Sunday, May 12, 2013

“No” to Testing: More and More City Parents Boycott Standardized Tests

On April 8th, parents from the Earth School, a progressive school on the Lower East Side, held a meeting to announce the boycott and spread the word to parents at other schools. The meeting was advertised by flyers posted in playgrounds and by word of mouth. News of the boycott trickled out and took hold most firmly in schools that are known for their alternative styles education.
I was going to try to parse this article but there is so much meat here I'm cross posting the entire thing.

http://school-stories.org/2013/05/more-and-more-city-parents-just-say-no-to-standardized-tests/

“No” to Testing: More and More City Parents Boycott Standardized Tests


On April 17, when most third through eighth graders in New York State were taking their second day of an English language arts test, one sixth grader at the Institute for Collaborative Education on the Lower East Side, had a different task. She was working on a 1,427-word letter to her teacher explaining why she wasn’t among her peers.

“I am boycotting the test because I don’t like the way the DOE uses the test results,” wrote 11-year-old Hope K. C., whose name has been changed to protect her privacy. “The kids who take the test are being used like guinea pigs in a lab. I do NOT want to be used this way.”

What began with a handful of parents deciding to opt out, took off as a full-blown test boycott in three days.

“Our sixth grade list just caught on fire,” said Kemala Karmen, a parent at the Institute for Collaborative Education, a public 6 through 12 school for TK students.

Half of the 60 students in Hope’s sixth grade class ended up refusing to take the test, which is given throughout the state over a two-week period in order to assess each student’s progress in English and math.

These families at Institute for Collaborative Education joined those from 40 other city schools, and many more around the state this year in a growing movement to halt the accelerated use of standardized tests in public schools for everything from closing schools to firing teachers. Organizers estimate that hundreds of students participated. Last year, only six New York City families opted out of the state standardized exams in grade three to eight. Schoolbook reported that 113 students did not take the tests statewide, those some of those students may not have been boycotting.

“It’s bigger this year because it got to the point where the parents realized that one, they have the right to opt out, and two, they were outraged,” said Jane Hirshmann, the co-founder and co-chair of an anti-testing advocacy group called Time Out from Testing.

Fueling the outrage was the amount of time taken away from instruction by the new tests. The length of the tests grew by 90 minutes–three hours for math and three hours for English language arts taken over six days.

The tests are longer because this year because New York State began testing its students for the first time on new, more rigorous standards called the Common Core. In a letter dated February 2013, Chancellor Dennis Walcott warned parents that scores would plummet this year because these standards have not been fully incorporated into the curriculum. Hirshmann said that letter helped kick parents into gear. 

In addition, observers believe recent revelations nationwide that test results have been both fraudulent and flawed angered many parents. Most notably, in March, Atlanta’s former superintendent Beverly Hall was indicted along with 32 of her teachers for their role in widespread cheating that was taking place on tests in that school district. Only weeks later, it was revealed that Pearson, the company that makes New York City’s tests, had miscalculated 13.2 percent of students’ scores on a test that determines eligibility for the city’s Gifted and Talented Program.  Pearson also drew fire last year for questions on the eighth grade English Language Arts tests about a pineapple that had no correct answers.

“I think that at a minimum, the testing advocates and companies are probably panicked over a public relations debacle,” said David Bloomfield, a professor of education, law and policy at Brooklyn College.  “But the problem is that state, city and corporate officials all seem to regard it as a mere public relations problem and not a substantive problem with testing.”

Pearson still maintains its $5.5 million contract with New York City, though “roughly” $500,000 of that was withheld because of the errors on the gifted and talented test, according to Devon Puglia, a spokesperson for the DOE.
“I told the company’s officials in no uncertain terms that I expect this will never happen again,” wrote Chancellor Walcott in a statement.

Since 2002, the federal No Child Left Behind Act has mandated that every third through eighth grader in the nation’s public schools take standardized tests in math and reading at the end of every school year. In the last year, a growing number of anti-testing movements have sprung up in various cities as a response. In Seattle, 19 teachers at Garfield High School refused to administer city-mandated standardized tests that would impact teacher evaluations. And in Texas, where then-Gov. George W. Bush laid the groundwork for No Child Left Behind, state Senators lambasted Pearson, which also has a contract with that state.

In New York State, what began more than a decade ago in Westchester County when two-thirds of the students at Scarsdale Middle School made headlines when they boycotted the statewide-standardized tests, has grown into a national movement.

At its core, the movement to boycott the standardized tests is an effort to hit at the heart of so-called education reformers such as former NYC Chancellor Joel Klein, former DC Chancellor Michelle Rhee, and philanthropists such as Bill Gates and Eli Broad. Their agenda includes support of charter schools, choice and minimizing teachers’ union power.
“The high stakes tests are the central nervous system of the ed reform movement,” said Janine Sopp, a parent of a fifth grader who opted out and is an active member of Change the Stakes, one of the groups that helped organize the boycott.

“The education world has become overwrought with powerful money, primarily through efforts of the Gates Foundation, the Broad Foundation and Walton,” Sopp said, referring to foundations that have contributed hundreds millions of dollars to boost the performance of schools by encouraging competition.  “It’s big corporations dictating legislation to the United States Department of Education and then that trickles down.”
She said the message of Occupy Wall Street movement in 2011 helped galvanize some parents to start Change the Stakes.

The movement gained traction last year when parents boycotted field tests, which are meant to gauge the validity of test questions. Pearson administered field tests to selected schools and students’ though results hold no bearing for students, parents feel that this practice takes class time away from time spent teaching and learning.

This year, field questions were sprinkled throughout the statewide tests that students took last week, which city officials say is the cheapest, most effective way to insure the quality of the tests.

“They’re using our kids do to their research,” said Lauren Blankstein whose daughter is in third grade at the Ella Baker School. “We should have to opt in to those kinds of tests and allowing our kids to answer those kinds of questions.”

Parents are concerned about the increased importance of children’s test results. The scores determine whether or not a student will progress to the next grade and are often used in the middle and high school admissions process. Now, they also play a large role in determining a school’s grade on its annual progress report. Starting next year they will once again be tied to teacher evaluations.

It’s the last two factors that are most troubling to parents participating in the movement.

“To judge a teacher based on a day’s test when there are so many other factors is driving good teachers from the profession,” said Jen Nessel, who has worked with Change the Stakes. Her child is not yet old enough to be tested.

This year, 22 schools in New York City were slated to close by the Department of Education because of consistently low scores on their progress reports. Under Bloomberg’s tenure a total of 163 schools have been closed.

Not all observers see that as a negative.

Teachers College professor Eric Nadelstern said the recent push to test elementary and middle school students is really a “push toward more academic rigor and raising the bar.” He served as a deputy chancellor  in Joel Klein’s administration.

“When you’re dealing with large complex systems such as the New York City Public School system, how do you actually compare performance of schools against each other?” Nadelstern said. He said he was once an opponent of standardized testing and still feels it’s not right for every school. But a need for accountability of teachers, principals and superintendents in New York City’s lower performing schools has convinced him that some form of testing is necessary.
“Part of what we’re seeing now in the push back against standardized testing is that it’s really a push back against accountability.”

Parents say that could not be further from the truth.
“The schools have to be held accountable,” said Blankstein. “But it’s not as simple as just tests.”
The most vocal parents in the movement are from high performing schools that are not on the chopping block, a fact that has drawn some criticism by reformers like New York State Regents Chancellor Meryl Tisch. However, parents who are involved say they have participators from the Bronx to Brownsville and they are trying to reach out further.

In fact, some parents feel that the tests do the most disservice to the families in low-income areas, where failing schools are typically found.
“I think what people are waking up to is that these tests are being used to sort and rank students and schools in a way that perpetuates inequity,” said Kemala Karmen.

Organizations such as Time Out from Testing and Change the Stakes served as resources for parents who were intrigued by the idea, but worried about the consequences. They made generic letters available on their websites that parents could download and give to their school administrators informing them of their decision to opt out.

Time Out from Testing was formed in 1998 when a network of schools, known as the consortium schools, was at risk of losing its waiver from the statewide Regents tests. Co-chairman Jane Hirshmann has had three children attend consortium schools and has been active in the organization since its inception.

This year, Hirshmann visited parents’ associations across the city, spreading her message against high stakes testing.

Change the Stakes formed in 2011 by parents and teachers. They have about 20 members and hold meetings once a month. They’ve drawn inspiration from educations activists such as historian Diane Ravitch and parent activist Leonie Haimson, according to Sopp.

Sopp said their main mission during the boycott was to squelch myths that had arisen about standardized testing. Most parents agreed that there has been a lot of confusion about how the test scores will be used and what will happen to the students who opt out.

Most of the organizing for this year’s boycott happened in the week leading up to the start of the tests.

On April 8th, parents from the Earth School, a progressive school on the Lower East Side, held a meeting to announce the boycott and spread the word to parents at other schools. The meeting was advertised by flyers posted in playgrounds and by word of mouth. News of the boycott trickled out and took hold most firmly in schools that are known for their alternative styles education.

At Institute for Collaborative Education, an email was sent out to all of the sixth grade parents on April 10th, which turned into a class-wide dialogue. That school also has a high school that is one of the consortium schools.
At the Ella Baker School, an elementary school on the Upper East Side momentum started in a similar way, with an email blast sent out by the Parent Teacher’s Association. Ella Baker had been part of the boycott of the field tests in 2012, so they were also ripe for this year’s boycott.
It is still unclear what effect the boycott might or might not have.
A Frequently Asked Questions sheet on the Department of Education website says that students who do not take the tests will be able to present a portfolio of their work in order to be promoted to the next grade. Fourth grade parent Cynthia Copeland said the high schools she surveyed told her she could use a portfolio instead of the test score for her son’s admissions application.

The Department’s website also says that if schools test fewer than 95 percent of their students, they will not make Adequate Yearly Progress, which means they may be subjected to some interventions by the city.
For many parents, opting out was worth the risk. All who participated reported that their schools were quick to find other tasks for their children to do during the tests. This was not the case in the Rush-Henrietta Central School district outside Rochester, where a couple is suing the school district for refusing to let their child participate in extra-curricular activities because he refused to take the tests.

While the movement succeeded in drawing attention to anti-testing arguments, it’s unclear what impact it will have on next year.

“I’m not really sure what would enable it to accelerate,” Aaron Pallas, a professor of sociology and education at Teachers College, Columbia University, said of the movement. “The institutional and legal supports for the maintenance of high stakes tests are very strong.”
But advocates are determined to press on through the summer.

“Last Friday the test finished,” said Marco Battistella, a parent from the Earth School. “Now we can start today to work on next year’s boycott.”

Providence Student Union: Take the Test - Updated with Ravitch Appeal to Support PSU

Where the people pushing high stakes testing are themselves challenged to "Take the Test." And as this film from the Providence Student Union shows, they don't do all too well.

Take The Test from Providence Student Union on Vimeo.

Diane Ravitch urges you to support the PSU:

Please Help the Providence Student Union

by dianerav
I am re-posting this appeal to help a great group of high school youth.
For their valiant, smart, witty efforts to save their schools and future generations from the blight of high-stakes testing, I name them to the honor roll as champions of public education. May they grow and flourish!
I am a huge fan of the Providence Student Union.
I just donated to them to help them continue their movement and to encourage students in other cities and states to organize against high-stakes testing.
Please consider going to their web page and supporting them. I love their energy, their idealism, their wit, and their creativity.
I share their belief that education should be engaging, exciting, and a source of inspiration and joy. They have energetically protested the soul-deadening emphasis on high-stakes testing in Rhode Island. And they have expressed their own vision for real education.
Best of all, they have mastered the art of political theater to publicize their work.
First, they held a zombie protest in front of the Rhode Island Department of Education building, protesting the state's dead zombie policies.
Then, they persuaded accomplished professionals to take a test made up of released items from the NECAP test, which the state has inappropriately made a graduation requirement.
Just days ago, they delivered their First Annual State of the Student Address, describing their vision for real education. They timed it so that it was one hour before the State Commissioner Deborah Gist's annual state of education address to the Legislature. Gist, you may recall, won national acclaim for threatening to fire every employee of Central Falls High School due to its low test scores.
Because of the PSU's political theater, the Boston Globe came out against the use (mis-use) of NECAP as a graduation requirement.
The Providence Student Union represents the best of American youth. They are independent, creative, active, fearless. They are what we hope for our nation in the future. Help them thrive.

Friday, May 10, 2013

MORE Weekly Update #53: Join us at MORE's last general meeting of the 2012-13 school year!

Note the important thing about this update. Number 53. Over a year of weekly updates. In all my 43 years of activism in union politics, one thing I would have wished for was some kind of consistent communication device. Peter Lamphere has been a MORE hero in making sure this happens every single week, rain or shine - or 3 month trips to Vietnam last year when he was making sure I got it out in some way while he was gone. So when people like to talk about victories it goes way beyond elections into little things like this. My goal is to establish a print edition, not weekly but as a quarterly. If it doesn't happen assume I spent the time at the beach.

Oh, and MORE is meeting tomorrow, which it has done in a general meeting every month since February 2012 -- other than last summer (when MORE held 4 summer events). That's -- let me see now -- excuse me, I have to take off my shoes -- 14 months. So all youse guys who only worry about elections every 3 years think deeper.

And by the way, ICE, which is still around, not as a caucus but as a group of people who have a lot to talk about, is meeting today to -- well, talk about stuff. Actually, MORE has so much on its plate, the 3 hour monthly meetings can't cover it all. So ICE affords some space to explore issues, most importantly, in a diner with great rice pudding loaded with whip cream.

Celebrate MORE's election campaign at our last general meeting of 2012-13!
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Movement of Rank & File Educators

Weekly Update #53 - May 9th, 2013

Upcoming:


General Meeting
Sat., May 11, 12-3PM
224 W. 29th St., 14th Fl.

Labor Notes Troublemakers School
Sat., May 18, 9AM-4PM
Health Professions HS
345 E. 15th St.

Join us at MORE's last general meeting of the 2012-13 school year!


Saturday May 11, 2013


 
 
  • Vote in caucus leadership elections
  • Develop strategies for advancing our vision of public schools and fighting for a contract that ensures better working/learning conditions
  • Select key issues and brainstorm mobilization methods
  • Form summer events committees (summer forums, family picnics, end-of-school-year celebration)
Noon to 3:00 PM
224 West 29th St (btwn 7th and 8th Aves.)
14th Floor

RSVP on Facebook
HELP CHOOSE OUR STEERING COMMITTEE 

The steering committee will vote on important caucus issues before bringing them to the general membership for further discussion and final voting.

The steering committee election will take place tomorrow at our May 11 general meeting and via email over the subsequent week.


Only MORE members may vote, so please join today.

 

We Need a New Contract! Rally at City Hall

Every single public sector worker in New York City is without a current contract.
On Wednesday, June 12, join other city unions rally to fight for a better contract for all!

Click here for directions.

Watch UFT Mayoral Candidates at the UFT Spring Education Conference

Before MORE's last general meeting of the year, hear where the candidates stand.

Saturday, May 11 @ 8:30 AM
New York Hilton Hotel
1335 6th Ave.
New York City, NY

Training for Activists

Register for the school
Read the flyer

Join MORE chapter leaders and activists at the Labor Notes Troublemakers School for important training on 
  • Beating Apathy
  • Running for Union Office
  • Assertive Grievance Handling
  • Roots of the Public Sector Budget Crisis
  • Community Alliance-Building Done Right
  • Contract Campaigns That Win
Saturday, May 18
9:00 AM – 4:00 PM
The High School for Health Professions and Human Services
345 E 15th St., Manhattan
(between 1st and 2nd Ave.)

Portelos: 9:30 AM Update - I recorded and didn't hide the fact - Meeting Cancelled by DOE - Security Rampant

Update: 9:30am. [See Drama Today, 9AM: Portelos Challenges "No Recording" Policies at DOE Despite Ermina Claudio Threats]

I'm not sure the DOE has face such rampant resistance as Portelos brings, especially given the internet age. What next? Live streaming? What if the UFT backed everyone in demanding to record these hearings? Does the UFT really support these people? I mean, if the UFT supported them in a forest while a tree fell and no one was there to hear it did they really support them?
I recorded and didn't hide the fact as I spoke into my phone and tablet. Again she insisted the meeting could not take place if I was recording. "Power everything down. Don't make me check." She stated.  It was as if Lex Luther was attempting to feed Clark Kent Kryptonite. Might as well make me walk through an Electro-Magnetic Pulse machine and fry all my devices.

  In addition to the regular School Safety Agent at the desk, there were two additional agents posted at her door. What? I'm just a mild mannered parent who has had enough of the corruption and I happen to be an educator. This past Tuesday there were EIGHT School Safety Agents at school as I was barred from attending a public meeting.

The meeting ended and they are trying to say I didn't want to meet. I spoke into my smartphone and stated "let the record show I want to have this meeting, but also exercise my right as citizen as per Penal Law 250."  At no point did they reference an article of our contract, a law, a regulation or policy.

As I left, they told me "oh also, you can't go to IS 49." I was supposed to go and cast my ballot for an SBO. I am the chapter leader.

They will try to get me on insubordination and just fuel my federal case. If I do not receive formal charges today, the 15th day since the SCI report, I have to be returned. Today is day 380!! All of you have been paying me "not to teach".

Please make calls to Courtenaye Jackson-Chase, top attorney (212) 374-3440. She runs the show. CJackson-Chase@schools.nyc.gov also Deputy Mayor Patti Harris +1 212-788-3000
This isn't just my fight...it's ours.
-Francesco Portelos mrportelos@gmail.com educatorfightsback.org
Parent
Educator
UFT Chapter Leader IS 49
“In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.” -Martin Luther King Jr.

Drama Today, 9AM: Portelos Challenges "No Recording" Policies at DOE Despite Ermina Claudio Threats

"Didn't let me record. Meeting didn't happen." - F.P. {See follow-up: Portelos: 9:30 AM Update - I recorded and didn't hide the fact - Meeting Cancelled by DOE - Security Rampant
I do not trust Ms. Claudio and I believe I have every right not to trust her. I am exercising my right to audio record. Ms. Claudio also falsely claimed I cannot record as per the CBA. what article was that again?  ... You have stated that I "have no right under the collective bargaining agreement to record a disciplinary conference." I searched the entire CBA and found no mention of audio recording. Neither for or against it. As I stated during our previous conference on May 3, 2013, I am exercising my right under New York State Law. More specifically NY Wiretapping Law Penal Code Law 250.00...... Francesco Portelos
This morning at 9AM should be P-day as Francesco Portelos directly challenges the attempts to keep disciplinary hearings in the dark. Have you ever asked a UFT official why they don't insist in the right to record given there is no rule stated anywhere that you can't? Sorry I asked.
Should you prevent the conference from going forward for a second time, we will take whatever actions we deem appropriate.
Erminia Claudio
Community Superintendent, District 31
What are they hiding? The above was in response to this email from Francesco Portelos.
Ms Claudio and UFT Leaders,
       
        The information I received, from Ms. Claudio, states that I cannot record and also falsely states that I "refused to meet without recording". It's less than 24 hours before this disciplinary hearing and I am telling all parties that the second I get out of my car, at Petrides, I will flip on the record button on one, or more, devices. I will not turn it off until I get back in my car. There is no hiding it. I do not trust Ms. Claudio and I believe I have every right not to trust her. I am exercising my right to audio record. Ms. Claudio also falsely claimed I cannot record as per the CBA. what article was that again? 

I'm awaiting a response from anyone showing me in writing and referencing a regulation, policy or law stating I cannot record. Actually there seems to be a growing number of people waiting to see the outcome. 


Also I hope Ms. Claudio has more information about the allegations and any substantiated claims than what is in that extremely vague report.

Thank you.

Francesco Portelos
Here is the full email from Erminia. Ask her and Walcott if they REALLY want quality teachers. Feel free to send her an email or better, call her office.
May 10, 2013 Disciplinary Hearing

From: "Claudio Erminia" <eclaudi@schools.nyc.gov>
Date: May 9, 2013 1:44 PM
Subject: RE: May 10, 2013 Disciplinary Hearing
To: "Francesco Portelos" <fportelos@gmail.com>
Cc:

Dear Mr. Portelos,

As we discussed, you are not permitted to record the disciplinary conference.  I expect to see you tomorrow at 9:00am in my office without any recording devices.  Should you prevent the conference from going forward for a second time, we will take whatever actions we deem appropriate.

E. Claudio

Erminia Claudio
Community Superintendent, District 31
715  Ocean Terrace, Building A
Staten Island, New York 10301
Telephone #: 718 420-5667 
Fax #:  718 420-5677
eclaudi@schools.nyc.gov
More from Francesco Portelos:
See my post about audio recording disciplinary hearing. My superintendent and DOE lawyers are having a fit. This can be huge for staff under attack if they can't stop audio recordings. http://wp.me/p31ecs-vO
 And the older correspondence:
Ms. Claudio
    Perhaps it's best an attorney from the Department of Education is present as this situation is not only delicate, high profile and in litigation, but also that with new information provided, you may be added as a defendant in an amended complaint of Federal case 12 CV 3141. I'm simply saying this would be best for both of us considering that what both of us say will probably come up in a court hearing.

-Francesco Portelos

From: Francesco Portelos [mailto:fportelos@gmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, May 08, 2013 1:21 PM
To: Claudio Erminia
Cc: Greenfield Robin; Singer Robin F.; Vazquez Marisol; Weiner David; Jackson-Chase Courtenaye; Rodi Katherine G.; Fox Thomas; Zaharakis Despina
Subject: May 10, 2013 Disciplinary Hearing

Ms. Claudio,

   I am in receipt of your letter dated May 7, 2013 (attached). You have stated that I "have no right under the collective bargaining agreement to record a disciplinary conference." I searched the entire CBA and found no mention of audio recording. Neither for or against it. As I stated during our previous conference on May 3, 2013, I am exercising my right under New York State Law. More specifically NY Wiretapping Law Penal Code Law 250.00. Am I supposed to understand that if it is not  mentioned in the UFT/DOE CBA I cannot do it? Just to throw in a small analogy; If I was to not fully stop at a stop sign and speed past 15 mph in the Petrides Complex can I reference the CBA if I am pulled over? 

   Speaking of the CBA, I came across something interesting in Article Twenty-One Section C:
 
"C. Summons
1. A teacher summoned by the principal to a conference which may lead to
disciplinary action for reasons of misconduct may be accompanied, at his/her option, by the chapter leader or his/her designated alternate.

2. Teachers summoned to the office of a community or high school superintendent or to the Division of Human Resources shall be given two days notice and a statement of the reason for the summons, except where an emergency is present or where considerations of confidentiality are involved.
Whenever an employee is summoned for an interview for the record which may lead to disciplinary action, he/she shall be entitled to be accompanied by a representative who is employed by the city school system, or by an employee of the Union who is not a lawyer, and he/she shall be informed of this right. However, where the community or high school superintendent or the Division of Human Resources permits an attorney who is not a member of the city school system to represent any participant in the interview, the employee shall be entitled to be represented by an attorney."

Pursuant to this section, I am requesting to be accompanied by my attorney for this disciplinary hearing.
--------
Interesting addition that there was an email from a MORE chapter leader on the MORE Chapter Leader listserve:
My principal informed staff a couple of days ago via e-mail that he would be doing informal pop in observations (ok, fine) AND that he would be filming portions of them to use later for reflections (not fine).
In the world of the DOE they can do anything they want.

Thursday, May 9, 2013

Chicago Teachers Union Plans 3 Day March to Oppose School Closings

....while the UFT does......

The march will begin March 18, the day after the Chicago union elections, a sign that CORE is pretty confident. Expect a vicious attack on them from the mainstream press in the days before the election to try to influence the vote.
I know that some Unity people are rooting against Karen Lewis, especially after she embarrassed the hell out of some of them when she appeared at the UFT last month and talked about how they gave up the perks when they got elected. Oh, sitting in that room at that moment was oh so much fun.

Well we know from some of the Unity comments on the blogs during the elections that they think that these school closings are what the CTU deserve for daring to stand up and strike instead of collaborating. Of course many of the 150 plus schools closed under Bloomberg through 2010 came WITH the UFT collaboration. The rest had court, not street resistance. Given a choice, would Bloomberg prefer the current Unity leadership of a Chicago-like leadership? One MORE reason to come to Saturday's MORE meeting.

This just in from Diane Ravitch:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Stephanie Gadlin
May 9, 2013 312/329-6250
Thousands prepare for a three-day march against school closings as Chicago’s mayor continues his assault on working-class people under the guise of education reform
CHICAGO – As the city braces itself for the largest assault on public education in the country, thousands of parents, students, teachers, clergy, citizens and community leaders are preparing for a “long march” against school closings on May 18, 19 and 20. Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) President Karen Lewis said the non-violent demonstration is necessary because “we have a mayor who refuses to listen to reason, research and logic,” in his campaign to destroy 54 school communities which will impact about 50,000 children.
The 30-plus mile march is themed, “Our City. Our Schools. Our Voice,” and will include simultaneous routes from the West and South sides of the city. Protestors intend to walk each day past many of the 54 school communities slated for closure and their efforts will culminate in a mass demonstration downtown. It is sponsored by the CTU, the Grassroots Education Movement, SEIU Local 1, Unite Here Local 1 and Chicago PEACE, an interdenominational coalition of clergy leaders from across the city. Donations are pouring in from across the country.
“Despite the testimony of thousands of parents, teachers and people who work and live in the school communities impacted, Rahm Emanuel is dedicated to entering the history books as having destroyed the most public schools in one year than anyone,” Lewis said. “He refuses to listen to independent hearing officers, law enforcement officials, educators, researchers, parents and the students themselves. We have no choice but to use the power of organizing and direct action to engage in what will be a long fight to restore sanity to our school district.”
The march kicks off at 10:00 a.m. on May 18 on the South Side at Jesse Owens Elementary School, 12450 S. State St., and on the near West Side at Jean de Lafayette Elementary School, 2714 W. Augusta Blvd.
“School closings hurt children academically and the mayor’s plan will also put thousands of students’ safety at risk and many public school employees may lose their jobs,” Lewis said. “We must do whatever is necessary to stop this assault on the working class and the poor. Instead of just getting angry we must organize. Tell Emanuel, the Board, the school CEO and their corporate sponsors that this is our city, these are our schools and we will use our voice to fight for justice.”
Independent hearing officers reviewed the Chicago Public Schools’ list of 54 slated closings and have recommended removing 14 from the list saying those schools don't meet the state standards and are in violation of the law. The mayor’s hand-picked Chicago Board of Education will vote on the issue on Wednesday, May 22. Shortly thereafter, a massive voter registration drive will commence throughout the city.

Friday: Change the Stakes Meeting Focuses on Coming Field Test Boycott

This in from parent activist Janine Sopp. I can't make this meeting as we have an ICE meeting tomorrow but these CTS meetings are becoming the epicenter of the opt-out movement with even people from around the state touching base to widen the impact of the movement beyond the city. There will also be some kind of demo/rally coming up in June. Teachers with parent contacts who might have an interest should be informed about these meeting.

By the way, the CTS group is holding a family picnic in Central Park on Saturday May 18 starting at 3PM, exact location to be announced.

Greetings!

As many of you know, the Pearson field tests are scheduled to hit our schools from June 3-7, less than a month away. Several people have been already been discussing their objection and desired actions against these tests again this year. We invite you to the next Change the Stakes meeting in which a boycott action will be on the agenda. We will have a preliminary discussion and spend some time outlining various strategies. We would like to collaborate with other groups and individuals on this and hope you will join this initial conversation. We are planning another meeting dedicated to this on the Monday following (location TBD) and would like to have as many groups come together. If you cannot make Friday's meeting but want to be involved please reply and we'll be sure to include you in the minutes and next steps. If you have someone who can represent your group, please let us know. We'll send details for the Monday meeting asap. For sure, it will take a group effort to pull off the kind of response we hope to create.

As always, our meetings are open to all but folks need photo ID to enter the building.

Change the Stakes Meeting
Friday, May 10th, 5:30-7:30 PM
CUNY Grad Center, Room 4202

Thanks so much and feel free to share this with others.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

When Davids Boo Goliaths Do They Lack Civility?

Civility is the last recourse of the powerful, those who can afford to appear civil because they hold all the power...
The call for civility exposes a foundational problem with the current education reform debate because, for all practical purposes, there is no debate..... Paul Thomas,  A Call for Non-Cooperation.
I call for a moratorium on requests that we be civil to people bordering on criminality. Straddling the fence is not an option. You can't take the position that we should act in a civil manner in a "debate" between people with nukes and people with pea shooters - in essence there is no debate ... public booing is not just born out of frustration but is a political tactic to draw attention from a very biased media that ignores the voice of the opposition....Even bad press is better than no press.  EdNotes (I love to quote myself).
Paul Thomas reacts here (A Call for Non-Cooperation: So that Teachers Are Not Foreigners in Their Own Profession) to Randi Weingarten's call for a one-year moratorium on high-stakes testing associated with the Common Core and to Jennifer Jennings' apology to Secretary Duncan for being booed at AERA. He warns that moderation and civility are not appropriate responses to extreme conditions... Diane Ravitch
Every day there is another outrage that enrages people. Whether teachers being railroaded or charters being illegally allowed to troll for pre-k students to keep them out of public schools or the monthly PEP meetings. Unfortunately, many academics stay removed from these arenas where they would rub elbows with real people -- teachers and parents and students in closing schools while multi-million dollar charters steal their futures. Maybe these academics like to think of themselves as being non-partisan, looking at both sides. There are no 2 sides, only one truth. ..... Me again (I can't shut up.)
As promised, I'm following up on yesterday's post "Jennifer Jennings (formerly Eduwonkette) apologizes to Secretary Duncan over the booing at AERA."

This one is a long slog and I still may have one more post to go, but hang in here if you can. Lots of points to make.

I love Paul Thomas' call for non-cooperation, exactly the position the UFT should have been taking since Day One of BloomKlein. (You won't get no stinkin' seniority rules changed so you can close billions of schools, etc.)

I was glad to hear from Jennifer Jennings this morning after she read my piece last night and we are hoping to get together soon. I promise not to boo when I see her, though maybe after this piece she may boo me.

I will ask if she got to see our $30 film at AERA on that Sunday morning when it was sandwiched between $multi-million ed deform films?

Diane Ravitch has her take on the apology here.

Arnold Dodge parses Duncan's speech at Huffpo: The Solution to a Bad Guy With a Test Is a Good Guy With a Test


Mike Antonucci at EIA comes at this from the right (which in his case is wrong): Boo-Hooey
 
The problem with Mike's analysis is that he reads Duncan's speech as if Duncan meant a word of what he said instead of looking at is a hooey designed to keep people from booing him too much and getting the people in the middle of the road to say, "You see, he is reasonable and can be talked to" instead of responding, "you lying piece of crap, you say one thing but act do the opposite. You will rot in hell." (Enough vitriol for ya?). Mike says that Duncan is just following his boss' orders. Jawohl.

The speech seemed to take Jennifer in who in "speaking" to Duncan says:
You had the grace, the guts, and the patience not to reciprocate. [What was he going to do, boo back?]
If there is one lesson from this conference, Secretary Duncan, you showed America’s educational researchers that we can have a different debate—one in which we rely on ideas and open disagreement and reason, and not on schoolyard bravado.
Oh, god, I am cringing just reading this. Duncan with grace? And guts? My goodness. I imagine Duncan might just invite Jennifer in for a "different" debate where he will be a reasonable guy and agree with much of what she says or maybe give the impression he does.

There are a whole bunch of issues I want to touch upon but first another bit from Paul Thomas expresses a lot of what I would say.
Standing in the middle of the road offers some statistical advantage to avoiding being run over since you aren’t in the prescribed lanes of traffic, but standing in the middle of the road can never assure the safety that refusing to walk into the road to begin with does.
The Thomas trilogy: Jennings, Weingarten, Di Carlo
Thomas points to Anthony Cody on Randi Weingarten's call for a moratorium on common core (as opposed to a call to use a machine gun),
Matthew Di Carlo at the Shanker blog (often used to justify ANY position the AFT might take) challenging charges that value-added methods (VAM) of teacher evaluation are “junk science” and Jennifer Jennings penning an apology to Secretary of Education Arne Duncan.

I'm glad Thomas lumped these 3 together.
Weingarten, Di Carlo [2], and Jennings share a call for standing in the middle of the road, a quest for ways to compromise, and these all appear reasonable positions. Ultimately, however, moratoriums, compromise, and civility are all concessions to the current education reform movement and the policies at the center of those reforms, specifically CCSS and VAM....
These messages are factually false and, despite the civility of the language, irrevocably offensive. Standing in the middle of the road of bureaucratic, accountability-based school reform, then, may decrease the likelihood of being run over, but it concedes the road itself to those who have built it, to those who govern the laws of transportation.
The implied and stated messages of calls for CCSS and more high-stakes testing include the following: (1) Teachers do not know what to teach, or how, and (2) teachers are unlikely to perform at the needed levels of effort in their profession unless they are held accountable by external and bureaucratic means.
The implied and stated messages of calls for VAM and merit pay include the following: (1) The most urgent problem at the core of educational outcomes is teacher quality, and (2) teachers are unlikely to perform at the needed levels of effort in their profession unless they are held accountable by external and bureaucratic means.
There is no little irony in Thomas bringing up the teacher quality issue given that Jennifer's Eduwonkette's very first posts in Sept. 2007 were related to this topic. I thought they were excellent points even if I didn't totally agree with all at the time (too much research I think and not enough from the gut and experience of teachers.) Here are some links:
Let me cover some of the same ground and some other points based on these topics:
  • Are we really engaged in a "debate" or in an "assault"?
  • Were the booing academics at AERA reacting to the coming assault on them that will be similar to the one on k-12? I'm betting many of them were still students.
  • Is a lack of so-called "civility" in a public forum an appropriate political tactic?
  • Who is Arne Duncan and why he deserves to be verbally eviscerated.  
  • My definition of what it means to be civil: I don't boo or harass when I run into ed deformers on the street and at times even hug them. But in a public forum at events or on blogs I boo the shit out of them.
Are we really engaged in a "debate" or in an "assault"?
Let's start with this from an article in Slate:

Failing the Test: Why cheating scandals and parent rebellions are erupting in schools in New York, Washington, D.C., and Atlanta.

It’s a terrible time for advocates of market-driven reform in public education. [Does Duncan booing count?] For more than a decade, their strategy—which makes teachers’ careers turn on student gains in reading and math tests, and promotes competition through charter schools and vouchers—has been the dominant policy mantra. [Do you remember then holding a debate on these policy decisions? Even our lousy unions which supported so much of this crap didn't hold democratic debates.] But now the cracks are showing [Booooo, Duncan]. That’s a good thing because this isn’t a proven—or even a promising—way to make schools better.
Jennifer wrote
It is one thing to disagree with some of the Obama administration’s policies, to bring countervailing data to the table, and to engage in reasoned—and, one would hope, enlightened—conversation.....
the educational policy debate has become an overwhelming chorus of boos, of shout-downs, and of bitter personal insults, rather than a real debate about ideas and data and first principles.
You see, there was never an enlightened, or any, conversation or debate about these policies. They were forced whole cloth down our throats by both political parties backed by billionaires with people like Duncan and Klein out there to implement these policies and undermine and destroy the voices of opposition.

War was declared on the teachers, parents and children in public schools in this nation. In warfare between the power structure with nukes and guerrillas with pea shooters, there is little room for civility. I'll get back to this later, but public booing is not just born out of frustration but is a political tactic to draw attention from a very biased media that ignores the voice of the opposition. And to firm up the resistance base where only numbers can counter billions.

Are academics at AERA reacting to the coming assault on them that will be similar to the one on k-12?

Duncan/Obama are about to push the same policies onto higher ed -- where  tenure and jobs might depend on 4-year college drop-out rates and outcomes on standardized tests.

Would academics insulted by the lack of civility feel differently if  hard-won tenure track positions could be taken away because of a low 4-year graduation rate, which I can guarantee is lower than many schools that have been closed?

I know some of the people who helped organize the Duncan protest in San Francisco. There are now some discussions going on over the award being given by the supposedly progressive ed bastion, Teachers College, to Merryl Tisch, the doyenne of high stakes testing, at the upcoming graduation. Should people boo and ruin graduation? Or get up and turn their backs? Or hold a demo in front? We'll deal with this issue in a follow-up.

Is a lack of so-called "civility" in a public forum an appropriate political tactic?

YES, YES, YES. Given a complicit ed press that ignores 95% of what is really going on, don't let these ed deform guys talk in public if you can stop them. Don't care about bad publicity or offending people. We know what they are going to say anyway. What they do in these situations is try to make nice, like when they get back to the office they will have a revelation. They are the enemy, not people to engage in debate.

Most of this is covered by Thomas. The apology to Duncan reminded me of Randi's apology to Bill Gates at the 2010 AFT convention when 50 people booed and walked out while Randi's Unity Caucus slugs ridiculed and booed them for doing so. See my videos here (Trojan Horse in the AFT House), here (updated Apple 1984 commercial) and here (Randi chastised for encouraging disparagement of protesters by California teacher).

Actually, before I go on and have your attention, take a peek at my version Apple commercial, which I consider one of my more creative moments (I needed David Bellel to help me do it.)



When you are powerless in an undemocratic system there is no other way. (The sad thing is that in so many extreme cases we see people all over the world who feel this way resort to suicide bombs. Imagine what it takes for someone to be willing to kill themselves while all we have to do is boo to get people upset.)

What I believe is coming, will be a growing civil disobedience movement like we saw in the civil rights movement. The testing opt-out movement is a sign of civil disobedience of sorts.

Who is Arne Duncan and why he does deserve to be verbally eviscerated?
Arne Duncan is a criminal verging on child abuse. (I know this is the kind of invective the middle of the roaders eschew). Let's not forget that Arne Duncan ran the Chicago schools into the ground for 8 years -- whether you use metrics or just plain gut feelings (my preference) -- and is force feeding his failures on the entire nation. His closing schools policies to favor the charter crooks (and as one scandal after another erupts he skates free from being held accountable) led to gangs crossing neighborhood lines. I'm convinced Duncan's policies have something to do with the extreme murder rate amongst teens and if I could I would bring him up on murder charges. (See Ed Notes Online: Is Arne Duncan Guilty of Murder? ...

When he helped celebrate the 20th Anniversary of Teach for America in Feb. 2011 he received an adoring standing ovation. Gary Rubinstein, who in some ways has taken Eduwonkette's place as a blogger supremo, was so offended by the Rhee, Duncans, Kleins, etc in the room he started questionning the very nature of TFA -- and he moved very fast out of the middle of the road, even running with MORE in this year's UFT elections because, well, the UFT tries to stand in the middle of the road.

Diane Ravitch posted this condemnation of Duncan today:
This is an astonishing story.
In 2002, Arne Duncan began his infamous policy of shutting down schools in Chicago with low test scores.
Among the schools he closed was Dodge.
Dodge parents were outraged that their school was handed over to a private turnaround operator, but Duncan assured them it was for the best.
Fast forward to 2008, when President-elect Obama announced that he had picked Arne Duncan as Secretary of Education.
The event was held at Dodge Renaissance Academy, which the President praised as a “perfect example” of a turnaround school, an exemplar of Duncan’s great success.
Sadly, Chicago Public Schools is now closing Dodge Renaissance Academy as a failing school, along with Williams, another of Duncan’s “turnaround” schools.
What do you think this does to the children, the parents, and the community?
When is it okay to say that it is better to help struggling schools than to close them?
Ed Notes has done quite a few Duncan pieces: Arne Duncan, Segregationist?

I'm thinking that booing Duncan is being kind of kind.

My definition of what it means to be civil: I don't boo or harass when I run into ed deformers on the street and at times even hug them. But in a public forum at events or on blogs I boo the shit out of them.

While I believe in not being civil in a public forum given we can gain some political advantage by increasing the underdog sense of power, I do agree that at some level civility works to a political advantage when you are one on one with an ed deformer. I know I can't convince them and have no interest in debating them and there is no political advantage in throwing invective on them. Getting emotional gains nothing. So I just have fun with them. Thus I hugged Joel Klein and was always civil when I ran into him. And when I see Randi I have no problem in chatting, as I also did with Eva and her husband at a party. Now you know no one has been tougher on them than Ed Notes but I work at making it clear nothing is personal. Except for Unity slugs (and not all Unity people are slugs).

At the rally at Tweed 2 weeks ago I saw Marc Sternberg coming out of Tweed as the rally was ending and I began to yell at him, not with invective, but chiding him on missing the rally. He came over to chat and even though people find him as despicable a person as possible in Tweed (I actually vote for Shael) I can engage in chiding, kidding around banter. I told him with the clock ticking down at BloomTweed he better get a job soon.  But when Sternberg tried to speak at a PIP I joined vociferously in the booing so he couldn't be heard. As I always used to tell Randi: Nothing personal. It's political.

I know lots of people don't agree with me. It is one of the areas Julie and I don't agree on. She chides me for allowing Klein to use me for that hug to defuse the audience hostility. And people ran over with hand sanitizer afterwards. I'm not a hater and see no point. And if I gain some political advantage -- in this case a big jump in hits to ednotes -- what does it cost? Funny, but at the next meeting -- Klein's last -- he came over to shake my hand and we had a chat about the lack of civility. I repeated that I see no point in vilifying people personally but am ready to go all out if there is a political basis. I find people on the other side use any sense of personal animosity against you --- Randi has actually got some Unity slugs convinced that my criticisms are about nothing more than she once didn't return an email. My principal used to do the same thing -- that we just didn't get along -- that I had no real issues other than dislike for her. In fact once I was out of the school and working at the district  she used to hug me when she saw me (relief?) and we laughed about our battles. I learned a good lesson. If you are nasty to their face it fuels them.

So I want to close with a few points from Jennifer's post where she calls out the protesters as having
 abdicate(d) our most sacred responsibility as researchers—a commitment to ideas, to data, to truth, to real debate—at the altar of one-upmanship.  It is toxic. It is unnecessary. And it is not befitting of a community of researchers who stand in front of students on most days of the week and call ourselves educators.
As I pointed out, yes it is all necessary. The altar of one-upmanship has a role when you are trying to rally and organize people to take action when they are powerless but you know if they grow in numbers they will have power.

And yes to truth. When we were doing our movie I was worried that maybe we should be telling a bit of the other side so we wouldn't look like a propaganda film. Julie said absolutely not. We were not telling one side as opposed to another. "Waiting for Superman" was the propaganda film. The "Inconvenient Truth Behind Waiting for Superman" was the truth.


Afterburn
Some more thoughts from the NYCEducation News listserve:

Steve Koss:
 When those in positions of political power are actually willing to listen and contemplate opposing views and provide genuine open forums for discussion, when they are willing to consider that their experience may not be as deep as others and that their policies might not be one hundred percent correct, when they begin to treat those with opposing views as people who have equal concerns rather than ignoring them or continually dismissing them as "special interests" (yes, Mr. Bloomberg, parents ARE "special interests" when it comes to their own children), then perhaps they will have earned the right to dignified treatment from an audience who feels it has been treated the same way.  Until then, I see no problem whatsoever with booing as one of the few ways left for the disregarded to express themselves. 


Dora Taylor, Seattle
Here, here. Duncan’s so called “Listening Tours” were totally bogus. He has listened to no one but those with the largest amounts of cash ever since he was the CEO of Education in Chicago.
Ann

One also sometimes feels that these people live within the bell jar of their own self regard and there is an impenetrable wall protecting them from criticism. I wasn't there but it perhaps it would take a few shocks like that for these people to realize they have serious critics and not just "vested interests" opposing them.

Did his "keynote speech" involve an opportunity for questions from the floor, or was it just a propaganda moment?  DId the organization chose him as a keynote speaker or was it political product-placement?

I feel there's a phrase for this tendency of leadership cliques to live in an echo-chamber of their own ideas... but I can't get at it...

Here is video of protest: 

 http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/eduwonkette/2009/01/


Catching up with Eduwonkette
http://eduwonkette2.blogspot.com/

http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/eduwonkette/2009/01/