Archives for category: Texas

Yesterday I had the privilege of participating in a wonderful rally for “Save Texas Schools” in Austin.

It was a beautiful, clear, crisp spring day, and a great day to be outdoors with thousands of students, parents, and educators.

The city closed the main street leading to the Capitol, and the marchers stepped cheerfully along the dozen or so blocks and massed in front of that majestic building.

There were thousands of marchers. I am no good at crowd estimates but I would guess this one was more than 10,000, there was a wonderful marching band from a Houston high school, bedecked in their beautiful blue uniforms. They were accompanied by a few dozen cheerleaders in spangled tights. There were drummers and singers.

And what a magnificent display of handwritten signs!

Two years ago, the legislature cut the public schools by $5.4 billion, while managing to find nearly $500 million for Pearson. Meanwhile, charters are expanding, and State Senator Dan Patrick wants vouchers. Turns out the state actually has a surplus of more than $8 billion, but there’s no talk of restoring the cuts. The current test regime is called STAAR, the latest in a long line of acronyms. Texas now requires students to pass 15 tests to graduate, the most of any state.

Thus the signs:

A student from Houston held up her handmade “Puppets of Pearson.”

Another: “Money for schools, not fools.”

“”STOP overtesting our students.”

“Our schools, our kids, our future.”

“Kids are more than test scores.”

“STAAR has gone too far.”

“”Your STAAR does not shine.”

“Education is a public good, not an opportunity for corporate gain. Stop privatization.”

“Are you looking out for just your child or all children.”

“Flunk Perry.”

“No STAAR. We need a Supernova.”

“Invest in Schools, not prisons.”

“Education is a right. Not just for the rich.”

“Can the legislature pass the tests?”

“We’ll remember in November.”

“No higher priority for surplus than our children.”

“Our schools are not broken. They are broke.”

“4-Star Education, Not STAAR-Driven Education.”

“I am a parent, and I vote.”

“Don’t mess with Texas children.”

Most impressive was the energy and enthusiasm of the students. They cheered their teachers and their schools. They created a sense of energy that enlivened the day.

Superintendent John Kuhn was electrifying as he spoke about the dedication and selflessness of educators.

An articulate Superintendent Mary Ann Whittaker described how her schools had taken down the banners exhorting the students to work harder for the tests and instead were emphasizing the arts and creativity.

A Baptist preacher, Dr. Frederick Haynes, brought roars from the crowd when he said, “Educate children now, so you won’t incarcerate them later.”

Former Commissioner Robert Scott explained why he could no longer support the high-stakes regime over which he was presiding.

There was much more, but the bottom line was that parents, students, educators, and others concerned about the schools joined to support them in a spirit of joy, commitment and energy.

It was a well-planned thrilling event.

Allen Weeks, the director of Save Our Schools, put together a tremendous show that displayed the energy that is ready to be tapped to change the conversation, not only in Texas, but across the nation.

You might want to reach out and get some tips from him about how to organize similar events in your state Capitol. The only way to beat Big Money is with big numbers of informed voters.

AWeeks@austinvoices.org

Jason Stanford is an Austin-based writer who has come to understand the sham of the Texas accountability system.

He knows that there is an old tradition in Texas called “brags.”

Back in 2000, a candidate for the presidency named George W. Bush bragged about the “Texas miracle.”

He said that testing every child every year from grades 3-8 would bring about amazing progress.

He said that in Texas, they did this and the dropout rate fell, the graduation rate rose, test scores went up, and the ahievement gap was closing.

Stanford shows that it was pure baloney.

There was no Texas miracle.

People in Texas know this.

School boards know it. Parents know it. Teachers know it.

But Governor Rick Perry doggedly sticks with the miracle tale.

Parents across America are outraged. So are school boards and educators.

It’s time to get organized and stop the farce.

Time’s up.

This just in, as I prepare to join a march and rally in Austin with “Save Texas Schools.” Be it noted that the superintendent in Austin, a high-performing district on NAEP, is an alum of the unaccredited Broad Superintendent Academy, which allegedly teaches management skills. The board majority shifted against her 5-4 after the last election but the previous board had extended her contract at its last meeting.

The parent writes:

Dear Diane, Thank you so much for sharing our story! ~~

There are many misconceptions about our school. Some created by self-serving “we can do better” groups. MOST created and broadcast by our own School District! I wish to address Five. ~~

First, “EMHS is always failing”. When EMHS was “born” in August 2008, it was already rated Academically Unacceptable (AU). That is NOT what they promised the neighborhood. It was supposed to be a fresh start. Our students and staff have lived and worked under this AU guillotine from day one. 😦 ~~

Second, “EMHS cannot fix itself.” EMHS is no longer AU. The hard-working students and staff turned the school around. Within two years, grades, test scores and graduation rates were WAY UP. And drop-out and discipline reports were way down. ~~ Their reward? Their beloved and successful Principal was replaced. And (10/20/2011) two months into the new school year the district Superintendent announced that IDEA Charter would take over their school in a year!!! ~~

Three, “The Community does not care.” Many emotionally exhausted, heart-broken students and staff left the school. Many more stayed and FOUGHT BACK. Eventually, thousands across Austin wrote, called, and protested FOR the school. As Diane said, it took an election and 14 months to cancel the IDEA plan. Now the Super is telling another story to scare us all. ~~

Four, “The TEA Commissioner will close EMHS”. But, why would he? EMHS is AA! And scores are way up. ~~ And, there is a lot going on right now in Texas education (testing, funding, etc.). He is busy. Why would he bother messing with our school??? Because the pissed off / embarrassed Super went charging over there to tell him that the new Board had messed up and EMHS was now out of compliance! ~~

Finally, Five: “Nothing at EMHS has worked./ We have tried everything.” Nearing 5 years of existence, EMHS has been subjected to 4 MAJOR restructurings by the District. IDEA is number 5. When I think of how wonderful our little campus family is and how well they are performing. I think about how glorious they might already have become. If not for the constant churning actions of their heartless (stupid?) District. ~~

Despite the District’s constant reminders to the world that EMHS is garbage. Our campus family is one of the most loving, compassionate, hard-working, and determined groups that I have ever had the honor of being a part of. ~~

Please pray for us. Thank you.

Signed: Toni Rayner, EMHS mom x2.

John Dewey wrote this great sentiment over a century ago:

“What the best and wisest parent wants for his child, that must we want for all the children of the community. Anything less is unlovely, and left unchecked, destroys our democracy.”

I do not begrudge any parent their decision to send their child to a private or religious school, so long as they pay for it themselves. What I object to is when parents choose a private school for its small classes, its experienced faculty, its wonderful curriculum, its great arts programs, and its freedom from standardized testing…..but advocate for something far different for other people’s children.

Instead of fighting to get comparable programs for public schools, they insist that other people’s children should have larger classes, a school day devoted to reading and math, no arts programs, and nonstop testing.

Sandy Kress, the architect of NCLB, is now a lobbyist for Pearson, which won a contract worth nearly $500 million from the state of Texas as the legislature cut the schools’ budget by $5.4 billion.

This comment came from a reader in Texas:

Ms. Ravitch – I found the following as I was researching private schools for my son last night. The first part is a part of the homepage for a primary school affiliated with the middle school that Sandy Kress’ children have attended. The second part includes testimonials from Sandy Kress. I removed his childrens’ names.

Why Paragon for grades 2-5?
• Central Austin Location
• Small class sizes
• Experienced and caring teachers
• Academic challenge
• Daily PE, plus Art, Music, Electives
• Selective admission
• Fully accredited
• No STARR test = more time to learn!
To schedule a visit – contact Headmaster ____________________________________________________

Testimonials for Paragon Prep

Paragon creatively concocts the perfect recipe for bright adolescents: begin with a classically driven curriculum seasoned with open-minded innovation, high moral expectations with a good dose of humor and a hilarious pinch of irreverence. Then add competitive spirit on the field and in the classroom, blended with genuine care so that each student and athlete feels a valued part of the school. But their secret and unique ingredient: the total focus is on the middle schoolers’ needs with the aim to provide the best preparation possible for high school. We as ourselves how is it possible that all this takes place in such a modest building with no aggressive fundraising or fancy bells and whistles. How do they turn out kids with a disciplined work ethic and a passion for learning? Now we know. Our son, _____, comes home everyday with stories of friendship, teamwork, and a mind brimming full of new thoughts. Paragon Prep is one of the smartest decisions we have ever made.
Camille and Sandy Kress
Parents of _____ Kress (Class of _____)
and _____ Kress (Class of _______)
________________________________________

Click here to learn details about rally on February 23 in Austin.

Last year, the rally drew 13,000 people.

I am looking forward to joining with my fellow Texans on behalf of the schools that educated me from kindergarten through twelfth grades.

I will be there.

So will John Kuhn and many more.

Join with thousands of Texas parents and educators to demand a restoration of the budget cuts.

Save Texas public schools: http://savetxschools.org/

I will be in Austin this Saturday to support the children and educators of Texas. Please join me!

Final Countdown

Save Texas Schools March & Rally This Saturday!

Dear Save Texas Schools Supporter,

WE NEED YOU to join thousands from across Texas calling for an end to under-funding and over-testing our children! This is a crucial week at the legislature, with education funding and testing bills being considered. An overwhelming response on Saturday can provide the momentum to turn the tide.

Confirmed speakers include Diane Ravitch, Supt. John Kuhn, Supt. Mary Ann Whitaker, former TEA Commissioner Robert Scott, Dineen Majcher from TAMSA and other Texas business, student, teacher and parent leaders.

According to Politifact, Texas put 25% LESS funding into schools in 2012 than in 2002, while requiring more and more from schools.

Now is the time to stand up to the state and say, “Put the funding back into schools.” Texas kids can’t be left standing outside a courtroom door for the support they need today!

Rally Details

11 am march on Congress Ave., noon to 1:30 pm rally at the Capitol.

Expected Attendance: HUGE! Let’s top 2011’s record of 13,000.

Save Texas Schools is launching a petition drive this week to call for a return of the $5.4 billion needlessly cut from public education in 2011. Sign today and make sure that our legislators hear loud and clear that Texas Kids Can’t Wait!

Just Added
Friday Night Dinner with Diane Ravitch

STS is sponsoring a pre-rally dinner with nationally-known education reformer Diane Ravitch on Friday, Feb. 22 at First United Methodist Church (west side of state capitol) from 6-8 pm. Light dinner included ($10 suggested donation). Click here to register. Open to the public.

Save Texas Schools | 5604 Manor Rd. | Austin | TX | 78723

Robert Scott, who recently stepped down as State Commissioner of Education in Texas, told Georgia legislators that he was pressured to adopt the Common Core standards before they were written.

He said, in the video that appears in the linked article:

My experience with the Common Core actually started when I was asked to sign on to them before they were written. … I was told I needed to sign a letter agreeing to the Common Core, and I asked if I might read them first, which is, I think, appropriate.  I was told they hadn’t been written, but they still wanted my signature on the letter. And I said, ‘That’s absurd; first of all, I don’t have the legal authority to do that because our [Texas] law requires our elected state board of education to adopt curriculum standards with the direct input of Texas teachers, parents  and business. So adopting something that was written behind closed doors in another state would not meet my state law.’ … I said, ‘Let me take a waitandsee approach.‘ If something remarkable was in there that I found that we did not have in ours that I would work with our board … and try to incorporate into our state curriculum …

 

“Then I was told, ‘Oh no no, a state that adopts Common Core must adopt in its totality the Common Core and can only add 15 percent.’ It was then that I realized that this initiative which had  been constantly portrayed as state-led and voluntary was really about control. It was about control. Then it got co-opted by the Department of Education later. And it was about control totality from some education reform groups who candidly admit their real goal here is to create a national marketplace for education products and services.”

Supporters of the Common Core dispute his claim.

Scott made national headlines when he was State Commissioner because he spoke candidly against the excessive testing of students in Texas. He said testing had become “the heart of the vampire” and had perverted the purpose of education. He didn’t last long in his job after being so brutally frank. Texas has long been obsessed with testing and accountability, and Scott spoke from the heart. He also helped to ignite the national anti-testing movement.

 

 

 

Tom Pauken has written a fascinating and informative article about how Texas became the leader of the testing movement and how testing became an instrument to destroy local control.

Pauken is a prominent Republican. He just concluded a term on the Texas Workforce Commission.

He became an outspoken opponent of the testing regime, as he saw that it was bad for students and bad for the workforce.

The only beneficiary of the testing obsession seems to be the testing company Pearson, which won a contract from the Texas legislature for nearly $500 million at the same time that the legislators were cutting $5.4 billion from the schools.

It is heartening that some wise heads in the Texas Republican party are beginning to push back against high-stakes testing because Republicans control the state.

Pauken is still in a minority but he has an important voice. He is a former chairman of the state party.

His fellow Republicans should listen to him and stop the high-stakes testing that has produced so few gains in the past twenty years and done so much to undermine education quality.

Doing the same thing over and over and expecting to get different results makes no sense.

 

 

Texas Republicans are hearing from their constituents–in the grocery store, at the barber, wherever they go.

People think that testing in Texas is out of control.

The last state commissioner Robert Scott said so. He called the testing obsession a “vampire,” sucking the life out of education.

More than 80% of local school boards agree.

Elected officials have to listen.

They cut $5.4 billion from the school budget but managed to find $500 million to pay Pearson.

Superintendents are sick of it. School boards are sick of it. Parents are fed up. Students hate it.

Put a stake through the heart of the vampire.