Last Update: Oct. 14, 11pm
I haven't seen Waiting for Superman yet because I don't want to give them my 9 bucks (senior citizen, ya know).
If you read my post yesterday (
O Canada, So Inglorious and Untrue), it seems the movie is not doing as well as expected. I expect Broad/Gates/Murdoch to buy air time on every TV station in the world to show the movie in an endless loop for weeks at a time. Or have 10 billion dvds made and give them away in cereal boxes. Or have one mailed to every person in the world - and even to some of those new planets they are discovering. You wouldn't want any sign of life to miss the message that tenure has to end for anyone to learn anything in school.
If you find grammar or speling mistakes, that must be my problem - I was taught by tenured teachers.
When I get to see WfS for free, Michelle Rhee going down in flames will make the movie so delicious. As will the NY Times
piece yesterday on Geoffrey Canada.
Inundated with Rhee speculation all over the place, we decided to do a small compilation from scattered sources.
Rethinking Schools
Fall 2010
By Leigh Dingerson
Washington, D.C., is leading the transformation of urban public education across the country—at least according to Time magazine, which featured D.C. Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee on its cover, wearing black and holding a broom. Or perhaps you read it in Newsweek or heard it from Oprah, who named Rhee to her “power list” of “remarkable visionaries.”
GFBrandenburg's Blog
Rhee’s presence was extremely divisive here in DC, largely along class and racial lines. Many wealthy whites thought she was wonderful, because they thought she was ‘reforming’ a corrupt, incompetent, black-run and black-staffed school system, and because they saw her replacing black veteran teachers, staff members, and administrators with brand-new, young white and Asian replacements. (I am not exaggerating.)
More at
Rhee’s Legacy and the Future of Education in DCPS
Leonie Haimson on Rhee's performance compared to predecessors:
For those of you who believe that Michelle Rhee’s resignation today will hurt the achievement gains experienced by the DC school system; take a look at these charts with DC NAEP scores from 2003-2009.
Read Leonie's entire post at:
Candi is aways Dandy when it comes to Rhee
Featuring Candi Peterson, blogger in residence and candidate for WTU General Vice President
The Washington Post reports that Chancellor Michelle Rhee will announce on Wednesday that she is resigning at the end of October. Deputy Chancellor Kaya Henderson will serve as the interim Chancellor. What do you think led to Rhee's abrupt resignation?
Valerie Strauss (MUST READ EVERY DAY) at The Answer Sheet
Rhee’s big legacy: Being a whirlwind
She came in like a whirlwind, kicking up dust wherever she went, and now, Michelle Rhee, all-powerful chancellor of D.C. public schools
, is leaving after three years, securing her place in the history of D.C. public education as, well, mostly a whirlwind.
Larry Cuban, the Stanford University educator and former superintendent, had it right when
he predicted on this blog last month that Rhee would wind up being no more than a footnote in a doctoral dissertation, just like Hugh Scott, the first African American superintendent in Washington D.C., who served in the early 1970s.
Why?
Continue reading this post »
Posted at 1:41 PM ET, 10/14/2010 Michelle Rhee's greatest hits
D.C. Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee gave us many reasons to remember her when she is gone.
There's the schools she closed. The teachers she fired. The contract she signed with the Washington Teachers Union. Her frequent use of the word “crap.”
Here’s some quintessential statements that Rhee made as chancellor. Thanks for many of these to my colleague,
Bill Turque, who often stood alone in his strong coverage of Rhee’s tenure.
I think my favorite is the one about taping students' mouths shut.
Let me know what I’ve missed.
Continue reading this post »
Gary Imhoff in themail:
October 13, 2010
Dear Payers:
Michelle Rhee resigned today. See her resignation letter at
http://www.dcpswatch.com/dcps/101013.htm. This, of course, leaves us with the top question on our minds: how much are the taxpayers on the hook for; how much do we have to pay her to go away? Bill Turque, the
Post education reporter, says he’s trying to find out. Is there anything we can learn from her contract,
http://www.dcpswatch.com/dcps/070703.htm? Not much.
Rhee was hired on July 3, 2007, at an annual salary of $275,000 a year. She was guaranteed an annual cost-of-living raise, so her salary is now considerably higher than that. Paragraph 6 of her contract says that, “should you choose to terminate your appointment for a good cause, you shall receive a severance payment of up to 12 weeks of your base salary, plus any accrued leave, as well as an additional 12 weeks of administrative pay.” That’s about a half-year’s salary, give or take. So has she terminated her appointment “for a good cause”? Does her not wanting to work with Gray count as a good cause? If Peter Nickles really wanted to protect the taxpayers from being fleeced — which is the excuse he uses for fighting so hard to deny equitable settlements to DC citizens who have been mistreated by the city — he would argue that her contract doesn’t call for her to be paid any severance allowance, and he would fight hard against paying her an extra dime. But Rhee is part of the Fenty team; Fenty will determine what she gets paid in severance; and Nickles will rubber-stamp whatever Fenty wants, even above the contractual ceiling.
Gary Imhoff
themail@dcwatch.com
More from Gary, though I don't necessarily agree about Baltimore since Alonso is from the Kloth of Klein -and Randi is working with him - which we know means teachers will get screwed - and I'm betting kids will too. But on the other hand, Baltimore doesn't have mayoral control - yet.
NEW FEATURE- I'm inserting a jump break for the first time to cut down on the length of this post - so click to read on.