Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Hear Me Tell a Story Thursday Night

I took a course in storytelling and we are telling our stories tomorrow night. I wrote this for this Friday's Wave but missed the deadline so it will be in the Mar. 1 edition, 2 days before my - gulp - 68th birthday. The reason I am posting this is that there will be a very sparse crowd as our storytelling class is down to 4 people and the others are all from out of town. So if you're in the neighborhood, come on down to 3 of Cups at 83 1st Ave at 5th St. Manhattan, NY 10003 (212) 388-0059 at 8PM tomorrow night. And my story won't have a word about edu-politics, ed deform or the UFT.
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Have I Got A Story to Tell
by Norm Scott
February 20

Is it safe to come out of the post-Sandy waters by writing about education issues again? Well, maybe not. Possibly when we are all enjoying the beach (I already bought my new Costco beach chairs and umbrella) again – if there is a beach. With most of my garden probably gone I’m thinking of turning my front lawn into a sandy beach, with a little pond full of salt water. Every so often I’ll toss something in to simulate a wave. 

While waiting for the beach season, I have been taking a weekly 5-session 3-hour class in storytelling where each week we all tell a story or two – not made up stories but based on real things which have happened to us. The idea is to shape our story with a beginning, middle and end while using narrative, some dialogue and some scenes – sort of like writing a piece of fiction except that these stories are expected to be true maybe with a light shading when memory fails. Afterward the class and instructor comment with the goal of developing the story into a coherent piece that would be presented in front of an audience. 

The day of reckoning has come and we are performing – actually not the right word – telling – our stories to an audience of invited friends and enemies at the “3 of Cups” restaurant on the lower east side. There are four of us left in the class as there have been a few dropouts. These personal stories have been fascinating, especially since I am old enough to be most of the other members’ of my class dad. The stories from the two young ladies (roughly 25) have been enlightening as were the two stories of the two older ladies, both of whom have dropped out after telling their “men are swine” stories (yes they are). The two other guys include a well-known artist from Shanghai and a financial analyst who told some wonderful tales. I was surprised at the stories from the young women and the relative lack of romance in their lives. Certainly an interesting insight given that I don’t get to talk “personal” with women that age. Everyone have been so totally supportive. What began as a whim – a way to kill a few winter weeks – has turned into an enriching experience. 

Each week I tried out a different story. My first kiss – a disaster. Another about my first trip to Europe on my own. I tried out a personal “day-of” Sandy story expecting that would be my performance piece. Somehow it didn’t feel right. While it had a beginning and a middle there is still no ending and it was hard to find a punchy closing line.

I really do have a whole lot of stories to tell and at times it was hard making a choice. Just the 35 years in the NYC school system contained a gold mine of material. What I ended up deciding to do was tell the story of how badly I wanted to go into space and basically having given up on the idea of being an astronaut, found the opportunity of a lifetime when NASA announced in the mid-80s they would send a teacher into space. I was one of 16,000 applicants. When the shuttle was due to take off we were in Antigua with the power out and not able to watch the launch. I was thinking about myself being at the top of that rocket as we were sitting on the plane waiting to take off when the captain announced the shuttle had crashed. I was in a state of shock the entire way home. As I went through the mail when we got back, there was a postcard from a friend with the message, “Norm, I’m so sorry you didn’t get to go on the shuttle.”

Well, I let me tell you one education thing – that we are in UFT election season with a new group I am associated with called Movement of Rank and File Educators (MORE) running as the alternative to the Unity Caucus ruling party with Julie Cavanagh as out presidential candidate opposing Michael Mulgrew. I will be visiting all the schools in Rockaway with election leaflets.


Julie Cavanagh Challenges Cathie Black on Schools She Chose for Her Children, UFT's Michael Mendel Confronts Black

Watch Julie in action here. OK. I'm going to be bi-partisan here by presenting strong speeches by both Julie and Michael at a PEP event. Why? Because I like Michael who I used to sit behind at NY Ranger games and have always had a cordial relationship with, as he does with most people. I do not consider him a Unity slug. Besides, I'm too lazy to re-edit the tape.

Note Julie's strong challenge to Black on the resources at the school she sent her children -- class sizes of 12 with an experienced teaching staff. This was the Jan. 2011 PEP. And by the way, Julie helped organize a rally at City Hall that month where 200 people showed up despite it being a snow day with about 15 inches. Mendel was supposed to speak at that rally but called me to say he was snowed in. Leo Casey took his place and we used footage of Leo in our film. Mendel makes a strong statement. I wish the UFT leadership always acted accordingly.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qglFL2HGBSo

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Come to NYCoRE's February Meeting for a Panel Discussion from MORE's Top Slate Candidates



New York Collective of Radical Educators
RSVP for NYCoRE's General Meeting - Friday, February 22nd
  

Learn MORE about the Upcoming UFT Elections
 
The UFT election season is right around the corner and it's time to meet the candidates.  Join NYCoRE and the top candidates from the Movement of Rank and File Educators (MORE) to discuss the UFT elections and the MORE platform.  MORE's top candidates include Julie Cavanagh, Brian Jones, Camille Eterno, Michael Fiorillo, and Marissa Torres.
In addition to our political education piece, there will be more ways to engage in critical discussions around issues affecting education.  Check out the following breakout groups:
  • Anti-Racist White Educators Group
  • People of Color Working Group of NYCoRE 
  • UFT 101 - Join UFT members to learn more about the your rights as UFT members and the structure of the UFT.
  • MORE UFT Election Campaign - Join MORE members to discuss ways to be involved in the upcoming elections.  
  • New Teacher Group - Join other newish teachers in NYC to discuss issues affecting you and your classroom.
  • Conference Planning Committee - Members will continue their awesome work of planning this year's conference.  Registration is open! 
If you are interested in leading a break out group please e-mail Rosie at rosie@nycore.org.
 
Location:

NYU Pless Hall 3rd Floor Lounge

82 Washington Square East

New York, NY


Time: 6:00 to 8:00 PM
There will also be a NYCoRE 101 Session at 5:30 for folks who are new to NYCoRE and who would like to hear more about the organization and ways to plug into it. If you are interested, please RSVP here .
Some food will be provided
Please Bring ID
Please  RSVP to give us a head count for food, and to notify security.
For questions, or if you would like to facilitate a breakout group, please e-mail Rosie at Rosie@nycore.org
Thanks,
NYCoRE Member Committee
Support provided by the Union Square Award, a project of the Tides Center.
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New York Collective of Radical Educators

MORE's Julie Cavanagh Exposes Eva Charter Schools

On May 21, 2011 (2 days after the premiere of the GEM film response to the ed deform film Waiting for Superman, The Inconvenient Truth Behind Waiting for Superman that Julie co-narrated, co-produced and co-wrote), Community Board 12 in upper Manhattan convened a panel to discuss charter schools.

Dennis Walcott was supposed to be on that panel but never showed up [he was as scared of Julie as Mike Mulgrew is]. Also Pedro Noguera, [former] chairman of the SUNY Charter Schools authorizing committee (which authorized both Eva/Success and UFT charter schools) and James Merriman, CEO of the NYC Charter School Center. They said their pieces and left before Julie Cavanagh got to go, clearly not wanting to hear what they were doing to undermine the public school system.

Merriman, as the charter school movement usually does, blamed the UFT for resistance, which if you know Julie, it was their LACK of resistance to a co-location of a charter in her school that activated her in the first place. In the early part of the 20-minute video Julie refutes this, showing the opposition to charters is growing from the grass roots far from being led by the UFT.

In the full presentation she presented a comprehensive case against the charter school movement (view it in full here) as she goes into details of her activation as she saw PAVE, with the complicity of Tweed, grab more and more at the expense of her school while the UFT stood on the sidelines.

Here is a short excerpt where she focuses on the inequities the Eva Moskowitz Success Academy brings into the schools.
http://youtu.be/z3XSm3b64Gk





UFT Shill Peter Goodman Lays Groundwork for UFT Continued Support of Mayoral Control

  • I favor mayoral control....  – perhaps a broad-based screening panel, an appointed school board serving fixed terms. [TWEAKS]
  • Geographic school boards did create a sense of community, unfortunately, too many were dominated by local politics and too many superintendents were mediocre at best.... 
  • Whether we call them districts or networks, whether they are geographically contiguous or theme/affinity based the goal must be to build professional learning communities (PLC)... 
  • Is it mayoral control or the specific mayor and the chancellor/superintendent?.... 
  • In the era of Citizens United, elected school board candidates can raise unlimited dollars and partisans of vouchers or easing the firing of teachers and principals or the privatization of education could win elections. Mayoral control ties mayors to education – both the successes and the failures.... Peter Goodman (Ed in the Apple).
At least Goodman is willing to say openly what the UFT leadership is hiding -- that they support mayoral control --- maybe with a few tweaks -- like a fixed term for the PEP and maybe some different appointment procedure. At least until the UFT elections are over they won't say openly. Just see some of the Unity crybabies on the MORE blog asking: did Mulgrew ever say he supports mayoral control? We can say one thing for sure: that Goodman would not have written this piece if Mulgrew was opposed to mayoral control.

On his blog Goodman lays out the rationale the UFT will use in its refusal to join with others in calling for an end to mayoral control. Basically, as you read through the lines he in essence supports the Joel Klein type of reforms -- his main criticism is that Klein chose the wrong people.

It's not mayoral control but the mayor. Just because at least 32 out of the last 36 years we had mayors who trashed us should not be a factor. We want to hand all the power to one person instead of actually having people with a real stake in the system -- parents and teachers -- have any real power.

But then again why expect anything different from a shill who was an active supporter of the authoritarian top-down structure of the UFT? I was a witness for many years when Goodman was a District Rep -- an elected district rep -- I'll give him that. (I haven't heard him call for the election of district reps since Randi abolished them a decade ago.)

Elected school boards? The rich will buy them anyway. While he's not wrong here the idea of neighborhood school board elections here in NYC would give anyone who wanted to buy all of them a tough proposition. But he trashes that idea too. I will maintain that with all their corruption and crap local elections was still a better system than exists today under the mayor -- and it was a system that was being repaired and could have been reformed. (And Goodman as the UFT rep in district 22 flourished in that system.)

Goodman's blog makes it clear the UFT will never support such a system again, much preferring even a Bloomberg. I will say one thing: they have been consistent over the past 45 years in opposing any vestige of local control, even though they helped create the semi-coma like system following the '68 strike. But they never felt comfortable in that role, much preferring to deal with one person, even if it Bloomberg because they can always claim to be waiting whatever ogre is in power out, knowing full well the Unity shills will trumpet the waiting game as the perfect game plan.

Goodman essentially justifies the basic UFT/AFT support for much of the underpinnings of the ed deform movement, one of the major assaults being disassociating neighborhoods from the local schools and teachers, opening the way for them to be closed, privatized and replaced by charters.

In the world of Goodman: Neighborhood schools and support networks? Nah, not so important. Geography be damned. Let's have networks where people are scattered all over the place.

Oh, charters? Goodman supported the opening and co-location of 2 UFT charters inside public schools, with his son being placed in charge of the middle school (until booted) located in George Gershwin MS whose closing hearing will be held this Thursday. Not a word

Goodman was a noted supporter of closing schools, as was the UFT for so long, serving on a state committee that recommended closing many schools, including my high school alma mata, Thomas Jefferson. Yes, the Goodman family has had a role in closing 2 of the 3 public schools I went to. I'm not telling them my elementary school.


Monday, February 18, 2013

Susan Ohanian Update

Confiscated Plan Books Languish in Death Valley Repository
NOTE: The product below is gluten-free; contains no peanuts, pesticides, or growth-enhancing hormones. However, exposure to sensitive content may cause rapid heartbeat, dizziness, blurred vision, rash, seizure, or temper tantrum.

by Susan Ohanian

Death Valley--At 282 feet (86 m) below sea level in the Mohave Desert, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation maintains the Substation for Confiscated Lesson Plans. It is a secure site that bears all the marks of a prison: high stone walls topped with concertina wire, uniformed guards shouting into walkie-talkies, forsaken teachers pacing the compound's edge, waiting for a sign of hope.

Jennie Worthsome, 15-year-veteran kindergarten teacher, waited as Foundation officials reviewed the seizure of her lesson plans twenty-three months ago. Ms. Worthsome's planbook indicated time for fingerpainting.
http://susanohanian.org/show_nclb_news.php?id=892

http://susanohanian.org/show_nclb_cartoons.php?id=855

George posted this Eggplant--with funny illustration--and better headline:
http://www.substancenews.net/articles.php?page=4002&section=Article

Forgive me, I've read it half a dozen times and still think it's funny. Hey, if you don't enjoy your own writing, then it's time to shut up.

Warning to Put on So-Called Education News
http://susanohanian.org/show_nclb_cartoons.php?id=856

Compare Tarantino Body Count with Gates Foundation Body Count
http://susanohanian.org
/show_nclb_cartoons.php?id=854

Occupy Kindergarten
http://susanohanian.org/cartoon_fetch.php?id=723

I ordered this T-shirt. It comes in every color imaginable.

The Rich Really Are Different
http://susanohanian.org/cartoon_fetch.php?id=722

Even Radiologists Miss the Gorilla in the Room
http://susanohanian.org/cartoon_fetch.php?id=720

Our Tax Dollars at Work Creating Huge Teacher Memory Hole
http://susanohanian.org/cartoon_fetch.php?id=719

I'm late in discovering Doug Martin's remarkable work:          The Truth Behind The Project School Closing: The Indiana Corporate School Complex. It was a bear to post with all the valuable hot links and having to rekey all the diacritical marks. Whine. Whine. Having done the work, I've posted it in two places--as Outrage of the Day and as Research Worth Reading. When you'll see why. Think about the work it took to dig up all this information, and here I sit griping about the work to post it.

Susan

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STEM as Vermont's urban myth?
William Mathis
Vermont Digger
2013-02-18
http://susanohanian.org/core.php?id=423

Yes, it says 'Vermont' in the headline but this is a piece EVERYONE needs to read.  Read and send to media, school boards, etc.

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Former education commissioner blasts Common Core process — update
Valerie Strauss and  Robert Scott
Washington Post Answer Sheet
2012-02-13
http://susanohanian.org/core.php?id=422

Former Texas Commissioner of Education Robert Scott spills the beans about being asked to sign on to the Common Core before the standards were written. He's on the stump in various states fighting the Common core. In Kansas, he teamed up with Sandra Stotsky.

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Strike for America: The CTU and the Democrats
Micah Uetricht

2013-02-17
http://susanohanian.org/show_commentary.php?id=1074

The Chicago Teachers Union can teach the rest of the country an important lesson. . . if they have the guts to learn from it. The article documents  the corrupt neoliberal education policies of the democratic party.

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Professor Leaves a MOOC in Mid-Course in Dispute Over Teaching
Steve Kolowich
The Chronicle: Wired Campus
2013-02-18
http://susanohanian.org/outrage_fetch.php?id=1520

LOTS of students drop out of MOOCs. Here's a story about a professor who dropped out mid-course.

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‘This American Life’ Looks at a High School Marooned in Violence
David Carr
NY Times Media Decoder blog
2012-02-15
http://susanohanian.org/outrage_fetch.php?id=1519

Here's a strong piece about a strong program from This  American Life. Don't miss either!

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The Truth Behind The Project School Closing: The Indiana Corporate School Complex
Doug Martin
Common Errant
2012-07-21
http://susanohanian.org/outrage_fetch.php?id=1518

You'll find below a meticulous documentation of 'Follow the Money'. It documents a horrendous corporate takeover of community schools and community values.

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Popular Public School Loses Out to Charter School for Space in Harlem
Jeff Mays
DNA Info: NY Neighborhood News
2012-02-13
http://susanohanian.org/outrage_fetch.php?id=1517

The New York DOE gives Harlem space to charter with deep pockets instead of progressive public school with proven track record.

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The State of the Union: an old fartish complaint
Doug Henwood
LBO News: Insta-punditry on Political Economy
2012-02-15
http://susanohanian.org/outrage_fetch.php?id=1516

Henwood takes a look at the reading levels of presidential state of the union addresses.

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Why wealthy foreigners invest in U.S. charter schools
Valerie Strauss
Washington Post Answer Sheet
2012-02-15
http://susanohanian.org/outrage_fetch.php?id=1515

It turns out that super-rich foreigners are forking over big money to American charters.

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Foundations Fund National Education Reform Program at UK
Press Release
University of Kentucky
2012-02-11
http://susanohanian.org/outrage_fetch.php?id=1514

This is a love (of money) fest--everybody clapping everybody else on the back.

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Occupy Kindergarten
Susan Ohanian

0000-00-00
http://susanohanian.org/show_yahoo.php?id=802

Every teacher should occupy her/his own classroom.

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The Truth Behind The Project School Closing: The Indiana Corporate School Complex
Doug Martin
Common Errant
2012-02-08
http://susanohanian.org/show_research.php?id=512

Here is a meticulous documentation of 'Follow the Money.' It documents a horrendous corporate takeover of community schools and community values.

It shows what's likely coming to your community next.

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Confiscated  Plan Books Languish in Death Valley Repository
Susan Ohanian
blog
2013-02-18
http://susanohanian.org/show_nclb_news.php?id=892

I can't help myself.

Youth Justice Event, Saturday February 23rd

We are having a large event this upcoming Saturday 2/23 to promote our work to raise the age of criminal responsibility in New York- currently we are one of only two states in the whole nation where all 16 and 17 year olds in the justice system are treated as adults. --- Gabrielle Prisco
Gabrielle is the daughter of our pals Gene and Loretta Prisco who have been part of the teacher union political movement since I met them c. 1971. Amongst the founders of the Coalition of School Workers in the 70s and of ICE in 2003 and working with MORE nowadays, they are also key political players in many areas beyond education, mostly in Staten Island.
Gabrielle is a social justice lawyer working with juvenile justice issues. Here is her announcement.
Please join the Correctional Association of New York's Raise the Age Campaign, the National Black Theatre and Lyrics From Lockdown at a FREE COMMUNITY TOWN HALL on Saturday, February 23 at 3:30 pm at the National Black Theatre, where impacted youth, parents, and community members will discuss New York's shameful practice of prosecuting children as adults.

The Town Hall is free and open to all who wish to attend, but we do request that you RSVP.  Register for the FREE February 23 Raise the Age Town Hall here.

You are also invited to purchase tickets for Lyrics From Lockdown, a phenomenal one-man show by Bryonn Bain exploring his own wrongful imprisonment after graduation from Harvard Law School and the story of Nanon Williams, sentenced to death in Texas at age 17. On Saturday February 23rd (the day of the Town Hall) there are shows at both 2pm and 8pm.

After the Sunday February 24th 4pm Lyrics performance (closing night) there will be an Artist talkback featuring Harry Belafonte, Executive Producer of Lyrics From Lockdown.

To purchase your Lyrics from Lockdown tickets, please visit the National Black Theatre’s website: www.nationalblacktheatre.org

NEW YORK IS ONE OF ONLY TWO  STATES IN THE NATION that automatically treats all 16- and 17-year-olds in the criminal justice system as adults. These young people are subject to lifelong criminal records and if detained or incarcerated are almost always right alongside adults in adult jails and prisons. New York also prosecutes children as young as 13, if charged with certain serious offenses, as adults. Children in adult jails are 36 times more likely to commit suicide than children in juvenile detention. Children in adult prisons are twice as likely to be beaten up by staff, five times more likely to be sexually assaulted, and far more likely to be attacked with weapons than youth in juvenile facilities. Children in adult jails and prisons are frequently placed in solitary confinement for up to 23 hours a day.  To learn more about this issue and join in our efforts, please contact the Correctional Association's Raise the Age Campaign Manager Angelo Pinto at apinto@correctionalassociation.org.

http://www.correctionalassociation.org/news/join-us-for-lyrics-from-lockdown-the-raise-the-age-community-conversation-series.

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Dewey Chapter Leader On Union Capitulation

It is clear that the UFT will continue to engage in the Big Lie of "due process" with the rating sheets for as long as they can hide behind the veil they have perfected: they cannot over-rule the DOE, no matter the unjust nature of the rating- they can only "go through the motions" of giving you your "day in (kangaroo) court!!!"
 ---- Martin Haber, Chapter Leader, John Dewey HS, Brooklyn
Marty Haber was elected chapter leader at John Dewey HS this past fall, defeating the incumbent Unity Caucus candidate by more than a 2-1 margin. Marty's election, considering he is not a guy known for being light on the trigger, is a signal to Unity that people are just plain fed up.
Norm, and all,

Another example, close to home for me, of union capitulation: I went for my "sham due process" (my "U" rating "hearing" at the DOE); just the fact that my principal can sit back in her office and communicate by speakerphone while "the accused" has to be there in that little shite office in person says a whole lot about who holds the cards, and who gave up their hand; even "skype" would allow me to "face my accuser", she'd have to look me in the eye as she lies. 

And then to defend myself and have a really strong, lawyerly advocate take the principal's argument apart for a good hour, and THEN be told by that same advocate that "someone in the district office"- NOT the functionary "hearing officer", who is just a "ref"- decides if the "U" stands or not- and they ALWAYS decide (the first "U", at least!) that it STANDS, well, that's really the height of cynicism. So, I got "my day in court", and now that I'm "shop steward" at Dewey, I have to get ready for the 2nd "U". But maybe I will take the route that Peter Lamphere did, and hire my own defense. It is clear that the UFT will continue to engage in the Big Lie of "due process" with the rating sheets for as long as they can hide behind the veil they have perfected: they cannot over-rule the DOE, no matter the unjust nature of the rating- they can only "go through the motions" of giving you your "day in (kangaroo) court!!!"

Martin

NYSUT Ianuzzi Echos Weingartenization of our Union

The message from NYSUT Prez Dick Ianuzzi was:  Hey folks I got us the best deal we could hope for : half a turd  sandwich. But look on the bright side, we don't have to eat the whole thing.  
 We need to be careful not to let our passions get the best of us says this NEA/AFT mouthpiece. What we need to do is remember that we are negotiating with enemies.... Another of this so called leader's aphorisms is "We don't do ourselves any good by dying on the barricades." Hmmmm. Is this Ghandi talking or is this more of the Randi Weingartenization of our unions? ---- b-loedscene blog

All you have to do is go to the MORE blog and read the Unity caucus whiners about how tough it is to fight Bloomberg (as it was too tough to fight Giuliani and Koch and Lindsay -- the last mayor who was easy was Wagner.) You can see their campaign theme all over the place. These commentors clearly have a big stake in keeping MORE from making inroads.

 
One thing we know. There is no Churchill in the spines of the leaders of the UFT/AFT/NYSUT.

NYSUT Comes to Town, Reminds Us We Need to Know Our Place

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Queens UFT District Rep Under Scrutiny

And the District Rep sell-out tour continues. So many have such cozy relationships with principals and beyond.

Well, we knew that over time the end of elections a decade ago, with people retiring (many of the older DRs who were appointed by Randi after 2002 had been elected so still had some loyalty to the chapter leaders) many in the new crop don't feel they owe the chapter leaders anything.

Unrest from below: Received from one school:
What do you do when a certain Queens District Rep gets too cozy with the principals?

Teachers in this DR's district are completely FED UP with this DR:
  • misinforming chapter leaders and members
  • discouraging any grievances from being filed
  • telling chapter leaders principals can "do whatever they want"
  • having inappropriate friendships with principals and superintendents 
  • not being trusted by members
  • only being in it for the perks
  • not addressing complaints on principals
  • misrepresenting the contract
I take the position that MORE will be build one brick - and one school at time. This is coming not from the usual activists inside the UFT beltway, and the MORE these come, the MORE MORE will grow. That's how I measure growth, not by vote counts every 3 years but by what is happening underneath. But if MORE doesn't provide whatever support it can to these schools (which currently it not much) it will come to seem as distant as the leadership. MORE is in the early days of developing a structure but to do this bottom up requires some analysis and thinking it through.

If this school and district become a MORE outpost that would be a breakthrough in an historic Unity support area. That takes putting some organizational effort into this but it is not always clear to me how to go about this. Right now MORE is still basically centralized but must figure this stuff out. I am just too old to get into the kind of effort this will take but I hope the younger gen of activists are capable of doing this.

Unity Caucus: 15 Minutes From Destruction

If the earth's orbit had been delayed by 15 minutes, the 150 foot long meteor aimed at the earth would have landed at 52 Broadway instead of passing 17,000 miles away. The UFT leadership took immediate credit for saving the UFT building and possibly much of New York itself, though many at 52 Broadway were seen using body language to try to nudge the meteor towards City Hall.

Unity Caucus members were quick to give President Mike Mulgrew credit for delaying the orbit long enough for the meteor to pass by going to court and suing Mayor Bloomberg over closing schools, an act that slowed down time but will not delay the closings. Inside the UFT there were mixed feelings as the meteor landing would have been the only way to stop this year's school closing agenda.

"The fact that so many in our union take what we have for granted is proof that the UFT does a great job. Those union dues go a long way," said Unity Caucus member John Bartley who was quick to blame MORE for not doing enough to deflect the meteor.

Friday, February 15, 2013

Brooke Parker on Public Schools: What’s Mayoral Control Got to Do with It?

Great piece by parent activist Brooke Parker with historical perspective on my old District 14 scandals. One of the funny things I found was how when the attacks on the districts came from the proponents of mayoral control they landed on the black and Latino run districts while white -- very much Hasidic run District 14 which had as big a scandal as one could imagine (and the district UFT people were up to their ears in it) was ignored.

http://thewgnews.com/2013/02/public-schools-whats-mayoral-control-got-to-do-with-it/

Public Schools: What’s Mayoral Control Got to Do with It?


At the public hearing to co-locate a charter elementary school in the only public middle school in Greenpoint, a parent stood up and asked, “If the NYC DOE [Department of Education] is doing such a poor job by parents, why don’t we open more charter schools?”

Those who think the solution to fixing the problems of urban education is to redirect taxpayer dollars to privatized charters don’t understand what parents want. We want an end to Bloomberg’s “my way or the highway” totalitarian mayoral control of our schools. Before hopping into another dysfunctional relationship with the next mayor, it’s worth discussing our painful love affair with public education, and an abusive city DOE, in order to find our way out of this mess.

In 2002, the mayor wrested control of our public schools from what for thirty years had been the decentralized power of local school boards. This much authority given to the mayor to appoint the New York City schools chancellor, set policy, and create budgets was radical and unprecedented. School boards were erased and the city Board of Education became the Panel for Educational Policy (PEP). A voting body might sound democratic, but the majority eight out of thirteen PEP members are appointed at the pleasure of the mayor. Imagine the public outcry if the U.S. President were able to assign members to the House and Senate as a rubber stamp for all of his policies. The PEP has never voted against Mayor Bloomberg, even as so many of his controversial policies don’t make any sense for public schools. The one time PEP members threatened to vote against Bloomberg with the use of high stakes tests to end social promotion for third graders, Bloomberg removed those appointees the night before the vote in what was dubbed the “Monday Night Massacre.”

Anyone familiar with abusers knows that the first step in developing compliance is to isolate your “partner.” This sheds light on some of Bloomberg’s restructuring initiatives under mayoral control. He abolished geographic district groupings of schools into “regions” (a larger geographic area of neighboring district schools), abandoning regions in favor of “networks,” a nonsensical, conceptual grouping of supposedly like-minded schools from across the city. This is what we’re stuck with today, where my daughter’s network is no longer located in the community where the school is housed, but shared with other isolated schools in Queens, Manhattan, the Bronx, and Staten Island. The system is bizarrely byzantine and utterly disempowering for parents and community members. Finally, the district superintendent, once charged with hiring and firing our district school principals, has been thoroughly neutered. Superintendents aren’t even allowed to visit their district schools without an invitation.

The great irony of Williamsburg complaining about mayoral control is that District 14, which includes Williamsburg and Greenpoint, was held up as a prime example of what wasn’t working with school boards, with over two thirds of our school board seats held by the Hasidic and Polish community even though their combined enrollment in our D14 public schools was less than 7%. Latinos, representing 80% of students enrolled in D14 public schools, were constantly outvoted on issues that were critical to their schools, not the least of which was choosing a superintendent to hire principals and develop curriculum.

The D14 school board, with the help of its 20-year superintendent, William “Wild Bill” Rogers, was shockingly littered with scandals and improprieties, from explicitly segregated buildings to 6 million dollars of public funds funneled into a girls’ yeshiva through payments to no-show staff for schools with phantom students. The absurd residual of this corrupt school board’s disregard for the Latino families they should have been serving is still seen in the oddly named PS380 John Wayne School, which is located in the Hasidic section, with majority Latino enrollment, and named after the Hollywood actor because Superintendent Rogers was a big fan. Students at PS380 sometimes refer to their school as “Juan Wayne.”

Ten years of the mayoral-control experiment hasn’t lessened corruption or cronyism; it’s just citywide now, rather than local. Emails released between former Chancellor Joel Klein and Eva Moskowitz, CEO of Success Academy Charter Network, revealed the special access Moskowitz had to the chancellor and the favoritism she received, all while co-location hearings showed overwhelming opposition to Success Academy schools by local communities. Who was the mayor serving? Even as I write this, a Daily News article discusses a recent PEP vote that approved renewing a 4.5 million dollar contract for Champion Learning Center LLC, in spite of Champion being found to have improperly billed the city for 6 million dollars in previous years.

The reaction from parents to the field of mayoral candidates has been lukewarm, since we know that after the election our only recourse will be Bloomberg’s snide suggestion to “Boo me at parades.” There are no authentic checks and balances against mayoral control. Each candidate simply asserts that she or he will make a better Ruler of All Schools.
Abuse of power is a plague, and accountability to the public is the only remedy. So what can we do?

As it turns out, a lot. And now is the time. Parents can take a lesson from advice given to victims of abuse: Change the narrative of power and rebuild the relationships your abuser severed. Don’t believe the mayor when he implies that public school teachers are your enemy. Don’t accept that parents should only be “involved” in their childrens’ schools.

Parent involvement just means helping your kid get to school on time and reading to them. Parent engagement is what we’re after—where people with skin in the game get a meaningful say in policies that directly impact our children. In short, democracy.

We need to start taking advantage of some of the systems that are still in place (due to state laws that Bloomberg wasn’t able to change), including School Leadership Teams (SLTs), where an equal number of elected parents and teachers develop their school’s Comprehensive Educational Plan (CEP) and align the CEP with the school-based budget. SLTs are designed to be democratic institutions. We can form advocacy groups within each public school to keep our school communities informed about what’s happening on the local, state, and national level. We can end any false competition between neighborhood public schools through parents working together to ensure that all our neighborhood schools are great.

We can attend our district Community Education Councils (CECs) and run for CEC positions (applications available in February). The CECs are really only advisory, but they can be a powerful mechanism for gathering community input and setting an agenda for our district. If we want a local say in our local schools, we need to be ready for it.

We have to press every mayoral candidate to stand against mayoral control beyond lip service to parental involvement and input, and reform the structure of absolute power that has been absolutely corrosive to democracy. Remember, mayoral control has only been in place for ten years.

And the mayor isn’t the only elected official in town. State government is just as essential. Mayoral control is a New York State law, and sometimes it appears that there is gubernatorial control of the state Department of Education. Governor Cuomo’s Education Reform Commission came out with a list of statewide policy recommendations, but didn’t include a single public school parent on the panel. The list of recommendations reflects this absence. Skin in the game, people.

Fighting this fight may seem like a lot of work, but sometimes it’s just a matter of making a phone call or signing a petition. More than anything, we have to vote every time there’s an election—especially the local elections.
Democracy is never a fait accompli, but involves ongoing participatory action. We’ve been conditioned to see mayoral control as in our best interest, lest “we, the people” misuse our power. Think about that for minute. Can you imagine our Founding Fathers putting a special clause in the Constitution calling for absolute power for those occasions when “we, the people” couldn’t handle the responsibilities of democracy? Any elected official, be they city, state, or federal, that believes “we, the people” are too inefficient or vested to decide, or too lazy or stupid for power, is un-American, and Americans should vote them out.

The great American philosopher John Dewey describes the charge of public education as creating democratic citizens who will design the pluralistic society we will live in together. How can we possibly teach our children to be democratic citizens, to have the personal, collaborative, and creative power to make their own worlds, if we have ceded our own?
There are groups working on policies in support of our public schools, including our very own WAGPOPS! (Williamsburg and Greenpoint Parents: Our Public Schools!) To find out more about WAGPOPS!, including information on the next public meeting, LIKE us on Facebook at: www.facebook.com/WilliamsburgGreenpointParents.

Trashing Citizens of the World Scam Charter Scheme

As registration is happening for citizens of the world (part of Eva Moskowitz empire), if you could circulate these negative articles and have everyone click on them, it would be very helpful. We need to let everyone know that there is significant opposition.

http://www.scribd.com/doc/94382088/WAGPOPS-Letter-to-Suny-Opposing-Citizens-of-the-World-Charter-Schools
http://www.williamsburggreenpointschools.org/truth-about-charters/citizensoftheworldcharternewyork
http://thewgnews.com/2012/09/the-demise-of-public-education-mr-mrs-moskowitz-push-more-charters-on-williamburg/
http://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/20130129/greenpoint/parents-sue-state-for-approving-citizens-of-world-charter-school/slideshow/popup/336446
http://thediariesofalawstudent.blogspot.com/2012/05/citizens-of-world-charter-parent-choice.html
http://beatricesindante.blogspot.com/2012/05/wagpops-brilliant-expose-of-citizens-of.html
http://greenpointers.com/2013/01/31/charter-schools-and-wagpops/
http://ednotesonline.blogspot.com/2012/05/wagpops-brilliant-expose-of-citizerns.html
http://www.facebook.com/events/185195068267404/
http://www.scribd.com/doc/90106044/WAGPOPS-Defend-Public-Schools-from-Profit-Driven-Segregation
http://www.villagevoice.com/2013-01-30/news/Eva-Moskowitz-Bloomberg-Charter-Schools/
http://www.change.org/petitions/no-segregated-schools-in-williamsburg-greenpoint
http://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/20121206/williamsburg/locals-blast-charter-schools-proposed-co-location-williamsburg
http://nycpublicschoolparents.blogspot.com/2012/05/comments-on-applications-of-citizens-of.html
http://bayridgejournal.blogspot.com/2012/12/rally-against-citizens-of-world-charter.html
http://www.facebook.com/events/167687510021996/?_ft_=fbid.386935824718359
http://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=576777532350915&id=112111438837256
http://ednotesonline.blogspot.com/2013/01/brooklyn-parents-in-williamsburggreenpo.html
http://nycpublicschoolparents.blogspot.com/2012/05/citizens-of-world-charter-parent-choice.html
http://ednotesonline.blogspot.com/2013/01/brooklyn-parents-in-williamsburggreenpo.html
http://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?id=276284055389&story_fbid=439308849439285
http://dianeravitch.net/2013/01/14/do-affluent-white-neighborhoods-need-charter-schools/
http://www.schoolsmatter.info/2012/04/guest-post-silver-lake-parents-unite-in.html
http://ednotesonline.blogspot.com/2012/02/finally-williamsburg-and-greenpoint.html
http://browse.feedreader.com/c/Ed_Notes_Online/295466535
http://www.greenpointnews.com/calendar/5010/public-hearing-about-co-locating-citizens-of-the-world-charter-school-in-jhs-126
http://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2012_05_16_archive.html
http://www.k12newsnetwork.com/2012/05/williamsburg-public-schools-draw-heightened-contrast-between-their-approach-pr/
http://thediariesofalawstudent.blogspot.com/2012/05/comments-on-applications-of-citizens-of.html
http://nycpublicschoolparents.blogspot.com/2012/03/charter-schools-and-their-segregating.html
http://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/20130129/greenpoint/parents-sue-state-for-approving-citizens-of-world-charter-school
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/nyceducationnews/message/43526
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/nyceducationnews/message/50127
http://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/20121206/williamsburg/locals-blast-charter-schools-proposed-co-location-williamsburg
http://seattleducation2010.wordpress.com/2013/02/03/the-weekly-update-cyber-buck-high-stake-testing-and-charter-school-its-all-about-the-children-right/
http://musicthatwelike.blogspot.com/2012/10/parents-sue-suny-over-charter.html
http://www.facebook.com/advocatesforjustice/posts/374269002667000
http://www.villagevoice.com/2013-01-30/news/eva-moskowitz-bloomberg-charter-schools/4/
WAGPOPS Letter to Suny Opposing Citizens of the World Charter Schools
www.scribd.com
WILLIAMSBURG AND GREENPOINT PARENTS: OUR PUBLIC SCHOOLS! Representing the District 14 Parents and Co...
 
 

MORE Upcoming Special Events

Jeez, these guys are busy. MORE pres candidate Julie Cavanagh (and maybe Jack) will be at the Park Slope event today. I will be there with petitions.

If you are in Staten Island head on over to meet Might Mike Schirtzer and the always awesome Francesco Portelos.

  union membership 

Get out your calendars; MORE has organized many exciting events 

MORE in The Boroughs- Happy Hours  & A Special Forum with Lois Weiner in Manhattan

Please share this with your colleagues and bring your friends.

Petitions for our UFT election and Campaign Literature will be available at all of the following locations:

Fri. Feb 15th  Staten Island 4-7pm
The Burrito Bar
585 Forest Ave
https://www.facebook.com/events/209936455811220/

Fri. Feb 15th  4-7pm Park Slope, Brooklyn
Freddy’s Bar(in the back room)
627 5th Ave (btwn 17th-18th St.)
https://www.facebook.com/events/423104114439528/

Sat Feb 16th 12-3pm General Meeting Manhattan
224 West 29th St  Btwn 7th & 8th Ave 14th Floor NYC
Sign Petitions so we can appear on the UFT ballot and help us plan our campaign. Volunteer to help with leaflet distribution.
https://www.facebook.com/events/523813434329564/

Fri Feb 22nd 4-7pm Elmhurst, Queens 
Terraza 7
4019 Gleane St
https://www.facebook.com/events/444153422322802/

Sat Feb 23rd 3-5pm Manhattan 
Lois Weiner with Francesco Portelos and Harris Lirtzman. Moderator: Brian Jones- Dignity and Democracy in Schools Forum
CUNY Graduate Center; 365 5th Avenue (34th st)  NYC (Free event, please bring ID)
https://www.facebook.com/events/135275253301378/
Immediately following this event at 5pm MORE is hosting a Petition signing party-Pizza/Soft Drinks for those that sign and distribute campaign literature in your school

Fri March 1st 4-7pmBay Ridge Brooklyn 
Harp Bar
7710 3rd Ave (btwn 77th & 78th St)
https://www.facebook.com/events/532409363448887/

Fri March 1st 5-7pm Nassau/Queens 
Nancy’s Restaurant
255-41 Jericho Turnpike (near Little Neck Parkway)
Floral Park

If you would like to plan a happy hour event or help MORE during our campaign for UFT office please or to receive weekly updates email more@morecaucusnyc.org

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Calling All Teachers to Attend Closing School Hearings.

Guess: UFT or CTU?

Teachers must join our parents, students and community members. Pledge to attend a community meeting by clicking the button below.

Here is the difference between the two unions. In Chicago they consider an attack on one school an attack on all. Here, the UFT takes court action but does not organize the masses of UFT members to act.
Not every CTU member’s school is on the Hit List—but the entire system of public schools in which every one of us works is targeted. In order to save it, we must insist that 

EVERY TARGETED SCHOOL MUST REMAIN OPEN.
Here is the memo the CTU sent out:

Today, February 13th, 2013, Barbara Byrd-Bennett released another revision of the mayor’s Hit List, targeting 129 schools for closure next year. This unprecedented attack targets only schools in Black and Latino neighborhoods—especially the ones in which resources are few. Over the years, charter schools have blanketed these same neighborhoods with marketing materials full of false promises to lure families. In an unsurprising move, every single politically-connected charter school once called “underutilized” has been cleared from the Hit List. All this amidst the growing scandal over UNO charter school patronage.

Not every CTU member’s school is on the Hit List—but the entire system of public schools in which every one of us works is targeted. In order to save it, we must insist that 

EVERY TARGETED SCHOOL MUST REMAIN OPEN.

 

CPS is currently holding “community hearings” underwritten by the Walton Family Foundation (Wal-Mart) to sell these school closings to the public. The public is not buying what the saboteurs and privatizers are selling. Thousands of parents, teachers and community members have attended these meetings to save our schools from closing. Click here to see a video. These parents aren't letting themselves be pitted against one another. They aren't begging for just their own schools to be spared, but are banding together to save ALL neighborhood public schools.

Teachers must join our parents, students and community members. Pledge to attend a community meeting by clicking the button below.

Click to RSVP for a Meeting

In an effort to justify their assault on our schools, the mayor and his schools CEO have tried to mislead the public with irrelevant and misdirectional statistics about school enrollment. They have continued the CPS habit of presenting doomsday budget PowerPoints that later prove absolutely false. They have expanded privatized charter schools while claiming to have “too many seats” to serve all students well.

According to Byrd-Bennett’s own hand-picked closings commission, CPS does not have the capacity to close so many schools without exponentially increasing the chaos that ten years of privatization have already unleashed on the system. Our researchers, using CPS’s own data have demonstrated the racist effect of closings and privatization on our district. Community activists have even testified in Washington over the related civil rights issues.

View this short video for CTU member Tara Stamps’ call for unity.
Video of CTU member Tara Stamps at Fullerton Network hearing
Click the image above or this link to view the video.
CTU members, parents, clergy,  and community-based, grassroots organizations have organized summits, knocked on doors, visited El stops and phoned elected officials in an attempt to stop school closings and ensure neighborhood schools get the resources they need.
In addition, several aldermen have called on the City Council for a moratorium on charter expansion. This resolution needs your help.

Contact City Council Rules Committee to insist this resolution be heard.

Click here to take action
Parents, students and community are standing up for our schools. We need YOU to stand with them.

How UFT Reps Ignore Teacher Rights While Threatening

Here is the essence of top-down unions where the members' concerns are put second to those of the leadership. Isn't it time to elect district reps?
A contact posted this on the MORE discussion list.
I ended up marching across the bridge with the UFT contingent during Sunday's ATU rally and march. I started talking with a UFTer I didn't know (better than some of the hacks). We sort of shared stories--pressures at the schools, etc. I wasn't paying the greatest of attention until he told me that their administration forced them to grade the acuity exams during lunch and prep periods. I asked about any fightback in the school. He told me everyone was too scared. I asked about union leadership. I asked what brought him out to this rally. His DR made it clear that it would be really good/make her happy if he would show up.

Is it obvious what's wrong with this picture? Too afraid to fight, ties to the DR who ignores the fear and loathing at the school while forcing this person to show.  I was just so stunned I almost didn't know what to say.
Ed Note: we think organizing people to show to this rally is the right thing to do but too bad the teacher is under assault in his own school and can't seem to get the District Rep to notice while the DR is only interested in getting the teacher to what the union leadership wants.

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Right to Distribute MORE Lit in Mail Boxes

MORE needs your help. Remember. Unity has access to every school, even if the chapter leader refuses to be errand boys and girls and hand out Unity lit. They just send in the district reps. Know this: note the heavy duty comments on the MORE blog, the first time in memory where Unity has bothered to respond on this level. They are concerned that if MORE gets a serious vote total Unity will lose their air of invincibility. For those teachers with access to all sides at least they can make a choice. If they hear only one voice then they have no choice.

If you intend to hand out literature for the elections in other schools download and print this to show to anyone who gives you a problem. This is good until April 25. NOTE: ONLY DO IN OTHER SCHOOLS ON NON-SCHOOL TIME. Lunch hour is up to interpretation, so be careful. They are asking to be sent names of people who violate the working time provisions.

If you have a problem get in get in touch with Kit (see his letter below).

Here is the direct link to download: http://www.scribd.com/doc/125345377/Uft-Right-to-Leaflet-in-School-Mailboxes



To: MORE leafleters
From: Kit Wainer: MORE Election Committee
Re: Leafleting in the school mailboxes

Thank you for helping MORE get the word out about our 2013 election campaign!
As you place our election leaflets in the mailboxes within schools there are a few things you should know.
  1. You have the right to place union literature in the mailboxes within your school or within any other school, as long as you don’t do it while you are on duty. You can do it before or after school, or during your lunch period.
  2. When going to other schools make sure to sign in with security (bring photo ID), go to the office where the mailboxes are, and introduce yourself to the secretary. Show the secretary, or any administrator who asks, the Department of Education memorandum which allows you to place election literature in the mailboxes.
  3. Do not agree to leave the stack with the secretary, the UFT chapter leader, or anyone else. You have a right to put them directly in the mailboxes.
  4. Do not get into fights or arguments! Speak confidently but not aggressively. Getting into a battle will do you no good. If after you have shown everyone the Department of Education memorandum they still won’t let you leaflet, contact Kit Wainer (KitWainer@yahoo.com). Kit will contact the UFT and the UFT will get the Department of Education to tell the principal to let you in. You will then be allowed to return on another day.
Thanks, 
Kit

Chicago Teachers Union: Neo-liberalism is the Problem, UFT: Bloomberg is the Problem

It's neoliberalism, stupid.
Just head on over to the MORE blog and see all the Unity people crying about how they can't do much until the big bad Bloomberg is gone. Same as they did with Giuliani and at times Dinkins and with Koch and Lindsay before them. In Chicago they know where to place the blame and that gives them tools to fight back by educating the members as to the real threat -- that the neo-liberal assault by both Dems and Rep and not one mayor is the threat. What the UFT is trying to sell is that things might get marginally better. A losing proposition for the membership, but fine for the leaders who will always collect their 6 figure salaries. Note the level of hysteria in their comments. The idea of MORE winning and sending them back to teach is just a bit too much to bear.
..an increasing number of Democrats no longer even feigning to be troubled with placating unions–once seen as a central constituency for the party–or a broader agenda of equality and social justice, unionists and their partisans have grown increasingly exasperated at party policies that look more and more like those of Republicans. This is particularly true in the case of education reform, where Democrats have swallowed the Right’s free market orthodoxy whole. Much of the party appears to have given up on education as a public project. This is a shift that necessarily entails an attack on teachers and their unions. But like the rest of labor, American teachers unions have been unable to articulate a cogent critique of that shift within the Democratic Party and the policy proposals it has produced. The broader agenda has been occasionally challenged, but the sectors of the party pushing it have remained beyond reproach....The Chicago Teachers Union has made a decisive break with this approach.... Micah Uetricht
I received a note from Micah with links to articles on the Chicago TU and CORE story. Worth reading and I am looking forward to Micah's book which we will review here when it comes out. Just not this from our pal Kenzo Shibata: Proponents of the CTU’s bottom-up organizing style say there is no other way to win. “Top-down just does not work. It’s the style of the bosses,” says the CTU's Kenzo Shibata.
Mark Brenner, director of Labor Notes, an organization dedicated to fostering union democracy, says this commitment sets the CTU apart from much of American labor. “There’s a lot of cynicism in labor about the capacity of ordinary, working-class people to run their unions,” Brenner says. “Leaders think those people should have good lives, but they don’t think they have the capacity to do big things.” That cynicism, Brenner says, has prevented other unions from engaging members the way Chicago teachers have. “Even among ‘progressive’ unions, democracy is not high on the list of must-haves. That has really hurt our movement,” he says. “Democracy is what builds the capacity to take high-stakes, risky actions like the CTU did.”
Kit Wainer, running for high school exec bd, is quoted:
Other union leadership has been made skittish by the CTU example. Referring to a CORE-style caucus fighting a recently negotiated Newark Teachers Union contract introducing merit pay, NTU President Joe Del Grosso seemed nervous. “They had some signs there that we should follow Chicago’s lead,” Del Grosso recently told Working In These Times’ Josh Eidelson. “I think that’s very dangerous.”
In New York City, the Movement of Rank-and-File Educators (MORE), a dissident caucus challenging the current leadership of the United Federation of Teachers (UFT), draws inspiration from the CTU’s rank-and-file democracy.
Kit Wainer, a social studies high school teacher and member of MORE, says that under the UFT’s current leadership, “There’s no real process for members to have any kind of direct say in the day-to-day direction of the union. There’s formal democracy, but no substantive democracy.”
The problem, Wainer says, is not that the UFT lacks a broad social-justice vision—it’s that rank-and-file teachers are not engaged in democratic practices within the union to enact that vision. “[UFT President Mike] Mulgrew talks about poverty, about charters as a privatization scheme by the rich,” Wainer says. “The problem is they won’t mobilize members to fight. Their idea of fighting is hiring lobbyists and lawyers to go to Albany, or buying TV commercials.”
If MORE’s slate can capture leadership like CORE, Wainer says, “We’d build up membership confidence and willingness to struggle. We could reteach members what the union is.”
Well, there's so much interesting stuff I want to print it all. So go forth and read. So many lessons for us here on the diffs from the UFT, especially in the approach where the UFT blames Bloomberg while the CTU blames neo-liberalism, a word the UFT will never use. Know why? Because a whole lot of neo-liberalism is built into their fabric.
Hi Norm,

My name is Micah Uetricht and I'm a writer in Chicago. I'm a subscriber to EdNotes and saw your post about the Ethan Young paper on the CTU and a bit of history about CORE in Chicago. Thought you might be interested in a short book I am currently at work on about the CTU that will be published by Verso in the summer. Obviously, CORE plays a central role in it, and the caucus gets its own chapter in the book, based on numerous interviews I've been doing with CORE members. 

It will be a little while before the book is out, but I thought I'd flag it for you anyway, in case you're interested. Also, here are two pieces I've recently written on the CTU:

This article (from the same issue of Jacobin that my piece on the CTU and the Democrats is in) was recently given to all 700-800 members of the CTU's House of Delegates. I think it's an extremely important piece about the transformation of education in the last several decades. And perhaps you know the author, Will Johnson. http://jacobinmag.com/2012/09/lean-production-whats-really-hurting-public-education/

In solidarity,

Micah
Assailed Teacher touches on the same theme about the teacher unions refusal to be critical of the Dem ed deformers.

MAYBE THIS GUY SHOULD RUN OUR UNION