Education conference in Raleigh. It is hard to capture the camaraderie, the fun, the sheer pleasure of meeting with fellow activists from all parts of the nation. But Steve does a good job of describing the exhilaration we feel.

 

He writes:

 

 

“Do you remember three years ago when I said this would all be over in 6 months?”

“And we all laughed. Me the loudest, because back then I had thought the same darn thing.

“Corporate education reform is on its last legs. Once we tell people about the terrible mistakes of standardized testing and Common Core, it will all be over in an election cycle or two.

“Kelly, that incredibly dedicated member of the Badass Teachers Association (BATs) from Ohio, hadn’t been the only one.

“It seemed so reasonable back then. Once it became common knowledge, our leaders couldn’t keep perpetuating policies that harm our children, we thought.

“No one would actually continue to stomp on the futures of our little kids once we’d pointed out that that was what they were actually doing! Right?

“Now the Network for Public Education is having its third annual conference – this one in troubled Raleigh, North Carolina. And far from being on its last legs, the testocracy is mightier than ever with a new federal education policy, the Every Student Succeeds Act, rebranding and refreshing its same horrific disdain for the young.
“But that’s not really news, is it?
“The powerful have always tried to find ways to keep the poor and minorities under heel. It’s a struggle as old as civilization, itself.

“What’s new is us.

“Yes, us – the ragtag band of rebels and revolutionaries who gather together every year to celebrate our victories, lament our losses and plan for the future.
“This is a real community – stronger than anything I’ve ever experienced. During the year we all have our separate support systems, be they Badass Teachers, United Opt Out, our teachers unions, our communities or – for many of us – some unique combination.
“But once a year we all come together from our separate corners of the country (and in some cases beyond) to commune, to gather strength from each other so we can carry on the fight.
“I cannot express to you the power and the glory I got this morning listening to Chicago parent activist Rousemary Vega talking about the pain of losing her children’s community school. This is still a raw wound for her, gushing blood. One moment she was heartbreaking sorrow; the next she was frightening strength and determination.
“She told us how to learn from her example, how to put up a fight, how to make it as difficult as possible for anyone to ever do this again. And when she was done and I had dried the tears that she had somehow cried with my eyes, I found that I had a tiny Rousemary inside my heart. I will never forget her story. I hope I can call on even a fraction of her strength.”

After the North Carolina legislature passed HB2, which legalized discrimination against people who are LGBT, the executive committee of the Network for Public Education deliberated whether we should cancel our conference. We consulted with our North Carolina allies, and they urged us not to cancel. They wanted our support.

 

So here we are, and I have to share with you that I feel right about where we are. It hit me tonight that we are exactly where we should be. We are here to show our solidarity with the parents and teachers of North Carolina who have suffered one setback after another since the Tea Party extremists took control of the legislature in 2010.

 

You don’t beat bullies by running away. We are all wearing “Repeal HB2” stickers. We have cards to hand out wherever we go, telling merchants that we oppose HB2 and won’t return until it is repealed.

 

We are not running away. We are here to stand by the good people of North Carolina and pray for the day when they are able to vote these hate mongers out of office.

 

We are here because injustice is here. We are exactly where we should be.