Wednesday, October 26, 2011

The New Orleans Charter Scam Game

...this really is about removing education from the public to the private sector and especially removing control of public education from urban black governance.  Once the schools are privatized, they never come back to the public.  
Here is a powerful piece on how New Orleans is the model for total privatization of the public school system. Most revealing is how certain selected charters were given double the resources to "prove" how "successful" the model was. All you need to know is this: Mayor Bloomberg has made sizable donations to Louisiana edu-politics causes. (Times-Picayune)

Lance Hill from New Orleans
Why foundation and corporations are focusing on New Orleans and why the true education reform movement and the national media needs to view New Orleans as the key battle ground for school privatization and deprofessionalization of teachers.  If the corporate reformers convince the public that the New Orleans model works (through fabricated and misleading data), then the rest of the nation will follow suit.
 
The “beachhead” strategy of the corporate education forces in New Orleans has always involved subsidizing select privatized charter schools to provide additional instructional resources and incentives which creates a set of model “successful schools” that can’t possibly be replicated on existing revenues in other districts.  From the outside, it appears that the charters and TFA have “done more with less” when in fact if they did more at all, it was with massive subsidies from the state, corporations, and foundations­all concealed from the public.  So the state, which never spent anything on education, gave Vallas double the expenditure per student. Broad foundation gave KIPP $150,000 to pay the kids (secretly) up to $50 a week to behave.  NOLA college prep spends twice per pupil as the state funding formula through corporate and foundation subsides.  And this does not take into consideration the in-kind subsidies­using AmeriCorps volunteers who function as teachers (calling them tutors); Konica-Minolta handing out $60,000 scholarships to KIPP 8th graders to attend private schools;  Bill Gates making a $3 million grant to plan charters and train charter CEOs. 

The outcome is a handful of model schools that the corporate reform advocates market as the norm.  That is why it is crucial to the corporate education reformers that New Orleans privatization appear to succeed at all costs.  It’s like a Ponzi scheme: great profits are returned at first but in the end, they could not sustain the flow.  So why would Gates and Broad and Duncan push a contrived, flawed, and subsidized model as the national model?  Because this really is about removing education from the public to the private sector and especially removing control of public education from urban black governance.  Once the schools are privatized, they never come back to the public.  That is part of the lesson of New Orleans ­the worse, chronically failing charters are just given to another charter operator.  Although Act 35 promised to return the schools once they were  brought up to standard, that promise was reneged.  What happens once all the veteran teachers quit because of new evaluation standards and pension cuts?  In the long run we end up with an untrained and inadequate teacher corp.  This is why we say the original charter movement which wanted autonomy to create replicable innovations was hijacked by the free-marketers who simply wanted control of education and the profits that will come with that. 

This shell bait-and-switch game can’t work without media complicity.  The first year that post-Katrina LEAP scores were published by the Times-Picayune, they only published the top charter school scores. They did not publish the scores of the “dumping schools”  within these charter networks where, in one case, 93% of the students failed the 4th grade LEAP.  So these temporary subsidies work if the media does not reveal them.  

New Orleans is at the center of the national debate on education because here we traded democratic control of education for the putative benefits of increased efficiency and lower costs ­the promise that privatization always makes.  The danger is that rest of the nation will forsake its local control of schools in trade for that same illusion.  In the end, the charter and on-line schools will make billions and the public will be left with schools that perform at the same level or worse but not accountable to the public.  

New Orleans is not an ”experiment”: it is a carefully planned corporate takeover of public education that will ignore evidence that they system they implement is a failure.  The free market has no problem selling products that don’t work as long as they turn a profit. 

Lance Hill, Ph.D.
Southern Institute for Education and Research

Tweed Panic Sets In: High Security as Noah Gotbaum Reports From Walcott Closed Meeting


Who is at this meeting?
Many CEC members, PA heads and Parent Coordinators will be. Not surprisingly, Walcott will be sharing his priorities, rather than working to establish shared priorities. He and the 1% at DOE continue to be blind to the irony that Parents as Partners week entails yet another top down presentation conceived, drafted and presented entirely without parent input. And they wonder why their parent engagement policies aren’t taking hold or why 7 out of 10 of us polled believe that Bloomberg’s education policies are failing our kids. Hello? Is anybody listening?-- Noah
6:20
Am at Chancellors meeting.  Security is impossible.  Only letting people in with tickets. Won't even allow reentry.  Must be 100 Tweedies here.  They are petrified of losing control. Booth promoting ARIS and handing out papers dog and pony show.  Inside 150 parents in an enormous auditorium. Outside about 50 parents protesting from various schools on the closure list chanting "oh where oh where can the Chancellor be?" and "save our schools" No wifi available according to Ravetz et al  so won't be able to live tweet.  Heading back in now and will report back in a bit. 

Noah

Parent Comments: OMG... We really shook them up last night!How sweet it is!

8:20
Enormous dog and pony show to focus on their definition of parent engagement in service of "college and career readiness". Guess they are hurting from high school progress reports and concerned about OWS influence on parents.

Speech by Walcott totally formal - behind lectern. He acted like Kennedy in Berlin. Presented 5 point plan to involve parents in college readiness:

1) parent academy in 2012! (what happened in 2009).

2) strengthen role of parent coordinators! (while laying them off)

3) improve communication with parents

4) focus on improving parent teacher conferences (including providing a bookmark with tips!)

5) raise bar on parent involvement including having it part of school and principal rating.

Will pilot in 15 schools. Expand later citywide. Supposedly developed with help from PC's, PA members and Tweed. Anyone know anyone who was involved?

Q and A by cards only.

Q: How can they cut PC's in high schools while touting them? A: Difficult decision to stop pc's in HS!

Q: Budget cuts? Doe doing everything it can to preserve school budgets.

Have it all on tape.

More later.
LOOK FOR ANY FURTHER UPDATES IN THIS SPOT


Check out Norms Notes for a variety of articles of interest: http://normsnotes2.blogspot.com/. And make sure to check out the side panel on the right for important bits.

Oakland Police Riot Against OCCUPY Oakland As Protesters Shout: WE ARE STILL HERE



 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QngE6kKk8Lg

Frank Rich pretty much predicted this in his NY Mag article on OWS with a story from the past.

Frank Rich on Occupy Wall Street and Class Warfare -- New York Magazine_

http://nymag.com/news/frank-rich/class-war-2011-10/

The Bonus Army veterans stage a mass vigil on the lawn of the U.S. Capitol in 1932. 
During the death throes of Herbert Hoover’s presidency in June 1932, desperate bands of men traveled to Washington and set up camp within view of the Capitol. The first contingent journeyed all the way from Portland, Oregon, but others soon converged from all over—alone, in groups, with families—until their main Hooverville on the Anacostia River’s fetid mudflats swelled to a population as high as 20,000. The men, World War I veterans who could not find jobs, became known as the Bonus Army—for the modest government bonus they were owed for their service. Under a law passed in 1924, they had been awarded roughly $1,000 each, to be collected in 1945 or at death, whichever came first. But they didn’t want to wait any longer for their pre–New Deal entitlement—especially given that Congress had bailed out big business with the creation of a Reconstruction Finance Corporation earlier in its session. Father Charles Coughlin, the populist “Radio Priest” who became a phenomenon for railing against “greedy bankers and financiers,” framed Washington’s double standard this way: “If the government can pay $2 billion to the bankers and the railroads, why cannot it pay the $2 billion to the soldiers?”

The echoes of our own Great Recession do not end there. Both parties were alarmed by this motley assemblage and its political rallies; the Secret Service infiltrated its ranks to root out radicals. But a good Communist was hard to find. The men were mostly middle-class, patriotic Americans. They kept their improvised hovels clean and maintained small gardens. Even so, good behavior by the Bonus Army did not prevent the U.S. Army’s hotheaded chief of staff, General Douglas MacArthur, from summoning an overwhelming force to evict it from Pennsylvania Avenue late that July. After assaulting the veterans and thousands of onlookers with tear gas, ­MacArthur’s troops crossed the bridge and burned down the encampment. The general had acted against Hoover’s wishes, but the president expressed satisfaction afterward that the government had dispatched “a mob”—albeit at the cost of killing two of the demonstrators. The public had another take. When graphic newsreels of the riotous mêlée fanned out to the nation’s movie theaters, audiences booed MacArthur and his troops, not the men down on their luck.



Join Me at Hofstra Today: Is "Reform" Killing or Reviving Public Education?

I'm on a panel at Hofstra from 4:30-6 this afternoon with NYC Charter School Center's Michael Regnier.  I don't usually do this sort of thing where I actually have to prepare a 15 minute presentation but I'm working on it so I don't just blather. Yelena Siwinski, CL of PS 193, is going with me for moral support. If you're in the neighborhood, come on down and ask Michael Regnier a question about charter schools.
4:30-5:55 p.m.
Is "Reform" Killing or Reviving Public Education?

Panelists:

Norm Scott, GEM (Grassroots Education Movement)

Michael Regnier, NYC Charter School Center

Moderator: Dr. Catherine DiMartino, Department of Teaching, Literacy and Leadership, Hofstra University
Mack Student Center


GEM film attracts 70
Just wanted to let you know that we had about 70 people turn out for the screening of your film last night - a UMass professor even brought her graduate class (Urban Education). We had a great discussion afterward and people were really inspired by the film!

And the UFT is still boycotting the film.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

PEP Meeting OCCUPIED! A NEW DAY DAWNS!

TONIGHT WE DOCKED THE REAL REFORMERS TO THE OWS AND TO THE 99% AND TIED THE ED DEFORMERS TO THE 1%.

I'll keep updating this post as new reports come in - check the UPDATED date and time to track them.

UPDATED: Thurs. Oct. 27 8:10 AM- REPORTS KEEP COMING IN. I CAN'T GET THIS STUFF UP FAST ENOUGH. LIVE STREAM INTERVIEWS POST MEETING WERE WONDERFUL - LOTS OF NEW PEOPLE INVOLVED.

http://nycpublicschoolparents.blogspot.com/2011/10/last-night-at-pep-we-occupied-doe.html

Epoch Times: http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/united-states/teachers-and-parents-occupy-education-meeting-63296.html

Daily News: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2011/10/26/2011-10-26_school_boss_disrupted.html

Fox News: http://www.myfoxny.com/dpp/news/protesters-shout-down-schools-chancellor-walcott-20111025

A NYPost editorial where we're "thugs"... ha. might be worth a few comments: http://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/editorials/the_thugs_win_again_sIavzdrhUBM3HxPHHY7IxH?CMP=OTC-rss&FEEDNAME=

Gotham Schools: Walcott opening remarks while People's Mic goes on: http://vimeo.com/31119914

HuffPo: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/25/occupy-wall-street-department-of-education_n_1031812.html

Raging Horse Blog: Occupy the Department of Education: Walcott Takes it On the Hop

Anna Philips, NYT:  http://www.nytimes.com/schoolbook/2011/10/25/walcott-event-disrupted-by-protesters/
Great photo by Anna Philips


Report from NY Eye: NEWS: On "Occupy the PEP"

NYCORE VIDEO: http://www.nycore.org/2011/10/10-25-11-occupy-the-pep-video/

NY1 Video from Lindsay Christ: http://www.ny1.com/content/news_beats/education/149635/doe-meeting-disrupted-by--occupy--protesters

A teacher reports:
Hi everyone,

Tonight was the best (non pep) pep ever. The best meeting ever. It was amazing! I have no words. We shut it down, everyone got to talk, voices were heard, the people's mic worked like a charm, basically we rocked it.

The doe is definitely going to spin it but there were literally few people there who weren't there for the occupy the doe action. And we really made something incredible happen. The press was there in mass and everyone who spoke on the mic was truly amazing. I was ao deeply happy. There are no words.

I want to give a more thorough report-back but I don't know what to say! I guess just ask questions and I will answer them... I am having a hard time figuring out how to share the energy of the room. Beautiful.   L
Let's see how the press covers this. Note the important point L makes - that there were only very few people there to actually hear Walcott and Coleman talk. (See Leonie report on who Coleman is).

I couldn't make tonight's possibly historic events but was trying to follow the Tweets. I heard Keith Olbermann mentioned what occurred. Pics below. And for those teachers who are wary of putting their foot in the activist water due to fear of Tweed, there are many teachers in this protest who show no fear. There were 200 people this time. Let's double or triple this at the next

PEP Regular Calendar Panel Meeting11/17/2011 - 6:00 P.M.
The Frank Sinatra School of the Arts
35-12 35th Avenue
Queens, NY 11106

Up to now you really couldn't do this without the UFT which while walking out and doing some disruption in the past never tried to stop a meeting cold in its tracks. This protest had no UFT presence - they were marching over the bridge with political slug like Vito Lopez to support OWS. Irony of irony when corrupt politicians like Lopez are part of the problem.

Here is a video from Gotham:

Untitled from Elizabeth Green on Vimeo.

Here is an email about tonight from Leonie:
It was a wonderful evening, something to celebrate and relive. Democracy
lives! For those who missed it, we took over the PEP tonight at Seward Park HS and the entire meeting is being re-broadcast now at http://www.livestream.com/occupynyc
Here is the Gotham Schools report:
mic check

Protest derails DOE meeting on curriculum after just minutes

The possibility of a public comment session evaporated just moments into tonight’s Panel for Educational Policy meeting, after nearly 200 protesters drowned out Department of Education officials.
The panel had convened for a special meeting about the city’s new curriculum standards. But as Schools Chancellor Dennis Walcott and the standards’ architect, David Coleman, took the stage at Seward Park High School, protesters aligned with the Occupy movement launched a chorus of complaints via “the people’s mic.”
“Mic check!” each protester would call out, commanding the attention of his or her compatriots. Then he or she would call out a statement, pausing after every few words so that others could repeat them, amplifying the statement without the help of a microphone.
“The DOE’s priorities! Are all wrong!” one protester shouted. “We would like! There to be a community conversation! a real community conversation! about the people’s priorities!”
“We want our teachers to be paid more,” yelled a 7-year-old, Anais Richard, who attends P.S. 11 in Brooklyn. “If these things are not done, then we won’t be able to be succeeded.” The people’s mic repeated her statement, complete with the misspoken final word.
Walcott delivered his opening remarks over the shouting. At one point, he said, “We appreciate the activism, and we look forward to having you participate in our discussion.”
But when Walcott turned the microphone over to Coleman, the tone shifted. (more…)

I'm putting up a series of tweets from Bryan Jones and NY1's Lindsay Christ which will give you a flavor- read in reverse order

»
Brian Jones
laid-off school aides were there, chanting "bring the workers back!"
»
Brian Jones
have to leave, sadly. best moments included Walcott walking in and out, not sure what to do while the crowd shouted "SHAME!"
»
GothamSchools
by brainyandbrawny
200 protesters, including teachers, parents, students, chant in auditorium while Walcott, David Coleman, PEP attend Common Core sessions
»
Brian Jones
What a moment. This movement, this feeling, is infectious. Very difficult to put this cat back in the bag.
»
Brian Jones
Amazing, just amazing. The whole room is repeating our speakers, Walcott is drowned out & the police have no idea what to do.
»
Brian Jones
People's mic has TAKEN OVER THE PEP!!


Lindsey Christ
"Occupy the DOE! Occupy the DOE!" They are now marching out of the building.
»
Lindsey Christ
Protester: "This is our PEP meeting. And we hope the next PEP meeting will be ours as well." Chancellor Walcott wouldn't comment on that.
»
Lindsey Christ
Meeting tonight was moved to small breakout rooms upstairs. The protesters remain in auditorium, holding their own meeting.
»
Lindsey Christ
Speaker David Coleman was much more hesitant to speak over crowd. He tried then turned to Chancellor. Walcott called general meeting off.
»
Lindsey Christ
As soon as Chancellor began speaking, the crowd began protesting through the "People's Mic". Walcott keeps speaking, through a real mic.
»
Lindsey Christ
These aren't school safety officers outside tonight's education meeting. Cops with guns and handcuffs. Several officers. No OWS presence yet


Earlier story from Gotham Schools:
NEWS: Discussion of Common Core to compete with human mic tonight




















==========
Check out Norms Notes for a variety of articles of interest: http://normsnotes2.blogspot.com/. And make sure to check out the side panel on the right for important bits.

Chancellor Meeting has been #occupied

The chancellor gave up. We are holding an open MIC CHECK right now.

Watch live:

http://www.livestream.com/occupynyc

Justin Wedes
Educator & Activist
Cheers,
Norm Scott

Education Notes
ednotesonline.blogspot.com

Grassroots Education Movement
gemnyc.org

Education columnist, The Wave
www.rockawave.com

nycfirst robotics
normsrobotics.blogspot.com

Sent from my BlackBerry

Thursday: See the Film Ed Deformers (and the UFT) Don't Want You to See

Ask your union reps why the UFT leadership is boycotting the most effective response to ed deform yet, a film made by NYC parents and teachers (and UFT members).

Thursday, Oct. 27, 7PM at NYU with a post screening panel with some of the film makers - Julie Cavanagh, Lisa Donlan, Mollie Bruhn and Darren Marelli.
===============

Check out Norms Notes for a variety of articles of interest: http://normsnotes2.blogspot.com/. And make sure to check out the side panel on the right for important bits.

Monday, October 24, 2011

Using the People's Mic to OCCUPY the DOE

UPDATED WITH MEDiA ADVISORY

How many times have we seen the mics turned off at PEP meetings at the 2 minute mark? Now the audience has a new weapon developed at Occupy Wall St. to have their voices heard. But you need enough people to join in to make it effective. Tuesday is a first test of this tactic but not the last. No matter what happens the message to WalBloom is: WE WILL BE BACK!

Now strictly speaking, this is not a PEP meeting but a Dennis Walcott dog and pony show pushing the Common Standards - another scam that the UFT is salivating over. I won't go into the details here but the main speaker on Tuesday is featured by Leonie on the NYC Parent blog - read it even if you are not going tomorrow:

The Kick-off of "Parents as Partners Week": Who is David Coleman and why should we care?

For Planning Purposes Only:                                                                                                                                         Contact:    Kelley Wolcott  201-344-0382
October 24, 2011                                                                   


MEDIA ADVISORY


After introducing catastrophic budget cuts to education that have left New York City schools overcrowded, under-staffed and sorely lacking in resources – despite an  estimated budget surplus in 2011 of more than $3 billion – Mayor Michael Bloomberg continues his attack on teachers, students and schools.

Educators, parents and other stakeholders fear that the worst cuts – as well as more school closings and inequitable charter school co-locations – lie ahead. The Panel for Educational Policy, which was replaced the elected Board of Education under Bloomberg’s tenure, could combat these cuts, but is dominated by mayoral appointees.


What:              Teachers, students, parents and education advocates from Occupy Wall Street will occupy a meeting of the city’s Panel for Educational Policy, dominated by mayoral appointees, and hold their own democratic meeting on the state of public education in New York City

When:             5:30PM, Tuesday October 25, 2011
                       
Where:           Seward Park High School
                        350 Grand Street
                      New York, NY

Who:               Public school teachers, students, parents, education advocates and activists from Occupy Wall Street.


Here is an announcement from the new Occupy Public Education Committee along with a video demonstrating the People's Mic.


WAYS TO PARTICIPATE IN THE OCCUPY THE DOE ACTION ON 
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25th
Seward Park High School
350 Grand Street
Manhattan
(near Williamsburg Bridge)
  
Background
On Tuesday, October 25th, the Panel for Educational Policy (PEP) is hosting a meeting where Chancellor Walcott (the 1%) is planning a "conversation on raising standards in the classroom.”  The PEP is an un-elected 13-member body (the majority of whom are appointed by Bloomberg) that makes decisions for the Department of Education. The PEP meetings are open to the public. ALL are welcome.
We, the 99% invite you, educators, parents and students to contribute to the conversation on the table:
How do YOU want public education to change?
What are YOUR “common core standards?”
Contact occupypubliceducation@gmail.com if you have questions, and to let us know that you plan to speak.
To get YOUR voice heard, please review the menu of options and also become familiar with how the people’s PEP will run on Tuesday:
Option A:  Come to the meeting with a prepared statement about why you are participating in this action.
EXAMPLE
I am here because as a parent my voice is not represented on the Panel for Educational Policy. Parents have no vehicle in the decision-making process around the issues affecting their children's education. 
EXAMPLE
I am here because as a teacher I support high standards in the classroom, but excluding teachers from the decision process around implementation of those standards is insulting and undermines my ability to teach to high standards.
EXAMPLE
I am a student and my common core standard is to have curriculum that is driven by critical thinking not test prep so that I can be prepared for college.
From 4:30 - 5:15 there will be an organizing meet at the Seward Park Library at 192 East Broadway to polish our mic check skills and prepare to speak the PEP meetingAt 5:15 we will go to the PEP meeting.
Option B: Arrive at the PEP Meeting - Seward Park High School at 350 Grand Street New York, NY at 5:30 to ensure you get a seat at the meeting. Participate in the Mic Check during the meeting (you'll have plenty of examples during the meeting -- we promise, you'll be able to pick it up!). Remember, this meeting is a public forum. The purpose of these meetings is to exchange ideas. We hope you will come and express your views.
For more information on the people’s mic go to this link to watch a video on how it’s performed.
Option C: Don't have a seat? Arrive a little late? Can’t get in for some reason? NO problem! Join us either in front of Seward Park High School (Ludlow entrance), or in the parking lot behind the school (on Broome). If we can't be at either we will go to Seward Park at Essex and Canal.  We will be hosting a teach-in around the issues impacting public education in NYC.
Can’t find us? Call Marcelle at 865 - 898 - 8632 or Kevin at 347-443-4598
Option D: Meet us at Zuccotti Park at 4:45 to march to Seward Park High School. (We are asking for 4 volunteers who would like to march with us -- contact Marcelle @marcellejgood@gmail.com if you love a good march.)
Contact occupypubliceducation@gmail.com if you have questions, and to let us know that you plan to speak.

And here is a nice video on the peoples mic from Rachel Maddow:

http://youtu.be/d0hxRGBcc6Y



===============
Check out Norms Notes for a variety of articles of interest: http://normsnotes2.blogspot.com/. And make sure to check out the side panel on the right for important bits.

The Agony and the Agony: UFT Delegate Assembly Tackles Danielson

UPDATED: Monday, Oct. 24, 11:30PM

UFT hands the DOE a knife to put to the throats of teachers and claims they won't use it. Or if it is used it is by a "rogue" principal or DOE incompetence. Will UFT support for Danielson Framework of Teaching lead to end of tenure and LIFO? And in addition, teachers are told to spend their own money to buy the Danielson book - sort of like handing someone a shovel to dig their own grave.
Teachers compare Danielson mania to way Workshop model was implemented and misused years ago.
Mulgrew claims the DOE people don't have a clue as to what's going on in the schools. Actions in supporting Danielson Frameworks raise issue as to whether he has a clue.

The report came in from a chapter leader.
In September of 2011, Bloomberg began implementing yet another reform in the NYC public schools. Dennis Walcott, with Bloomberg’s encouragement, has directed principals to use the Charlotte Danielson Framework rubrics as a formative evaluation for teachers. For those who are unfamiliar with educational jargon, a rubric is a grading scale that can be used to give a rating to someone or something. In the current school year, this framework is to be used for support, next year it is to be used to provide evaluations.

As stated before, this is one of many changes that have taken place since Bloomberg began mayoral control of the New York City Public Schools. When Bloomberg first came to be head of the schools, he instituted the city wide use of the workshop model. The workshop model is a 45 minute long lesson set aside for a particular subject. Teachers are expected to execute a series of lessons in that hour, all related to that particular subject. This approach prescribes teacher controlled and rigidly timed short lessons sometimes aimed at the whole class, sometimes a small group. Teachers are expected to race through these workshop models daily, keeping the students under rigid and stifling control, while maintaining a specific and inflexible schedule of activities. Teachers are castigated for any deviation from the confines of the script and actions, letters are placed in teacher’s files, and teachers have been given unsatisfactory ratings, for not implementing every aspect of this top down model. Teachers have even been sent to the ‘rubber room’ for not following this model to its exact specification. For example, within a 45 minute framework, teachers must execute the following: a short ten minute skill lesson with the whole class, followed by another ten minute lesson with five or six students, followed by three five minute visits to individual students. This is to be done with note taking and individual mini lessons, all this while the remaining students are working independently. Finally a class meeting is held at the end of the workshop for another 5-10 minutes. Teachers are expected to create charts, take notes, complete checklists, and collect data about student performance during these workshops. This is done with 25-32 students in the room, and, most frequently, without any assistance.

Now we enter the age of Danielson in New York City. The Danielson model is to be implemented in a supportive, collaborative, non threatening environment of mutual trust. To be highly effective, Danielson states, a teacher should offer students choice in their pathways to learning. She also states that students should raise their own questions and show that they take initiative for their own learning. Danielson states that an observer of teachers should be trained and certified in this fine art, and Danielson says she can provide the training. To date, we are unaware of any NYC principals receiving this training. To initiate the process without these components already in place is to exchange one poor evaluation system for another in the very words of Ms. Danielson herself.

There is a clash between these two approaches. It will take principals with knowledge, experience, and expertise to make the two models work together. Unfortunately, Mr. Bloomberg has not sought out and appointed principals that have the experience, sensitive understanding and knowledge of the classroom to collaborate on the Danielson model. He has replaced many experienced principals with younger, corporate minded supervisors. The senior principals that have remained under Bloomberg have never openly challenged his ideas, and certainly have not been encouraged to bring their experience and expertise to Bloomberg’s table of reforms.

Given the present reality of the Bloomberg/Walcott regime, the Danielson rubrics have already failed in the New York City Public Schools. The prerequisite climate of trust, knowledge, and cooperation inherent to achieving the true goals of the Danielson framework does not exist, precluding any possibility of this transition. Principals are already using Danielson merely as a vehicle to give teachers unsatisfactory ratings, without implementing any of the positive ideas that Danielson has put forth. The focus continues to be on the usual pecking away at details, rather than on true teacher support and improvement. Therefore, the use of Danielson should be tabled at this time. Perhaps, instead, to move forward in the right direction, a rubric should be created for principals that would encourage them to work toward that climate of trust and respect that Danielson aspires to.

When Sam Lazarus (a member of ICE), Chapter Leader of Bryant HS, one of the 30 or so target schools trying out the Danielson system of teacher evaluation, spoke out at the October 19 Delegate Assembly against the resolution being promoted by the UFT leadership I thought I was watching a horror film akin to the Chernobyl disaster, embellished by zombie administrators looking to use what some people consider a potentially useful tool to chew on the livers of living teachers.

Sam, following Academic HS VP Leo Casey's urging the "brudders and sistas" to support the UFT Administration sponsored reso - which affirmed support for Danielson system while admonishing the DOE to stick to what was agreed to - to only use the system in Transformation and Restart schools THIS year - yes it is coming to a school near you soon.

Sam laid out what is happening at Bryant in such graphic terms, some people could be seen wretching in the halls - OK - just a little hyperbole - it was probably the rotten bananas. He told of how the DF could be used to rate teachers poorly and fire them without hearings - an end to LIFO and tenure.  Pretty shocking and something that should call for a looooong discussion within the union.

Of course, in the spirit of UFT democracy, this reso was gotten to with about 2 minutes left in the meeting. After Leo and Sam spoke, Mulgrew, using his seating chart to call on the pre-planned Unity Caucus speakers who would support the reso, got 2 affirmatives before hitting the "call the question" to close debate guy.

Sure it so assuring for the reso to say that the UFT will "defend the integrity of the Danielson Framework of Teaching using all contractual, legal and other means [please tell us some of these] at our disposal to stop its misuse in schools where supervisors are engaged in rogue [see, it's not good guys at the DOE executing a plan] evaluations that violate our members' rights."

So I know you are enjoying a good laugh at how tough the UFT administration will be with the DOE in defending your rights. At the DA a Unity Caucus member who has some knowledge of U-rating hearings told me disgustedly, "Even the hearing officers are asking why the UFT is so weak in defending people."

The reso has lots of whereas' defining all sorts of background. But you can read it for yourself here.
But we do know about the lack of support at the school level when it comes to psycho principals (which we have been reporting on). Imagine giving this tool to one of them, especially when we know that Tweed will support even serial killer grads of the Leadership Academy.

UFT chapter leaders are disgusted and some are resigning, claiming collusion between UFT district reps and their principals against the teachers. Here is an email I received today:
Just wanted to let you know that I will be resigning as Chapter leader of my school shortly due to negligence of the DR by not supporting her chapter leaders. This has been endemic for several years. I could write a book on the grievances the school has but the DR does not want to touch them while also communicating to the principal, exposing confidential matters between myself and members. Several other chapter leaders are just plain fed up. This is the cancer bloggers talk about at the UFT. All major issues are skirted or totally avoided!

So how will/can the UFT protect people from misuse of Danielson? The disconnect between the leadership and At the Sept Chapter Leader meeting Mulgrew was slobbering all over how wonderful Danielson is and selling it to the members and now, this week, Mendel is publically complaining about the principals using it when they are not yet empowered to do so and this has become a point of contention w/ UFT leadership and DOE (even though Mulgrew, Walcott and CSA pres sent out a joint letter telling principals they are not to be using it).

Given what I am hearing from the schools, the UFT Administration may have as little knowledge of what is occurring as the Tweedies. Or a better explanation is that they know exactly what is going on and are choosing to ignore the pleas of the members just as Tweed also knows full well what is going on with so-called rogue administrators and are actually encouraging them.

In her own words: Charlotte Danielson interview:
Let me give you a story of when it’s not done well. I was contacted early on by a large urban district in New Jersey that…had a horrible evaluation system. It was top-down and arbitrary and punitive and sort of “gotcha.” And they developed a new one based on my book, and it was top-down and arbitrary, and punitive. All they did was exchange one set of evaluative criteria for another. They did nothing to change the culture surrounding evaluation. It was very much something done to teachers, an inspection, used to penalize or punish teachers whom the principal didn’t like…[and] I discovered that if I didn’t do something here, my name would get associated with things people hate. So I thought about what it would take to do teacher evaluation well. And I discovered that doing it well means respecting what we know about teacher learning, which has to do with self-assessment, reflection on practice, and professional conversation. 
http://educationnext.org/straight-up-conversation-teacher-eval-guru-charlotte-danielson/

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