Archives for category: Obama

A reader sent this comment:

If I may be so bold and presumptuous, it is time for a deep breath, a time-out from the issues of the day, and a focus on the issues of tomorrow: THIS ELECTION IS LIFE OR DEATH FOR PUBLIC EDUCATION.

I got a wake up call on many fronts on Sunday in dialogue / debate with a staunch union member who, understandably, is really angry. I appreciate Diane’s honest comments to me. Aside from the issues at hand, and there are many, the bottom line is that this teacher can’t see casting a vote for President Obama.

Are there really a few, hundreds, thousands of teachers (and unions and parent activists) considering not voting for President Obama and/or Democratic House candidates?

If so – PLEASE – appeal to them for a moratorium on being ticked off at Arne Duncan, President Obama, and RTTT. We can hold the President’s and Duncan’s feet to the fire later. They are not going to tinker with policy in the next 30 days. I’ll lead the charge with you. I’ll drive. I’ll meet you on the steps of where that stupid little red school house used to be – but for now – let’s get him elected.

You all have a voice. You know those with voice in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Florida, and other swing states.

I’ll just say it – I don’t care how angry a union member or any teacher is right now. A GOP White House and GOP House – and the inevitable (at least one) Supreme Court appointment in the next fours years would be the end of public education for every child not to mention women’s rights, social justice, and dozens of other issues.

No matter how angry teachers and others may be about RTTT or their union leadership – I would compel them to hold their noses, hold their breath, or hold whatever criticism they need to hold and get Mr. Obama in the White House and democrats in the House. Go radical and angry again on November 7; but for now they must vote – especially in key states and every House vote.

I offer the following worst-case but sadly possible worst-case scenarios if R and R take over:

An eventual ultra-conservative 6-3 majority in the Supreme Court with all the implications on public education, privacy, privatization, civil rights, immigration, curriculum, free speech, and others

A shut down of the Department of Education (not a bad thing) but along with it will go civil rights protections and special education protections (which are federal)

A return to the 20th and 19th century versions of school and society. All things public education should be left to the States – which is what the Constitution provides – but in the “red” states the “states rights” stance will be a jaunt back to the first half of the pre-Brown, pre-Sputnik, pre-Title IX, pre-P.L. 94-142 (IDEA), and pre – non-discrimination on sexual orientation schools.

Kansas manages to get evolution evicted from the curriculum every few elections. That will only be the tip of the iceberg.

The demise of unions for public employees.

Corporate-determined direction of education

Privatization for some; the heck with the rest

Some Children Left Behind

An Ayn Rand screw-the-poor (sorry) philosophy of leadership and business

College for the rich and a few more, but not all.

More charters

Vouchers

Merit pay based on invalid and unreliable methods of value-added testing and test-based teacher evaluations

Segregation

The end of tenure

A narrow, low cognitive curriculum

ESL bilingual prohibitions like Arizona and Massachusetts

More Wisconsins

Perhaps the most appropriate analogy is Butch telling Sundance, “The Fall’ll probably kill ya!”*

Does it really matter if Obama will perpetuate RTTT when a Romney win “will probably kill ya!”

Butch Cassidy: I’ll jump first.
Sundance Kid: Nope.
Butch Cassidy: Then you jump first.
Sundance Kid: No, I said!
Butch Cassidy: What’s the matter with you?!
Sundance: I can’t swim!
Butch Cassidy: [laughing] Why, you crazy — the fall’ll probably kill ya!

As part of our Campaign for Our Public Schools, this teacher wrote a fine letter to the President:

Dear President Obama,

While I was and remain your supporter I respectfully disagree with many of your ideas about education policy. I have been working in education for more than ten years and I can say confidently that high stakes testing does nothing for the low-income, high-need students population I have been working with diligently.

What does matter? Strong relationships with teachers and other adults, supports at the school setting that help them figure out who they are and what they want for their life and people who encourage them to think about college and understand the steps required. Critically needed to make any kind of education possibly is wrap-around support that think about young people holistically, the way I’m sure you think about your daughters. You would never take away art and music classes for them because test prep is more important and expensive. You would never get rid of their sports because of “budget cuts.” You would never allow them to suffer through the pain of watching classmates shot and family members killed without any counseling because there is only one social worker at a school of 2,000 students. You would never tell them learning a 2nd language is a bad thing, so why would ELL students be treated as outcasts and special ed students, when they are already fluent in a second language? You would never allow them to think college isn’t for them because they didn’t know how to pay for it or had been told for years they were not good students because their test scores weren’t high enough. Just a few of my complaints about our current system of education 🙂

If I can give you one piece of advice it’s this – think about what you want for your own children. Would you want them sitting in a class with a scripted curriculum every day designed only to improve their math and reading test scores? Would you want them completing worksheet after worksheet from a stressed out teacher who has been told she will be fired if all of her students do not pass the state test or at least improve dramatically on a test she knows is not testing the right material or the right way, but has to go along with it because she’s “only a teacher.” I know I would not want my daughter in these types of situations. I panic daily thinking about the future of education for my toddler because I know what education can be and I know I can’t afford to send her to a school where she would receive the kind of education I know she needs and I believe is best for her and all students.

I know we can do better. I do. I know it’s possible. I’ve read about other countries doing the right thing. I’ve seen some schools here (many private and almost all in affluent communities, unfortunately) doing the right thing. Know that does not mean I think public schools should be privatized – I don’t think many of the of Charter School Networks are examples of schools “doing the right thing” although they may have become experts at test prep and marketing.

Thank you,
Alison Upton Lopez

Carol Burris, who was recently named to the honor roll as a hero of public education, wrote a letter to President Obama. Carol understands how excessive testing is harming students and demoralizing teachers. She warns the President how this policy–at the heart of Race to the Top–will do increasing damage as it is institutionalized.

Dear Mr. President:

First, thank you for all you do.

I am writing because as the principal of South Side High School, an integrated high school in New York, I am deeply concerned about the inclusion of test scores to rate teachers that is a mandated part of Race to the Top and in the waivers. Because of this mandate, my state New York, has implemented an evaluation plan which is not respected by the majority of principals and teachers, and excessive testing against which parents are rebelling

Our high school’s philosophy has been “kids, it’s you and your teacher against the test.” If students fail an exam, we prepare them to try again. The goal is for students to take the most challenging courses they can, even if their scores are not the best. Our results have been great, with the school selected consistently as one of the top 100 high schools in the United States by Newsweek, and last year by US News and World Report.

But this student-centered, healthy approach to testing is changing now that we are forced to use student scores to evaluate teachers. In classrooms all over New York State, it is no longer “teacher and student against the test” but rather “teacher and test against the student.” How students do on the test will play a key role in deciding whether or not teachers and principals keep their jobs. Not only that, because parents are allowed by law to see the teacher’s score, it will shortly result in the public embarrassment of some teachers, based on measures of dubious value.

This approach is trumpeted as judging educators by their performance, which may resonate with some people who are not immersed in the daily labor of reaching a wide variety of students in a wide variety of ways. Although the New York model technically allows educators to earn up to 60 points for measures other than student achievement, the system is rigged so that it is nearly impossible to be rated effective or even “developing” if the test-score components are low. In short, test scores trump all.

The biggest losers of these new evaluation policies, in my school and beyond, will be students. A teacher will look at each student as potential “value added” or “value decreased” – that is as a potential increase or decrease on the score the teacher is ultimately assigned. With his or her job dependent on those students’ test scores, this teacher will now have a set of incentives and disincentives very different than in the past.

For teachers with young families and college debt to pay, the student who comes late to class, or who does not do his homework will become a threat to her job security. The troubled child who transfers in will be nervously welcomed. The student with disruptive behavior will be a threat to the scores of the rest of the class instead of a person to be understood and whose needs should be met. The score, not the well-educated child, will become the focus. The pressures will build to engage in exclusionary and non-educative practices designed to improve numbers at the cost of learning. Instead of pushing students to take physics and advanced algebra, schools will discourage weaker students so that the aggregate score for the teacher and principal does not go down.

This isn’t an argument against holding teachers accountable; it’s an argument against holding them accountable for the wrong things and in a way that will result in very negative unintended consequences. I wouldn’t want to teach in that environment, and I wouldn’t want my children or the students at my school to try to learn in that environment; but the incentives for teachers to teach to the test and teach to the best will be unavoidable.

And to what end, Mr. President? For over a decade we have engaged in increased testing with punitive consequences under No Child Left Behind. There is no evidence that the massive outlay in tax dollars and learning time has produced increased learning. SAT scores have not gone up. NAEP scores have remained flat. Remediation rates at community colleges have not gone down. Our students have not improved on international assessments. Rather than acknowledging that testing is not the lever for increased learning, the plan is now to increase the pressure. There will be consequences, but better learning outcomes will not be one of them.

There will also likely be endless lawsuits brought by principals and teachers questioning the fairness and legality of the use of test scores and these unproven evaluation systems for termination of employment. Yes, the New York State Board of Regents and others will certainly attempt to include all important factors that impact learning in their test-score-based “growth models.” But these models have serious weaknesses. The recent score that was issued was characterized as a “first attempt” at being fair by the research firm that generated them. Not a “good attempt”, not even our “best attempt”, but a first attempt. Nevertheless, the scores were disseminated by the New York State Education Department and teachers were labeled “ineffective”.

Models are intended to be simplified versions of reality, but they can be manipulated – and they will invariably leave out important unmeasured (and immeasurable) elements. Some factors beyond a teacher’s control depress students’ test scores (think here of behavioral issues, traumatic life experiences, drug involvement, or lack of home supervision). Other factors beyond a teacher’s control increase students’ test scores (think here of summer enrichment activities, private tutors, and simple parental help with schoolwork and other learning). These are nonrandom student characteristics, and the growth model’s assignment of students to teachers can be complex and problematic. Similarly, the practical decisions about these assignments are troubling. Should I continue to assign my best teachers the most challenging students, knowing that those students might pull down those teacher’s scores?
.
If teachers have a choice between working in a district with high wealth and college-educated parents or a struggling district with high numbers of students of poverty, and they know that their employment is dependent upon test scores, which should they choose? Which are most of them likely to choose? While growth models do minimize the effects of poverty on outcomes, those effects remain substantial. Accordingly, one of the many unintended consequences of the new evaluation system will be even less incentive for good teachers and principals to work with the students that need them the most.

I had hoped that your administration’s educational leader, Mr. Duncan, and you might rethink this policy. But it appears that you are going “full steam ahead”. That makes me feel sad. Last election, my husband and I gave you considerable support. This year, we are unsure who we will vote for or if we will vote for president at all.

I hope that you will rethink this misguided policy and recommend an evaluation system not based on test scores but on the encouragement of approaches to teaching that are associated with increased learning. We need policies that work to reduce racial isolation in schools and in classrooms and that encourage schools to include all students in excellent curriculum, regardless of test scores.

Great leaders have the courage to change course when they realize that their policies are misguided.

I thank you for reading. I cannot tell you how discouraged teachers and principals are across this nation. I am a 59 year old grandmother who will retire in 3 years. This policy will not negatively impact me personally. However, for the sake of our public schools and our public school children, especially our students of color and poverty, I ask that you rethink the Race to the Top requirements before horrible damage is done.

Sincerely,

Carol Burris, Ed. D.
cburris@rvcschools.org

This letter was written by an early childhood educator. It expresses succinctly what many readers of this blog believe to be true:

Dear President Obama,

Please wake up and see that the education policies your administration is promoting are decimating our public schools, harming our children, demoralizing our teachers, and threatening the future of our democracy. Worst of all, your policies are promoting inequities in our education system and diminishing the opportunity every child in the nation should have for an excellent education

Your mandate for more charter schools is fast creating a three-tiered education system in our country. Children of the wealthy and privileged such as your daughters attend elite private or public schools. Children of less affluent families who are relatively able students with better informed parents increasingly find their way to charter schools, many of which have access to private funding and greater resources. But the third tier is left for the majority of poor or working-class children who must attend underfunded, under resourced, mostly inner-city public schools.

I am an early childhood educator and I can say with certainty that your policies are impacting the early childhood field in many negative ways, but that the greatest harm is falling on our nation’s poorest children. They are getting the worst of test-based, restrictive, standardized, rote instruction, while children in more affluent communities continue to benefit from more play and activity-based curriculum. More often the teachers in lower income communities have less training and are therefore more dependent on the standardized tests and scripted curricula that are a result of your misguided policies.

Standardized tests of any type don’t have a place in early childhood. Children develop at individual rates, learn in unique ways, and come from a wide variety of cultural and language backgrounds. It’s not possible to mandate what any young child will understand at any particular time.

Early childhood teachers are leaving the field in great numbers. They can’t teach using their professional expertise and many detest having to follow prescribed curriculum that they don’t agree with. As one teacher said recently, “I see kids with eyes glazed who are simply overwhelmed by being constantly asked to perform tasks they are not yet ready to do. I finally had to leave my classroom and retire early.” (www.deyproject.org).

Please look closely at how your education policies are impacting children, especially our youngest and poorest children. Your focus on competition and market-driven reforms is resulting in greater inequities in our education system and an undermining of our public schools. A vibrant, flourishing public education system is the cornerstone of our democracy. Please be willing to re-examine and reverse the direction of your approach to education. Please don’t be the President who abandoned our nation’s children and our public education system.

Respectfully,

Nancy Carlsson-Paige

Professor Emerita
Lesley University
Cambridge, MA

Katie Osgood, who teaches children in a psychiatric hospital in Illinois, has some good suggestions for President Obama.

You should read her letter to President Obama.

This teacher wrote a great letter to President Obama. I hope you will write one also, and send it to my colleague anthony_cody@hotmail.com

October 6, 2012
Dear President Obama: I Feel As Though I’m Playing In The Band On The Titanic

My part in the presidential letter writing campaign this October.

The Titanic was a behemoth that was too large for its time. It could not change course to avoid obstacles due to its massive size, yet this juggernaut was capable of 24 knots (about 28 mph to us land-bound souls). Despite being the marvel of its day, it sank in less than three hours after hitting an iceberg. My favorite Titanic story is about how the band kept playing until the last possible moment. It was only their job, but they knew that it would calm the masses as they were fighting for room in the sparse lifeboats. Today, after 27 years in the classroom I feel like I am a member of the band, hopelessly playing along as if nothing is wrong. Going about my job while everything I dedicated my life to and believe in falls apart around me. It is ironic that the musicians on the Titanic traveled as second class passengers on board this ship as do the teachers in American public schools today.

The Titanic was seen as the pinnacle of decades if not centuries of marine engineering and people saw it as infallible. Though we have been working for decades on our education system and graduation rates and NEAP scores are up, education is now seen as being responsible for a national security crisis. This is the third crisis in my lifetime if you count “Sputnik” and “A Nation At Risk.” This time things feel different though. This crisis has hidden agendas and a dual purpose. Some would even say it is manufactured. I believe that originally school vouchers were about giving money back to wealthy individuals who put their children in private schools while paying taxes for public schools, but they have a more insidious purpose today. Today they are about putting public money in the pockets of private companies.

The people on the Titanic had blind faith in the unsinkable ship and it’s captain who was said to believe that icebergs could not hurt his modern ship. The passengers were blissfully unaware of the dangers that were inherent in the crossing but the captain knew of and disregarded the warnings from other ships. Americans seem unaware of the true agenda of “reform” so cleverly cloaked behind a big media campaign today. Online schools, charters, grading schools, and testing for teacher evaluation are hallmarks of the privatization agenda. Anti-union advocates point at Finland to quote test scores, but never mention that all of Finland’s teachers are unionized. The best performing states in the country are unionized, but facts seem to fall on deaf ears in this debate. I am amazed at how blissfully unaware the average American is about our education voyage as well. Most are only focused on their local school and surveys show that they are overwhelmingly happy with them but the “reform” movement has convinced them that “other” schools are not like theirs.

Something that few Americans understand is that we spend almost as much nationally on education K-12 as we spend on defense. It is one of the last great pools of public money that is yet to be given to the lowest bidder. Still we find ourselves traveling at 24 knots with no radar or depth gauge at night in the fog in uncharted waters. These are dangerous waters indeed to be steaming at full speed as was the norm in the day of the Titanic. One of the “reforms” that we are pushing through at full speed despite the lack of research supporting it is teacher evaluation. Though teacher evaluation needs revision, high stakes testing has little validity. Teacher’s scores are dictated by the students they have. Moving excelling students from a “high performing” teacher to the classroom of a “low performing” teacher magically makes the poor teacher’s value added score highly effective. Let’s improve education through sound research, not the kind produced by politically motivated think tanks. We now know that cost cutting, brittle steel, and cheap rivets doomed the Titanic. Budget cuts and privatization are stacking the deck against public education as well.

My wife and I are both teachers and we raised two children with the help of the public school system. Both had full tuition academic scholarship offers. One was even a valedictorian now leaving college as a chemical engineer. The other a talented writer and artist who finished a double major bachelors in just 3 and 1/2 years. They went to a great public school, but more importantly, they were brought up in a home with high expectations, no poverty, emotional support and parents that were highly involved in their education. If you want to improve education, find a way to level the playing field for children who do not have these advantages. Poverty is not an excuse, just a reality. I will keep playing as long as the band will let me, but I see a large object looming on the horizon. Please keep in mind how hard it is to change the direction of a ship this large. There isn’t much time.

Respectfully,

Doug Purdy

I will write about this every single day from now until October 17.

Please write your thoughts about what needs to change in federal education policy and send a letter to President Obama by that date.

You can write it now and follow instructions here.

Anthony Cody, experienced middle school science teacher and fabulous blogger, has offered to coordinate our campaign to write President Obama on October 17.

We call it the Campaign for Our Public Schools.

Our campaign is meant to include everyone who cares about public education: students, parents, teachers, principals, school board members, and concerned citizens. We want everyone to write the President and tell him what needs to change in his education policies.

Tell your friends about the Campaign. If you have a blog, write about it. Wherever you are, spread the news. Join us.

Here are the instructions:

You can send your letter to Anthony Cody or to this blog.

Or you can send it directly to the White House, with a copy to me or Anthony.

Anthony will gather all the emails sent to him and me and forward them to the White House.

1. Email your letters to anthony_cody@hotmail.com.

2. Or submit them as comments to this blog. You can respond to this post or to any other post on this blog about the October 17 Campaign for Our Public Schools.

All letters collected through these two channels will be compiled into a single document, which will be sent to the White House on Oct. 18.

In ADDITION to this,

3. You can mail copies of your letters through US mail to The White House, 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, 20500

4. You can send them by email from this page: http://www.whitehouse.gov/contact/submit-questions-and-comments

If you choose to write or email the White House, please send us a copy so we can keep track of how many letters were sent to the President.

One more thought: when you write to the President, also write to your Senators and Congressman or -woman and to your state legislator and Governor. Send the same letter to them all.

Let’s raise our voices NOW against privatization, against high-stakes testing, against teacher bashing, against profiteering.

Let’s advocate for policies that are good for students, that truly improve education, that respect the education profession, and that strengthen our democratic system of public education.

Let’s act. Start here. Start now.

Join our campaign. Speak out. Enough is enough.

Diane

Let’s give credit where credit is due.

Because of Race to the Top, most states are now evaluating teachers based in significant part on student test scores. The American Educational Research Association and the National Academy of Education say that the methodology for doing this is inaccurate and unstable. The ratings bounce around from year to year. Such ratings reflect which students were in the class, not teacher quality.

Because of Race to the Top, more states are permitting privatization of public schools.

Because of No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top, all schools are labeled by their test scores.

Because of Race to the Top, there is more teaching to the test, more fear and anxiety associated with testing, more narrowing of the curriculum, more cheating.

Because of Race to the Top, many schools in poor and minority neighborhoods will be closed.

Because of Race to the Top, many principals and teachers will be fired.

Is this what President Obama meant when he referred to the “results” of his Race to the Top? It explains why Romney applauded it and specifically hailed Arne Duncan.

This reader has a different view of Race to the Top:

In addition to the intimidation and demoralization of teachers, Race to the Top is having its intended results: the destabilization, fragmentation and privatization of the public schools.

In their public utterances on education, Obama and Duncan are frauds, but the education reform complex is being managed by very intelligent and far seeking -venal, but far-seeking – people. They know exactly what they are doing, and more often than not are getting their way.

Anthony Cody reports that teachers in Sacramento and Fresno rejected participation in Race to the Top.

They reject the program’s heavy emphasis on testing and basing their evaluation on test scores.

Cody wonders why President Obama insists that Race to the Top is not “top down.” Of course, it is top down. It reflects what the Obama administration wants, not what teachers believe is right for their students.

Why does President Obama says he opposes “teach to the test” when his signature program compels teachers to teach to the test?

Why does President Obama claim that Race to the Top is “working” and getting results?

It is not working, it is being imposed. And it has no results other than demoralized teachers.

A teacher from New Hampshire wrote his own letter, which he will send to President Obama on October 17. Please tell your friends and colleagues to join in our mass action.

You can write a long letter or a short one. It’s up to you.

The important thing is to let the President know that friends and supporters of public education are very unhappy with the policies of his administration. We are trying to help the President find the words to give us hope and real change.

Note: I usually don’t include names in letters as many of the comments are anonymous. In this case, the letter was signed in full so I am including the writer’s identification.

The teacher’s letter follows:

Dear President Obama,

I am teacher and a lifelong Democrat. I have voted in every presidential election since I was old enough to vote. I’m certainly not going to vote for Mr. Romney but for the first time in my adult life I am considering not voting at all. I can not in good conscience support the educational policies espoused by you and your Secretary of education, Arne Duncan. I know many teachers who are facing the same crisis of conscience. When you ran for president four years ago, I like many of my colleagues, were full of hope that that you might take measures to address the negative outcomes that were the result of the No Child Left Behind mandates. Instead, The Race to the Top, standardization, and privatization are destroying our public schools.

Although I agree that teachers should not be evaluated by test scores, this is not my principle concern. Inside the school building, there are three stakeholders. The students, the teachers and the administrators. A wise middle school principal of my acquaintance has pointed out that the students should always be considered first, the teachers second and the administrators third. When so much time is being spent on teaching the student how to do well on standardized tests, can it truly be argued that we are putting the student first? Bloom’s revised taxonomy suggests that there are six levels of learning. The bottom of the pyramid starts with remembering and then moves upwards to understanding, applying, analyzing, evaluating, and finally creating. At best, standardized testing might measure the bottom two skills. The united States has always been recognized for its innovation and creativity. Do we really want our teachers to ignore the top four learning skills in order to conform to a “one size fits all” concept that doesn’t recognize student abilities, interests and needs. The other major stakeholder in education is our students’ parents. We are seeing more and more of them who are expressing dismay at what we have to do to keep from becoming a school in need of improvement. Many are seeking alternatives such as Waldorf Schools where students are treated as creative human beings rather than as fodder for data. I come from a long tradition of teachers and even my own grandchildren are all going to a Waldorf School. My daughters’ families are willing to make personal financial sacrifices so that their sons and daughters will not be exposed to the standardization that was mandated by the Bush Administration and now yours.

I have been fortunate to witness the the outcomes of student based learning. Students who are engaged in an environment where they may pursue some of their own interests blossom into true learners. Standardized testing is alienating not only our teachers but also, more importantly, our students. NECAP test prep is about the worst possible way I can think of to engage potential learners at the start of a new school year. I actually had a student suggest to me that we should find a way to fill a bucket with what is on the tests. Then we should bore a hole in the students’ heads and pour the contents of the bucket into the hole. Is this how we want our students to see education?
The Common Core Standards may very well be useful guidelines but they do not teach the students to infer. Interpreted literally, they are fostering a mentality coming from the top down that each teacher must cover the same material at exactly the same pace and during the same time period. Most teachers don’t believe in this methodology but they are afraid to speak up in fear of losing their jobs. The top levels of the taxonomy are being lost to what appears to be an effort to make everyone be the same. 21st Century learners need to be creative problem solvers, not mindless automatons. Studies have shown that formative assessment is much more effective than summative assessment and yet we we spend an inordinate amount of time on cumulative assessments that address only the lower levels of learning. As one educator has said,”Rigor is not giving the students difficult stuff, it is the quality of the feedback.” The feedback from standardized tests is not high quality. Noam Chomsky from MIT has pointed out that it is not what is covered that is important, it is what the student discovers that matters.

Mr. President and Mr. Duncan please realize that your present policies are not only demoralizing teachers, these policies are also doing our students a great disservice. Those of us who choose to teach do it not for monetary reward. it is however not unreasonable to assume that we should be able to earn a respectable professional income. We don’t work to win monetary recognition for high test scores. Doing so does not set a good example for our students. Bribing our students to do well on the tests is also not a good model for future adult behavior.

I want to support you on November 6 but I don’t know if I can. Do we really want a society where only the students who go to private schools will be the creative thinkers of the future? Education is not a basketball game. The Race To The Top only creates a few winners and many losers. The losers are also the future of our country. Please listen to those of us who have devoted our lives to helping our students become lifelong learners and thoughtful productive citizens in a free society. Diversity, not standardization is what has brought out the best in the United States of America.

Rick Davidson
Computer Technology Integrator
Kingswood Regional Middle School
Wolfeboro, NH