Sunday, March 4, 2012

The Expats: Chris Pavone Novel Published

When I opened the book review section of the NY Times this morning on the entire page 2 and 3 was an ad for "The Expats" by Chris Pavone.

Some of you may recognize the name Pavone from my long time friend and mentor Vera Pavone, one of the founders of the Coalition of NYC School Workers in the 70's and the Independent Community of Educators (ICE) in 2003. Vera did so much of the work in ICE's early years and much of the writing on our co-written review of the Richard Kahlenberg Shanker bio (Al Shanker: Ruthless Neo-Con - get the pdf) for New Politics. When I look smart in that piece, it is due to Vera. The dumb stuff is all mine.

Her son, Chris, who I've known since he was 3 years old, survived endless ed-political meetings throughout his childhood and lived up to his guarantee he would never be a teacher, (his brother has become a NYC teacher), though in this interview there some teaching on how to write a best-selling novel. My contribution to us upbringing was taking him and his brother to see Star Wars when it first came out and they flipped over it. So where is the sci-fi novel?

Well, Chris has written a spy movel that is being billed as a very hot novel which is being released with a buzz on March 6. The story is based in Europe where Chris and his wife and twin boys lived for a few years. They are now NYC public school parents. How about a novel based on the machinations in a PTA?

Chris will be on national and world book tours and will be doing book signings. Here is one in NYC: 8 March 2012, BARNES & NOBLE, Tribeca NYC: talk, Q&A, signing

Our community of 70's UFT opposition activists are thrilled at the news about Chris. Boy is there a mystery -- or horror- novel to be written about the ed deformers. Wish I had the time. And the talent. Or convince Chris there is a best-selling novel lying in wait in the WalBloomBlackKlein era.

Here is the latest from Chris's blog:

climbing the lists at b&n.com

It is still five days before the book’s official on-sale date in the U.S., Tuesday March 6th. But yesterday b&n.com shifted into gear with their marketing efforts, and it worked brilliantly: THE EXPATS is today the #1 top trending Nook Book! It is also as of this moment the #62 hardcover overall (!), and amazingly the #17 ebook (!!). Of all the great things that’ve happened during the pre-publication process, this may be the most encouraging. Actual book sales!

Check out The Expats at Amazon.

---------
Here is a story on the novel from the WSJ.


Saturday, March 3, 2012

Out of the Heat, Into the Fire

We came back late last night from a week in Delray Beach where you couldn't get more perfect weather. It was so good and we had so many people to see we only got to one movie.

After doing the stuff you need to do upon returning from a trip it was after 1AM when I turned on the TV before going to sleep and there was Bruce Springsteen on the Jimmy Fallon show doing his new rallying cry Death to My Home Town in an amazing performance and a real assault on the 1%. We could apply every word by just changing the title to "Death to My Public School."

This is the first time staying in Delray after over 20 years in West Palm or Singer Island and this is a very different place than most of East Coast South Florida. A real combo of young and old ---- and not many early bird specials - so many restaurants, so little time.

I have a killer tan and I got to see some old pals from my Brooklyn College fraternity when 7 couples went out to dinner. Lots of talk about how we were Animal House before there was an Animal House. There was only one other career teacher, though two others were teachers for some time. One of them became a top level old board of ed mover and shaker and the other left after 15 years to open a highly successful business. The rest: accountant, US foreign service, cancer surgeon. So sad as we talked about at least 3 guys who have died young, two from probably heart attacks and one from an accident.

Speaking of which -- young -- a word that gets further and further away from me with today being my 67th birthday. And noticing my overhanging belly I better wrap this up and get to the gym.

Bernie the cat had to spend a week alone for the first time but now that he is over 5 months old we figured he could handle it. Even though our friend came in to feed him and play with him twice a day we got a pretty good greeting so I imagine he was lonely. Can there be a 2nd cat in our future? Maybe after our next trip in April.

I spent hours at the beach or on the terrace reading -- very deep stuff --- a bio of Mick Jagger. Since I've been reading Keith Richard's autobio but the book was too big to take with me I figured I'd give Mick equal time. I learned a lot of useless celebrity information.

I did get to start "Water for Elephants" on the last day. I wish every student could capture the excitement in fiction that is better than watching a movie but so many people are not reading fiction because "it is not true." When I think back to how I tried to teach reading to kids who were mostly behind I put at the top of the list of things I tried to do was to share my excitement at reading. Other than kids who have structural/physical issues I still believe that if we focused on love of reading and provided lots of space and time for kids to just enjoy we would solve much of the reading issue. But we've gone in the other direction with high stakes tests and rating teachers (how many teachers will take a chance and just let kids read for love of reading, the single best way of teaching reading?).

I'm sure the above paragraphs will lead the usual Unity slug suspects to tell me how I can thank the union for my retirement and ability to take these trips. So I say "Thank you" in advance for a Tier I retirement that has not been available to any UFT members who started working after 1973.

Inconvenient Truth Behind Waiting for Superman Screenings while UFT continues boycott

I just found out that today there is a screening in Minneapolis with Brian Jones as the guest speaker.

Last nite this message came from Diane Ravitch to Julie, Brian and Leonie:
The Louisiana School Boards Assn showed Inconvenient Truth Behind Waiting for Superman. Your fame spreads!
Diane
Diane has had a major impact in spreading word of the film (showings coming up in Tuscon, Austin TX and on Long Island to name just a few.) The UFT leaderships continues its boycott. One of the surprises to me is how the film seems to be inspiring people to act, which is a major message with Julie's final comment, "The hero is you," echoing the theme song written by her husband Glen. But then again, the UFT doesn't really want people to act until and unless they tell them to so the boycott makes sense from their point. What I don't get is why teachers who read this blog are not arranging showings in their own schools.

Diane is in Louisiana to counter former Tweed ghoul John White who reigns supreme and where Karran Harper, Royal who appears in our film, is battling him every inch of the way.

Summing up the week: Sorry too much happened but check the post for the last week and the blogroll.

I did try to follow all that is going on with the TDRs, charter co-locos, etc. I don't have a feel yet for what happened at Thursday's PEP both inside and outside though I got a sense through the twitter feeds.

The North Brooklyn alliance to oppose Moskowitz invasion is very active with pressers and law suits. See below for links to videos.

My post earlier in the week about the press conference on the proposed bill to have CECs vote on charter co-locos (The Real Story Behind UFT Push for Legislation on Charter Co-locations) did bring some angry responses from some allies for disparaging the attempt to curb charter co-locos. My main aim was to focus on the UFT leadership's role in the process and the role they generally play. In fact, the charter lobby is telling its people this bill will go nowhere but I focused on not including the closing schools issue. I'll try to do a follow-up to try to explain what is behind the way the UFT leadership operates --- I get clearer on the consistency of their actions as time goes by.

I am trying to pack too much into this post and just can't manage any more. Better get my ass to the gym before I have to get a crane to lift me out of my chair.


March 1, 2012 Southside Community Press Conference

(ALSO SEE: Los Sures)

Video by GEM/ICE Pat Dobosz

http://www.youtube.com/my_videos





Council Member Diana Reyna speaks against Success Academy (English)

[20120301050304 March 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6rpN732H8aA



Arthur Schwartz, lawyer filing a suit against the co-location of success Academy into JHS 50

[20120301052931 March 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-YvZ3LO_1Ys

Luis Garden Acosta is critical of charter schools that do not serve ELLs and special needs students. Janine Sopp speaks about the travesty that the DOE is.

[20120301052133 March 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UeXn2y1wORw

Why the Southside community coalition is boycotting tonight's PEP, Patrick Sullivan, Antonio Reynoso

[20120301051445 March 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lBQ19lXWybo


Evelyn Cruz on behalf of Nydia Velaszquez

[20120301051010 March 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wF8FIirJb0g


Students Speak Out: Dream Yard Project 



[20120301053215 March 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RPpFljGhyKI
 


[20120301070007 March 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5yAsWlOGgro
[20120301060754 March 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hZBUSywVl50
[20120301055848 March 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AYtNa_dKUX8
[20120301054614 March 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HqNgVVSrVMc
[20120301054514 March 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MyWDIjcQYIg
[20120301054414 March 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JPprNXu-Hok
[20120301054325 march 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BEt8rxQjnIo
[20120301053215 March 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RPpFljGhyKI
[20120301052931 March 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-YvZ3LO_1Ys
[20120301052826 March 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OA8Iq-CYdMI
[20120301052559 March 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jh2heerlekM
[20120301052133 March 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UeXn2y1wORw
[20120301051445 March 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lBQ19lXWybo
[20120301051010 March 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wF8FIirJb0g
[20120301050755 March 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rsKZfw6ijLY
[20120301050304 March 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6rpN732H8aA
[20120301050137 March 1] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYXCSgmc50U
[20120301045856 March i PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJOxGjue_7Y
[20120301045452 March 1] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JJ-IYyYLN30
[20120301045256 march 1 PEP] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fCmmPCwwcWo


============
March 10 - STATE OF THE UNION PART 2: TIME TO FIGHT BACK ----

See 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.

Friday, March 2, 2012

Parent Activists Lisa Donlan and Khem Irby

The game is rigged to replace viable community schools with corporate style privately managed charter schools that do not serve our highest needs students and then claim above average success. The charters push into our school buildings, taking space from the schools that do not screen or push out students, taking services, enrichment, supports that allow those schools to encourage, support and educate our students with special needs, the new comers, the students in difficult family and economic situations. The DoE is aiding and abetting and even engineering this take over, in the name of accountability, and data driven decision making. ---- Lisa Donlan, CEC 1

Commentary on two somewhat different but related topics (from the NYC Ed News Listserve) expose levels of undermining the public school system.

Lisa Donlan, CEC 1

I am not clear about the process by which these new schools are developed and cited. Does anyone know how these schools get created/selected/sited?

I don't suppose the CCHS or any other elected body,  or any parents or community members in any shape or from have an input or window into this process.

There used to be an Office of New schools, run by Garth Harries Assistant Superintendent, Portfolio and Performance Management New Haven Public Schools) that had this charge.

At one point there was a simulacrum of parent involvement- once a proposal was put forward by some group- perhaps a charter school CMO, an EMO, a CBO, or even the odd school leader or community group, who had jumped through some DoE hoops, that proposal was theoretically presented to a parents, for input.

I know that we on CEC 1 lobbied  hard to make the new school process one that included parents and community and this is what the DoE came up with in response.

Our CEC would get the odd invite now and then to hear a presentation at Tweed on the various new school proposals, none of which had any locations or any other type of connection to our community.

We did support a successful, diverse, non screened district middle school that had sought to create a related HS to provide a good alternative for its average students, in keeping with its own adolescent-centered, collaborative practices.

The school found that high performing students had generally good options for HS, and that many high needs students also had good options, but that low to mid performing average students had very limited options and that those options were becoming harder and harder to get into, and were becoming more and more screened and skewed to high performance.

So they went through the entire proposal process with their concept- which DoE loved and encouraged- until it was time for the physical school siting.

Even though every element of the proposal, from the name to the scaffolding off of the existing MS staff and curriculum, presupposed proximity to the MS, and thus a local siting, DoE offered them space in Brooklyn.

The new school leader declined, despite the year of work she had invested for free, and got an AP job in an existing HS instead. The project was DOA.

Incidentally a charter school founded by the SUNY CSI big wig Susan Barker Miller and some Edison and CEI-PEA edu-profiteer types has decided, in a vacuum, to replicate in our district.

SUNY CSI approved the proposal last June, even though the school now serves NO- ZERO- NADA ELL students, despite the clear legal mandates to meet our district proportions of 14%.

The charter also claims to serve 14% students with IEPs but offer no CTT or Self Contained classes which schools in our district serve at an average of 19%, in addition to the SETTS only IEPs that the 14% at the charter represent.

Despite this clear violation of the law, the fact that no one in the district is asking for another elementary school, another charter school or another Manhattan Charter School (except 5 of their current parents who clearly will not attend the new school!) you can be sure they will be given the space they want.

The game is rigged to replace viable community schools with corporate style privately managed charter schools that do not serve our highest needs students and then claim above average success. The charters push into our school buildings, taking space from the schools that do not screen or push out students, taking services, enrichment, supports that allow those schools to encourage, support and educate our students with special needs, the new comers, the students in difficult family and economic situations.

The DoE is aiding and abetting and even engineering this take over, in the name of accountability, and data driven decision making.

Yet none of the data supports this fad, and there is no accountability in failing schools and turning them over to private management.

 ---------

Khem Irby, CEC 13:

Urban Assembly is the DOE version of Success Academy.

This school is replacing the phasing out SAT III in District.  This school is phasing out because of DOE's incompetent Principal which was disclosed in the public hearing.  Kathleen Grimm refused to recommend that the school should not be closed.  The newly hired principal has already turned the school in the right direction.  This is a legacy school in District 13 and is being closed in haste.  Urban Assembly does not want to be in certain areas of Brooklyn.  They don't want to go beyond Clinton Hill as the available space is Bed-Stuy.

Why should the phasing out school be reminded every day that they are a failure according to the DOE.

We should no longer allow this psychological torture happen to our children, teachers and staff.

There will be three schools next year in the bldg at K56 in Clinton Hill.  There will be impact to the elementary school and SAT III.  District 13 can easily open this MS in other known spaces.  The DOE refused to work with District 13 and rejected sound advise.

Urban Assembly is the DOE version of Success Academy.

Please share on your list serves.  A petition will be forth coming.

Khem Irby

--------------
March 10 - STATE OF THE UNION PART 2: TIME TO FIGHT BACK ---- See 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.

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Democracy Now - Lewis, Pallas and Noor

This just came in. For up to date coverage of Chicago hotbed ed news check in with George Schmidt and Substance - at the beach (eat your hearts out) and don't have link handy.
There should be some nyc action today. And check my tweets on outrageous action in San Fran where Teach for America newbies based on no teaching record will keep jobs over senior teachers.

Good afternoon,
I am writing to share an interview that we broadcast on the independent, daily news hour Democracy Now! today. As students across the country stage a national day of action to defend public education, we look at the nation's largest school systems — Chicago and New York City — and the push to preserve quality public education amidst new efforts to privatize schools and rate teachers based on test scores.
We host a discussion with Karen Lewis, president of the Chicago Teachers Union; Columbia University's Aaron Pallas; and Democracy Now! education correspondent Jaisal Noor.
"The danger is that if teachers and schools are held accountable just for relatively narrow measures of what it is students are doing in class, that will become what drives the education system," says Pallas, who studies the efficiency of teacher-evaluation systems.
"The effects of school closings in [New York City] is one of the great untold stories today," says Noor. "The bedrock of these communities [has been] neighborhood schools and now they're being destroyed."
Lewis says, "When you have a CEO in charge of a school system as opposed to a superintendent — a real educator — what ends up happening is that they literally have no clue how to run the schools." Lewis recounts a meeting where she says Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel told her that, "25 percent of these kids are never going to amount to anything."
When you have a chance, please take a moment to watch the interview and read the complete transcript, which is available at the link below. I have also provided the video embed code if you would like to share the interview on your website and social media networks today.

You can find our past coverage of education-related topics at:
http://www.democracynow.org/topics/education
Thank you so much for your time and consideration. Please let me know if you have any questions.
My Best,
Megan Hafner
Social Media and Online Outreach Intern
Democracy Now!
--
Cheers,
Norm Scott

Twitter: normscott1

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

Public Officials and Major Civic Leaders Break with the Bloomberg Version of Mayoral Control

Coming on the heels of a disturbing meeting with public school Chancellor Dennis Walcott, public officials as well as church and community leaders will charge the Chancellor with “Academic Malfeasance” and call for an end to the PEP process that they decry as the antithesis of good government practice.
 March 1, 2012

A group of Williamsburg community leaders met with Dennis Walcott 10 days ago to request the removal of the Success Academy invasion of MS 50 from today's PEP agenda for further discussion, especially given the outpouring of people in the community opposed to Moskowitz and the lack of any serious level of support to the extent she had to bring 4 busloads of people in from Harlem to give the appearance of phony demand at the Feb. 16 hearing. This was the 2nd hearing because at the first one on Jan. 17 Eva didn't organize people because she knew it was a slam dunk. But the 500-1 voices opposed caused her and the DOE to rethink the issue and they suddenly found a "clerical" error in order to have a do over.

I was at both meetings and I think the 4 busloads of people from Harlem was one final straw for people in the community. Eva has united elements that have not worked together in the past in a coalition

But it takes years of seeing people like Walcott in action to realize exactly what he is made of so they figured he must be a reasonable man and a logical appeal to at least postpone the vote so other options/locations could be sought might work. His unmoving arrogance and obvious catering to Moskowtiz was the final straw, especially with Walcott's final words, "do what you have to do." Well they are and they will. This is hopefully only a first step. I'm still in Florida and won't be there today at all the PEP outside actions (March 1 - Stand UP! Speak OUT!)
and it will be interesting to see what the call for a PEP boycott will mean. But when the outrage spans politicians from the City Council to the US Congress we are entering some interesting territory.


For Immediate Release:  Wednesday February 29th, 2012 
Contact: Luis Garden Acosta 718-387-0404 

Public Officials and Major Civic Leaders Break with the Bloomberg Version of Mayoral Control 

Congresswoman Nydia Velazquez, Councilwoman Diana Reyna and a host of other public officials and high profile leaders will take the unprecedented step of breaking with the Bloomberg administration control of the public school system. A press conference is scheduled for tomorrow, March 1st, 2012 at 5:00 p.m., Brooklyn Tech High School, 29 Fort Greene Place, Brooklyn NY, (set up at S. Elliot Street and DeKalb Avenue) prior to the Panel on Education Policy (PEP) public meeting at Brooklyn Tech High School at 6:00 p.m.

Coming on the heels of a disturbing meeting with public school Chancellor Dennis Walcott, public officials as well as church and community leaders will charge the Chancellor with “Academic Malfeasance” and call for an end to the PEP process that they decry as the antithesis of good government practice.

Church and community leaders of the Southside Community Schools Coalition* will be present to denounce the Bloomberg administration handling of schools as irresponsible, lacking integrity and a failure for District 14 (Williamsburg, Greenpoint and Bedford-Stuyvesant) public schools in general, and Williamsburg Southside schools, in particular. 

High school students from at least four high schools will rally across the street against the “closed back room dealings” of corporate driven charter networks that do not emanate from the communities they propose to serve, are not accountable to those communities and who are backed by the Mayor’s autocratic rule in the use and abuse of public school space.


*Southside Community Schools Coalition (SCSC) partial listing:
Brooklyn Legal Services Corp., Churches United For Fair Housing, Congresswoman Nydia Velázquez, Councilmember Diana Reyna, District 14 Community Education Council, El Puente, First Spanish Presbyterian Church, The Make School Planning Collaborative, Los Sures (the Southside) United HDFC, Nuestros Niños Child Development Centers, Occupy Williamsburg, Parents of P.S. 19, Parents of P.S. 84 Dual Language Program, Parents, Teachers and Staff of M.S. 50, Progress Inc.

--------------------
March 10 - STATE OF THE UNION PART 2: TIME TO FIGHT BACK ----
See 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.

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

On the Sunnyside of the TDR Street

Posted by Norm Scott

TDR posts of the day:

Slimed teachers take one for the team

We have already seen a number of teachers like Pascale Mauclair [nobly defended by Leo Casey] slimed and hounded by the NY Post [let us know if anyone is tracking down those NY Post reporters' home addresses so people can go over and knock on their doors and windows and talk to their neighbors]. I even came across an old pal of mine listed with a 0 at one of the top schools in the city for teaching reading when she has a Spanish license and was teaching mostly Spanish in the years covered (she may have had one reading class but no rating on her Spanish teaching).

I know the pain that many people are going through but if we look at the long run this may be the best thing to happen for our side since the beginning of the war – a war declared choose one: a decade, two decades or 3 decades ago on the entire educational community by the usual suspects [I'm just too tired today to list them again].


Gates, Tisch, Kopp, et al. trying to cover their asses

It is not an accident that people like Bill Gates, Merryl Tisch, and even the always lying Chris Cerf now say they are opposed to the release of TDRs. And who can blame them? They were hoping to use these evals behind closed doors to wipe out huge swaths of teachers. Opening up the process has led to the light and the cockroaches are scattering. As Reality-Based Educator reports - If Merryl Tisch Is For It, It Must Be Bad. Add Gates, et al to the mix and we can  begin to see the sunny side of the issue.

And with the forced release of selected charter school data we are also seeing another side of the TDR issue and why increasing numbers of ed deformers are now pulling back. Charter school parents are denied the right to see the same data parents of public school data can see. Since charters are given the choice --- their favorite word -- whether to hand over the data to the city or not parents of the charter schools who choose NOT do not get the choice to see the data. How nice. But what a good talking point for our side.

And I believe we will be able to shame/force the charters out of the closet and people will see that all the noise about creating a dual school system will come to naught. That charters -- even with creaming --- will not show much difference from comparable public schools. And we will also see that the vaunted Teach for America and other alternately recruited teachers will show little difference or in fact be inferior. Thus Wendy Kopp's opposition to the TDR release.

The coming counter-revolution: the most active and informed parents are increasingly rejecting the ed deform model

I received the following analysis from a long-time associate going back to the 70s and through ICE who I am keeping anonymous because of close relatives and friends in the schools she refers to. I think it expresses the enormous amount of harm the TDRs have done to the ed deformers – way more harm in the long run than to the named teachers.
I don't mean to minimize the harm that the publication of teacher scores is doing. There will be all kinds of of anger and chaos out there, which will hurt some teachers and some schools, but hopefully will stir a few people to make courageous choices. The first principal to speak out was from PS 321K, and she only did it so readily because she knows she has full support from her parents. Also her school is in no danger of losing students--it's the most sought-after school in Brooklyn. Hopefully she will spur other principals to do the same. And she knows full well that publishing the scores is nowhere near as destructive as having to lose teachers two years from now because of the value added punishment.

I'm sure that the principals at [2 schools in Brooklyn I know well] won't be pleased to see that their best fourth grade teachers got the lowest scores. In these two cases, for example, I would be surprised if any parents reacted by blaming the teachers or the school.

Likewise, in a top elem school in Manhattan where some of my family members go, I would be very surprised to see parents react in a negative way to the teachers whose scores are low. Especially since I believe that this was true for the teachers in the two inclusion classes. Parents there have constant access to their children's classes (there are "family days" once a month), and they have a good idea of how their children are doing. If their kid got a perfect score in the 3rd grade, I don't think they'll blame a teacher if he or she got two answers wrong on the fourth grade test. Looking at the map on p. 17 of Saturday's NY Times, it looks like many of the poorest value added scoring schools were in the best scoring neighborhoods (eg. Bayside, Queens, Borough Park, Windsor Terrace, Tribeca). It's all so absurd.

===============
March 10 - STATE OF THE UNION PART 2: TIME TO FIGHT BACK ----
See 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.

March 1 - Stand UP! Speak OUT!

Calling all students, parents, teachers, education workers and community members to take part in a national day of action to defend public education...

Stand UP!  Speak OUT!

Join Right to Education, Occupy the DOE and Southside Community Schools Coalition for:

2PM MARCH starting @ Department of Education Headquarters (52 Chambers Street)
led by Right to Education

4PM SPEAK OUT @ Fort Greene Park (Dekalb Avenue side)
facilitated by Occupy the DOE and Right to Education

5PM PRESS CONFERENCE @ Brooklyn Technical HS (Dekalb and Ft. Greene Place) 
led by Southside Community Schools Coalition

At 6PM the Panel for Educational Policy will vote to co-locate more charter schools in public schools. Various students, parents, educators and community organizations have called to boycott the PEP.

 ------------

March 10 - STATE OF THE UNION PART 2: TIME TO FIGHT BACK ---- See 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.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

FOIL: final performance evaluations all members of Chancellor’s leadership team

Leonie will have to wait 'till hell freezes over. Let's see the NY Times follow up on this one. Send your own FOIL for the rest of the Tweedies.
February 28, 2012
Records Access Officer
NYC Department of Education
52 Chambers Street, Room 308
New York, NY 10007
By email: FOIL@schools.nyc.gov

Dear Records Access Officer:

Under the provisions of the New York Freedom of Information Law, Article 6 of the Public Officers Law, I hereby request a copy of the following records or portions thereof:

The final performance evaluations of all of the members of the Chancellor’s leadership team for 2009, 2010 and 2011, in the NYC Department of Education, including but not limited to every Deputy Chancellor, as well as the performance evaluation of the Chancellor himself.

According to Robert Freeman of the NYS Open Govt. Committee, the performance evaluations of all public employees in NY State are available to the public through FOILs, except for police and correction officers and firefighters.

These requested records are not exempt from disclosure under FOIL. To the extent that information contained in the requested records is protected please redact such information and provide us with the remaining information. In the event that all or part of this request is denied, please cite each specific applicable FOIL exemption and notify us of appeal procedures available under the law. 

To the extent that these records are readily available in an electronic format, we request that they be provided in that format. Please provide responsive records as they are identified, rather than waiting to gather all records.

I request to be notified of any fees associated with this request of over $100.00.

The Freedom of Information Law requires agencies to respond within five (5) business days of a records request.  

Please contact me by phone at the below number or by email at leonie@att.net  with any questions. Thank you in advance for your timely consideration of this request.

Sincerely, 
Leonie Haimson
Executive Director
Class Size Matters
124 Waverly Pl.
New York, NY 10011
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/leonie-haimson
NY Post reporters who wrote stories on Pascale Mauclair:
GEORGETT ROBERT, JEANE MACINTOSH
Additional reporting by Kevin Sheehan and Daniel Prendergast
jeane.macintosh@nypost.com

Is it time to head over to the homes of NY Post reporters who write these stories?

=========

March 10 - STATE OF THE UNION PART 2: TIME TO FIGHT BACK ---- See 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.

Finally, Williamsburg and Greenpoint Parents for Our Public Schools (WAGPOPS) were heard by the media:

The Battle Continues:


http://www.dnainfo.com/20120228/williamsburg-greenpoint-bushwick/brooklyn-parents-protest-plans-for-two-new-charter-schools

Local news has been friendlier to our cause.

And here's a timely article about the former chairman of Teacher For America Los Angeles and founder of Citizens of the World Charter Schools, Mark Gordon:

http://www.aoltv.com/2010/08/12/producer-mark-gordon-accused-of-using-racial-slurs-at-pilot-tabl/

It turns out that this charter school DOES know something about sharing space. Their office suite is shared by scandal plagued The Wonder of Reading. http://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/local/NBC4-Extra---Book-Wars-Episode-Two.html

LIKE us on Facebook:
www.facebook.com/WilliamsburgGreenpointParents
and follow us on twitter:
twitter.com/#!/WAGPOPS



March 10 - STATE OF THE UNION PART 2: TIME TO FIGHT BACK ---- See 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.

Charter school TDRs are now online at the NYP

UPDATED: 8:30PM

We all know this stuff is crap for charter school teachers too. And this anonymous email does take aim at our of our favorite targets.

Sixty Minutes did a feature on Zeke Vandehoek who is the 125K a year maven for paying teachers. Where's the follow-up? In fact I don't necessarily believe TEP is a bad school or any worse than many other schools and in fact may be better. His results may be a sign he is not creaming and in fact playing an honest game. What Vandehoek is discovering is that unless he creams he will be branded a failure no matter what he pays the teachers. He is also a hero of sorts in the movie American Teacher which I've written about - a movie that claims all it takes is paying teachers more money -- with the usual caveat that teachers have to be accountable -- code for measure them, evaluate them to death and place the blame on them when things don't go right but when they do be sure to credit the school or district leadership.

Fascinating little insight: TEP charter school, headed by that publicity hound Zeke Vandehoek who bragged about how he would get great teachers w/ higher pay and that class sizes didn’t matter at http://nycpublicschoolparents.blogspot.com/2011/03/zeke-vanderhoek-relentless-self.html

Has two teachers listed, both below average.


One of the TEP teachers who is featured in the movie American Teacher got an 18.



The eight winning candidates, he said, have some common traits, like a high “engagement factor,” as measured by the portion of a given time frame during which students seem so focused that they almost forget they are in class. They were expert at redirecting potential troublemakers, a crucial skill for middle school teachers. And they possessed a contagious enthusiasm — which Rhena Jasey, 30, Harvard Class of 2001, who has been teaching at a school in Maplewood, N.J., conveyed by introducing a math lesson with, “Oh, this is the fun part because I looooooove math!” Says Mr. Vanderhoek: “You couldn’t help but get excited.” Hired.
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March 10 - STATE OF THE UNION PART 2: TIME TO FIGHT BACK ---- See 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.

Obama Admin To Apply Race to the Top to Airline Pilot Evaluations

For The Wave - by Norm Scott

The Obama administration, recognizing the success of RTTT in education, especially with the enormously popular publication of teacher data reports in NYC, has decided to institute a version for the airline industry.

An admin spokesperson said the idea of Race To The Top  was a perfectly named program for an industry which races to the top with every flight.

"Given that the pilot is the most important factor in a successful airplane flight, we think it crucial to find out who are the good and bad pilots," said Arne Duncan, who has been put in charge of all Race to the Top programs which will be applied to many other areas of industry. Merit pay will be given to the top pilots as an incentive to fly better.

"Arne has been chosen because he is so tall," said the spokesperson. "Get it -- Race to the TOP --- tall, top -- we can be so clever."
Lowest rating a pilot can get

In this extension of RTTT, the Obama administration is reaffirming its belief in choice as has been applied to the public school system. In its "Choose your pilot" program, upon arrival at the airport passengers will be allowed to look up their pilot's rating and if not satisfied switch to any other flight with a pilot that has a rating more to their liking.

The spokesperson said, "The public has a right to know whether a pilot is Highly Effective, Effective, Developing, Ineffective, or in the lowest category: Bend over and kiss your ass goodbye."

A pilot is rated in the latter category will be given time to improve while all passengers on flights flown by these pilots will be given double insurance at a discount.


Monday, February 27, 2012

The Real Story Behind UFT Push for Legislation on Charter Co-locations

  • Limited proposal to have local CECs vote on Charter Co-locos while closing schools removed from agenda.
  • No role for District Leadership Teams (DLTs) or School Leadership Teams (SLTs). 
  • Now that the UFT's two co-located schools in District 19 in East NY Bklyn will be removed after the UFT gets its own building, it is safe for them to enter the water of challenging co-locos.
  • Does UFT move undercut alliance to kill mayoral control?

Ask people at the 33 threatened closing schools or the ones already closed and threatened to be closed if they want CECs to vote on this issue --- but won't happen in UFT proposed legislation.


Amidst charges by some parents of a betrayal and hijacking of their agenda, the UFT will be holding a joint press conference on Tuesday Feb. 28 at 10:30AM at Tweed to announce proposed legislation that would give Community Education Councils (CECs  - the Tweed version of local school bds) a vote on charter co-locations in public schools.

Various parent groups and individuals had been working on legislation in the fight towards ultimately ending mayoral control and wanted inclusion of both colocos and school closings in the legislation but feel their efforts have been hijacked by the UFT who rounded up their usual arm candy/paid off usual suspects to join with them.

While lots of Assembly members have been invited among the usual suspects are DFER Darling Brooklyn Assemblyman Hakeem Jeffries (who is running for Congress - see below if you think he is not a DFER darling) and Harlem Assemblyman Keith Wright who not long ago declared he would oppose renewing mayoral control, (if you're asking why the UFT would climb into bed with a DFER Darling you haven't been reading this blog). Wright will be pushing the bill with Jeffries joining in -- when he isn't spending his DFER money on his congressional campaign. [I must throw in that Martine Guerrier is going to run for Jeffries' seat with lots of DFER support. Martine's story deserves its own post].

Wright deal after Wadleigh turnaround on closing: Do you smell school closing politics?

The Wright story is a prime example of how closing down of schools is political and not educational. Not long after Wright threw his bomb about not supporting mayoral control (coming from a supporter in Harlem this is not good news for the charter lobby or Bloomberg) the school he was trying to keep open  -- Wadleigh -- where Cornel West visited --- the DOE pulled them off the list and Wright goes silent on mayoral control. Watch the UFT leaders brag how they worked behind the scenes to keep the school open -- while selling everyone else out.

CEC would get vote on co-locations but not on closing schools
While the bill would keep the DOE from force-feeding charters into public schools –  some parents think this would be a significant victory even if mayoral control continues – a sister provision put forth by some parents requiring a CEC vote on closing schools was not included despite a big push from many real reformers, leading to charges that the charge of UFT hijacking.

No little irony here considering we have been attacking the UFT leadership for many years for putting on a phony show about fighting closing schools (after almost a decade of supporting this policy). Ask people from the schools closed and about to be closed if they wanted the CECs to vote on closing schools.

More usual suspects:
*AQE, NYCC and CEJ, all in some way receiving funds from the UFT will be in attendance supporting the gradualist approach to corralling the mayoral control monster. At the rate they are moving, we might see some progress by the next century. I hope you're all still reading ed notes then when we can trumpet the victory. *[Alliance for Quality Education, NY Communities for Change - formerly ACORN and Coalition for Educational Justice --- one day I'll do a piece on all these orgs -- are they real or are they memorex?]

All I will say now is, this deal is the ultimate in dirty politics where everyone from DFER to UFT leadership to Bloomberg get a little bit of what they want and preserve some of their power while parents and kids and teachers lose. Another example of a big tent created to serve multiple motives, instead of supporting truly parent led legislation that would really help our kids and reign in mayoral control which is out of control.

Charter lobby begin campaign to take control of selected CECs in districts they want to occupy --- in a year the UFT bill will be an anachronism. Note these 2 Gotham Schools reports.

Charter lobby pushes for seats on the CECs 
Feb 7, 2012 ... The request was the centerpiece of this year's Charter Lobby Day, which drew more than 1200 charter parents to Albany today to push the CEC ...
gothamschools.org/.../charter-parents-inclusion-call-yields-a-bill-but-not-city- support/
Feb 8, 2012 ... On Tuesday, more than 1200 charter school parents traveled to Albany as part of Lobby Day. Their main ask was that legislators set aside seats ...
gothamschools.org/.../city-actually-undecided-about-charter-parents-call-for- inclusion/
There is even more irony in that the charter lobby's main legislative ask is for seats on the CEC, their way of using their muscle to control the CECs so these selected CECs will vote for the charter co-locos.

In fact charter parents who live in the district already have the right to be on CECs via Borough President appointees or if they are a parent of kids in a district school in the past 2 years. Thus, gaining a "victory" as is usual with the UFT, may very well prove Pyrrhic if a quid pro quo is reached where CEC's are allowed to vote on charter colocos but charters get to use their money to push themselves into control of CECs. Can you imagine the day when Eva tosses an enormous pot of money into pushing her candidates for CEC? What would it take? Just buy off selected public and charter school parents in targeted districts for charters. If a public school parent works for a charter org that still allows them to be on CEC.

Push for more parent and teacher voice scuttled
Some parents were pushing for a role for SLTs and DLTs as a counter to the "CEC only" option but are being ignored in the deal, not surprising given that including SLT's, though also severely flawed, might allow for a rank and file teacher voice in the process. (Does the UFT fear that the teachers in the two schools the union charters co-locate might vote them out?)

What is a CEC and how is it chosen?
The CECs are the Bloomberg created versions of local school boards from the old days, but eviscerated of any real power and chosen in a severely limited process that is far more undemocratic than even the old school board elections pre-mayoral control. I won't get into any more detail here other than to say that with each election cycle the DOE screws things up more and more. [Parents sue to stop Community Education Council ... - Ed Notes Online].

Summing up
A coalition of parents were pushing a comprehensive plan to at the very least limit the absolute power a mayor would have over the school system, with an ultimate goal of ending mayoral control and were working with some political forces to accomplish some of their program. The UFT moves in and coopts them while severely weakening the controls they were asking for. Standard op procedure for the UFT.

Now also notice how deeply entrenched up the ass of DFER the UFT's partner, Hakeem Jeffries, is:
Just in case you have not had enough, this was posted to a listserve by a parent activist and former charter school parent:




The charters ALREADY have their bill introduced for charter parents to be on the PEP and CEC. It's been introduced in the Senate and Assembly. They're lobbying hard for this in an election year with loads of campaign cash to give out. Legislators haven't heard from any public school parents who object to charter parents being on the PEP or CEC's.

This is why parents AND teachers at all schools must have a say in school closings and co-locations. We already have charter parents who are BP appointees to the CEC's, we have those whose child has been in a public school in the last two years who are eligible to serve and now we'll have it in the law any charter parent can serve.

Funny thing is they're still not complying with the 2010 law requiring them to serve a comparable amount of students with special needs and ELL's and every charter have a PA/PTA but they want charter parents on CEC's and the PEP.

I guess it's okay to violate charter parent rights under the law and use us as puppets to undermine public school parental involvement structures to create more charters where more parents' rights will be violated.

Please start calling your legislators and tell them NO to charter parents
on the PEP and CEC's and that they should enforce the 2010 charter
reforms.

Thanks.

http://assembly.state.ny.us/leg/?sh=printbill&bn=S06100&term=2011

Read the bill below -- if you dare:

What ICE Said About Mayoral Control: Feb. 2009

Without handing control of the schools to one person we would not be seeing charter co-locos, school closings except in the most extreme cases, crazy teacher evaluation systems and the publication and shaming of teachers in the press.
 I know the publication of the TDAs is the issue de jour but let's look at the bigger picture. Today's NY Times claims the publication bolsters Mulgrew's standings with the rank and file. I think that is a misreading of the issue and that many teachers BLAME the UFT leadership for the debacle. But in case people start to forget history I am here to remind them.

With the battle over mayoral control of schools beginning to heat up again and with the UFT talking out of 12 sides of its mouth I will once again restate my position that I have taken for over a decade: that no matter what words come out of the mouths of UFT/Unity leaders, they will continue to back mayoral control no matter how bad it has been for all parties --- parents, students and especially teachers.

"Why," you might be asking? Because the UFT cannot live with any alternative to mayoral control. In their world they still prefer having to deal with one person --- even a Bloomberg -- than with community groups all over the city. In 1969-70 the UFT had the power to influence the decentralization law to weaken it to such an extent that 30 years later when push came to shove, they were able to push the baby they helped create off the ledge by handing power to Bloomberg. This time around they think they will do better. Thus we hear Mulgrew taking a page from the past by saying, "Only blah, blah days 'till we get rid of Bloomberg." They said that 4 years ago but punted on supporting an opponent and they said the same things about Giuliani and Koch. That is the extent of the message to the members which is code for "Next time we will do better with Christine Quinn, most likely, or whoever."

Without handing control of the schools to one person we would not be seeing charter co-locos, school closings except in the most extreme cases, crazy teacher evaluation systems and the publication and shaming of teachers in the press.

So no matter how loud they scream, those screams of UFT leaders are akin to the guy who murders his parents and asks for mercy on the grounds he is an orphan.

But watch the duplicity and back room dealing by the UFT as it tries to put out different messages to different people. On the deep inside within the Unity Caucus hawks, they will push the horrors of any plan that turns control of schools over to local forces even if those forces includes teachers at the school level.

Just to give you a clue as to how the leadership feels about the rank and file, I had a conversation with Randi Weingarten about 13 years ago where I urged her to support ideas that would empower teachers at the school level. Her response was, "How can we trust...." before she shut her mouth as she realized what she was saying.

In the last renewal for mayoral control, Randi set up committees and borough meetings and all kinds of crap for show and then overturned all the recommendations to do her own thing in supporting mayoral control --- claiming they got enough tweaks to curb Bloomberg power. How has that worked out?

When it came time to a vote at the DA, ICE members who had participated on the committee put our a minority report for the Feb. 2009 DA.
Remember these points as you watch the UFT leaders begin to dance once again around this issue.

Mayoral Control:
Bad for Teachers, Students, Parents and Communities 

One of the major planks in the corporate agenda for education is to put large urban school systems under dictatorial mayors who are free to shut out parent and teacher input while undermining the union, especially at the school/chapter level. To continue this policy, even with checks and balances, invites disaster. 

Mayoral Control Has Been a Disaster for Teachers:
  • Attacks on tenure, seniority, working conditions and the professional status of teachers.
  • Teachers don’ t know where incompetence ends and the malice begins.
  • Throughout the United States, mayoral control of the schools has been the vehicle for privatizing
    public education, bringing in charter and contract schools that are overwhelmingly anti-union, and that have few or none of the protections and benefits that UFT members expect and deserve.

  • Mayoral Control Has Been a Disaster for Students:
    • Students subjected to a stultifying, stress-filled regime of high stakes testing, with the wholesale loss
      of classes and activities that are unrelated to test prep. Science, art, music and physical education
      have all been cut back to meet the single-minded focus on testing in math and reading.
    • Time and again, mayoral control has shortchanged students, whether it was the fiascos with bus
      routes, cell phones, or the willful chaos they’ve brought to Special Education.
      Mayoral Control Has Been A Disaster for Parents:
Over and Over, Bloomberg and Klein have shown their contempt for parents, ignoring them, patronizing them, and creating an opaque, impenetrable system where it’s impossible to even get a phone call returned, let alone remedy a problem. 

Mayoral Control Has Been a Disaster for Communities:
Under mayoral control, the reorganization and closing of schools, many of which have served their communities for generations, has accelerated, and there has been no opportunity to give communities any voice in the process. As a result, the democratic process itself has been harmed, and the community fabric has been undermined. 

The UFT Must Do Better!
The UFT Governance Committee wasted a golden opportunity to stand up for democracy by failing to call for a return to some form of school governance procedure enjoyed by the overwhelming majority of communities in the state and nation, namely, direct elections of school board members. Rather than come up with a governance system that would serve our and the students best interests, the committee started off with the assumption that our vision would be rejected by the press and other critics; that we had to water it down before we could even formulate a better vision. Not that we shouldn’t be willing to compromise when actual negotiations over governance begins, but was it wise to eliminate what we really wanted before we were publicly engaged? 

Members of ICE (The Independent Community of Educators) participated on the Task Force, and repeatedly pointed this out, but to no avail. We could not support a position that in reality will mean more attacks on teachers, students and communities. Consensus means agreement is reached by all, not majority rule.
NOTE: Link not working at this time-- email norm for pdf:normsco@gmail.com
We urge you to read the ICE minority report on school governance. 
Independent Community of Educators (ICE) http://www.ice-uft.org/ http://iceuftblog.blogspot.com/ 
Dear Delegate,
At the helm of our system are a Mayor and Chancellor who know little about education and care more about test scores, do little for our public schools, and care more about privatization and charterization. There has been more damage heaped on our students, their education, our profession, and our professional lives than at any other time in the history of public education. 

We need to minimize the roles of politicians, make a Chancellor accountable to us, and put experienced educators back in academic leadership roles. The UFT recommended governance plan does not do that, ICE’s plan does. 

Please consider substituting or amending the UFT report when voting this afternoon. 

The major points included in the ICE recommendations, missing from the UFT plan. 

ICE proposes:
  • SLTs appoint their principals.
  • The SLTs of a District select their Superintendent.
  • The DOE must be politically neutral and not tied to any one political office.
  • A Central Board will be made up of one member elected from each borough; one appointee from each of the borough presidents, three Mayoral appointees and a UFT representative. The Central Board will appoint a Chancellor.
  • Evaluations of schools and students should be based on multiple measures and should be used for gathering information in order to provide support.
  • All schools provide the core curricula subjects, performing and visual arts, health and physical education, career and technical education, and technology.
  • The school leadership committees will determine how funds are spent.
  • All contracts will be put out to open bid and made public via the Internet.
  • All registered voters and parents are eligible to vote for district councils and a representative to the Central Board from their borough.
  • Chancellors, district superintendents and supervisors must have a minimum of 5 years classroom experience, no waivers granted.

    FULL VERSION OF ICE SG REPORT: EMAIL NORM FOR PDF - COUNTER THE UNITY PROPAGANDA MACHINE - POST ON YOUR SCHOOL UFT BULLETIN BOARD.